Movie Bummys: Best Performances of 2018

Movie Bummys: Best Performances of 2018

I can’t tell if it means something or not that nine of my Top Ten are women. It certainly feels like 2018 was a banner year for roles for women in movies, though The Favourite and If Beale Street take up four of those slots. I thought it would be cool if the entire Top Ten was women, but Ethan Hawke forced his way in, which speaks to how undeniable that performance was.

Notable absences:

Willem Dafoe, At Eternity’s GateHaven’t seen it.

Anybody from Green BookStill haven’t seen it! Think I should?

Anybody from ViceThey were fine.

Glenn Close, The WifeHaven’t seen it.

Anyway, here were my favorite twenty contenders from last year:

Top Twenty

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20. Michael B. JordanBlack PantherJordan has been a great actor since his days as Wallace on The Wire, but his best roles have all come in movies directed by Ryan Coogler. His most soulful roles have probably been in the Creed movies, but his villain in Black Panther gave him a chance to demonstrate his complexity. Killmonger balanced two worlds in one man, representing the anger resulting from colonization as perfectly as T’Challa represents what should have been.

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19. Kathryn Hahn, Private LifeHahn was mired for so long in her career in terrible comedies and middling TV shows that it’s refreshing to see her put her craft to use in something as substantial as Tamara Jenkins’s Private Life. Hahn plays a writer hoping to become a mother as she and her husband (Paul Giamatti) struggle to conceive. She’s wonderful in her vulnerability.

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18. Brian Tyree HenryIf Beale Street Could TalkHis scene only last 12 minutes, but Henry’s impact on If Beale Street is indelible. He appears as an old friend of Fonny’s (Stephan James) and falls into telling him what it was like in prison. The darkness in Henry’s eyes as he tells his story falls over the entire movie and colors everything that happens afterward in a different shade.

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17. Elizabeth Debicki, WidowsAll the women in Widows lose their husbands, and the movie does a brilliant job of making it unclear whether or not that’s a wholly bad thing for any of them, but especially for Debicki’s Alice, whose husband (Jon Bernthal) abused her before his death. Debicki appears lower down on this list in The Tale, where she plays a very self-assured woman who is just a terrible person. In Widows, Debicki is the lease self-assured character in the movie, and the journey she goes on over the course of the story is essential to the movie’s themes.

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16. Brady JandreauThe RiderAmateur actors have supplied some of the great performances in film history, perhaps because the medium requires individual moments to be captured rather than a sustained performance like on the stage. Whatever the reason, Jandreau, whose life forms the basis for The Rider‘s story, breaks out in this beautiful movie. His naturalism is a plus for such a naturalistic film, but his compassion shines through more than anything.

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15. Steven YeunBurningYeun has a very punchable face in Burning. I mean that as a testament to his acting ability, I promise, because in interviews he is very likeable. His cocky character in Burning, who may or may not be a murderer but is most definitely a jackass, also captures your attention in every scene as Yeun imbues him with both charisma and a hint of authenticity. He seems like the kind of guy you’d hate until you talked to him one on one and he shared just enough vulnerability to make you doubt that he’s a jerk- but really he’s just a jerk.

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14. Natalie PortmanAnnihilation: At this point you know Annihilation is my favorite movie of the year, and Portman is a huge reason why. She has always occupied an interesting space in the movies as someone who is clearly a movie star but has no interest in following any sort of expected path for her career. Portman fascinates me in Annihilation, because she epitomizes that in-between space. She begins the movie as one thing, a principled doctor, and by the end of the movie both she and the audience discover she is something else entirely.

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13. Bradley CooperA Star Is Born: The memes probably killed Cooper’s chances at any of the big Oscars. It’s a shame, because while this isn’t Cooper’s best performance ever, it’s still a remarkable transformation. Jackson Maine’s and Ally’s love story is not believable, except that Cooper and Gaga make it believable. Cooper’s greatness was already established, but A Star Is Born should solidify that he belongs up there among the best actors of his generation.

