Joaquin Phoenix Wins First Oscar for Joker

Joaquin Phoenix has finally taken home an Academy Award, and he has the Clown Prince of Crime to thank.

Phoenix won the Oscar for Actor in a Leading Role for his performance in Joker. This was Phoenix’s fourth Oscar nomination and first win, having previously been nominated for 2001’s Gladiator, 2006’s Walk the Line and 2013’s The Master.

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Phoenix has the distinction of being only the second actor to win an Oscar for playing a superhero character. The first? None other than Heath Ledger, who won a posthumous Best Supporting Actor award for his performance as Joker in 2008’s The Dark Knight. The Academy clearly love that Joker.

Joker was nominated for a total of 11 Academy Awards, but only took home one other Oscar, for Best Original Score. Phoenix also won big at the Screen Actors Guild Awards in January.

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Click here to see all the 2020 Oscar winners.

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Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on Twitter.

Parasite Makes History At The Oscars

Director Bong Joon-ho’s thriller Parasite won four Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, at the 92nd Academy Awards and did something no film in history has ever done.

Parasite is the first non-English language movie to win Best Picture. It beat out the other Best Picture nominees, which included JoJo Rabbit, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, The Irishman, Joker, Marriage Story, 1917, Little Women, and Ford v Ferrari.

Parasite also won Best International Feature Film and Best Original Screenplay as part of its four Academy Award wins.

Parasite also won the top honor at the Cannes Films Festival in May, winning the highly coveted Palme d’Or award. It’s the first movie since 1995’s Marty to win the Palme d’Or and Best Picture.

Parasite has made more than $165 million worldwide at the box office. Here at GameSpot, we also named Parasite our No. 1 movie of 2019.

“Parasite is the kind of film that will stick with you for days, and make you want to talk about it,” Chastity Vicencio wrote. “It’s thrilling, stressful, at times hilarious, and haunting. It takes you on an unforgettable ride resulting in an ending that you will never see coming. The class divide at the heart of the film is something that is universally relatable, and will make you question your own biases. Bong Joon-ho is a master filmmaker.”

Following the huge success of Parasite, HBO announced that it was adapting the movie for a new TV series. The limited series will add more depth and detail to the story. “So I had all these key ideas accumulated from when I started writing the script,” the director said. “I just couldn’t include all those ideas in the two-hour running time of the film, so they’re all stored in my iPad and my goal with this limited series is to create a six-hour-long film.”

For more on the 92nd Academy Awards, check out GameSpot’s full rundown of all the winners.

Oscar Winners 2020: The Complete List

The 92nd Academy Awards were held Sunday, February  9, 2020, wherein the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences will announce their picks for the best films and artists of 2019 during a hostless ceremony broadcast on ABC. Although Joker lead the pack with 11 nominations, it only took home two (for Best Actor and Original Score). No, Oscar night clearly belonged to Parasite, which became the first foreign language film to win Best Picture.

Parasite was also the first South Korean film to win Best Original Screenplay, Best International Feature Film, and Best Director (for Bong Joon-ho).

Our staff had overwhelmingly predicted that 1917 will win Best Picture, even though the majority of us stated their preference was that Parasite should win instead. (IGN named Parasite as the Best Movie of 2019, after all.) So needless to say there are a lot of happy IGN folks tonight!

The Oscar Winners 2020: The Complete List

We will be updating this list of nominees throughout the Oscars broadcast, with the winners marked in bold red.

The nominations in full are as follows:

Best Picture

  • Parasite (WINNER)
  • Ford V Ferrari
  • The Irishman
  • Jojo Rabbit
  • Joker
  • Little Women
  • Marriage Story
  • 1917
  • Once Upon a Time In… Hollywood

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Directing

  • Bong Joon-ho, Parasite (WINNER)
  • Martin Scorsese, The Irishman
  • Todd Phillips, Joker
  • Sam Mendes, 1917
  • Quentin Tarantino, Once Upon a Time In… Hollywood

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Actor in a Leading Role

  • Joaquin Phoenix, Joker (WINNER)
  • Antonio Banderas, Pain and Glory
  • Leonardo DiCaprio, Once Upon a Time In… Hollywood
  • Adam Driver, Marriage Story
  • Jonathan Pryce, The Two Popes

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Actress in a Leading Role

  • Renée Zellweger, Judy (WINNER)
  • Cynthia Erivo, Harriet
  • Scarlett Johansson, Marriage Story
  • Saoirse Ronan, Little Women
  • Charlize Theron, Bombshell
Renée Zellweger in Judy.
Renée Zellweger in Judy.

