Showbiz
‘Once Upon a Time...’ and ‘1917’ boosted by producer, director nods
Quentin Tarantino, Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio pose after winning Best Screenplay u00e2u20acu201d Motion Picture and Best Motion Picture u00e2u20acu201d Musical or Comedy for u00e2u20acu02dcOnce Upon a Time...in Hollywoodu00e2u20acu2122 at the 77th Golden Globe Awards January 5, 2020. u00e2u20acu201d AFP pic

LOS ANGELES, Jan 8 — Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood and Sam Mendes’ 1917 boosted their awards charges yesterday, collecting key nominations from Hollywood’s producing and directing guilds just days after bagging the top Golden Globes prizes.

Tarantino’s homage to 1960s Tinseltown and Mendes’ World War I thriller were among 10 films shortlisted by the Producers Guild of America.

The PGA gong is a reasonably reliable bellwether for the best picture prize at the Oscars, which are barely a month away. It has predicted 21 of the last 30 Academy Award winners, including the last two years with Green Book and The Shape of Water.

There were also PGA nods for dark comic book tale Joker, starring Joaquin Phoenix, and Martin Scorsese’s much-vaunted crime epic The Irishman, which left the Globes empty-handed.

South Korean black comedy Parasite, from Bong Joon-ho, was the only foreign language film to make the cut, while Greta Gerwig’s Little Women was the sole female-helmed movie. 

The Directors Guild of America also release its shortlist of five yesterday, with its top prize often an indicator for the best director Oscar.

Mendes, who won the best director Globe on Sunday, will face Scorsese, Tarantino, Bong, and Jojo Rabbit director Taika Waititi.

Jojo, a Nazi satire set during the Second World War, has left critics lukewarm, but won the influential Toronto film festival’s top honours. 

No women featured on the DGA shortlist, although three female directors earned separate first-time director nominations.

It follows the #BAFTAsSoWhite hashtag, which began trending earlier yesterday after Britain’s version of the Academy was criticised for a chronic lack of diversity in its own award nominations. 

BAFTA film chief Marc Samuelson described the lack of diversity as "infuriating.” 

The PGA awards will be held in Hollywood on January 18, followed by the DGAs on January 25.

The all-important Oscars conclude the awards calendar on February 9, with nominations due out this Monday. — AFP

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