Berliner Boersenzeitung - Bizarre, beloved 'Everything Everywhere' wins best picture Oscar

EUR -
AED 4.314247
AFN 72.834015
ALL 95.548235
AMD 435.41981
ANG 2.102654
AOA 1078.414127
ARS 1642.91309
AUD 1.634016
AWG 2.114537
AZN 1.974411
BAM 1.956788
BBD 2.366995
BDT 144.582989
BGN 1.959591
BHD 0.443447
BIF 3492.76323
BMD 1.174743
BND 1.496255
BOB 8.1211
BRL 5.843987
BSD 1.175193
BTN 110.634851
BWP 15.822988
BYN 3.300466
BYR 23024.96355
BZD 2.365994
CAD 1.598373
CDF 2719.530063
CHF 0.921345
CLF 0.02668
CLP 1050.044176
CNY 8.030893
CNH 8.015113
COP 4175.635877
CRC 533.969561
CUC 1.174743
CUP 31.130691
CVE 110.320693
CZK 24.35828
DJF 209.275647
DKK 7.472764
DOP 69.86527
DZD 155.497455
EGP 61.753302
ERN 17.621146
ETB 183.500836
FJD 2.583027
FKP 0.870329
GBP 0.86585
GEL 3.148182
GGP 0.870329
GHS 13.038582
GIP 0.870329
GMD 86.334075
GNF 10314.206857
GTQ 8.984536
GYD 245.874123
HKD 9.207113
HNL 31.232767
HRK 7.537267
HTG 153.867676
HUF 363.652304
IDR 20212.981139
ILS 3.499265
IMP 0.870329
INR 110.588194
IQD 1539.577215
IRR 1547136.581076
ISK 143.811587
JEP 0.870329
JMD 185.523657
JOD 0.832925
JPY 187.031088
KES 151.895467
KGS 102.708602
KHR 4703.374375
KMF 493.391788
KPW 1057.268728
KRW 1727.835061
KWD 0.361539
KYD 0.979394
KZT 538.421808
LAK 25753.000728
LBP 105240.828077
LKR 374.018814
LRD 215.648865
LSL 19.367977
LTL 3.468711
LVL 0.71059
LYD 7.454763
MAD 10.859682
MDL 20.34327
MGA 4884.465795
MKD 61.665369
MMK 2466.869922
MNT 4201.457577
MOP 9.486889
MRU 46.92669
MUR 54.872583
MVR 18.149453
MWK 2037.828745
MXN 20.393065
MYR 4.643174
MZN 75.077649
NAD 19.367977
NGN 1596.125509
NIO 43.251835
NOK 10.887812
NPR 177.015362
NZD 1.985557
OMR 0.451695
PAB 1.175193
PEN 4.097969
PGK 5.103576
PHP 71.382677
PKR 327.562761
PLN 4.24437
PYG 7403.737583
QAR 4.295969
RON 5.095451
RSD 117.38388
RUB 87.989024
RWF 1722.269443
SAR 4.406255
SBD 9.451169
SCR 16.251034
SDG 705.436248
SEK 10.791483
SGD 1.495471
SHP 0.877064
SLE 28.928043
SLL 24633.769637
SOS 671.639059
SRD 44.009982
STD 24314.809095
STN 24.512374
SVC 10.283191
SYP 129.838452
SZL 19.351769
THB 37.943614
TJS 11.038272
TMT 4.117474
TND 3.419026
TOP 2.8285
TRY 52.890808
TTD 7.980029
TWD 36.918062
TZS 3057.270029
UAH 51.829644
UGX 4372.207194
USD 1.174743
UYU 46.743597
UZS 14189.163028
VES 567.594321
VND 30965.051746
VUV 138.842347
WST 3.205294
XAF 656.28831
XAG 0.015522
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.174802
XCG 2.118069
XDR 0.817535
XOF 656.282721
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.35268
ZAR 19.363995
ZMK 10574.098394
ZMW 22.241228
ZWL 378.266779
  • RBGPF

    64.0000

    64

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    15.3

    -0.78%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.95

    +0.17%

  • RELX

    0.4000

    36.53

    +1.09%

  • NGG

    0.4600

    87.42

    +0.53%

  • RIO

    0.7600

    99.61

    +0.76%

  • BTI

    0.8100

    58.09

    +1.39%

  • GSK

    -1.1900

    54.44

    -2.19%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    15.63

    +0.06%

  • AZN

    -2.5500

    189.75

    -1.34%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.32

    +0.39%

  • BCC

    0.3300

    84.15

    +0.39%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    23.88

    -0.92%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.89

    +0.08%

  • BP

    -0.1000

    46.25

    -0.22%

Bizarre, beloved 'Everything Everywhere' wins best picture Oscar
Bizarre, beloved 'Everything Everywhere' wins best picture Oscar / Photo: Patrick T. Fallon - AFP

Bizarre, beloved 'Everything Everywhere' wins best picture Oscar

In the end, its victory was utterly predictable and yet still totally implausible.

