Sundance-Supported ‘Brooklyn’ Leads the Way with Three Oscar Nominations

Brooklyn

Nate von Zumwalt

Nominations for the 88th Academy Awards were announced this morning and John Crowley’s Brooklyn, which premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival, led all Sundance-supported films with three nominees, including Best Picture. Saoirse Ronan garnered a Best Actress nomination for her role in the film as Eilis, a young woman forced to choose between the allure of love in New York City and her abandoned roots back home in Ireland. On the nonfiction side, Matthew Heinemen’s perilous – and increasingly pertinent – journey into the world of Mexican drug cartels received a Best Documentary nod along with fellow 2015 Sundance docs The Look of Silence and What Happened, Miss Simone?

See below for the full list of Sundance-supported projects and artists receving Oscar nods.

Best Picture

Brooklyn

Best Actress

Saoirse Ronan, Brooklyn

Best Adapted Screenplay

Brooklyn

Best Animated Feature

Shaun the Sheep

Best Foreign Language Film

Embrace the Serpent

Best Documentary Feature

Cartel Land

The Look of Silence

What Happened, Miss Simone?

Best Original Song

“Manta Ray,” Racing Extinction

“Til It Happens to You,” The Hunting Ground

Best Animated Short Film

World of Tomorrow

Other notable Sundance-related nominations include Anomalisa, which will screen as part of the Special Events category at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival and will be followed by a conversation with filmmakers Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson (Behind the Scenes of Anomalisa). Also, Asif Kapadia, director of Best Documentary nominee Amy, is on this year’s Sundance Film Festival jury and directed this year’s Premieres section official selection, Ali & Nino.

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Alexis Chikaeze as Kai in 'Miss Juneteenth,' coming to digital platforms June 19

Channing Godfrey Peoples on a Bittersweet ‘Miss Juneteenth’ Release and the Urgency of Portraying Black Humanity on Screen

After premiering at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, Channing Godfrey Peoples’s debut feature is hitting digital platforms this Juneteenth—the day for which the film is named and which is very close to the director’s heart. “I feel like I’ve been living Miss Juneteenth my whole life,” she says.
The June 19 holiday—which commemorates the day slavery was finally abolished in Texas (more than two years after the 1863 Emancipation Proclamation was issued)—is celebrated in her hometown of Fort Worth with a deep sense of reverence and community, with barbecues, a parade, and a scholarship pageant for young Black women.

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