
-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
Netanyahu meets Trump for tariff and Gaza talks
-
German police earn their stripes with zebra-loaded van stop
-
'Bloodbath': Spooked Republicans warn Trump over US tariffs
-
Belgian prince loses legal quest for social security
-
France detains alleged Romanian royal wanted in home country
-
Netanyahu to plead with Trump for tariff break
-
JPMorgan Chase CEO warns tariffs will slow growth
-
Stocks sink again as Trump holds firm on tariffs
-
Honda executive resigns over 'inappropriate conduct'
-
'Alarming' microplastic pollution in Europe's great rivers
-
Japan emperor visits World War II battleground Iwo Jima
-
'Everyone is losing money': Hong Kong investors rattled by market rout
-
China vows to stay 'safe and promising land' for foreign investment
-
Stocks savaged as China retaliation to Trump tariffs fans trade war
-
Belgian prince seeks social security on top of allowance
-
European airlines hit turbulence over Western Sahara flights
-
Boeing faces new civil trial over 2019 Ethiopian Airlines crash
-
Equities savaged as China retaliation to Trump tariffs fans trade war
-
Netanyahu and Trump to talk tariffs, Iran and Gaza
-
New app hopes to empower artists against AI
-
GA-ASI Expands Targeting Capability for MQ-9B SeaGuardian(R)
-
World scrambles to temper Trump tariffs: White House
-
Torrential rains kill dozens in DR Congo capital
-
Vietnam seeks US tariff delay as economic growth slows in first quarter
-
UK readies to protect industry as US tariffs upend global order: Starmer
-
Vietnam economic growth slows in first quarter as US tariffs loom
-
The scientist rewriting DNA, and the future of medicine
-
'Anxious': US farmers see tariffs threaten earnings
-
Nostalgia fuels UK boom in vintage video game repairs
-
Snappy birthday: Germany's Leica camera turns 100
-
India's Modi in Sri Lanka for defence and energy deals
-
Fractious Republicans seek unity over Trump tax cuts
-
Trump's global tariff takes effect in dramatic US trade shift
-
'I don't have a voice in my head': Life with no inner monologue
-
Lula admits 'still a lot to do' for Indigenous Brazilians
-
California to defy Trump's tariffs to allay global trade fears
-
Sean 'Diddy' Combs faces more charges ahead of criminal trial
-
Intercommunal violence kills dozens in central Nigeria
-
Trump goads China as global trade war escalates
-
How can the EU respond to Trump tariffs?
-
Canada loses jobs for first time in 3 years as US tariffs bite
-
Nations divided ahead of decisive week for shipping emissions
-
US job growth strong in March but Trump tariff impact still to come
-
Stocks, oil slump as China retaliates and Trump digs in heels
-
US hiring beats expectations in March as tariff uncertainty brews
-
Where things stand in the US-China trade war
-
UK spy agency MI5 reveals fruity secrets in new show
-
Taiwan earmarks $2.7 bn to help industries hit by US tariffs
-
Greece nixes Acropolis shoot for 'Poor Things' director
RBGPF | 1.48% | 69.02 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.82% | 22.109 | $ | |
RELX | -4.95% | 45.89 | $ | |
GSK | -5.11% | 34.755 | $ | |
NGG | -3.57% | 63.655 | $ | |
RIO | 0.29% | 54.83 | $ | |
BTI | -0.45% | 39.68 | $ | |
CMSD | -1.24% | 22.55 | $ | |
AZN | -4.05% | 65.795 | $ | |
BCC | -1.31% | 94.205 | $ | |
SCS | -2.32% | 10.34 | $ | |
BP | -3.24% | 27.49 | $ | |
JRI | -4.91% | 11.4 | $ | |
BCE | -2.53% | 22.15 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.36% | 8.22 | $ | |
VOD | -1.25% | 8.395 | $ |

Streamers come of age after 'CODA' Oscar win
Almost buried by the attention surrounding The Slap at the Oscars was a historic first: a streaming film won best picture, taking Hollywood's top prize from the legacy studios that have long dominated the town.