 

Actor in a Supporting Role

  • Brad Pitt, Once Upon a Time… In Hollywood (WINNER)
  • Tom Hanks, A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
  • Anthony Hopkins, The Two Popes
  • Al Pacino, The Irishman
  • Joe Pesci, The Irishman
Brad Pitt in Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood.

Actress in a Supporting Role

  • Laura Dern, Marriage Story (WINNER)
  • Kathy Bates, Richard Jewell
  • Scarlett Johansson, Jojo Rabbit
  • Florence Pugh, Little Women
  • Margot Robbie, Bombshell
laura-dernmarriage-story
Laura Dern, Marriage Story

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Adapted Screenplay

  • Jojo Rabbit (WINNER)
  • The Irishman
  • Joker
  • Little Women
  • The Two Popes

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Original Screenplay

  • Parasite (WINNER)
  • Knives Out
  • Marriage Story
  • 1917
  • Once Upon a Time In… Hollywood

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Cinematography

  • 1917 (WINNER)
  • The Irishman
  • Joker
  • The Lighthouse
  • Once Upon a Time In… Hollywood

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Animated Feature Film

  • Toy Story 4 (WINNER)
  • How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World
  • I Lost My Body
  • Klaus
  • Missing Link

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Original Score

  • Joker (WINNER)
  • Little Women
  • Marriage Story
  • 1917
  • Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker

Original Song

  • “(I’m Gonna) Love Me Again”, Rocketman (Winner)
  • “I Can’t Let You Throw Yourself Away”, Toy Story 4
  • “I’m Standing With You”, Breakthrough
  • “Into The Unknown”, Frozen II
  • “Stand Up”, Harriet

Production Design

  • Once Upon a Time In… Hollywood (WINNER)
  • The Irishman
  • Jojo Rabbit
  • 1917
  • Parasite

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Film Editing

  • Ford v Ferrari (WINNER)
  • The Irishman
  • Jojo Rabbit
  • Joker
  • Parasite

Documentary Feature

  • American Factory (WINNER)
  • The Cave
  • The Edge of Democracy
  • For Sama
  • Honeyland

Documentary Short Subject

  • Learning To Skateboard In a Warzone (If You’re a Girl) (WINNER)
  • In The Absence
  • Life Overtakes Me
  • St. Louis Superman
  • Walk Run Cha-Cha

International Feature Film

  • Parasite (South Korea) (WINNER)
  • Corpus Christi (Poland)
  • Holy Land (North Macedonia)
  • Les Misérables (France)
  • Pain and Glory (Spain)

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Makeup and Hairstyling

  • Bombshell (WINNER)
  • Joker
  • Judy
  • Maleficent: Mistress of Evil
  • 1917

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Visual Effects

  • 1917 (WINNER)
  • Avengers: Endgame
  • The Irishman
  • The Lion King
  • Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker

Costume Design

  • Little Women (WINNER)
  • The Irishman
  • Jojo Rabbit
  • Joker
  • Once Upon a Time In… Hollywood
Little Women

Animated Short Film

  • Hair Love (WINNER)
  • Dcera (Daughter)
  • Kitbull
  • Memorable
  • Sister

Live Action Short Film

  • The Neighbors’ Window (WINNER)
  • Brotherhood
  • Nefta Football Club
  • Saria
  • A Sister

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Sound Editing

  • Ford V Ferrari (WINNER)
  • Joker
  • 1917
  • Once Upon a Time In… Hollywood
  • Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker

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Sound Mixing

  • 1917 (WINNER)
  • Ad Astra
  • Ford v Ferrari
  • Joker
  • Once Upon a Time In… Hollywood

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Let us know your thoughts on the Oscar winners in the comments below!