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12. Hugh GrantPaddington 2Paddington 2 is an astoundingly good movie. There is very little space between it at No. 3 on my list and Annihilation at No. 1. But the movie is nothing without Hugh Grant’s villain, and believe me when I hyperbolize here: Grant is an absolute revelation. He chews the scenery, yes, but after a while you realize that Hugh Grant is the scenery.

THE FAVOURITE

11. Emma StoneThe FavouriteIt’s impossible to choose between the three actresses in The Favourite. A ranking system like this forces me to, but the truth is that Stone, Rachel Weisz, and Olivia Colman are equals, and their ranking here is related more to the meatiness of their respective roles than their talent level. Stone is given a lot more physical comedy in The Favourite than the other two and slightly less nuance in her character development. But No. 11 in all the performances I saw last year is nothing to sneeze at.

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10. Regina KingIf Beale Street Could TalkKing has been such a solid workhorse performer in mediocre material for much of her career, so it was a genuine pleasure to watch her run away with awards season, culminating in a moving win of last year’s Oscar for Actress in a Supporting Role. She was the only member of the Beale Street cast to be recognized throughout awards season. It makes some sense, since she has the showiest role in the movie. In one scene she travels all the way to Puerto Rico to plead for help from a stranger to help her save her daughter’s boyfriend from jail time. In another, in one of the movie’s core scenes of morality, King appeals to another mother’s sense of parental love to outweigh her misplaced piety.

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9. Elsie FisherEighth GradeI don’t remember middle school very fondly. Eighth Grade makes the case that things have just gotten worse for today’s preteens. Fisher plays an awkward, insecure eighth grader- that is to say, she plays an eighth grader. Director Bo Burnham and Fisher understand something most teen movies don’t get about teens today, that the teenage affect is performative. You have to get under the front that teenagers present to the world, especially in light of social media. Fisher finds both the face and the facade.

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8. Rachel WeiszThe FavouriteEmma Stone is a physical force in The Favourite, using her body in space for comedy in brilliant ways. Weisz, by contrast, is a coiled spring. Of the three main actors in this movie, Weisz’s character is the most in control. Even when she appears to be losing, she has the upper hand, and Weisz is a tension wire throughout. But like Stone, she too has an unexpected character arc, and the way Weisz changes her tension by the end of the movie is astounding.

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7. Lady GagaA Star Is BornThere’s something to be said for beginner’s luck. Gaga had appeared in projects before this (most notably American Horror Story), but nothing had really prepared audiences for how good she would be as the up-and-coming star, Ally, in A Star Is Born. It helps that Ally is basically Gaga herself from ten years ago, an artist struggling against the norms of her field to achieve her dream against the odds. You don’t have to buy into Gaga herself and what she’s been selling for the past decade to appreciate the level of talent she brings to this role. It’s tempting to comment on the rawness of her performance and assume that she’s not even really performing, but she’s better than that.

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6. Laura Dern, The Tale: The nature of the story that The Tale tells means that much of Laura Dern’s performance is passive. The Tale consists of Dern discovering that many of her memories of her childhood have been faulty, her mind faltering in her memories of trauma. Because of this, most of what we see of Dern is her parsing through the events surrounding two adults in her life. The movie largely follows her character’s childhood self. But the moments in which Dern takes action to discover the truth and to confront her abusers are devastating.

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5. KiKi LayneIf Beale Street Could TalkBeale Street suffered in the Oscar race from a late release date and a subpar advertising campaign. It’s the kind of movie that we’re going to be looking back on in ten years, marveling at the lack of awards it received. But no one came out of its awards season push looking more underserved than Kiki Layne. She is the heart of this movie – or, rather, her character’s love for Fonny (Stephan James) is the heart of this movie, and she sells that love so well. Layne sells it well at he beginning of the movie when they are first discovering each other. And she sells it well at the end, when she must show her inner strength as they fight to maintain their love while Fonny is in prison.

