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Oscar Snubs and Surprises: Greta Gerwig, Leonardo DiCaprio and More

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Last year, the actress Andrea Riseborough employed a new kind of Oscar bid: Instead of waging a costly, monthslong awards campaign for her performance in the microbudget indie “To Leslie,” her team waited until the weeklong Oscar-voting window opened, then leveraged a group of famous friends that included Edward Norton, Gwyneth Paltrow and Sarah Paulson to tout the movie en masse on social media. It worked, earning Riseborough a surprise best actress nomination, and though she sought to pay it forward last week by throwing her muscle behind Ava DuVernay’s underseen “Origin,” the film was snubbed by the academy, while all 20 acting slots went to performers who had campaigned the old-fashioned way.

Hey, was this Oscar-nomination morning or Valentine’s Day? At least six couples scored his-and-hers nominations today, including the “Oppenheimer” director Christopher Nolan and his producer wife, Emma Thomas; the “Anatomy of a Fall” director Justine Triet and her partner and co-writer, Arthur Harari; the “May December” co-writers Samy Burch and Alex Mechanik; and Jared and Jerusha Hess, the directors of the animated short “Ninety-Five Senses.” “Barbie” was responsible for the other two pairs of lovebirds, with Gerwig and her husband, Noah Baumbach, nominated in the adapted-screenplay category and Margot Robbie and her husband, Tom Ackerley, earning nominations as the film’s producers.

As the nominations were read, “Killers of the Flower Moon” waxed and waned: Martin Scorsese’s period drama earned key nods for picture, director, actress (Lily Gladstone) and supporting actor (Robert De Niro), but missed an expected nomination for adapted screenplay and extended a continuing snub of lead actor Leonardo DiCaprio that began with the Screen Actors Guild. Still, the film did make Oscar history in several categories, as Gladstone became the first Native American nominated for best actress and Scorsese’s 10th directing nomination helped him pull ahead of Steven Spielberg as the most-nominated living director of all time.

Members of the short-film branch can often be hostile to directors they perceive as dilettantes, doling out snubs in recent years to big names like Taylor Swift (for “All Too Well: The Short Film”) and Pedro Almodóvar (for his Tilda Swinton short “The Human Voice”) in favor of lesser-known filmmakers struggling to break through. This year, voters from other branches were allowed to volunteer their services to nominate films for best live-action short, and this expanded group allowed in Wes Anderson, whose miniature “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar” bowed on Netflix in the fall. Almodóvar was not so lucky, snubbed once again for his western “Strange Way of Life,” starring Pedro Pascal and Ethan Hawke.

“Barbie” might have scored one more nomination if it weren’t for a rule change introduced in 2008 that forbade any film from placing more than two nominees in the original-song category. Though three of the tunes from “Barbie” qualified for the original-song shortlist announced in December — Dua Lipa’s disco-infused “Dance the Night,” the Ryan Gosling-sung “I’m Just Ken” and Billie Eilish’s ballad “What Was I Made For?” — only the latter two made it in. At least Lipa can console herself with the tune’s recent Grammy nomination for song of the year.

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