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    Oscars 2021: Yuh-Jung Youn Wins Best Supporting Actress, 'Soul' Is Best Animated Feature

    A24/Walt Disney Pictures

    While the ‘Minari’ star has become the first Korean actress to win an Oscar, ‘Tenet’ has earned its first prize at the 93rd Academy Awards for Best Visual Effects.

    Apr 26, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    More awards have been presented at the 93rd annual Academy Awards, with Yuh-Jung Youn among one of them who have become victorious at the Sunday, April 25 ceremony. The veteran South Korean actress nabbed Best Supporting Actress award for her role in “Minari”.

    While Youn has set another Oscar history by becoming the first Korean actress to win an Oscar, her win was rather expected. She was a favorite to win in the category after earning prizes at other award shows, including the Critics’ Choice Movie Awards and Screen Actors Guild Awards, for the same role.

    The 73-year-old had a fan-girling moment when accepting the award from Brad Pitt. “Mr Pitt, finally. Nice to meet you. Where were you while we were filming? I’m very honored to meet you!” she said, before thanking “Minari” cast and crew, including director Lee Isaac Chung, and her fellow nominees, particularly Glenn Close.

    Prior to Youn’s win, “Tenet” grabbed the Oscar for Best Visual Effects. “Soul” was named Best Animated Feature, edging out “Onward”, “Over the Moon”, “Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon” and “Wolfwalkers”.

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    Best Animated Short Film went to “If Anything Happens I Love You”, while “My Octopus Teacher” won Best Documentary Feature. Winning Best Documentary Short Subject was “Colette”, which is a about a former member of the French Resistance who goes back to Germany.

    In his speech, director Anthony Giacchino mentioned that the movie’s Oscar win coincided with the real-life Collete’s birthday. “Today’s Colette’s birthday. She was born just 22 days before the very first Oscars in 1929,” he said. “So I imagine it must have been a very a crowd about this big, right?”

    He continued, “When she – when we got nominated, she told us that – she reminded us that the power of documentary film making ensured that her brother Jean Pierre was, as she put it, no longer lost in the night and fog of the Nazi concentration camp system.”

    Later at the currently ongoing show, “Mank” scored two consecutive wins with Production Design Best for Donald Graham Burt and Jan Pascale, as well as Best Cinematography for Erik Messerschmidt.

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    Golden Globes Under Fire for Shutting 'Minari' Out of Best Picture Contention

    A24/Josh Ethan Johnson

    ‘The Farewell’ director Lulu Wang calls for a change in the HFPA’s policy, ‘Glee’ actor Harry Shum Jr. and The Black List founder Franklin Leonard throw in double standard accusation.

    Dec 24, 2020
    AceShowbiz – The Golden Globes has yet to unravel its 2021 nominees, but it has got entangled in a controversy. After Variety brought out the report that Lee Isaac Chung’s “Minari” is out of the Best Picture competition due to the Hollywood Foreign Press Association’s category guidelines, a slew of celebrities stepped out to voice their frustration.
    Among those blasting the HFPA for relegating the Steven Yeun-starring film to the Best Foreign Language Film category was “The Farewell” director Lulu Wang. “I have not seen a more American film than #Minari this year. It’s a story about an immigrant family, IN America, pursuing the American dream,” she tweeted.
    The woman behind 2014’s “Posthumous” also called for change in the Globes eligibility rule that places any film with at least 50 per cent of non-English dialogue into the Foreign Language category. “We really need to change these antiquated rules that characterizes American as only English-speaking,” she further argued in the same tweet.

    Lulu Wang called out HFPA for relegating ‘Minari’ to the Best Foreign Language Film category.
    “Little Fires Everywhere” author Celeste Ng, on the other hand, expressed a stronger criticism at the policy. “This is a gorgeous film by an American, about Korean-speaking Americans in America, which would be a strong contender for awards in ANY category,” she tweeted. “The idea that only films in English count as ‘American’ is complete bulls**t.”

    Celeste Ng blasted HFPA’s policy over Best Picture category.

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    Also weighing in on the controversy, “Hawaii Five-0” actor Daniel Dae Kim pointed out, “The film equivalent of being told to go back to your country when that country is actually America.” Andrew Phung of “Kim’s Convenience” chimed in, “A sad and disappointing reminder that a movie about the American dream, set in America, starring an American, directed by an American, and produced by an American company, is somehow foreign. #Minari.”

    Daniel Dae Kim and Andrew Phung weighed in on ‘Minari’ debacle.
    Expressing similar sentiment were Phung’s co-star Simu Liu and “Pachinko” author Min Jin Lee. “Just for the record, Minari is an American movie written and directed by an American filmmaker set in America with an American lead actor and produced by an American production company,” wrote Liu, whereas Lee noted, “The English language is not an indigenous language. Enough of this nonsense about Asian-Americans being permanently foreign. I’m done.”

    Simu Liu and Min Jin Lee expressed anger over ‘Minari’ debacle.
    Others tookissue with the HFPA’s double standard using Quentin Tarantino’s “Inglourious Basterds” as an example. “Shadowhunters” actor Harry Shum Jr. tweeted, “Checks ‘Inglorious Bastards’ English to German, French & Italian ratio – roughly 30:70 #Minari is an American film,” and The Black List founder Franklin Leonard noted, “Let us not forget that Inglorious Basterds was mostly not in English and was not classified the same way.”

    Harry Shum Jr. and Franklin Leonard complained over Golden Globes’ double standard.
    “Minari” was premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival. It went on to win both the U.S. Dramatic Grand Jury Prize and the U.S. Dramatic Audience Award. Its story centers around a family of South Korean immigrants who try to make it in rural Arkansas in the 1980s. Meanwhile, the 2021 nominations of the Globes will be announced on February 3, 2021.

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