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4. Olivia ColmanThe FavouriteOf the three main performers in The Favourite, Colman has by far the hardest job. She is playing a character who is quite literally disturbed, but who has complete agency as the queen. When we first meet Queen Anne, she is set in her ways, obeying her lover, Sarah Churchill (Weisz), in matters of state. The introduction of Sarah’s cousin, Abigail (Stone), into court awakens something inside Anne. This manifests as greater energy, which is originally a good thing. But Colman imbues Anne with a bitterness that devolves into mania by the end of the film, and Colman finds the humanity in that inanity.

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3. Ethan HawkeFirst ReformedSome of the greatest hymns find their resting place in sorrow and despair. To me, Ethan Hawke’s performance is like those hymns: he finds the reality of hopelessness but grounds it in the things of God. That is to say, the depths that Hawke sinks to as Rev. Toller are real. But God meets us in that real place, and Hawke illustrates this in moments of pure transcendence. He’s helped along by some fantastical filmmaking from director Schrader. But the power in First Reformed rests firmly in how Hawke bridges the great divide that mirrors the one in all of our souls.

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2. Sakura AndôShopliftersThe films of Hirokazu Koreeda that have broken out in America have largely been quiet affairs. Shoplifters is different, and Sakura Andô is a big reason why. Koreeda films have had great actresses before; Kirin Kiki has been a mainstay in his movies as the grandmother character, and both Still Walking and After the Storm have strong female foils for their male protagonists. But the story Shoplifters tells, while sharing the screen evenly between Andô’s character and that of her male co-star (Lily Franky), finds most of its emotional resonance in Sakura Andô’s world-weary mother figure. Andô manages to strike a balance between jaded and wishful when her character’s family happens upon a mostly abandoned child and takes her in. When her family’s misdeeds finally catch up with them, its her reaction that sets the moral tone of the movie, and it’s unforgettable.

COLD WAR Joanna Kulig

1. Joanna KuligCold WarI’m not sure a sadder performance has ever been put on film. Hyperbole is necessary to describe Kulig’s performance, because it encompasses such a wide range of emotions. There are scenes in Cold War where Kulig’s musicality and spark remind you that a free life is worth living to the fullest. And then there are scenes in which her character, Zula, finds nothing worth living for under communist repression. Her co-star, Tomasz Kot, is also terrific, but its Kulig’s fire that lights up the film, even though it eventually burns the whole thing down. I don’t agree with where the two characters end up taking themselves, but because of Kulig’s performance, I never stopped believe their choices were anything less than legitimate.

Another Thirty Contenders (alphabetical by last name)

Alfonso Cuaron - ROMAYalitza AparicioRoma

 

 

 

2018performances22Emily BluntMary Poppins Returns

 

 

 

2018performances23Emily BluntA Quiet Place

 

 

 

 

2018performances24Chadwick BosemanBlack Panther

 

 

 

2018performances25Noah CentineoTo All the Boys I’ve Loved Before

 

 

 

2018performances26Toni ColletteHereditary

 

 

 

2018performances27Lana CondorTo All the Boys I’ve Loved Before

 

 

 

2018performances28Viola DavisWidows

 

 

 

 

2018performances29Marina de TaviraRoma

 

 

 

2018performances30Elizabeth Debicki, The Tale

 

 

 

 

2018performances31Adam DriverBlacKkKlansman

 

 

 

2018performances32Sam ElliottA Star Is Born

 

 

 

2018performances33Lily FrankyShoplifters

 

 

 

 

2018performances34Ryan GoslingFirst Man

 

 

 

 

2018performances35Richard E. GrantCan You Ever Forgive Me?

 

 

 

 

2018performances36Armie HammerSorry to Bother You

 

 

 

2018performances37Laura HarrierBlacKkKlansman

 

 

 

 

2018performances38Michael B. JordanCreed II

 

 

 

2018performances39Jong-seo JunBurning

 

 

 

THE BALLAD OF BUSTER SCRUGGSZoe KazanThe Ballad of Buster Scruggs

 

 

 

2018performances41Kirin KikiShoplifters

 

 

 

 

2018performances42Tomasz KotCold War

 

 

 

2018performances43Blake LivelyA Simple Favor

 

 

 

 

2018performances44Rami MalekBohemian Rhapsody

 

 

 

 

2018performances45Melissa McCarthyCan You Ever Forgive Me?

