Oscar Nominations 2023: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

The 2023 Oscar nominations are finally out and that means the 2022-2023 awards season is heading into its resurged finale. After two years where The Academy’s intense additions to its ranks attempted to curb some of its less palatable tendencies towards the familiar, white and generically prestigious, this year’s nominees seem to reflect a regression—a return to the status quo.
As we head backwards one or more steps for every step taken forward, we’ve got some of the same issues we’ve always got with the Oscars. For every excellent nomination, every interesting piece of recognition, there’s the predictable nonsense that conned its way in. There’re the games played in the highly specialized categories of Original Song, and of the short films. There are the odd gambles made when deciding which acting award to seek. It’s certainly not a bad year, however. Some of the top-grossing movies (that of course found some awards) are actually pretty good, and some of the more niche choices made by the Academy will steer aspiring cinephiles and middlebrow consensus-takers alike into more adventurous waters.
Here are the good, bad and ugly takeaways from 2023’s Oscar nominations:
The Good
Women Are Talking
Sarah Polley started her directorial career with Away We Go, the story of a couple floundering in the face of an Alzheimer’s diagnosis. It is a remarkably adept love story, one that understands how time can both bind a couple together and unravel them. The film earned her an Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay and Women Talking will see her return to the ceremony for the same nomination, but this time the film will also be up for Best Picture. On the surface, Women Talking appears to be straight awards bait, featuring a star-studded cast and based on a hit book. But it is really a film charting the threads that spin out from meaningful conversations, invested in the ways we implicate and free one another from our inherited trauma, lending heft to the distinctly un-cinematic act of listening. It has been largely shut out from other awards bodies, so it is a pleasant surprise to see it acknowledged by the Oscars.
All the First-Time Acting Nominees
Of the 20 actors nominated this year, 16 of them have never been nominated before. The Academy is often (rightly) accused of navelgazing, coating the evening in a glitzy sheen by celebrating the already established. Now, it’s not like Michelle Yeoh or Ke Huy Quan or Brendan Fraser are industry newcomers whose careers have been waiting for a boost from this “very local” awards body, but a nomination for actors like these two can function as a nod of acknowledgement. It is equally exciting to see actors like Stephanie Hsu and Paul Mescal, who both deliver entrancingly self-possessed, startlingly honest performances that disguise their relative newness to the industry.