Cannes' Oscar Impact
Tuesday, January 14, 2020 at 11:03PM
Murtada Elfadl in Antonio Banderas, Cannes, Les Misérables, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Pain & Glory, Parasite

by Murtada Elfadl 

The Cannes Film festival is not usually a bellwether for Oscars. That happens with the trifecta of late August / early September of Venice, Telluride and Toronto. However this year several movies that premiered in the main competition and in adjacent sections have been nominated for Oscars. Two of them  - Parasite and Once Upon a Time in Hollywood - scored multiple nominations and are expected to win a few and are considered favorites for the big prize, Best Picture... 

Parasite 

Bong Joon Ho’s masterpiece was called just that seconds after its world premiere at Cannes. The adoration was instant and humongous and started at the Croisette. It went on to win the Palme D’or and eight months later add six Oscar nominations to its big tally of awards.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

This multiple nominee left Cannes with no prizes but rather a controversy. Quentin Tarantino refused to answer a question from the New York Times about the scarcity of Margot Robbie’s lines as Sharon Tate telling off the reporter "I just reject your hypothesis." Oscar remedied that no prizes outcome with 10 nominations and the controversy has since died. Though perhaps that was one of the reasons Robbie campaigned exclusively for her nominated performance in Bombshell.

Pain and Glory 

Pedro Almodovar’s film was a favorite for the Palme D’Or going into the festival, buoyed by ecstatic reviews from its March debut in Spain. Ultimately it was Anotonio Banderas who won the best actor prize starting his months long journey to a best actor Oscar nomination. That journey took him through the Fall festivals and to the trifecta of critics awards; NYFCC, LACFA and NSFC. It also landed a nomination in the Best International Feature Film category representing Spain. 

Les Misérables 

Cannes movies always figure in the Best International Film category. Three Cannes premiers were nominated last year (Capernaum, Cold War and Shoplifters) and another three this year. In addition to the aforementioned Parasite and Pain and Glory there’s Les Misérables. The Ladj Ly directed intense action thriller won the  Jury Prize or 3rd place and is a nominee for France.

I Lost My Body

This animated movie about the life and trials of a severed hand debuted in the Critics Week section. Director Jeremy Clapin won the Grand prize and the film is a nominee for Best Animated Film.

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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