Joaquin Phoenix Wins Best Actor Award For Joker

Tonight at the 92nd Academy Awards, Joaquin Phoenix won the coveted Best Actor in a Leading Role award for his performance as The Joker in Todd Phillips’ billion-dollar DC movie, Joker.

Phoenix is the second actor to win the Best Actor award for portraying Joker, following Heath Ledger. He won the award posthumously for his performance in 2008’s The Dark Knight.

Phoenix gave a blistering and haunting performance in Joker as Arthur Fleck in a story that saw his character evolve from a down-on-his-luck professional clown to become a murdering madman. He was widely expected to win the Best Actor award over the other nominees, which included Antonio Banderas (Pain and Glory), Leonardo DiCaprio (Once Upon a Time in Hollywood), Adam Driver (Marriage Story), and Jonathan Pryce (The Two Popes).

In addition to Best Actor for Joaquin Phoenix, Joker took home the Academy Award for Best Score by Hildur Guðnadóttir. Phoenix gave an impassioned acceptance speech where he spoke about how he would like to see people grow together in unity. You can watch it below.

For more on the 92nd Academy Awards, check out GameSpot’s full rundown of all the winners.

Joaquin Phoenix Acceptance Speech

Oscars: James Corden and Rebel Wilson Presented While Dressed Like Their Cats Characters

Cats may have have been a critically-panned box office bust that caused Universal to lose a cool $100 million, but that doesn’t mean some of its stars can’t have a sense of humor about it.

At tonight’s Oscars ceremony, James Corden and Rebel Wilson presented an award together, walking out on stage dressed like their Cats characters Bustopher Jones and Jennyanydots, respectively.

“As cast members of the motion picture Cats,” Wilson opened, to hearty laughs from the crowd.

“Nobody more than us knows the importance of good visual effects,” Corden said.

That’s right, the two of them were there to present the Oscar for Best Visual Effects. Yes, after Cats notoriously was rereleased, just a few days after its premiere, with an update to the film’s rushed, slapdash visuals

Watch their bit below…

Also, check out why Eminem performing “Lose Yourself” at this year’s Oscars was so meaningful, and how Jojo Rabbit’s Taika Waititi made history by winning Best Adapted Screenplay.

Click here to see the full list of Oscar nominees and winners.

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Matt Fowler is a writer for IGN and a member of the Television Critics Association. Follow him on Twitter at @TheMattFowler and Facebook at Facebook.com/MattBFowler.

Eminem Returned to the Oscars After Refusing to Perform 17 Years Ago

Almost two decades ago, Eminem won an Oscar for the song “Lose Yourself,” from the Curtis Hanson movie he starred in, 8 Mile.

He didn’t, however, attend the 2003 Academy Awards ceremony after being nominated, and was reportedly asleep when Barbra Streisand read his name aloud on TV, as the winner of the Best Original Song award.

This year, after Hamilton creator/composer Lin-Manuel Miranda introduced a montage of famous movie songs (which featured Eminem’s movie character B-Rabbit walking out toward a stage), Eminem arrived live and in-person to perform “Lose Yourself.”

Here’s Eminem, Marshall Mathers himself, tweeting about his surprise performance…

Earlier in the evening, Taika Waititi made history after winning an Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay for Jojo Rabbit.

Click here to see the full list of Oscar nominees and winners.

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Matt Fowler is a writer for IGN and a member of the Television Critics Association. Follow him on Twitter at @TheMattFowler and Facebook at Facebook.com/MattBFowler.

The Outsider: Episode 6 Review

Warning: Full spoilers for The Outsider’s sixth episode follow…

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The Outsider’s sixth chapter, “The One About the Yiddish Vampire,” delivered the show’s first true chokepoint: A cliffhanger-style ending that felt like the thrilling culmination of Holly’s investigation so far. El Coco is forcing Jack to kill Holly. We don’t know how it plans to, possibly, cover up her murder, but the creature is desperate enough to actually pull the trigger, so to speak, on taking her off the game board. And we leave the episode with Holly driving off to a remote location with a severely busted-face Jack.

This episode also brought every major character up to speed. Everyone’s on the same page now, for better or worse. With her arrival in Georgia, Holly presented her findings and far-out theories and then we watched the others scatter and deal, emotionally, with her spooky “show and tell” session.

