The Prague Post - Oscars return - with slap jokes and hot dog fingers on menu

EUR -
AED 4.199055
AFN 73.176343
ALL 93.736674
AMD 418.740472
ANG 2.047106
AOA 1049.030252
ARS 1698.78048
AUD 1.645562
AWG 2.058079
AZN 1.962695
BAM 1.955522
BBD 2.302573
BDT 140.901202
BGN 1.933315
BHD 0.431042
BIF 3402.231219
BMD 1.143377
BND 1.476597
BOB 7.916555
BRL 5.876164
BSD 1.143247
BTN 108.514523
BWP 15.440805
BYN 3.26545
BYR 22410.19818
BZD 2.299273
CAD 1.625505
CDF 2578.315681
CHF 0.921848
CLF 0.02691
CLP 1059.09933
CNY 7.770849
CNH 7.771508
COP 3836.820303
CRC 520.82596
CUC 1.143377
CUP 30.299503
CVE 110.250773
CZK 24.229483
DJF 203.583729
DKK 7.474539
DOP 67.510993
DZD 152.110291
EGP 55.856619
ERN 17.150662
ETB 183.392433
FJD 2.559682
FKP 0.855338
GBP 0.854109
GEL 3.012816
GGP 0.855338
GHS 13.050316
GIP 0.855338
GMD 84.046882
GNF 10026.70615
GTQ 8.722836
GYD 239.139141
HKD 8.966738
HNL 30.602917
HRK 7.534284
HTG 149.560047
HUF 353.886185
IDR 20456.680624
ILS 3.458774
IMP 0.855338
INR 108.506007
IQD 1497.6002
IRR 1572944.369234
ISK 143.791093
JEP 0.855338
JMD 180.054404
JOD 0.810647
JPY 185.114523
KES 147.826876
KGS 99.988572
KHR 4592.347155
KMF 493.362371
KPW 1029.040113
KRW 1730.764682
KWD 0.354092
KYD 0.952669
KZT 536.448431
LAK 25760.563196
LBP 102375.989365
LKR 382.758935
LRD 207.841362
LSL 18.569223
LTL 3.376097
LVL 0.691618
LYD 7.332958
MAD 10.69018
MDL 20.11514
MGA 4847.353298
MKD 61.641602
MMK 2400.427177
MNT 4099.700177
MOP 9.234387
MRU 45.622514
MUR 53.830285
MVR 17.665285
MWK 1981.944249
MXN 19.916778
MYR 4.654571
MZN 73.061641
NAD 18.569223
NGN 1567.273882
NIO 42.074387
NOK 11.213172
NPR 173.621318
NZD 2.008754
OMR 0.439627
PAB 1.143247
PEN 3.886481
PGK 5.024286
PHP 70.242257
PKR 317.844395
PLN 4.292479
PYG 6960.010569
QAR 4.167808
RON 5.233701
RSD 117.34716
RUB 87.180244
RWF 1675.369157
SAR 4.294937
SBD 9.258415
SCR 15.390648
SDG 686.598532
SEK 11.043311
SGD 1.476426
SHP 0.853647
SLE 27.86985
SLL 23976.057799
SOS 653.307126
SRD 43.097351
STD 23665.604914
STN 24.496732
SVC 10.003709
SYP 126.379909
SZL 18.558443
THB 38.033879
TJS 10.569136
TMT 4.001821
TND 3.381419
TOP 2.752979
TRY 53.555491
TTD 7.758897
TWD 36.705501
TZS 3001.369264
UAH 50.876512
UGX 4184.405147
USD 1.143377
UYU 46.013459
UZS 13738.047008
VES 761.736568
VND 30061.68013
VUV 137.371201
WST 3.164616
XAF 655.863763
XAG 0.018593
XAU 0.000275
XCD 3.090035
XCG 2.060307
XDR 0.815445
XOF 655.863763
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.066227
ZAR 18.561363
ZMK 10291.771981
ZMW 21.06419
ZWL 368.167075
  • RIO

    -1.3400

    92.24

    -1.45%

  • BCE

    0.6400

    21.51

    +2.98%

  • VOD

    0.2000

    13.28

    +1.51%

  • RBGPF

    0.1700

    68.32

    +0.25%

  • BCC

    -1.2800

    74

    -1.73%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    22.22

    -0.05%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    61.92

    +0.74%

  • NGG

    1.0200

    83.61

    +1.22%

  • GSK

    0.7200

    53.81

    +1.34%

  • BP

    0.8250

    38.215

    +2.16%

  • AZN

    2.3600

    192.52

    +1.23%

  • JRI

    -0.0350

    13.075

    -0.27%

  • RELX

    0.7500

    33.02

    +2.27%

  • RYCEF

    -0.6300

    19.46

    -3.24%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.07

    +0.05%

Oscars return - with slap jokes and hot dog fingers on menu
Oscars return - with slap jokes and hot dog fingers on menu / Photo: Patrick T. Fallon - AFP

Oscars return - with slap jokes and hot dog fingers on menu

The Oscars take place Sunday, with two big questions on everyone's lips: Will anyone get slapped? And can a wacky sci-fi featuring hot dog fingers and butt plugs really win best picture?

