Filmmaker Alfonso Cuarón was himself nominated in four categories
by the El Reportero’ news services
The accolades for Roma, the award-winning film by Alfonso Cuarón, continued today with the announcement of the Oscar nominations — fully 10 of them, including best picture, best director and best actress.
The filmmaker himself became the third person ever to be nominated in four categories in a single year, joining a short roster that includes Orson Welles and Warren Beatty. Cuarón was nominated for direction, cinematography, original screenplay and best picture.
Yalitza Aparicio’s debut acting performance earned her a nomination as best actress, a singular list that also includes another first-timer, Lady Gaga, along with Glenn Close, Olivia Colman and Melissa McCarthy.
The nominations earned by Roma, described by the newspaper SFGate as a “deeply personal exhumation of [Cuarón’s] Mexico City childhood,” also included best supporting actress, best foreign language film, best production design, best sound editing and best sound mixing.
Roma also gave the film’s distributor, Netflix, its first best-picture nomination, a prize that has until now eluded the streaming giant.
Only one other film was nominated in as many categories as Roma this year— Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Favourite.
Best-actress nominee Aparicio, 25, who plays a domestic worker in the home of a family living in Mexico City’s Roma district in the 1970s, is the second Mexican actress to earn the nomination. The first was Salma Hayek for her role in Frida in 2002.
Roma had already made history earlier this month when it became the first foreign language film to win the award for best picture at the Critics’ Choice Movie Awards, where it won three other awards as well.
Other awards won by the film include two Golden Globes for best director and best foreign film.
The other best-film nominees this year are Black Panther, BlacKkKlansman, Bohemian Rhapsody, The Favourite, Green Book, A Star Is Born and Vice.
The Academy Awards will be broadcast Feb. 24 at 7 p.m.
Source: Milenio (sp), El Economista (sp), SFGate (en).
The Oscar nominee has reason to feel proud
Yalitza Aparicio has captivated audiences with her first-ever acting role in Alfonso Cuaron’s masterpiece Roma. Her nominatioan is a momentous occasion for a multitude of reasons: she’s only the 4th Latin American actress to achieve this honor and the only one to be indigenous, reported Vanessa Erazo.
Especially after facing racist attacks online, Aparicio knew that landing an Oscar nomination would have a tremendous impact on her community.
Thankfully, a friend woke up her up early in the morning armed with a laptop to stream the nominations while they were announced live and a camera to catch Yalitza’s reaction. It’s impossible to watch without crying.
No Manches Frida releases on March 15
In this over-the-top sequel to the smash hit No Manches Frida, the all-star cast of the original (Omar Chaparro and Martha Higareda) and some fresh new faces (Itatí Cantoral and Aaron Díaz) leave the school yard and hit the beach in No Manches Frida 2! But there’s trouble in paradise… literally.
When the seemingly reformed ex-con Zequi is about to marry the love of his life, the lovably nerdy Lucy, wedding day jitters turn into a full blown fiasco and Lucy calls the wedding off. Meanwhile, the school finds itself in deep trouble and the gang heads to the water to compete in the tournament of their lives.
Once they’re all seaside, Lucy runs into her high school sweetheart Mario, whom since she last saw him has transformed into a smoking hot hunk. He’s coach of the opposing squad and Zequi finds himself a rival in more than one competition. Now he has to pull out all the stops to wrangle in his rowdy kids, win Lucy back, and in case that wasn’t enough, save the school from shutting down by leading Frida High to victory!