FALLOUT FROM HOLLY’S FINDINGS

We don’t have to sift through all of what Holly put forth and displayed to Ralph, Jeannie, Howard, and the rest (even Glory Maitland, who was there on Jeannie’s invite), since it’s everything we’ve learned over the past three episodes. Even the new information she discovered on her harrowing bus trip into town (thanks to El Coco trying to wreck the entire ride) about Dayton’s “Renfield,” Tracy Powell – Heath’s first cousin. Tracy was an active accomplice, capturing the girls and delivering them to the monster. He’d obviously been picked and controlled before the murders and not after the fact, like Jack. Unless Jack was picked to help the next murders, which Claude is supposed to be framed for.

Anyhow, the meeting wasn’t just interesting because everyone got to be in the same room as Holly, but everyone absorbed the information very differently. Ralph was frustrated and restless. Glory was infuriated. Jeannie, Yunis and Alec (as we’d find out later) were actually very open to the El Coco madness. Jeannie because of her own experiences, obviously. Yunis, because of his upbringing and natural belief in the supernatural. Alec too was someone who’s given a lot of thought to the unexplained and whether or not true demons were real. Much to the chagrin of Howard.

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And then there was Jack, listening to Holly describe most of everything he’s currently going through as El Coco’s servant. So the room of listeners itself was actually more fun to behold than Holly finally laying all the cards out on the table.

Then everyone retreated to their stations, acting on the new information. Glory — poor Glory — surrendered. She gave serious thought to the consideration that Terry was actually guilty. If not just so she could accept it and start to, maybe, move on with her life somehow. Yunis, in the meantime, started tailing Claude. Good for him. He’s probably going to end up dead, but at least he’s the only person on the right track at the moment. He heard Holly’s findings and took them to heart, knowing that the main goal was to stop El Coco from killing again (and escaping).

Jeannie and Holly (who’s staying with the Andersons), began to dig deeper into Jeannie’s visit, uncovering the creature’s residue on the chair it sat in when threatening Jeannie. It can project itself, in a very light physical form, it would seem. It’s visits are very real.

It’s how Ralph dealt with Holly and her theories that was the most fascinating here, however.

THE SON ALSO RISES

After Ralph finished talking to his department-mandated therapist, where he used the dream he had of his son as a distracting talking point, he was forced to actually consider the possibility that El Coco appeared to him as Derek. Whether it was a dream or not, Ralph’s now so buried under crazy evidence he can’t process that he’s wondering if he was targeted by the entity.

He sees the patterns. He’s studied the melty-face drawings, including new ones drafted by Glory’s daughter. He doesn’t know what to do. So he lashed out at Holly, who he bitterly dismissed as a hack charlatan akin to a phony psychic. Obviously, Ralph could have dreamed about Derek and it’s just a coincidence that El Coco can readily appear to people in other forms. We saw it happen this week when it was Tracy on the bus, and then with Jack seeing his dead mother – and getting the holy hell beaten out of him by her. El Coco, as Jack’s mom, could readily beat the s*** out of him! It couldn’t just be something happening in his mind, Fight Club-style, right? There was so much blood. And specific attacks to the face, like kicks.

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Anyhow, that brutal beatdown, aside from feeling very Stephen King (a monster taking the form of a loved one), felt a teensy bit incongruous with the rest of the show. Not just because former SNL star Denny Dillon, who played the mom, is usually in comedies, but because it was very violent. Sure, this show has violence, but not as much as you’d think. It’s rooted in violence and the story makes its nest there, but displays aren’t all that common. This beating went on for a while, and it messed Jack up so much that his face was overly suspicious the next day. I get that we want Holly to know something’s wrong, but it still took the neck boils to truly signal to her that something was off and she was in danger.

Regardless, my point is the show wants us to seriously consider that Ralph was visited by El Coco, because we’ve seen it use its powers similarly with other people, but it might not have. It’s enough that Ralph thinks it could have though. And, in the end, if Ralph finds out that El Coco did try to use Derek against him, it might be the realization that finally galvanizes his energies against the monster.