 

 

 

2018performances46Joaquin PhoenixYou Were Never Really Here

 

 

 

2018performances47Jason RitterThe Tale

 

 

 

2018performances48Lakeith StanfieldSorry to Bother You

 

 

 

2018performances49John David WashingtonBlacKkKlansman

 

 

 

 

2018performances50Michelle YeohCrazy Rich Asians

 

 

 

 

Past Top Tens

2017

Sally Hawkins, The Shape of Water
Timothée Chalamet, Call Me by Your Name
Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird
James McAvoy, Split
Meryl Streep, The Post
Nicole Kidman, The Beguiled
Daniel Kaluuya, Get Out
Zoe Kazan, The Big Sick
Colin Farrell, The Killing of a Sacred Deer
Robert Pattinson, Good Time

2016

Natalie Portman, Jackie
Mahershala Ali, Moonlight
Amy Adams, Arrival
Colin Farrell, The Lobster
Sasha Lane, American Honey
Michelle Williams, Manchester by the Sea
Emma Stone, La La Land
Andrew Garfield, Silence
Anya Taylor-Joy, The Witch
Casey Affleck, Manchester by the Sea

2015

Michael B. Jordan, Creed
Alicia Vikander, Ex Machina
Idris Elba, Beasts of No Nation
Juliette Binoche, Clouds of Sils Maria
Tom Hardy, The Revenant
Nina Hoss, Phoenix
Teyonah Parris, Chi-Raq
Brie Larson, Room
Leonardo DiCaprio, The Revenant
Maika Monroe, It Follows

2014

Michael Keaton, Birdman
Edward Norton, Birdman
Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
Scarlett Johansson, Under the Skin
Agata Trzebuchowska, Ida
J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
Emma Stone, Birdman
David Oyelowo, Selma
Bradley Cooper, American Sniper
Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Beyond the Lights

2013

Julie Delpy, Before Midnight
Lupita Nyong’o, 12 Years a Slave
Michael Fassbender, 12 Years a Slave
Chiwetel Ejiofor, 12 Years a Slave
Leonardo DiCaprio, The Great Gatsby
Tom Hanks, Captain Phillips
Brie Larson, Short Term 12
Jennifer Lawrence, American Hustle
Ethan Hawke, Before Midnight
Jake Gyllenhaal, Prisoners

WIDOWS Is a Success in Every Way but the Box Office

WIDOWS Is a Success in Every Way but the Box Office

A heist movie doesn’t have to be interesting beyond the heist. The great heist movies usually double down on their entertainment value. Ocean’s Eleven, probably the most recognizable of the genre, goes all in on the wit and charm of its cast and its screenplay. Heat, maybe the most technically proficient heist film, reveals its hand from the very beginning, relying on the gravitas of its star power (Al Pacino and Robert De Niro face off! Fireworks ensue!). And other movies, like A Fish Called Wanda, fold, giving the heist plot over to the cast’s high jinks.

Widows, on the other hand, is impeccably written and takes itself very seriously. Director Steve McQueen (12 Years a Slave) makes the case that a thrilling heist film can double as social commentary and deliver an actual emotional payoff for its characters. The movie lacks the lightness common to other movies in this genre, but McQueen makes up for it with a deftness of touches throughout the movie. There’s dark subject matter here, but he uses several cinematic flourishes to keep you on the edge of your seat rather than off it walking out of the theater.

Viola Davis stars as Veronica, the widow of the leader of a gang of thieves (Liam Neeson), who wants the wives of the rest of the gang (also killed in the same police incident that killed Veronica’s husband, Harry) to carry out the next heist Harry had planned to pay off the last person Harry stole from. Michelle Rodriguez and Elizabeth Debicki are two of the other widows, each of them wanting the money from the heist so they can make their own way in the world after their husband’s deaths. Brian Tyree Henry also stars as Jamal Manning, an ambitious Chicago politician who lost $2 million in Harry’s botched last heist. He and his brother (a chilling Daniel Kaluuya) threaten Veronica if she is unable to get them the money paid back.

