• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Dubai News TV
  • UAE
    • Abu Dhabi
    • Dubai
    • Ajman
  • REGION
    • Middle East
    • GCC
    • MENA
      • Syria
    • Asia
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • India
      • Iran
      • Israel
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • Africa
    • Europe
  • REAL ESTATE
  • Opinion
    • EDITOR’S CHOICE
    • The Big Read
    • Viewpoint
    • EXCLUSIVE
  • World
  • Business
    • Local Business
    • Markets
  • TECH
  • HEALTH
  • Horoscope
  • PR
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
  • UAE
    • Abu Dhabi
    • Dubai
    • Ajman
  • REGION
    • Middle East
    • GCC
    • MENA
      • Syria
    • Asia
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • India
      • Iran
      • Israel
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • Africa
    • Europe
  • REAL ESTATE
  • Opinion
    • EDITOR’S CHOICE
    • The Big Read
    • Viewpoint
    • EXCLUSIVE
  • World
  • Business
    • Local Business
    • Markets
  • TECH
  • HEALTH
  • Horoscope
  • PR
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Dubai News
No Result
View All Result
  • Top News
  • UAE
  • Dubai
  • World
  • Business
  • GOLD/FOREX
  • REGION
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FEATURED
  • EDITOR’S CHOICE
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • Road To Financial Freedom
  • Health
  • Sports

And the Oscar goes to … a movie most people have seen

by Web Desk
2 years ago
in Entertainment, Top News
And the Oscar goes to ... a movie most people have seen
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

NEW YORK (news agencies) — The Oscars are poised to do something on Sunday that they haven’t done in a very long time: Hand its top award to a blockbuster.

After years of favoring smaller movies like “The Shape of Water” and “Nomadland, ” the clear best-picture favorite “Oppenheimer” — with just shy of $1 billion in tickets sold — is steam rolling toward the kind of big-movie dominance the Academy Awards hasn’t seen in two decades.

You have to go back to Ben Affleck’s “Argo” (2012) to find a best-picture winner that’s grossed more than $100 million domestically. Academy voters’ tastes have instead largely favored smaller independently produced films like “Moonlight,” “Nomadland” and “CODA,” an Apple release with zero reported box office in North America. Last year, the scrappy, distinctly un-Oscar-like indie “Everything Everywhere All at Once” played the role of awards-season underdog until it became an unlikely Academy Awards heavyweight.

But even “Argo,” which walked away with three Oscars after grossing $232.3 million worldwide on a $44.5 million budget, isn’t much of a corollary to “Oppenheimer.” For that, you need to rewind to the 2004 Oscars, where Peter Jackson’s “The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King” — a $1.16 billion smash — took home 11 Oscars. That’s more the kind of wall-to-wall sweep expected Sunday for Christopher Nolan’s J. Robert Oppenheimer biopic.

It’s a reversal all the more striking because the 20 years since “Return of the King” have belonged, overwhelmingly, to the blockbuster. It’s a period that’s included “Avatar,” “Black Panther,” “Top Gun: Maverick,” “The Dark Knight” and the entire run of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It’s a film culture shift that not everyone in Hollywood — including, most famously, this year’s best director nominee Martin Scorsese — has loved. That’s surely been a factor in Oscar voters embracing less traditional choices in recent years, like the 2020 best-picture champ “Parasite,” the first non-English language winner.

For years, big has been bad at the Academy Awards — a trend the film academy has watched unfold with sporadic panic. After Nolan’s “The Dark Knight” failed to be nominated for best picture in 2009, the academy expanded the best-picture category beyond five films. (It’s now 10.) In 2018, the academy proposed a new “popular film” award, but within weeks that was nixed when Oscar voters rebelled against it.

Such schisms are as old as the Oscars. The first Academy Awards, in 1929, split its top award in two: Outstanding Picture (which went to William Wellman’s dazzling WWI fighter plane action film “Wings”) and Best Unique and Artistic Picture (which went to F. W. Murnau’s silent masterpiece “Sunrise”).

When more widely seen movies are in contention at the Oscars, more people have historically tuned in. The most-watched Academy Awards ever was when “Titanic” ruled the 1998 Oscars, winning 11 trophies. Some 57.3 million viewers watched James Cameron declare “I’m the king of the world!”

