It seems increasingly clear that the multiverse will unleash at the Dolby Theater in Los Angeles on March 12th. ‘Everything at Once Everywhere’ is the film with the most Oscar nominations this year, eleven, including Best Picture. And her awards career is so strong that she aims to be crowned winner of the Academy Awards.

On Saturday February 25th she reached another great milestone in this “horse race”, as Cate Blanchett called the prize race weeks ago. Daniels’ film was made with a Best Picture award presented by the Producers Guild. Only three films since 2009 have won the Producers Guild Award and not followed up with the Best Picture Oscar: ‘The Big Short’, ‘Star City: La La Land’ and ‘1917’.
‘Todo a la vez en todos partes’ already has on its record, in addition to the triumph in the producers’ awards, the Best Director award to Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert of the Directors Guild, another of the most important trophies of their career. They also have five Critics Choice Awards, including Best Picture, two Golden Globes for Michelle Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan, are in the running for several Screen Actors Guild Awards (due Sunday night, Feb. 26), and were also nominated for Screenwriters Union (whose prizes are awarded on March 5).
His biggest obstacle: preferential voting
While it seems to be one of those fish-selling years, keep in mind that The Biggest Foe of Anything Anywhere in its crusade for the Best Picture Oscar is preferential voting. The premier category of the Academy Awards is not voted for by the favourite, but voters must rank the nominees in order of preference. That is why there are years, like last year without going any further, that a film like ‘CODA: The Sound of Silence’, which can end up in the intermediate positions of most academics’ grades, ends up prevailing over films that perhaps sound more worthy of a Best Picture, but have a more polarizing aspect (i.e. they can accumulate many first places, but also many last). A film like ‘All at the same time everywhere’ that has so many times been described as ‘strange’, involving a mix of genres that is as appealing to some as noisy to others, is just the kind of film that ends up in the first and penultimate ballots .
To find out what happens with her and the rest of the nominees we will have to wait for the Oscars, which will be held at early in the morning from Sunday 12 to Monday 13 March with Jimmy Kimmel as host. “All at once everywhere” is available on Movistar Plus+.
Source: E Cartelera

Lloyd Grunewald is an author at “The Fashion Vibes”. He is a talented writer who focuses on bringing the latest entertainment-related news to his readers. With a deep understanding of the entertainment industry and a passion for writing, Lloyd delivers engaging articles that keep his readers informed and entertained.