-- Director Juan Antonio Bayona's «A Monster Calls» will enter Spain's annual Goya Awards on February 4, 2017 with more
nominations than any other film.
Not exact matches
Take away The Wind Rises, which was briefly screened in 2013 only to qualify for awards (which it did, collecting an Oscar
nomination for best animated
film), and Disney's 2013 average drops to 53.4 (the studio's lowest average since 2010), though that was still higher
than four
other major distributors last year.
And even if it is a make - up
nomination for Wall - E, its gonna go to a mighty fine
film and I daresay it will deserve its
nomination more
than half of the
other nominees.
Unfortunately,
other than his role as Jordan Belfort, I think this
film will miss out on the Best Picture
nomination as well as Best Director for one reason, nudity.
The gamble — which also re-teamed the Coens with No Country producer Scott Rudin — paid off handsomely: True Grit grossed more
than twice as much as any of their
other films and received Academy Award
nominations in a remarkable 10 categories.
No
other film from that year was a more across - the - board contender
than «Benjamin Button,» a technical marvel that was essentially guaranteed
nominations in nearly every tech category available.
It's arguably a better fit in that vein
than some of the
other female - focused contenders; Lady Bird certainly has its own momentum now, and it's entirely possible Natalie Portman will have successfully shamed the Academy (and possibly the DGA) into giving Greta Gerwig a
nomination for Best Director, but that
film doesn't play the abuse card the way Three Billboards does.
I'm betting it gets two
nominations for acting, which will be more
than any of his
other films (though I'm not sure if the supporting nod will go to Roberts or Martindale - or maybe even both).
Thrones received 23 prime - time 2016 Emmy
nominations, more
than any
other show, but requires a heavy amount of winter location shooting for the next season (locations include a production unit
filming in Iceland).
Despite the hysteria, it may not be appropriate yet to call a time of death on the decades and decades» worth of precedent that will be shattered when Argo wins Best Picture despite very conspicuously not being nominated for its director, not having even remotely close to the year's highest
nomination tally (it trails behind four
other films), and not having even a halfway plausible shot at winning more
than two
other categories aside from this one.
It now has some competition, though, in La La Land, another critical and festival darling that scored 12 Critics» Choice
nominations, more
than any
other film, including key categories like best picture, best director, best actor, and best actress.
While
films and their leading actors are split into «drama» or «musical or comedy» categories, the Golden Globes» supporting actors hail from all
films; for that reason the two categories have a stronger correlation to the eventual Academy Award
nominations than most
others.