Taika Waititi Wins First Academy Award for Jojo Rabbit

Director Taika Waititi took home his first Academy Award, as his satirical WWII movie Jojo Rabbit won Best Adapted Screenplay at the 2020 Academy Awards.

This is Waititi’s first Oscar win out of three total nominations. In addition to being nominated for Best Short film for 2004’s Two Cars, One Road, Waititi is also in the running for Best Director for Jojo.

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Jojo Rabbit faced some stiff competition this year, ultimately triumphing over other contenders like The Irishman, Joker, Little Women and The Two Popes. The win is certainly well-deserved. In our review of Jojo Rabbit, we said Waititi “strikes just the right balance between comedy, tragedy, and drama, the result being a very funny WWII film that nevertheless carries an incredibly important message about the here and now.”

Waititi also makes history as the first person of Maori descent and the first indigenous person to win an Oscar. In his acceptance speech, Waititi said, “I want to dedicate this to all the indigenous kids in the world who want to do art and dance and write stories, original stories.”

An Oscar win should be a nice feather in Waititi’s cap as he prepares to return to the Marvel Cinematic Universe for Thor: Love and Thunder, a sequel he’ll both direct and reprise his role as Korg. We’re keeping an eye on social media to see how Waititi’s fellow MCU veterans react to this big win, so check back for updates soon.

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Waititi’s upcoming projects also include the live-action Akira adaptation, which Waititi promises is still coming despite having to be postponed in favor of Thor 4.

Click here to see the full list of Oscar nominees and winners. 

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Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on Twitter.

Natalie Portman’s Oscar Attire Featured Names of Snubbed Women Directors

Natalie Portman’s Oscars outfit drew a lot of attention this evening as it made a bold statement about the state of the Best Director category.

As a reminder, at the Academy Awards two years ago, while presenting the Best Director award with Ron Howard, Portman memorably pointed out the lack of female nominees.

At tonight’s awards ceremony, Portman arrived in a black and gold dress, adorned by a black cape that featured the names of women directors who many felt should have been nominated for Best Director this year.

The names listed, in gold embroidery, were Lorene Scafaria (Hustlers), Lulu Wang (The Farewell), Greta Gerwig (Little Women), Marielle Heller (A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood), Mati Diop (Atlantics), Melina Matsoukas (Queen & Slim), Alma Har’el (Honey Boy), and Céline Sciamma (Portrait of a Lady on Fire).

Photo Credit: Amy Sussman / Getty Images.
Photo Credit: Amy Sussman / Getty Images.

Portman’s next projects include voicing her MCU character Jane Foster for Disney+’s animated Marvel’s What If? series and then bringing Jane back to the Thor franchise in 2021’s Thor: Love and Thunder – where Jane will be The Mighty Thor.

Check out all the winners of this year’s Oscars so far, including Brad Pitt and Toy Story 4.

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Matt Fowler is a writer for IGN and a member of the Television Critics Association. Follow him on Twitter at @TheMattFowler and Facebook at Facebook.com/MattBFowler.

Alita: Battle Angel Sequel Fan Campaign Buzzes the Oscars

The fan campaign to get a sequel to 2019’s Alita: Battle Angel has expanded to the Oscars.

According to a tweet from writer and producer Steven Santos, a plane trailing the message #AlitaSequel and #AlitaArmy has been spotted flying around Hollywood during the Academy Awards red carpet.

This comes after fans brought the hashtags up to trending status on Twitter recently, as reported by ScreenRant. There were over 19k tweets which included images, fan art, memes, clips, and more from fans to celebrate the movie and help push for a sequel to be made.

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Alita: Battle Angel wasn’t as successful as many had hoped, especially in the US. Combined with James Cameron’s decision to focus on his Avatar sequels over this project, fans are concerned they won’t get a sequel to this film.

At IGN, we happened to think the movie was pretty great and it even made it into our best reviewed movies of 2019. For those who do want to see a sequel, a good move is to vote with your wallet and pick up the film which released on digital, Blu-Ray, and DVD last July.

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[poilib element=”accentDivider”]Hope Corrigan is an Australian freelance writer for IGN who really enjoyed the aesthetic of the first movie. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.