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Colin Farrell also plays a role as Jamal’s sleazy opponent in an upcoming alderman election, Jack Mulligan, standing for the privileged white sector of Chicago politics that wants to keep power while actually representing a ward populated by black neighborhoods. There’s a much-celebrated long take in which Mulligan gets in a car after leading a poorly attended event in a black neighborhood and the camera follows the car from a poor area of town to Jack’s obviously wealthy neighborhood, clearly portraying the thin divide between the two versions of Chicago. The movie has more on its mind than just a heist, also dealing directly with the effects of police brutality and the brutal lengths to which women have to go to succeed in a man’s world.

Widows works on nearly every level. I was taken out of the movie a bit by Farrell’s shaky Chicago accent, but everything else landed for me, including a twist in the middle of the movie that changes the entire tenor of Veronica’s quest for some semblance of justice. It also worked for critics; Widows has a high score of 84 on Metacritic (a better aggregation of critic opinions than Rotten Tomatoes), and most of the critics I’ve read felt about the same as I did. Awards pundits were predicting Viola Davis would compete for Best Actress this awards season and that maybe the movie itself might land some big nominations as well, if it was even a little bit commercially successful.

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Well, it wasn’t. Audiences aren’t going to see Widows, and the audiences that are going to see Widows aren’t raving about it. You can usually look to marketing as the culprit in a case like this; audiences aren’t enticed by the trailer or the movie they see isn’t the one that was advertised to them. But that’s not the case for Widows. The trailer is a pretty good indication of the kind of movie you’re going to get: not quite an action movie and not quite a straight drama. I’m not sure what angle would have gotten more eyeballs on the screen; maybe the trailers could have played up the political subplot in an election year?

It’s really a shame, because Widows is one of the smartest studio movies of the year. Given that its studio, Twentieth Century Fox, guided The Hate U Give (a similarly thrilling, socially aware film) to a successful run, you’d think they could have done better by Widows. But some movies are destined to go under the radar and then rise to the top over time. That’s what Widows feels like to me: it’s got the makings of a slow-burn, cult favorite. Eventually, it’s going to be on listicles of the best heist movies next to Ocean’s Eleven and Heat. It deserves that company.

November 2018’s Contenders

November 2018’s Contenders

We’ve already looked at the contenders released in October and before, so now it’s time for November. November is stacked. We only had four total movies in October’s post, and there are seven this month. I’ll start with the long shots and end with the most likely nominees.

Production note: There aren’t odds out for all the craft awards, so I only included likely nominations and long shots for the categories I care about. Some of these movies will compete for things like Best Score or Best Costume Design, but I’m not focusing on those right now.

01At Eternity’s Gate (will release on November 16th)

Long shot: Actor

Willem Dafoe plays Vincent Van Gogh in a movie by Julian Schnabel (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly), whose directing style doesn’t lend itself to coherent performances. However, Dafoe is a respected veteran actor, much like Robert Redford in The Old Man & the Gun. If anyone crashes the nomination party, it’s one of those two. And after the terrible reviews of a certain rock star biopic, it’s looking like there might be some room…

02Boy Erased (will release on November 2nd)

Long shots: Picture, Actor, Supporting Actress, Supporting Actor, Adapted Screenplay

A movie starring Academy Award-nominated Lucas Hedges with support from the Academy Award-winning duo Nicole Kidman and Russell Crowe about a conversion therapy camp seems like an obvious contender, but when it premiered at Telluride in September, it was met with a muted reception. Directed by Joel Edgerton (you may have seen the well-received The Gift…I haven’t), this was apparently being edited until right before the premiere, suggesting Edgerton just didn’t really have the footage he needed to make an emotionally complete film. If anyone gets nominated, it will be Kidman, who is just churning out great performances at an unparalleled pace.

