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All you need to know about this year’s Oscar nominees

LOS ANGELES: The 90th Oscars take place on Sunday, with The Shape of Water and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri expected to do battle for the main prizes.

But the statistical quirks that the annual event throws up can be as intriguing as tracking which movie wins the most statuettes.

Here are some fun facts and figures about this year’s list of nominees:

Female filmmakers recognised

The 7,000-plus voters of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences managed to remember this year that women make movies too.

Greta Gerwig, recognized for Lady Bird, is only the fifth female Best Director nominee, and the first since Kathryn Bigelow won for The Hurt Locker in 2010.

Rachel Morrison, the director of photography on Mudbound, is the first woman ever to receive a nomination for Best Cinematography.

Long live Queen Meryl

Meryl Streep has increased her lead as the most nominated performer in history with her 21st nod for Steven Spielberg’s The Post.

Her three wins were for Kramer vs Kramer (1979), Sophie’s Choice (1982) and The Iron Lady (2011).

Three-time Oscar winners Daniel Day-Lewis and Meryl Streep, shown here at the 2013 ceremony

All hail the maestro

John Williams has added to his record number of music scoring nominations with his 46th for Star Wars: The Last Jedi.

His overall total of 51 nominations, including five for Original Song, is the most for any living person, and second only to Walt Disney at 59.

Kobe Bryant: Oscars MVP?

Retired basketball superstar Kobe Bryant is an Oscar nominee thanks to his collaboration with artist Glen Keane and composer John Williams for the short Dear Basketball.

“What? This is beyond the realm of imagination,” Bryant, 39, tweeted following the announcement.

Kobe Bryant

Awards prediction website Gold Derby says Bryant is the odds-on favourite to win the Oscar for best animated short, but such a victory may not please everyone.

In the wake of the Harvey Weinstein scandal, it will be a reminder that the Los Angeles Lakers legend was arrested over the suspected rape of a 19-year-old hotel worker in Colorado in 2003.

Bryant admitted to a sexual encounter but insisted it was consensual. The criminal case was dropped when the accuser refused to testify, but Bryant faced a civil suit.

As part of an out-of-court settlement, he publicly apologized to his accuser but admitted no guilt.

Snubs and surprises

Among this year’s big snubs were Golden Globes nominees Armie Hammer (Call Me by Your Name) and Hong Chau (Downsizing), as well as the blockbuster hit Wonder Woman, which didn’t get a single nomination.

Mudbound and The Big Sick were conspicuously absent from the best picture category, though they received other nominations.

Steven Spielberg (The Post) and Martin McDonagh (Three Billboards) were both left out of the best director category, despite helming two of the most acclaimed movies of the year.

On the other side of the coin, Denzel Washington picked up a surprise eighth nomination for acting, expanding his own record as the most-nominated black actor in Oscars history. He has won twice, for Glory and Training Day.

Washington also had a nomination last year for best picture for Fences, which he directed and co-produced.

Time’s Up 

The Academy Awards show has also set aside a moment to feature the Time’s Up campaign against workplace sexual misconduct during the Oscars ceremony.

Organisers of the campaign said they have worked with the producers of Sunday’s ceremony to bring attention to their cause, Hollywood trade publications Variety and The Hollywood Reporter said.

“There’s a moment that’s been carved out,” Variety quoted film director Ava DuVernay as saying.

However, the organisers did not go into details, and producers of the Oscars show did not respond to a request for comment.

The Oscars ceremony on Sunday will give the Time’s Up campaign its biggest public moment, reaching an audience of A-list celebrities and millions watching on television worldwide.

Time’s Up, launched on January 1, is a legal defense fund which aims to support people reporting sexual harassment in the entertainment industry and beyond.

It has the support of some of Hollywood’s biggest female stars, including Reese Witherspoon, Natalie Portman, DuVernay and“Grey’s Anatomy” producer Shonda Rhimes.

 

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