HomeEntertainmentWhy Oppenheimer will likely be the 2024 Oscars Best Picture winner?

Why Oppenheimer will likely be the 2024 Oscars Best Picture winner?

The preferential ballot or ranked choice voting system for the Oscars Best Picture can benefit a film like Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer. Even if it’s not everyone’s absolute favourite, voters who rank it highly on their ballots can contribute to its overall score and a strong performance across the board can lead to victory.

March 10, 2024 / 20:21 IST
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Starring Cillian Murphy in the titular role of Robert Oppenheimer, Christopher Nolan's biographical thriller is the frontrunner for winning Best Picture at the 96th Academy Awards, on March 10, 2024.
Starring Cillian Murphy in the titular role of Robert Oppenheimer, Christopher Nolan's biographical thriller is the frontrunner for winning Best Picture at the 96th Academy Awards, on March 10, 2024.

Christopher Nolan is 12 films old. And while he commands a phenomenal fan following, most prominently in America and India. The indie film master, despite being nominated for eight Oscars for his previous films such as Memento (2000), Inception (2010), and Dunkirk (2017), hasn’t yet won an Academy Award in any category. His 12th feature is in all likelihood going to change that. Nolan’s Oppenheimer, the biographical thriller based on the life of the “American Promethues” J Robert Oppenheimer (played by Cillian Murphy), aka “the father of the atomic bomb”, which released in theatres on July 12 last year, alongside Greta Gerwig’s Barbie — with Barbenheimer becoming a cultural thing, a cinematic battle — is the frontrunner for winning Best Picture at the 2024 Academy Awards, on March 10 at Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, for a number of reasons.

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The 2024 nominees for the Oscars Best Picture are…

The 10 Best Picture nominees are The Holdovers (produced by Mark Johnson); American Fiction (co-produced by Ben LeClair, Nikos Karamigios, Cord Jefferson and Jermaine Johnson); Anatomy of a Fall (by Marie-Ange Luciani and David Thion); Barbie (David Heyman, Margot Robbie, Tom Ackerley and Robbie Brenner); Killers of the Flower Moon (by Dan Friedkin, Bradley Thomas, Martin Scorsese and Daniel Lupi); Maestro (by Bradley Cooper, Steven Spielberg, Fred Berner, Amy Durning and Kristie Macosko Krieger); Past Lives (by David Hinojosa, Christine Vachon and Pamela Koffler); Poor Things (by Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Yorgos Lanthimos and Emma Stone); The Zone of Interest (by James Wilson); and, the most likely to win, Oppenheimer (by Emma Thomas, Charles Roven and Christopher Nolan, Producers).