This year, there are not one but two billion-dollar blockbusters in the Oscar mix, in “Oppenheimer” and “Barbie,” raising hopes for a telecast that has in recent years hovered closer to a third of the “Titanic”-year viewership. Last year’s ceremony was watched by 18.7 million viewers.

“It makes it 10 times easier,” host Jimmy Kimmel said in a recent interview. “When nobody has seen the movies — and that has happened, including years when I’ve hosted — you have no point of reference to go from.”

It can sometimes be overstated how much having a blockbuster to root for impacts Oscar ratings. The more significant factors tend to be long-term ones, like the decline of linear television and the overall splintering of pop culture. Year-to-year fluctuations are usually less drastic. Nearly as many tuned in to see Clint Eastwood’s “Million Dollar Baby” win best picture in 2005 (42.1 million) as they did the year prior for “Return of the King” (43.5 million).

“Barbenheimer,” though, was a rare phenomenon, and one the Oscars — which lavished a combined 21 nominations on the two films — was eager to embrace. That’s especially because the success of the two films stood in such stark contrast to what the majority in the film industry is currently experiencing.

Both films launched just as actors walked out in a strike that consumed the industry in a protracted battle over streaming, artificial intelligence and the future of the business. Labor strife isn’t over, either; this week, craft workers with IATSE and Teamsters Local 399 began negotiations with studios, talks that much of the industry will be closely watching even as it celebrates at the Oscars.

More than that, “Oppenheimer” stands for a kind of filmmaking that many fear is increasingly obsolete in a Hollywood that’s struggling to find its way forward amid widespread contraction. Streaming revenues have lagged for all but Netflix. Production delays brought on by the strike has led to a downturn in moviegoing in 2024. The sheer, spectacular accomplishment of “Oppenheimer” — a talky three-hour drama that outperformed “Ant-Man” and “Aquaman,” combined — is a bright, shining exception.

“It certainly confirms our faith in what studio filmmaking can be,” Nolan said the morning of Oscar nominations.

The Oscars are always where Hollywood celebrates an idea of itself. Last year, Hollywood told itself with “Everything Everywhere All at Once” that, yes, it could still be boldly original. When “Parasite” triumphed, it was a chest-thump for Hollywood’s expanding internationalism.

This year, Hollywood will hang its hat on an old-fashioned kind of winner — a studio epic — full of awe for what’s possible and dread for what may be to come.

Follow news agencies Film Writer Jake Coyle at:

Share21Tweet13Send

Related Posts

TCL Sets New Standard for Immersive Sports Viewing with Cutting-Edge QD-Mini LED Technology
Sports

TCL Sets New Standard for Immersive Sports Viewing with Cutting-Edge QD-Mini LED Technology

February 27, 2026
Pakistan Declares ‘Open War’ on Afghanistan as Deadly Strikes Hit Kabul and Kandahar
Top News

Pakistan Declares ‘Open War’ on Afghanistan as Deadly Strikes Hit Kabul and Kandahar

February 27, 2026
UAE ‘Strongly Condemns’ Deadly Terrorist Attacks on Police in Pakistan
Top News

UAE ‘Strongly Condemns’ Deadly Terrorist Attacks on Police in Pakistan

February 26, 2026
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and EU Nations Condemn Israel’s West Bank Settlement Expansion
Top News

Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and EU Nations Condemn Israel’s West Bank Settlement Expansion

February 26, 2026
Ramadan 2026: Expert Tips to Beat Nicotine and Caffeine Cravings as Withdrawal Eases
Entertainment

Ramadan 2026: Expert Tips to Beat Nicotine and Caffeine Cravings as Withdrawal Eases

February 26, 2026
Gold and Silver Prices Dip Slightly as Geopolitical Jitters Cap Losses
Business

Gold and Silver Prices Dip Slightly as Geopolitical Jitters Cap Losses

February 26, 2026
Load More
  • 50,000 Palestinians Defy Restrictions to Pray at Al-Aqsa Mosque on First Ramadan Night

    50,000 Palestinians Defy Restrictions to Pray at Al-Aqsa Mosque on First Ramadan Night

    55 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Lebanon President Condemns ‘Blatant Aggression’ After Israeli Strikes Kill 12, Threatening Fragile Ceasefire

    55 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Managing personal liquidity in 7 easy steps

    324 shares
    Share 130 Tweet 81
  • Rubio to Brief Netanyahu on US-Iran Talks Amid Military Build-Up in Region

