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Oscars take the stage on Sunday with best picture up for grabs

Oscars take the stage on Sunday with best picture up for grabs

The Academy Awards, the highest honors in the film business, take place on Sunday with no clear frontrunner among "Anora," "The Brutalist," "Conclave" and other movies contending for the prestigious best picture prize.
Timothee Chalamet and Demi Moore are vying for their first Oscars at the red-carpet ceremony in Hollywood. The show will air live on Walt Disney's ABC network starting at 4 p.m. Pacific time (0000 GMT on Monday).
Comedian and host Conan O'Brien said he planned to mix jokes, celebrations of filmmakers and serious moments including tributes to Los Angeles as it recovers from January's wildfires. He likely will address U.S. politics but not dwell on it, he said.
"Good jokes are really important, but there's also more than that," O'Brien told reporters last week as he prepared for his first Oscars hosting gig. "We're trying to go for different tones, different textures."
This year's Oscars race has featured twists and turns, and no movie has dominated the precursor film awards.
That will keep the drama going until the end of Sunday's show. Any of three films could score best picture, according to Oscars pundits. One is "Anora," the story of a sex worker with a shot at a Cinderella story. The other two are "The Brutalist," about a Jewish immigrant and architect chasing the American dream, and "Conclave," which imagines the secret proceedings for choosing a pope.
Others in the best picture field include blockbuster musical "Wicked," a prequel to "The Wizard of Oz," and "A Complete Unknown," the Bob Dylan biopic starring Chalamet.
Netflix musical "Emilia Perez" heads into the ceremony with the most nominations. But its chances of victory dwindled when offensive social media posts surfaced from star Karla Sofia Gascon. The actress, the first openly transgender person nominated for an acting Oscar, disappeared from the awards circuit but is expected to attend Sunday's ceremony.
Her co-star, Zoe Saldana, is the favorite to win the supporting actress trophy for playing a fixer who helps a Mexican drug lord (Gascon) transition to a woman and start a new life.
Winners of the gold Oscar statuettes are chosen by the roughly 11,000 actors, producers, directors and film craftspeople who make up the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Behind the glitz, Hollywood is fighting a battle to keep its place at the center of the global film business. None of the 10 best picture contenders were filmed in Los Angeles, home to most major film companies for more than a century.
Supporting actor nominee Kieran Culkin is the favorite for his role as a man who travels with his cousin to Poland to study family history in "A Real Pain."
Best actor could go to either Chalamet or "The Brutalist" star Adrien Brody, according to awards experts.
Brody became the youngest best actor winner when he landed the prize at age 29 for "The Pianist" in 2002. Chalamet is nine months younger than Brody was at the time.
Best actress is widely expected to go to Moore for "The Substance," though one pundit said the category could produce an upset win for Brazil's Fernanda Torres of "I'm Still Here." The academy has increased its international membership, which could favor Torres, said Ian Sandwell, movies editor at Digital Spy.
"She could well be a surprise and the only one to take it away from Demi on the night," Sandwell said.
Producers scrapped the annual tradition of having musicians perform each of the nominated original songs, saying they wanted to focus instead on the songwriters.
They do promise many musical moments, including a performance by "Wicked" stars Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo and a tribute to music producer Quincy Jones, who died in November.
Also, expect some previously unannounced guests.
"We absolutely love the element of surprise," executive producer Raj Kapoor said.

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Sci-fi film 'Mickey 17' tops box office, but profitability long way off
Sci-fi film 'Mickey 17' tops box office, but profitability long way off

Voice of America

time09-03-2025

  • Voice of America

Sci-fi film 'Mickey 17' tops box office, but profitability long way off

'Parasite' filmmaker Bong Joon Ho's original science fiction film 'Mickey 17' opened in first place on the North American box office charts. According to studio estimates Sunday, the Robert Pattinson-led film earned $19.1 million in its first weekend in theaters, which was enough to dethrone 'Captain America: Brave New World' after a three-week reign. Overseas, 'Mickey 17' has already made $34.2 million, bringing its worldwide total to $53.3 million. But profitability for the film is a long way off: It cost a reported $118 million to produce, which does not account for millions spent on marketing and promotion. A week following the Oscars, where 'Anora' filmmaker Sean Baker made an impassioned speech about the importance of the theatrical experience – for filmmakers to keep making movies for the big screens, for distributors to focus on theatrical releases and for audiences to keep going — 'Mickey 17' is perhaps the perfect representation of this moment in the business, or at least an interesting case study. It's an original film from an Oscar-winning director led by a big star that was afforded a blockbuster budget and given a robust theatrical release by Warner Bros., one of the few major studios remaining. But despite all of that, and reviews that were mostly positive (79% on RottenTomatoes), audiences did not treat it as an event movie, and it may ultimately struggle to break even. Originally set for release in March 2024, Bong Joon Ho's follow-up to the Oscar-winning 'Parasite' faced several delays, which he has attributed to extenuating circumstances around the Hollywood strikes. Based on the novel 'Mickey7' by Edward Ashton, Pattinson plays an expendable employee who dies on missions and is re-printed time and time again. Steven Yeun, Naomi Ackie, Toni Collette and Mark Ruffalo also star. It opened in 3,807 locations domestically where it performed best in New York and Los Angeles. Premium large format showings, including IMAX screens, also accounted for nearly half of its opening weekend. Internationally, it did especially well in Korea, where it made an estimated $14.6 million. Second place went to 'Captain America: Brave New World,' which added $8.5 million from 3,480 locations in North America and $9.2 million internationally. Its global total currently rests at $370.8 million. Walt Disney Studios is on track to become the first studio to cross $1 billion in 2025 sometime this week. Holdovers 'Last Breath,' 'The Monkey' and 'Paddington in Peru' rounded out the top five. The weekend also had several other newcomers in 'In the Lost Lands,' a fantasy film from Paul W.S. Anderson starring Milla Jovovich and Dave Bautista, and Angel Studios' 'Rule Breakers,' about Afghani girls on a robotics team. Neon upped the theater count for 'Anora' to nearly 2,000 screens after it won five Oscars on Sunday, including best picture, best director and best actress. It earned an estimated $1.9 million (up 595% from last weekend), bringing its total grosses to $18.4 million. According to data from Comscore, the 2025 box office is up 1% from where it was last year as of this weekend and down 34.2% from the last pre-pandemic box office year of 2019. 'That is the rollercoaster that is the box office,' said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore. 'You have two or three down weeks; it can profoundly impact the bottom line and the percentage advantage. But it will come back again.' Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday. 1. 'Mickey 17,' $19.1 million. 2. 'Captain America: Brave New World,' $8.5 million. 3. 'Last Breath,' $4.2 million. 4. 'The Monkey,' $3.9 million. 5. 'Paddington in Peru,' $3.9 million. 6. 'Dog Man,' $3.5 million. 7. 'Anora,' $1.9 million. 8. 'Mufasa: The Lion King,' $1.7 million. 9. 'Rule Breakers,' $1.6 million. 10. 'In the Lost Land,' $1 million.

