Amy Adams Oscar snub ‘very disappointing’

Amy Adams Oscar snub ‘very disappointing’
Amy Adams
Updated 29 January 2017
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Amy Adams Oscar snub ‘very disappointing’

Amy Adams Oscar snub ‘very disappointing’

LOS ANGELES: Oscar-nominated Canadian filmmaker Denis Villeneuve spoke Saturday of his exasperation at the Academy overlooking Amy Adams’s acclaimed performance in sci-fi thriller “Arrival.”
The alien invasion drama, re-released in US theaters this week, has eight nominations for February’s Oscars, including for best film and for Villeneuve’s direction.
But Adams, widely expected to get a sixth Oscar nomination for “Arrival” — and perhaps another for “Nocturnal Animals” — was left off the list, leaving the trade press and many leading industry figures bewildered.
“I was very disappointed, because she is the soul of the movie. She was my biggest ally. She gave everything, she gave a tremendous, very complex performance,” Villeneuve, 49, told AFP at the Producers Guild Awards (PGAs) in Beverly Hills.
Adams, 42, was universally lauded for her portrayal of Louise Banks, a linguist enlisted by the army after alien pods pop up worldwide, to help figure out what their occupants want. The picture pairs Adams with fellow “American Hustle” star Jeremy Renner, playing against type as a shy, soft-spoken mathematician.
The best actress Oscar nominations went to Emma Stone (La La Land), Natalie Portman (Jackie), Ruth Negga (Loving), Isabelle Huppert (Elle) and Meryl Streep (Florence Foster Jenkins).
Villeneuve told AFP he had spoken to Adams several times since the nominations and that she had been nothing but magnanimous.
“She just said to me, ‘Danny — it’s all right. The movie is nominated, you are nominated, it’s all good. Don’t think about it, please just celebrate.’”