Text size:

"Everything Everywhere All at Once" -- a wacky sci-fi featuring hot dog fingers, sex toys, bagels and talking rocks -- on Sunday became surely the most absurd film ever to win the Oscar for best picture.

With its unique blend of action, humor and existential angst, the adventure of a Chinese American laundromat owner battling a multiverse-hopping supervillain entered the Academy Awards as the clear favorite.

It had dominated nearly every Hollywood awards ceremony in the buildup to the Oscars, and led the nominations for Sunday night's gala with 11.

It ultimately fended off rivals such as Steven Spielberg's intimate memoir "The Fabelmans," Tom Cruise's blockbuster "Top Gun: Maverick" and acclaimed tragicomedy "The Banshees of Inisherin" to claim Tinseltown's most coveted prize.

"If our movie has greatness and genius, it's only because they have greatness and genius flowing through their hearts and souls and minds," co-director Daniel Kwan said of his cast and crew.

Overall the film won seven prizes: best picture, best director, best actress, best original screenplay, best editing, and both the best supporting actor and actress prizes.

A joyful tour-de-force in which dildos are used as nunchucks and an everything bagel represents a black hole of nihilism, "Everything Everywhere" could hardly be further from the classic Oscar canon.

Yet the modestly budgeted independent film not only found success with Hollywood and film industry voters, but with mainstream audiences, earning a whopping $100 million at the global box office.

It chronicles the unlikely odyssey of Evelyn Wang (played by Michelle Yeoh), an immigrant businesswoman who is overwhelmed by strained family relations and financial woes.

During a tax audit, the existence of parallel universes is suddenly revealed to her by forces who insist she holds the key to saving the entire multiverse from an evil force.

This shadowy threat turns out to be none other than the alter ego of her depressed lesbian daughter Joy (Stephanie Hsu).

She must harness the wide-ranging powers of other Evelyns living vastly different lives in their own distant but inter-connected universes, from martial arts to opera singing.

In witnessing the myriad paths she did not take, this ordinary mother questions whether her life could have been more meaningful -- and whether she and her family would have been happier.

- 'Bulldozed by the emotion' -

While it is packed with pop culture references and bizarre conceits -- not least a universe in which human fingers have been replaced by hot dogs -- "Everything Everywhere" has deeply emotional, heartfelt messages at its core.

Audiences and voters "gave our movie a chance" and "got past the kind of things that were going to be 'too edgy' for them," producer Jonathan Wang recently told AFP.

"And then they were bulldozed by the emotion of it."

Yeoh has said "the one thing that stays with you is the emotion of love."

With its focus on a mother-daughter relationship, its use of the multiverse concept popularized by superhero movies, and discussion of how modern life is oversaturated with information, "Everything Everywhere" has the clear feel of a movie made by and for a younger generation.

Co-director Daniel Scheinert has discussed how he and Kwan, both 35, set out to make "an empathetic story about how hard it is for our parents' generation to understand our generation."

"This film is almost a way for us to say, 'We see you in this chaos. (...) Maybe we can find a way to exist in all this noise,'" Kwan told The Verge.

- 'Look at us now!' -

The film was originally written for Jackie Chan, but its lead role was reworked for his fellow martial arts superstar Yeoh, giving the movie a feminist tone and allowing the Malaysian actress to showcase her formidable range of talents.

The movie is also multicultural. It transforms an ordinary family of Chinese immigrants into superheroes, with characters alternating mid-sentence between English, Mandarin and Cantonese.

It revitalized the career of Vietnam-born actor Ke Huy Quan, who plays Evelyn's gentle husband Waymond.

Quan was a major child star with "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" and "The Goonies," but had disappeared from acting due to a lack of roles.

As co-star James Hong, 94, commented after the film's Screen Actors Guild win last month, Hollywood has long marginalized Asian actors.

"But look at us now!" he concluded.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)