Michelle Yeoh and Cate Blanchett films top indie Spirit Awards nominations | Inquirer Entertainment

Michelle Yeoh and Cate Blanchett films top indie Spirit Awards nominations

/ 11:09 AM November 23, 2022

Malaysian actress Michelle Yeoh attends the premiere for Netflix’s “The School for Good and Evil” at the Regency Village Theatre in Westwood, California, on Oct. 18, 2022. Michelle Yeoh’s “Everything Everywhere All At Once” led the Spirit Awards nominations Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2022. PHOTO: Michael Tran / AFP

LOS ANGELES, USA—Michelle Yeoh’s “Everything Everywhere All At Once” and Cate Blanchett’s “Tar” led the Spirit Awards nominations Tuesday, Nov. 22, underlining their credentials as the indie films to watch this awards season.

The Film Independent Spirit Awards, which consider only low- and mid-budget movies, gave eight nods to Yeoh’s hit sci-fi about surreal parallel universes, and seven to Blanchett’s drama set in the cut-throat world of classical music.

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Both were nominated for best feature, along with Sarah Polley’s “Women Talking,” which will receive the prestigious Robert Altman Award for a film’s director, casting director and overall cast.

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All three movies are widely tipped to feature at next year’s Oscars, which take place in March, just one week after the Spirit Awards winners are revealed in an annual ceremony by a Los Angeles beach.

“Everything Everywhere All At Once” has grossed over $100 million worldwide, making it leading indie distributor A24’s biggest hit.

The absurdist film portrays a Chinese-American immigrant family undergoing a tax audit, who are quickly drawn into an inter-dimensional battle to save the multiverse from a powerful villain.

“Tar” follows the rise and fall of a fictional, globally renowned conductor who will stop at nothing to succeed in her high-flying career.

“Women Talking,” a drama about women in an ultraconservative religious colony debating how to deal with systemic sexual abuse, features an ensemble cast including Claire Foy, Rooney Mara and Frances McDormand.

Rounding out the Spirit Awards’ best feature category were Timothee Chalamet’s cannibal love story “Bones and All,” and African refugee drama “Our Father, the Devil.”

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But Chalamet was among several eligible A-listers who notably missed out on acting nominations, along with Jennifer Lawrence (“Causeway”) and Brendan Fraser, whose acclaimed film “The Whale” earned zero nominations.

Double Oscar-winner Blanchett and Yeoh both received lead actor nominations, while Mark Rylance (“Bones and All”) and Jamie Lee Curtis (Everything Everywhere All At Once”) earned supporting nods.

Films with budgets over $30 million are not considered for the Spirit Awards, which aim to celebrate independent filmmaking.

Film Independent president Josh Welsh said Tuesday the nominations had looked for “uniqueness of vision, original provocative subject matter, economy of means, and diversity both on screen and off.”

For the first time, the awards have opted for gender-neutral acting awards.

The Spirit Awards take place in a giant tent by Santa Monica beach on March 4.

Oscars voting ends three days later, and the season-capping 95th Academy Awards take place March 12.  /ra

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TAGS: Cate Blanchett, Entertainment, films, Michelle Yeoh

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