Text size:

While the answer to the first question is likely no -- Academy chiefs have a "crisis team" in place after Will Smith's misadventures last year -- the overwhelming response to the latter seems to be yes.

"Everything Everywhere All at Once," which follows a Chinese immigrant laundromat owner locked in battle with an inter-dimensional supervillain who happens to also be her own daughter, could not be further from your typical Oscar winner.

In a plot almost too bizarre to describe, Michelle Yeoh's heroine Evelyn must harness the power of her alter egos living in parallel universes, which feature hot dogs as human fingers, talking rocks and sex toys used as weapons and trophies.

But the film has dominated nearly every awards show in Hollywood, with its charismatic, predominantly Asian stars -- supported by the ever-popular Jamie Lee Curtis -- becoming the feel-good story of the season.

"It's a group of very likable people behind the movie who it's impossible to not be happy for," Hollywood Reporter awards columnist Scott Feinberg told AFP.

Having won top honors from Hollywood's directors, producers, actors and writers guilds, the film -- a bona fide, word-of-mouth, $100 million-grossing audience hit too -- is expected to dominate Oscars night.

But unlike in other categories, the movie could hit a stumbling block for best picture -- the evening's top prize -- due to the special "preferential" voting system, in which members rank films from best to worst.

The system punishes divisive films, and Feinberg said "many" voting members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences "just don't get" the madcap appeal of "Everything Everywhere."

If any rival can benefit, it is likely "All Quiet on the Western Front," Netflix's German-language World War I movie that dominated Britain's BAFTAs.

Another potential beneficiary is "Top Gun: Maverick," the long-awaited sequel from Tom Cruise -- no less a figure than Steven Spielberg recently said the actor and his film "might have saved the entire theatrical industry" from the pandemic.

- Toss-ups -

If best picture has a clear favorite, the acting races are incredibly tight.

"I can't remember a year, at least in the time I've been doing it, where three of the four acting categories were true toss-ups," said Feinberg.

In best actress, Cate Blanchett had long been favorite to win a third Oscar for "Tar," but "Everything Everywhere" love could propel Yeoh to a historic first win by an Asian woman in the category.

Best actor is a three-horse race between Austin Butler ("Elvis), Brendan Fraser ("The Whale") and Colin Farrell ("The Banshees of Inisherin").

And supporting actress may be even closer.

Angela Bassett, the first Marvel superhero actor ever nominated with "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever," is up against Curtis and "Banshees" star Kerry Condon.

One category does appear to be locked.

Ke Huy Quan, the former child star of "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" and "The Goonies," has won every best supporting actor prize going and looks near-certain to complete a comeback story for the ages.

- 'The Slap' -

Hanging over the ceremony is the specter of "The Slap" -- the shocking moment at last year's Oscars when Smith assaulted Chris Rock on stage for cracking a joke about his wife.

At a press conference this week, Oscars executive producer Molly McNearney said: "We're going to acknowledge it, and then we're going to move on."

For Feinberg, "the Academy has made it very clear that they don't find it funny and they would rather it not be discussed. But I guess you can't pretend it didn't happen."

Organizers were criticized last year for allowing Smith to remain at the show after the attack, and even collect his best actor award.

He was later banned from Oscars events for a decade, meaning he cannot present the best actress statuette this year, as is traditional.

A "crisis team" has been set up for the first time, to immediately respond to any unexpected developments.

Asked by AFP how this would work should something untoward happen, producer Glenn Weiss said "every major event I've worked on in the last 20 years has some kind of security."

"We've done the Democratic Convention, we've done the inauguration for multiple presidents. We put on the entertainment -- the Secret Service takes care of the other side."

The focus of his team, and host Jimmy Kimmel, is strictly "to keep it entertaining and hopefully keep you guys watching," he said.

- Blockbusters -

Whether people will keep watching is arguably the biggest question of all.

Partly thanks to "The Slap," last year's ratings improved from record lows, but remained well below their late 1990s peak, as interest in awards shows wanes and doomsayers continue to predict the demise of theatergoing.

This year, organizers hope nominations for widely watched blockbusters like "Top Gun: Maverick" and "Avatar: The Way of Water" will bring viewers back.

"If the public cares about the movies, they care about the Oscars, relatively more," said Feinberg.

The year "Titanic" won 11 Oscars including best picture, in 1998, recorded the highest ever ratings, with 57 million tuning in.

"That world is gone," said Feinberg. "But if it doesn't go up from last year, then the Academy has a big problem."

Y.Havel--TPP