In his own words: Pope's views on resigning changed over time
In his own words: Pope's views on resigning changed over time

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time08-03-2025

  • Voice of America

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Pope Francis entered his fourth week in the hospital with double pneumonia, increasingly handing off his day-to-day duties to cardinals as questions swirl about the near- and long-term future of his papacy. On Saturday, the Vatican secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, took Francis' place to celebrate Mass for a group. On Sunday, another Vatican official, Cardinal Michael Czerny, is stepping in for the pope to celebrate a Holy Year Mass for volunteers. There is no reason why such delegation of papal obligations cannot continue, especially since Francis remains conscious and working from the hospital. But the 88-year-old pope has spoken about the possibility of resignation, although his position has changed over time, especially after the death of Pope Benedict XVI. Here's what Francis has said about pope's retiring, in his own words: On Benedict's resignation In his 2024 memoir, 'Life,' Francis recounted how he first learned about Benedict's resignation, the first in 600 years. He said a Vatican journalist had called him in Buenos Aires on Feb. 11, 2013, and told him the news as it was breaking. 'For a moment I was paralyzed. I could hardly believe what I was hearing,' Francis wrote in 'Life.' 'This was news I had never expected to receive in my lifetime: the resignation of a pope was unimaginable, although it was provided for in canon law. In the first few moments I said to myself, 'I must have misunderstood, it's not possible.' But then I understood that Benedict had surely meditated and prayed for a long time before making this brave and historic decision. Faced with his declining strength, he had evidently realized that the only irreplaceable element in the Church is the Holy Spirit, and the only Lord is Jesus Christ. This is why he was a great pope, humble and sincere, who loved the church until the end.' During the 10 years they lived together in the Vatican as a reigning and retired pope, Francis repeatedly praised Benedict's courage and humility for resigning and said he had 'opened the door' to future popes also stepping down. On the chance he might follow In a 2022 interview with Spain's ABC daily newspaper, Francis revealed that he had written a letter of resignation soon after he was elected pontiff. The letter laid out his resignation if medical problems impeded him from carrying out his duties or from freely announcing a resignation. The text of the letter has not been released, and it's not known what sort of medical impairment or lack of consciousness might trigger a resignation. Canon law has no provision for what to do if a pope is permanently impaired and canonists are divided on whether a prewritten letter of resignation would be valid. Canon 332.2 says that for a pope to resign his office, 'it is required for validity that the resignation is made freely and properly manifested but not that it is accepted by anyone.' Francis has repeated the existence of his resignation letter as recently as last year. But in 'Life,' which was published a year ago this month, Francis said he had no plans to resign and was at least at that time enjoying good health. 'But this is, I repeat, a distant possibility, because I truly do not have any cause serious enough to make me think of resigning,' he said. 'Some people may have hoped that sooner or later, perhaps after a stay in the hospital, I might make an announcement of that kind, but there is no risk of it: Thanks be to God, I enjoy good health, and as I have said, there are many projects to bring to fruition, God willing.' What changed after Benedict died Benedict died Dec. 31, 2022, at the age of 95. There were not a few problems during those 10 years of cohabitation, with traditionalists and conservatives looking to Benedict as their nostalgic point of reference. In his first interview with The Associated Press after the death, Francis again repeated that Benedict had opened the possibility of future retired popes. He repeated that if he were to follow, he would live outside the Vatican in a home for retired priests in the diocese of Rome and be referred to as the 'emeritus bishop of Rome' as opposed to 'emeritus pope.' Francis said that Benedict's decision to live in a converted monastery in the Vatican Gardens was a 'good intermediate solution,' but that future retired popes might want to do things differently. But a few weeks later, speaking to Congolese and South Sudanese priests, Francis changed tune. Freed from Benedict's presence, Francis pointed out the risks that papal resignations become the norm. He repeated that he had written a letter of resignation, but made clear the papacy was for life. 'I did it in case I have some health problem that prevents me from exercising my ministry and I am not fully conscious in order to resign,' he said, according to the closed-door comments reported by the Jesuit journal La Civilta Cattolica. 'However, this doesn't mean that resigning popes should become, let's say, a 'fashion,' or a normal thing. Benedict had the courage to do it because he didn't feel like going on because of his health. I for the moment do not have that on my agenda. I believe that the pope's ministry is ad vitam [for life]. I see no reason why it shouldn't be so. The ministry of the great patriarchs is always for life. And historical tradition is important. 'If, on the other hand, we listen to the gossip well, then we should change popes every six months!'

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