Several underperforming films at the Oscars had one thing in common: A blunt willingness to deal with sex.
To wit: âBabygirlâ star Nicole Kidman, playing a woman who comes closer to understanding her carnal side after an affair with her intern, campaigned harder than she ever had before; so did âQueerâ lead actor Daniel Craig, as a lovelorn gay man who expresses through physicality what he cannot with words. Neither actor got a nomination. âChallengers,â a spring sensation led by Zendaya that seemed set to compete for its pulsating score and boundary-pushing screenplay, got in nowhere, while âNosferatu,â a ravishing Gothic depiction of lust at the edge of death, didnât get the best picture nod that some speculated it might.
None of these come as true shocks, exactly; Kidmanâs and Craigâs campaigns seemed to lose steam as precursor nominations eluded their grasps, while âChallengersâ may just have faded from memory â and âNosferatuâ can take its craft nominations (and its box-office haul) as the reward. And the filmsâ respective merits can be debated â from my perspective, the most unfortunate miss of this particular set of nominees is âChallengers,â in which its music and writing evoked the heart-racing feeling of sexual gamesmanship.
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Elsewhere, among the morningâs biggest surprises was the absence of both Pamela Anderson and (especially) the hard-charging campaigner Jamie Lee Curtis for âThe Last Showgirl,â a movie about Las Vegas burlesque that went the way of its East Coast counterpart in 2019, âHustlers,â another well-liked movie that the Oscars didnât make room for.Â
âHustlersâ provides an intriguing comparison. In the 2019 Oscar race, Jennifer Lopez had been tipped as a possible winner for her supporting performance as a stripper who gets one over on her clients â it was a raw and frank piece of work from a superstar we were unaccustomed to seeing in quite such a light. And Lopez losing out on a nomination suggests that this particular iteration of the Academy doesnât prize that particular tone. In its subject matter, âHustlersâ looks like âThe Last Showgirl,â with its jobbing dancer left out in the cold; in its treatment of lust as the source of painful comedy, itâs more akin to âChallengers.â
Among the films that were nominated, âThe Substance,â an overperforming best picture nominee, bears in its astonishing frankness about the extremity to which the human body can be pushed an old, familiar argument: Violence, perhaps, is always more acceptable in Hollywood than sex. And âAnora,â a best picture nominee this year, would seem to provide the counterargument to the idea that the Academy looks down on films about sexual matters: It, like âHustlers,â is about a stripper whose physicality takes her places she might never have imagined. But that filmâs road-movie middle third, in which it becomes a madcap chase through the Brooklyn night, takes sex off the table, at least for a while. âAnoraâ is about the delicate web of relationships between its characters. Sex, in âAnoraâ (as in last yearâs multi-Oscar-winning âPoor Thingsâ) is ultimately a device that allows the real story to begin.Â
Whereas in âQueer,â in âBabygirl,â and especially in âChallengers,â sex is the story â to a degree that one must sit with, perhaps uncomfortably. (While âChallengersâ is a work of supreme control, both âQueerâ and âBabygirlâ push their lead actors into baroque and revealing expressions of lust, ones that court uncomfortable laughter in their directness.) Itâs Craigâs desire for Drew Starkey, Kidmanâs desire for Harris Dickinson, and Zendayaâs desire to place the two men pursuing her on opposite sides of a tennis net that doesnât just kick off each respective story but that propels them to new and strange places. This yearâs Oscar nominations are laudably wide-ranging â surprisingly political (from âIâm Still Hereâ in best picture to âThe Apprentice,â twice over, for Sebastian Stan and Jeremy Strong in the acting races) and ranging from blockbusters like âWickedâ and âDune: Part Twoâ to little-seen films like âNickel Boysâ that will now get a boost. But there still may be places that Oscar, for now, doesnât really want to go.
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January 23, 2025
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