Oscar nominations 2018: The Shape of Water leads the pack as fan favourites Get Out and Lady Bird get nods - as it happened
What went down at The Academy's 5am announcement in LA
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Your support makes all the difference.Another year, another batch of Oscars nominations, and for once the general consensus is that The Academy got it right.
At an eye-watering 5.22am PST in Los Angeles (1.22pm GMT) the 2018 nominees were announced by Tiffany Haddish and Andy Serkis live from the Academy's Samuel Goldwyn Theater.
As expected, Guillermo del Toro's surreal yet touching romance The Shape of Water picked up the most nominations, landing a sizeable 13, with Christopher Nolan's war epic Dunkirk and Joe Wright's Churchill biopic Darkest Hour following, albeit quite far behind.
Luscious movies Call Me By Your Name and Phantom Thread also made the big categories, along with indie darlings Lady Bird and Get Out. Respective directors Jordan Peele and Greta Gerwig managed to earn Best Director nods for their directorial debuts, Gerwig becoming only the fifth woman to enter that category.
Blade Runner 2049 and Star Wars: The Last Jedi also snuck into the mix thanks to the Oscars involving a larger number of technical awards.
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The 2018 Oscars will take place on Sunday 4 March presented by Jimmy Kimmel.
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Greta Gerwig becomes the fifth woman in Academy Awards history to be nominated for Best Director, the first in eight years.
It was her directorial debut, too (same goes for Jordan Peele).
Meanwhile, Paul Thomas Anderson's fantastic Phantom Thread gathered more noms than expected. Daniel Day-Lewis for Best Actor was a dead cert, but it made it into Best Picture too.
On the Indy film desk we've been a little saddened to see Blade Runner 2049 not get the credit it deserves this award season. It landed five technical nods to do, but no Best Director for visionary Denis Villeneuve.
Here's us discussing why we loved it:
Believe it or not, this is the first time Christopher Nolan (Dunkirk, Inception, Interstellar, The Dark Knight etc) has been nominated for his direction.
Speaking of firsts, Mudbound's Cinematography nomination marks the first ever female nominee in that category. Well done, Rachel Morrison.
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