If Will Smith had not mounted the stage and hit Chris Rock, the best picture win for Apple TV+ crowd-pleaser "CODA" would have been the talk of Tinseltown ever since the Academy Awards.
"There was clearly going to be a streaming service break through that barrier. And I think it's an important break," said Kendall Phillips, a Syracuse University professor who specializes in pop culture.
"I do think it's going to open up a much wider body of films to be taken more seriously by Academy voters."
For months before the ceremony at the Dolby Theatre, streaming's coming of age had appeared likely to be the main storyline from the 2022 Oscars.
The smart money for best picture was initially on arty Western "The Power of the Dog," Jane Campion's brooding meditation on toxic masculinity.
The film, starring Benedict Cumberbatch as a sexually repressed cowboy, was a Netflix title that the streamer -- the biggest player on the small screen -- had spent heavily to promote as it chased Hollywood's ultimate stamp of approval.
But a late surge from "CODA" as audiences warmed to its charming cast of loveable characters -- and its hopeful message of a deaf family overcoming adversity -- pushed it into the top slot.
- Money -
Streaming services first barged their way into Hollywood's premier awards in 2017, when Amazon's "Manchester by the Sea" bagged a best picture nomination.
It lost out to "Moonlight," at the ceremony when "La La Land" was briefly and incorrectly announced as the year's winner.
Netflix now has a growing stable of best picture nominations -- including "Roma," "The Irishman," "Marriage Story," "Mank," "The Trial of the Chicago 7," and "Don't Look Up."
For the past three years, Netflix has snagged the most Oscar nominations of any distributor. This year alone it had 27, though only won one -- best director for Campion.
Apple TV+, by contrast, received its first-ever Oscar nomination last year, and this year managed three wins from six nods.
Trade title Variety reported Apple had lavished more than $10 million on its Oscars campaign -- about as much as it cost to make "CODA."
Netflix spent heavily on its bid for Oscar glory -- Los Angeles was awash for months with advertisements puffing its prize bull.
For some in the industry, all that money being thrown around was a little difficult to swallow.
"Everywhere you drive in LA you are faced with a billboard saying it's 'The Best Film of the Year,'" one anonymous director told Indiewire.
"If anyone is to blame for pushback it's Netflix themselves for pushing really hard on the movie."
- Modern-day Medicis -
There was off-the-record griping from some Academy members who felt they were unable to vote for a streaming movie because of a general distaste for the upstart format.
For a start, there's a nostalgia for the medium.
Many moviemakers bemoan the solitary experience of watching on a small screen at home, and talk warmly of the joy of being in a dark cinema with scores of other movie lovers.
Kevin Costner emerged at the Oscars to award best director with an elegy to the artform (and some of the most eloquent speechifying of the night).
"Once I too was a boy, in that magic castle of story and narrative, my seat there in the flickering dark of imagination... projected phantoms painting portraits of poets past," he waxed.
But, says Phillips of Syracuse University, audiences ultimately care about the content -- and streamers are up to the task.
"It's increasingly difficult to determine where [a film is] coming from, whether it's a streaming service production, or big studio production. Those lines have probably blurred forever," he said.
Audiences who went to see "CODA" during its limited run in movie theaters didn't care who made it, he said.
"That boundary, where one side is the motion picture theater experience, and the other side is the at-home streaming experience, I think that boundary is probably never going to be reestablished, at least the way it was, for many decades."
Increasingly, filmmakers themselves are less bothered about the distinction.
"Netflix is not what I would have wanted historically, but they're a little like the Medicis of our time," Campion told the Los Angeles Times last year, referring to the moneyed patrons that funded many of the best-known pieces of Renaissance art.
"The people at the top do love cinema; they want to see good things. When you've got a lot of money, beauty counts."
H.Cho--CPN