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Oppenheimer triumphs, Ryan Gosling dazzles at 96th Academy Awards

A man in pink stands next to a man in a top hat playing guitar.

It was a night of surprises and upsets at Sunday’s Academy Awards — especially for what were arguably the year’s two biggest films. 

That was perhaps most clear with Oppenheimer, which took home seven wins — the most of all nominated movies. The period piece won for film editing, cinematography, score, best supporting actor for Robert Downey Jr., best actor for Cillian Murphy, best director for Christopher Nolan, and the top award, best picture. 

Meanwhile, up for eight awards, Barbie only took home one, as sister-brother duo Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell won best original song with What Was I Made For?. The two previously won the same category in 2022 for their track No Time to Die from the James Bond film of the same name. 

Although Barbie itself didn’t perform as expected, Ryan Gosling certainly did. The Canadian actor’s live rendition of I’m Just Ken was a show-stopping, standing-ovation inspiring event — including appearances from co-star Simu Liu, and guitarist Slash.

Ryan Gosling, left, and Slash perform I’m Just Ken from Barbie onstage during the 96th Annual Academy Awards at Dolby Theatre on March 10, 2024 in Hollywood. (Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

The third-most nominated film, Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, struggled. Despite being up for some of the ceremony’s top prizes, it lost in every category for which it was eligible. One of its stars, Lily Gladstone, was the first Native American contender in the best actress category.

That award instead went to Poor Things actress Emma Stone, her second career win. The surrealist comedy also took home wins for makeup, production design, and costume design, making it the film with the second-most awards on Sunday. 

WATCH | Oppenheimer dominates Academy Awards: 

Huge night for Oppenheimer at the 96th Oscars

The movie Oppenheimer had a huge night at the 96th annual Academy Awards winning 7 awards out of 13 nominations. Canadian Ben Proudfoot also won his second Oscar for his short documentary The Last Repair Shop.

Currently on his fourth time hosting the awards, Jimmy Kimmel started the ceremony with a tongue-in-cheek skit alongside Barbie‘s Margot Robbie before poking fun not at Robbie and director Greta Gerwig, but at the Academy itself.

“Now Barbie is a feminist icon thanks to Greta Gerwig — who many think deserved to be nominated for best director,” Kimmel said, to general applause. “I know you’re clapping but you’re the ones who didn’t vote for her, by the way.”

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