Guardian film 

Oscars 2024: how to watch, nominations, predictions, and timetable

The 96th Academy Awards are almost upon us – here’s our guide to tuning in at home on Sunday and who we reckon will win the top prizes
  
  


The run-up to this year’s Oscars has been smoother than in recent years: no major turmoil to report other than the “snub” for Barbie – 2023’s biggest hit arrives with eight nominations, but Greta Gerwig was passed over entirely in the directing category. Well, this is a democracy, and the votes don’t just go with money. (No one is getting in a huff about The Super Mario Bros Movie, last year’s number two, not coming to the big show.)

The Oscars are fully aware that the bigger the movies they reward, the better the audience figures are for the TV broadcast (their main money-spinner), so they plan to rinse Barbie for everything they can. They will be giving 65 Kens to frug alongside Ryan Gosling as he warbles I’m Just Ken (nominated for best song), while Billie Eilish (also nominated, a much more likely winner) will sing her hit song What Was I Made For?

Another element of Oscar “news” is the nudge to the start time: the ceremony is getting underway an hour earlier and is aiming for a snappy three and a half hour running time. Host Jimmy Kimmel – the universally acknowledged safe pair of hands – will have to do a lot of shooing, but unless they give the playoff orchestra leader an electric cattle prod, the chances of keeping things that trim are slim to bupkis.

What not many people are talking about, though, is the likelihood of significant political protest, given the activity at the Grammys, the Independent Spirit awards and elsewhere. Security around the venue has been “beefed up”, but the Oscars have said they won’t interfere with winners’ speeches – though, unless Mark Ruffalo manages to get past Robert Downey Jr for best supporting actor, it’s hard to see where an incendiary Vanessa Redgrave-type speech is going to come from. James Wilson, producer of The Zone of Interest, has a bit of form in the area though.

How to watch

In the US: The E! channel gets things under way with Brunch at the Oscars at 12:00 PT/15:00 ET, then moves to Live from the Red Carpet show at 14:00 PT/17:00 ET. ABC starts its coverage with The Oscars Red Carpet Show at 15:30 PT/18:30 ET, before the ceremony begins at 16:00 PT/19:00 ET. It is due to finish at 19:30 PT/22:30 ET.

In the UK: ITV has nabbed the rights this year, with its streaming platform ITVX starting up at 21:30 GMT and its broadcast channel ITV1 stepping in with Oscars Live at 22:15 GMT.

In Australia: 7Bravo is carrying E!’s red carpet coverage from 08:00 AEDT. Channel 7 is picking up Red Carpet Live at 09:30 AEDT, with the ceremony show getting under way at 10:00 AEDT.

Preparation

There’s a lot to read about the Oscars. Here’s the best of it

What’s in those goodie bags?
• Guardian writers step up for their favourite best picture nominee
The Oscar short films reviewed.
• Stuart Heritage assesses what the “brutally honest” Oscar voter interviews can tell us.
• Argue over which Christopher Nolan film is the best.
• The art of a memorable Oscar speech.
• Emma Stone would do anything for an Oscar win – and we mean anything.
The awards-bait movies that got away.
• Interviews with all the key players: Greta Gerwig, Jeffrey Wright, Justine Triet, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Lily Gladstone, Cillian Murphy, Yorgos Lanthimos and Jonathan Glazer.

Final predictions

Some of these have been dead certs for weeks; others less so. Everyone’s had their say, including our own Peter Bradshaw, so here’s a last roll of the dice.

Best picture Oppenheimer
Best actor Cillian Murphy
Best actress Lily Gladstone
Best supporting actor Robert Downey Jr
Best supporting actress Da’Vine Joy Randolph
Best director Christopher Nolan
Best song What Was I Made For?
Best adapted screenplay American Fiction
Best original screenplay Anatomy of a Fall
Best documentary 20 Days in Mariupol
Best animated film The Boy and the Heron
Best international film The Zone of Interest

 

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