    56 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Pakistan Air Strikes in Afghanistan Kill Dozens, Including Children, Escalating Border Tensions

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Dubai Office Market Hits 11-Year High with Dh13.1 Billion in Sales

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • South Africa Announce Themselves as T20 World Cup Favourites with Dominant 76-Run Demolition of India

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Gold Jewellery in UAE vs India: Where Should NRIs Buy? A Cost Comparison

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Humbert Ousts Defending Champion Tsitsipas in Dubai First-Round Blockbuster

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Eze Haunts Tottenham Again as Arsenal Thrash Spurs to Extend Premier League Lead

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
United Arab Emirates Dirham Exchange Rate

About Dubai News TV

Dubai News is an English language news and current affairs digital TV channel established to provide round-the-clock news, information, and knowledge about local, regional, and international events. It covers a wide range of topics, including politics, business, technology, culture, and sports, ensuring viewers stay informed and engaged with the latest developments. The channel aims to deliver accurate, unbiased reporting and insightful analysis, catering to a diverse audience with a global perspective.

Categories

  • Abu Dhabi (43)
  • Afghanistan (32)
  • Africa (29)
  • Ajman (5)
  • Artificial Intelligence (4)
  • Asia (82)
  • Bangladesh (87)
  • Business and Economy (751)
  • Cricket (11)
  • Donald Trump (6)
  • Dubai (157)
  • EDITOR'S CHOICE (10)
  • Education (26)
  • Entertainment (1,933)
  • ENVIRONMENT (13)
  • Europe (91)
  • EXCLUSIVE (4)
  • FEATURED (40)
  • Featured Stories (38)
  • Global Business (2,239)
  • Gold & Forex (1)
  • Healthcare (9)
  • heath (10)
  • Horoscope (619)
  • Hospitality (1)
  • India (176)
  • International (8,571)
  • Iran (19)
  • Israel (16)
  • Israel-Palestine conflict (76)
  • Life Style (1)
  • Lifestyle (1,372)
    • Health (8)
  • Local Business (1,614)
  • Markets (11)
  • MENA (817)
  • Military & Defense (8)
  • News (11,375)
    • Business (2,145)
    • Politics (12)
    • World (8,615)
      • Games (2)
      • Travel (6)
  • Opinion (25)
  • Outreach Initiatives (1)
  • Pakistan (286)
  • Personal Finance (7)
  • Philippine (11)
  • Philippines (7)
  • PR (157)
  • REAL ESTATE (169)
  • REGION (4,214)
    • GCC (206)
    • Middle East (3,284)
  • Road To Financial Freedom (7)
  • Russia (28)
  • Russia-Ukraine war (73)
  • Saudi Arabia (15)
  • Sharjah (12)
  • South Asia (91)
  • Sports (1,214)
  • Sri Lanka (45)
  • Startup (7)
  • Syria (7)
  • Tech (497)
  • Technology (488)
  • The Big Read (6)
  • Top News (24,642)
  • turkey (9)
  • TV Shows (7)
  • UAE (6,837)
  • Uncategorized (10)
  • Video Posts (11)
  • Viewpoint (8)

Latest News

Your daily horoscope: February 27, 2026
Horoscope

Your daily horoscope: February 27, 2026

by Web Desk
February 27, 2026
0

IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAYA Mars-Uranus link on your birthday will endow you with huge amounts of physical, mental and...

Read moreDetails
Gaza Ceasefire Crumbles Further as Israeli Strikes Kill at Least 5, Officials Say

Gaza Ceasefire Crumbles Further as Israeli Strikes Kill at Least 5, Officials Say

February 27, 2026
TCL Sets New Standard for Immersive Sports Viewing with Cutting-Edge QD-Mini LED Technology

TCL Sets New Standard for Immersive Sports Viewing with Cutting-Edge QD-Mini LED Technology

February 27, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2024 Dubai News TV - Powerd by Global Biz International.

No Result
View All Result
  • Top News
  • UAE
  • Dubai
  • World
  • Business
  • GOLD/FOREX
  • REGION
    • South Asia
      • Pakistan
      • India
    • GCC
    • Middle East
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FEATURED
    • Featured Stories
  • EDITOR’S CHOICE
    • The Big Read
    • Viewpoint
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • Road To Financial Freedom
  • Health
  • Sports

© 2024 Dubai News TV - Powerd by Global Biz International.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.