Movie News: Oscars 2025 Shortlist Announced in 10 Categories: ‘Emilia Pérez’, ‘Wicked’ ‘Dune 2’ & ‘Gladiator 2 UPDATE: FULL LIST!

The nominations came out first and then the tweets resurfaced.

And the orange new black trans already won an Emmy I think
And I bet you women celebrated that shit.

You wouldn't see me celebrating vanilla ice being voted black man of the Year. Hell, you wouldn't see me celebrating Eminem getting voted black man of the Year. Eminem is as much a black man as a trans woman is a woman. Less actually, because Eminem is actually happy in his own skin lol
 
And I bet you women celebrated that shit.

You wouldn't see me celebrating vanilla ice being voted black man of the Year. Hell, you wouldn't see me celebrating Eminem getting voted black man of the Year. Eminem is as much a black man as a trans woman is a woman. Less actually, because Eminem is actually happy in his own skin lol

no argument from me bro
 

Oscar Fans Debate What Makes ‘Anora’ A Best-Picture Winner​

‘Anora’ received a raft of trophies at the 97th Academy Awards, but the mixed reaction online shows the dangers in judging art like it can “win” or “lose.”
ByCallum Booth, Contributor.
Callum Booth covers the intersection of art and internet culture.

Follow Author
Mar 03, 2025, 01:47am ESTUpdated Mar 3, 2025, 08:18am EST

Save ArticleComment3
Anora actor Mikey Madison and its director, Sean Baker

Mikey Madison and Sean Baker attend the "Anora" Photocall at the 77th annual Cannes Film Festival/ (Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)
Getty Images
The biggest night in entertainment may have come to a close, but the online discussion is still in full swing. While a range of topics from the 2025 Oscars are being talked about, Anora winning Best Picture is provoking fierce debate online, with many shocked and stunned that the movie won the top prize at the event.


This mixed reaction to Anora winning Best Picture at the Oscars shows how award ceremonies and social media can come together to create controversy by encouraging people to hold entrenched opinions. Art can’t “win” or “lose,” but the nature of award ceremonies pushes people to holding this viewpoint.



What Is ‘Anora?’ And How Did It Perform At The Academy Awards?​

Anora is an independent movie by Sean Baker. It follows the eponymous character—played by Mikey Madison— who’s a sex worker that marries a Russian oligarch’s son.



The film had a phenomenally successful night at the 2025 Oscars, winning Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress, Best Screenplay, and Best Editing.

In fact, Anora did so well it broke records, with Sean Baker tying Walt Disney with the most Academy Award wins by a single person in one night. The difference, though, is that Baker won all of these for a single movie, while Disney picked up his trophies for an range of films.
While you might think this would be a cause for celebration across the industry, the response online has been less clear. While many films were honored, Anora picking up so many awards and batting away the crowd, can be viewed in a less positive light by some.

How Has The Internet Reacted To ‘Anora’ Winning Best Picture At The Oscars?​

Anora better than Nickel Boys? Better than Conclave? Better than Wicked? Better than The Substance?” asks one user on social media.
“The bar is so damn low,” reads one of the replies.
Many users online hold similar views, being disappointed and surprised that Anora not only took home Best Picture, but a raft of other Academy awards too.
Beyond not being fans of the movie, there were other people online who saw Anora in a more damaging light, finding its representation of sex workers lacking:


Yet despite there being a swell of people disliking Anora’s Best Picture win, a lot of discussion online also praised the film.
“Anora deserved it and will be remembered as one of the best Best Picture winners of this decade,” one user said.
A fan community—something referred to as the Anora hive—were also out in force online, celebrating the movie’s win:


This pattern is repeated across social media, with people in deep discussion about Anora, all holding an array of differing views—and being vocal about it.
So... what’s going on? What’s driving this backlash?

What The Mixed Response To ‘Anora’ Winning Best Picture Means​

One of the first things to note is Anora has a particular style, aesthetic and non-mainstream approach to movies. As an independent picture about a sex worker that’s filled with bad language and nudity, it’s bound to split opinion.
In other words, the topic and style of the movie were always going to provoke an online response if it won Best Picture.
Despite that, you can argue that this mixed response would’ve happened to any movie that won the award at the Oscars—and part of this is due to the nature of the ceremony itself.

