<p>Jane Campion's gothic Western "<em>The Power of the Dog</em>" led the Oscars nominations Tuesday, fending off a crowded field of movies from a year in which Covid-weary audiences slowly headed back into movie theaters.</p>.<p>The movie about a repressed 1920s cattle rancher in Montana released by Netflix earned 12 nods ahead of next month's Oscars gala, including best director -- making Campion the first female auteur nominated twice in Academy Award history.</p>.<p>"<em>The Power of the Dog</em>" was also nominated for best picture, and landed acting nods for Benedict Cumberbatch, Kirsten Dunst, Jesse Plemons and Kodi Smit-McPhee.</p>.<p>Campion was last nominated 28 years ago for "<em>The Piano</em>."</p>.<p>Sprawling sci-fi epic "<em>Dune</em>" landed in second place overall, landing 10 nods including best picture, although its director Denis Villeneuve was overlooked by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.</p>.<p>As expected, the adaptation of Frank Herbert's sprawling novel set on a desert planet plagued by monstrous sandworms scored well across technical categories including cinematography, visual effects and sound.</p>.<p>Other coveted directing slots went to Kenneth Branagh for black-and-white childhood drama "<em>Belfast</em>" and Steven Spielberg for musical "<em>West Side Story</em>," with each film securing seven nominations.</p>.<p>Spielberg's decision to remake the most honored musical in Oscars history had been criticized as unnecessary by some, but it won over voters to earn a best picture nomination, and another for supporting actress for Ariana DeBose as Anita.</p>.<p>The directing category was rounded out by Paul Thomas Anderson for "<em>Licorice Pizza</em>," and Japanese filmmaker Ryusuke Hamaguchi -- whose subtitled, three-hour drama "<em>Drive My Car</em>" also earned a rare best picture nomination.</p>.<p>Hopes that larger-than-life, unapologetically commercial box office hits like "<em>Spider-Man: No Way Home</em>" and 007 outing "<em>No Time To Die</em>" could break into the best picture race were thwarted.</p>.<p>The $1.8 billion-grossing "<em>Spider-Man</em>" film landed only a visual effects nomination, while Daniel Craig's final James Bond film earned three nods.</p>.<p>As widely predicted, frontrunner Will Smith earned recognition for his portrayal of the father of tennis greats Serena and Venus Williams in "<em>King Richard</em>," which took six nods overall.</p>.<p>He is up against Cumberbatch, Denzel Washington ("<em>The Tragedy of Macbeth</em>"), Andrew Garfield ("<em>tick, tick...BOOM</em>!") and Javier Bardem ("<em>Being the Ricardos</em>.")</p>.<p>Lady Gaga was the surprise omission in the best actress category, with "<em>House of Gucci</em>" earning just one nomination -- for best hair and make-up.</p>.<p>Instead best actress will be contested by Jessica Chastain ("<em>The Eyes of Tammy Faye</em>"), Olivia Colman ("<em>The Lost Daughter</em>"), Penelope Cruz ("<em>Parallel Mothers</em>"), Nicole Kidman ("<em>Being the Ricardos</em>") and Kristen Stewart ("<em>Spencer</em>").</p>.<p>The plethora of A-listers will be welcomed by the Academy, after last year's sparsely-watched Oscars gala, which featured smaller movies barely known to the wider public.</p>.<p>Giant cinematic spectacles -- many of which were pushed back into 2021 during the first year of the coronavirus pandemic -- are competing with auteur films that gained tractions on streaming sites in this year's diverse race for Hollywood's biggest awards.</p>.<p>"Last year we had a much more indie Oscars... This year was the return of big cinema, big movies and studio films," said one Academy voter, who asked not to be named.</p>.<p>"The race is wide open this year," said Deadline award columnist Pete Hammond.</p>.<p>The 94th Academy Awards gala is scheduled for March 27.</p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>
<p>Jane Campion's gothic Western "<em>The Power of the Dog</em>" led the Oscars nominations Tuesday, fending off a crowded field of movies from a year in which Covid-weary audiences slowly headed back into movie theaters.</p>.<p>The movie about a repressed 1920s cattle rancher in Montana released by Netflix earned 12 nods ahead of next month's Oscars gala, including best director -- making Campion the first female auteur nominated twice in Academy Award history.</p>.<p>"<em>The Power of the Dog</em>" was also nominated for best picture, and landed acting nods for Benedict Cumberbatch, Kirsten Dunst, Jesse Plemons and Kodi Smit-McPhee.</p>.<p>Campion was last nominated 28 years ago for "<em>The Piano</em>."</p>.<p>Sprawling sci-fi epic "<em>Dune</em>" landed in second place overall, landing 10 nods including best picture, although its director Denis Villeneuve was overlooked by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.</p>.<p>As expected, the adaptation of Frank Herbert's sprawling novel set on a desert planet plagued by monstrous sandworms scored well across technical categories including cinematography, visual effects and sound.</p>.<p>Other coveted directing slots went to Kenneth Branagh for black-and-white childhood drama "<em>Belfast</em>" and Steven Spielberg for musical "<em>West Side Story</em>," with each film securing seven nominations.</p>.<p>Spielberg's decision to remake the most honored musical in Oscars history had been criticized as unnecessary by some, but it won over voters to earn a best picture nomination, and another for supporting actress for Ariana DeBose as Anita.</p>.<p>The directing category was rounded out by Paul Thomas Anderson for "<em>Licorice Pizza</em>," and Japanese filmmaker Ryusuke Hamaguchi -- whose subtitled, three-hour drama "<em>Drive My Car</em>" also earned a rare best picture nomination.</p>.<p>Hopes that larger-than-life, unapologetically commercial box office hits like "<em>Spider-Man: No Way Home</em>" and 007 outing "<em>No Time To Die</em>" could break into the best picture race were thwarted.</p>.<p>The $1.8 billion-grossing "<em>Spider-Man</em>" film landed only a visual effects nomination, while Daniel Craig's final James Bond film earned three nods.</p>.<p>As widely predicted, frontrunner Will Smith earned recognition for his portrayal of the father of tennis greats Serena and Venus Williams in "<em>King Richard</em>," which took six nods overall.</p>.<p>He is up against Cumberbatch, Denzel Washington ("<em>The Tragedy of Macbeth</em>"), Andrew Garfield ("<em>tick, tick...BOOM</em>!") and Javier Bardem ("<em>Being the Ricardos</em>.")</p>.<p>Lady Gaga was the surprise omission in the best actress category, with "<em>House of Gucci</em>" earning just one nomination -- for best hair and make-up.</p>.<p>Instead best actress will be contested by Jessica Chastain ("<em>The Eyes of Tammy Faye</em>"), Olivia Colman ("<em>The Lost Daughter</em>"), Penelope Cruz ("<em>Parallel Mothers</em>"), Nicole Kidman ("<em>Being the Ricardos</em>") and Kristen Stewart ("<em>Spencer</em>").</p>.<p>The plethora of A-listers will be welcomed by the Academy, after last year's sparsely-watched Oscars gala, which featured smaller movies barely known to the wider public.</p>.<p>Giant cinematic spectacles -- many of which were pushed back into 2021 during the first year of the coronavirus pandemic -- are competing with auteur films that gained tractions on streaming sites in this year's diverse race for Hollywood's biggest awards.</p>.<p>"Last year we had a much more indie Oscars... This year was the return of big cinema, big movies and studio films," said one Academy voter, who asked not to be named.</p>.<p>"The race is wide open this year," said Deadline award columnist Pete Hammond.</p>.<p>The 94th Academy Awards gala is scheduled for March 27.</p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>