03Bohemian Rhapsody (will release on November 2nd)

Likely nomination: Actor

Long shot: Picture

Whoooooee. The reviews for this one are…well, they’re not good. Like really not good. Like so, so not good. Freddie Mercury’s story is so rich and full of life that it seems like you’d have to give only the bare minimum of effort to make an interesting and fun movie about him. This one did have some drama though, with director Bryan Singer being fired near the end of the shoot, so maybe it was unfair to expect a great movie. If there’s any silver lining though, Rami Malek is by all accounts a must-see. In the end, it comes down to this: Mamma Mia was a huge hit on Broadway, because jukebox musicals work. The average person wants to hear these Queen songs, and I doubt they want to think that hard about who Freddie Mercury was. This will still make money and get attention, and while it probably lost any shot at a Best Picture nomination, Malek is getting in.

04Widows (will release on November 16th)

Likely nominations: Picture, Actress

Long shots: Director, Supporting Actor, Adapted Screenplay

I’m so excited for this movie. Director Steve McQueen hasn’t made any movies since 12 Years a Slave won Best Picture in 2014. I was skeptical that McQueen’s spare, uncompromising style would fit a studio heist movie, but it was a crowd favorite at Toronto in September. The word is that Widows is exciting, yet still socially relevant- basically a prestige heist movie, which sounds like my jam. It would help its Best Picture chances if it was a sizable hit. And even Viola Davis isn’t a lock for Best Actress; if Alfonso Cuarón’s Roma is popular enough, star Yalitza Aparicio could sneak in ahead of her. But I’m optimistic.

05Green Book (will release on November 21st)

Likely nominations: Picture, Actor, Supporting Actor

Long shot: Director

I don’t know what to make of Green Book. The trailer is inscrutable. The Driving Miss Daisy comparisons are all too easy, and usually unfavorable. Viggo Mortensen’s voice is distracting. I can’t tell if it’s trying to be funny or not. And what is Peter Farrelly (director of Dumb and Dumber, as well as the acclaimed follow-up Dumb and Dumber To) doing directing a contender? But Green Book was the winner of the People’s Choice Award in Toronto in September, and the winner of that award has gone on to be nominated for Best Picture nine out of the last ten years. So congratulations to the director of Osmosis Jones and Shallow Hal.

06If Beale Street Could Talk (will release on November 30th)

Likely nominations: Picture, Director, Supporting Actress, Adapted Screenplay, Cinematography

Long shot: Actress

This is another movie that I couldn’t be more excited about. I kind of liked Moonlight, so I was looking forward to the next thing director Barry Jenkins made. When I heard it would be based on a novel by James Baldwin, I was skeptical anyone could translate his ideas to the screen. But the trailer looks like vintage Jenkins, poetry in motion. And word out of Toronto is that it’s every bit Moonlight‘s equal. I have my doubts that it will connect with audiences. The story is relevant, speaking to the failings of the prison system, but Jenkins’s style is off-putting enough to alienate a mainstream audiences. In the end, I think Jenkins has built enough goodwill with the newly diverse Academy membership. If Beale Street may not win anything in the end (except Regina King for Supporting Actress), it’ll at least score a bunch of nominations.

07The Favourite (will release on November 23rd)

Likely nominations: Picture, Director, Actress, Supporting Actress (2), Original Screenplay, Cinematography

It’s just as likely that you’re totally surprised that The Favourite is a favorite as that you’re not surprised in the slightest. On one hand, this is a period piece starring two Oscar-winning actresses (Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz) about the English monarchy, which the Academy loves: 18 actors have been nominated for playing British royals, and four of them have won. On the other hand, this is directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, who directed two of the weirder movies to get awards attention in recent memory, The Lobster and The Killing of a Sacred Deer.

But those movies did receive awards attention, and The Lobster even garnered an Original Screenplay nomination in 2017. Apparently The Favourite tones down Lanthimos’s more stilted screenplay tendencies for a story that’s more accessible and more obviously comedic. Expect The Favourite to rack up nominations, but if it still doesn’t feel like a mainstream movie, I doubt it will win any.