Decreeing any piece of art as the “best” is a troublesome proposition, and this is at the core of events like these. Really, any sort of creative work is subjective, that’s what makes it interesting to study and engage with.
But when art is reduced to either “winning” or “losing”—such as what happens with the Academy Awards—that upsets this innate feeling we have of all these works being valuable. This entrenched idea is broken and, when that happens, it can instigate a strong response, either in favour or against the winner.
By judging which movies are “best,” we’re effectively forced to make the same decision—and media plays an intriguing role in channelling this response.
Studies show that the rise of the internet has changed fandom from a static state into something that’s far more dynamic. In the past, when people enjoyed a movie, their interaction would be passive, pretty much absorbing and watching a film like Anora.
Yet, because the online world enables an increased level of interaction, fandom now is participatory. People online can get involved in the discussion and push a narrative.
In the context of the Best Picture win at the Oscars, this leads to things like the aforementioned “Anora hive” where people celebrate the movie’s win. But it also provides the opposite: fans of other movies trashing what they perceive to be weaknesses in the winner’s case.

What this results in is not an online world that’s united behind a single movie, instead there are various collectives coming together trying to support their favorite films from the past year.
Art is subjective, but the outcome of awards aren’t, and the cognitive dissonance of those two elements can lead to a lot of backlash.
Anora winning Best Picture at the 2025 Oscars shocked a lot of people online, but, let’s be honest, that would’ve happened no matter who or what won.
 

Oscar Fans Debate What Makes ‘Anora’ A Best-Picture Winner​

‘Anora’ received a raft of trophies at the 97th Academy Awards, but the mixed reaction online shows the dangers in judging art like it can “win” or “lose.”
ByCallum Booth, Contributor.
Callum Booth covers the intersection of art and internet culture.

Follow Author
Mar 03, 2025, 01:47am ESTUpdated Mar 3, 2025, 08:18am EST

Save ArticleComment3
Anora actor Mikey Madison and its director, Sean Baker

Mikey Madison and Sean Baker attend the "Anora" Photocall at the 77th annual Cannes Film Festival/ (Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)
Getty Images
The biggest night in entertainment may have come to a close, but the online discussion is still in full swing. While a range of topics from the 2025 Oscars are being talked about, Anora winning Best Picture is provoking fierce debate online, with many shocked and stunned that the movie won the top prize at the event.


This mixed reaction to Anora winning Best Picture at the Oscars shows how award ceremonies and social media can come together to create controversy by encouraging people to hold entrenched opinions. Art can’t “win” or “lose,” but the nature of award ceremonies pushes people to holding this viewpoint.



What Is ‘Anora?’ And How Did It Perform At The Academy Awards?​

Anora is an independent movie by Sean Baker. It follows the eponymous character—played by Mikey Madison— who’s a sex worker that marries a Russian oligarch’s son.



The film had a phenomenally successful night at the 2025 Oscars, winning Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress, Best Screenplay, and Best Editing.

In fact, Anora did so well it broke records, with Sean Baker tying Walt Disney with the most Academy Award wins by a single person in one night. The difference, though, is that Baker won all of these for a single movie, while Disney picked up his trophies for an range of films.
While you might think this would be a cause for celebration across the industry, the response online has been less clear. While many films were honored, Anora picking up so many awards and batting away the crowd, can be viewed in a less positive light by some.

How Has The Internet Reacted To ‘Anora’ Winning Best Picture At The Oscars?​

Anora better than Nickel Boys? Better than Conclave? Better than Wicked? Better than The Substance?” asks one user on social media.
“The bar is so damn low,” reads one of the replies.
Many users online hold similar views, being disappointed and surprised that Anora not only took home Best Picture, but a raft of other Academy awards too.
Beyond not being fans of the movie, there were other people online who saw Anora in a more damaging light, finding its representation of sex workers lacking:


Yet despite there being a swell of people disliking Anora’s Best Picture win, a lot of discussion online also praised the film.
“Anora deserved it and will be remembered as one of the best Best Picture winners of this decade,” one user said.
A fan community—something referred to as the Anora hive—were also out in force online, celebrating the movie’s win:


This pattern is repeated across social media, with people in deep discussion about Anora, all holding an array of differing views—and being vocal about it.
So... what’s going on? What’s driving this backlash?

