Meet This Year's Best Picture Contenders
We may be living in unsettled times, but there's one bit of (minor) normalcy rapidly approaching: Hollywood's awards season. So which films from 2020 (plus next January and February, thanks to an extended eligibility period) could contend for a best picture Oscar next spring? We have surveyed industry experts, reviewed the reviews, and examined the top performers at this year's few surviving major film festivals to come up with a list potential contenders.
Despite the fact that so many potential 2020 nominees have taken themselves out of the running by shifting their release dates into late 2021 (a list that includes Steven Spielberg's West Side Story, Denis Villeneuve's Dune, Tom McCarthy's Stillwater, the Aretha Franklin biopic Respect, and Wes Anderson's The French Dispatch, among others), there are still over a dozen strong contenders to receive a best picture nomination when the Academy reveals its selections on March 15, 2021. (The delayed Oscar ceremony will be held on April 25.) Those films, and a handful of additional wildcards, are listed in alphabetical order in the gallery above.
Note that it looks like director Steve McQueen will be represented at least twice (and perhaps more) near the top of our list of 2020's best-reviewed films. But his five (!) upcoming releases are technically part of an BBC/Amazon anthology series (Small Axe) which will make his films Emmy-eligible rather than Oscar-eligible, so they are omitted here.
What is it? Regina King's film directorial debut and an adaptation of the play by Kemp Powers that fills in the details of what may have happened during a 1964 gathering of Cassius Clay (Eli Goree), Malcolm X (Kinglsey Ben-Adir), Jim Brown (Aldis Hodge), and Sam Cooke (Leslie Odom Jr.) at a Miami hotel following Clay's triumph in the ring over Sonny Liston.
Why is it a contender? It was one of the best-reviewed films at festivals in Venice (where it was the festival's first ever film directed by an African-American woman) and Toronto this fall. Amazon paid a lot of money to acquire the film and hasn't had a best picture nominee in three years, so it will be eager to get back in the race and will likely launch an aggressive FYC campaign.
What are its chances? It would be a major surprise if it's not nominated.
When can I see it? It opens on a few screens on Christmas Day and then heads to Prime Video on January 15.