LOS ANGELES, March 9 ― Netflix and Amazon bagged more than half the film nominations chosen by Hollywood's top producers yesterday, tightening the streaming platforms' grip on an awards season turned upside-down by the pandemic.

Six of the 10 movies shortlisted by the Producers Guild of America (PGA) were released by streamers ― up from two last year ― as movie theatres only begin to reopen in New York and remain closed in Los Angeles after a year of Covid-19 restrictions.

Netflix's courtroom drama The Trial of the Chicago 7 is seen as the streaming giant's best shot at top awards glory, and is joined on the list by Mank and Ma Rainey's Black Bottom.

Amazon, which failed to land a nomination last year, has Golden Globe-winning comedy sequel Borat Subsequent Moviefilm, as well as One Night in Miami and Sound of Metal.

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Neither company has ever won the top prize at the PGAs or the season-crowning Oscars.

The prestigious PGAs, chosen by the 8,000-odd Hollywood movers and shakers of the producers' union, have predicted 10 of the past 13 winners of the Academy Award for best picture.

In a year that saw major studios postpone several big-hitting titles, intimate US road movie Nomadland from Disney-owned Searchlight leads the charge for Hollywood's traditional powerhouses, winning the Golden Globes' top prize last month and earning a PGA nod.

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Warner is represented on the list by Judas and the Black Messiah and Universal by Promising Young Woman.

Korean-American immigrant drama Minari from A24 is the only indie-label movie to make the cut.

And notable absences included western News of the World starring Tom Hanks and Spike Lee's Da 5 Bloods.

The PGAs also honour television, with newcomers such as Bridgerton and Ted Lasso joining perennial favorites including The Crown on the shortlists.

Winners will be announced at a virtual ceremony on March 24, around a month before the delayed Oscars. ― AFP