What The Mixed Response To ‘Anora’ Winning Best Picture Means​

One of the first things to note is Anora has a particular style, aesthetic and non-mainstream approach to movies. As an independent picture about a sex worker that’s filled with bad language and nudity, it’s bound to split opinion.
In other words, the topic and style of the movie were always going to provoke an online response if it won Best Picture.
Despite that, you can argue that this mixed response would’ve happened to any movie that won the award at the Oscars—and part of this is due to the nature of the ceremony itself.

Decreeing any piece of art as the “best” is a troublesome proposition, and this is at the core of events like these. Really, any sort of creative work is subjective, that’s what makes it interesting to study and engage with.
But when art is reduced to either “winning” or “losing”—such as what happens with the Academy Awards—that upsets this innate feeling we have of all these works being valuable. This entrenched idea is broken and, when that happens, it can instigate a strong response, either in favour or against the winner.
By judging which movies are “best,” we’re effectively forced to make the same decision—and media plays an intriguing role in channelling this response.
Studies show that the rise of the internet has changed fandom from a static state into something that’s far more dynamic. In the past, when people enjoyed a movie, their interaction would be passive, pretty much absorbing and watching a film like Anora.
Yet, because the online world enables an increased level of interaction, fandom now is participatory. People online can get involved in the discussion and push a narrative.
In the context of the Best Picture win at the Oscars, this leads to things like the aforementioned “Anora hive” where people celebrate the movie’s win. But it also provides the opposite: fans of other movies trashing what they perceive to be weaknesses in the winner’s case.

What this results in is not an online world that’s united behind a single movie, instead there are various collectives coming together trying to support their favorite films from the past year.
Art is subjective, but the outcome of awards aren’t, and the cognitive dissonance of those two elements can lead to a lot of backlash.
Anora winning Best Picture at the 2025 Oscars shocked a lot of people online, but, let’s be honest, that would’ve happened no matter who or what won.
I just watched Anora, it's an outstanding movie. I can see why it cleaned up.
 
I just watched Anora, it's an outstanding movie. I can see why it cleaned up.

I liked it but I have NOT heard anyone stand up for it PASSONATELY winning the Oscar

Can you tell me why you personally thought it was Oscar worthy especially over the other films nominated in the category?
 
I liked it but I have NOT heard anyone stand up for it PASSONATELY winning the Oscar

Can you tell me why you personally thought it was Oscar worthy especially over the other films nominated in the category?
I personally only feel sorry for The Substance, which I hope won something, as it was fucking excellent and very original.
I've watched the substance 3 times, trust me thats rare for me.

Anora just has very natural acting performances that drive the story forward, every emotion is conveyed from highs to
heartfelt lows, where you can see why even the smallest insult can sting like its describing her whole life. Watch the whole thing and then look at the expression on her face as she's about to leave out of the car in the final scene. Very rarely does an actor convery, in one look, the entire rollercoaster we've all just watched, so perfectly. She acted her cute little ass off, quite literally too.
 
I personally only feel sorry for The Substance, which I hope won something, as it was fucking excellent and very original.
I've watched the substance 3 times, trust me thats rare for me.

Anora just has very natural acting performances that drive the story forward, every emotion is conveyed from highs to
heartfelt lows, where you can see why even the smallest insult can sting like its describing her whole life. Watch the whole thing and then look at the expression on her face as she's about to leave out of the car in the final scene. Very rarely does an actor convery, in one look, the entire rollercoaster we've all just watched, so perfectly. She acted her cute little ass off, quite literally too.

So you think she deserved best lead and the picture deserved to win OVERALL?

I respect it.

I thought it was good very good but not BEST PICTURE good compared to the other nominations.

I am STILL shocked that voters actually recognized the substance like that to ME? That was ALREADY a huge win.

Personally? I thought Dune 2 and Wicked and Nickel Boys and The Brutalist edged out Anora

but you make a COMPELLING argument.

By your measure I would probably STILL not pick it OVER Dune 2

but it could make top 3.

You made want to see Anora again and focus more.

Seeing the Substance 3 times based on the subject matter? is VERY impressive. I got even more respect for your movie sensibilities.

It was a little MUCH for me.
 
So you think she deserved best lead and the picture deserved to win OVERALL?

I respect it.

I thought it was good very good but not BEST PICTURE good compared to the other nominations.

I am STILL shocked that voters actually recognized the substance like that to ME? That was ALREADY a huge win.

Personally? I thought Dune 2 and Wicked and Nickel Boys and The Brutalist edged out Anora

but you make a COMPELLING argument.

By your measure I would probably STILL not pick it OVER Dune 2

but it could make top 3.

You made want to see Anora again and focus more.

Seeing the Substance 3 times based on the subject matter? is VERY impressive. I got even more respect for your movie sensibilities.

It was a little MUCH for me.
I'd forgot dune 2 was even in the same time frame for an Oscar. For some reason it seems so long ago since I watched it, enjoyed it tho, as i did D1, plus it's more of my palet as I'm a Sci fi addict.
I haven't seen nickel boys or wicked yet, started brutalist, didn't finish, went into my music room instead. A great movie I watched yesterday is "Inheritance", again female led with really good realistic acting.

Anora conveyed so much with so little that i could immediately understand why it did so well. It even has lots of great humour
 
Oscars could be streamed on Netflix after decades on ABC as talks with Disney falter: report

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has held information discussions with streaming giant Netflix about televising the Oscars after it reached an impasse with ABC parent Disney over what it should pay to extend its current rights agreement, according to Bloomberg News.

By Ariel Zilber
March 3, 2025


Netflix-The-Oscars.jpg
 
Oscars could be streamed on Netflix after decades on ABC as talks with Disney falter: report

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has held information discussions with streaming giant Netflix about televising the Oscars after it reached an impasse with ABC parent Disney over what it should pay to extend its current rights agreement, according to Bloomberg News.

By Ariel Zilber
March 3, 2025


Netflix-The-Oscars.jpg

that HULU streaming sh*t was a huge embarrassment.

It was faster clearer and easier to watch on Twitter and Youtube.
 
Oscars could be streamed on Netflix after decades on ABC as talks with Disney falter: report

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has held information discussions with streaming giant Netflix about televising the Oscars after it reached an impasse with ABC parent Disney over what it should pay to extend its current rights agreement, according to Bloomberg News.

By Ariel Zilber
March 3, 2025


Netflix-The-Oscars.jpg
Maybe there can be some uncensored cussing when someone loses a nomination :lol:
 

Lizzo Shows Off Dramatic Weight Transformation on Date With Myke Wright at Vanity Fair Oscars Party​

At the Vanity Fair Oscars Party, Lizzo and her boyfriend Myke Wright stepped out together, where the pair stunned in complementing looks.



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Nikki Glaser Grades Conan O’Brien’s Oscars Hosting & “Selfishly” Says Her Favorite Moment Was Adam Sandler-Timothée Chalamet Joke​

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By Armando Tinoco

Armando Tinoco

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@armietinoco

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March 3, 2025 8:41am
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Nikki Glaser talks Oscars on 'Live with Kelly & Mark'

Nikki Glaser talks Oscars on 'Live with Kelly & Mark'ABC
Nikki Glaser shares her thoughts on the Oscars and grading Conan O’Brien’s hosting following Sunday’s ceremony.
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Glaser kicked off award season earlier this year hosting the Golden Globes and gave her take on O’Brien’s turn helming the Academy Awards.
“Last night, Conan … A+,” the stand-up comedian said on Live with Kelly & Mark. “I mean, we know he’s funny. We know he’s going to kill. We knew we were in good hands, but there was a silliness to it, with the Sand Worm playing the harp. There was wild stuff happening.”


Glaser said that O’Brien’s monologue “was good,” adding, “I thought he took some chances. He did the Kendrick [Lamar] joke halfway through. They thought outside the box and it was a traditional Oscar show, but Conan injected some silliness into it.”


The hosts asked Glaser for her favorite moment of the night and she said that “selfishly” her favorite moment was the Adam Sandler-Timothée Chalamet running joke, which she started at the Golden Globes in January.
“I really loved when he was talking to Adam Sandler and then Adam Sandler ran up to Timothée Chalamet and goes, ‘Chalomeeeeet,'” she said. “That was the joke I made at the Golden Globes. So I felt like a callback to my joke and when I was watching it, I was like [makes surprised expression]. It was so awesome.”


Glaser also noted that one of her favorite moments — with her “hair on my arms raising” — was the opening with Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande performing “Defying Gravity” from the Oscar-nominated film Wicked.
“It was so beautiful,” she added.

In January, Glaser joked about Chalamet’s name during her opening monologue, saying, “Your name sounds like something Adam Sandler would say.” The comedian then called on Sandler to illustrate the joke with an exaggerated “Timothée ah Chalameeeet.”
 


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