Oscars Organization Expands International Film Eligibility, Addresses AI in New Rules

07 March 2024: An Oscars statue seen at The Academy Museum in Los Angeles. (dpa)
07 March 2024: An Oscars statue seen at The Academy Museum in Los Angeles. (dpa)
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Oscars Organization Expands International Film Eligibility, Addresses AI in New Rules

07 March 2024: An Oscars statue seen at The Academy Museum in Los Angeles. (dpa)
07 March 2024: An Oscars statue seen at The Academy Museum in Los Angeles. (dpa)

The organization behind the Oscars is for the first time addressing the use of artificial intelligence in performances and scripts for the 2027 Academy Awards. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences on Friday released updates across many categories, stressing the importance of human authorship while not banning AI.

The new rules also include significant changes to the much-criticized international film category, expanding eligibility to include films that won top qualifying awards from prestigious film festivals like Cannes, Venice and Toronto.

“As we do every year, we made a lot of, we think, really smart and progressive changes,” film academy CEO Bill Kramer told The Associated Press. “Obviously, as the academy becomes more global, we need to think about how we are inviting international films into the Oscars conversation.”

AI and the Oscars

As part of its annual review of Oscar eligibility rules, the academy is tackling one of the global filmmaking community's biggest concerns: generative artificial intelligence.

The new rules state that “the tools neither help nor harm the chances of achieving a nomination” and that the academy and each branch “will judge the achievement, taking into account the degree to which a human was at the heart of the creative authorship when choosing which movie to award.” They’re also reserving the right to request more information from the filmmaking team about the nature of the use of AI and “human authorship.”

“Humans have to be at the center of the creative process,” said academy president Lynette Howell Taylor. “As AI continues to evolve, our conversations around AI will do so along with that. But for the academy, we are always going to put human authorship at the center of our awards eligibility process.”

When it comes to the eligibility of performances, only roles “demonstrably performed by humans with their consent” will be considered. The organization declined to comment on whether the upcoming AI-rendered Val Kilmer performance would be eligible as the filmmakers have not yet submitted it for consideration.

A likeness is not an actor, for one, but it might also depend on how Kilmer is credited in the film: As Val Kilmer or something else? One could also take Andy Serkis as Gollum as an example of a human collaborating with technology for the final performance.

“We will review that on a case-by-case basis,” Kramer said. “We, like everybody in our industry and world, we will be assessing this every year.”

There is less ambiguity in the screenplay categories, where the rules state that “screenplays must be human-authored to be eligible.”

The film academy has often had to review its standards to meet the technological advances of the moment, whether it be sound, color or computer generated imagery (CGI).

Sweeping changes to international film eligibility

As its membership has grown much more international, there have been increasing calls for an overhaul to the international film category, which had been continually criticized as unjust, outdated and subject to political interference. That's led to independent and dissident filmmakers often pointedly not being submitted to represent the country they’re from.

Last year’s Palme d’Or-winner at Cannes, for instance, was “It Was Just an Accident,” from Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi, was not submitted as Iran’s official entry for the 98th Academy Awards, but France’s.

Under the new rules, “It Was Just an Accident” could be considered eligible because it won the top Cannes prize and not because a country chose to submit it. In addition to the Palme d’Or at Cannes, the Golden Lion at Venice and the Platform award at Toronto, other festivals with eligible qualifying awards will also include the Berlin International Film Festival’s Golden Bear, the Busan International Film Festival’s best film award and the Sundance Film Festival’s World Cinema Grand Jury Prize.

All the international films will also be credited as the nominee, not the country or region, and the award will be accepted by the filmmaker. The director’s name will also be listed on the Oscar plaque, “after the film title and country if applicable.”

“That really reflects our desire to honor the film’s creative team. That is how we approach other categories,” Kramer said. “And as we become more global, as the filmmaking community becomes more global. I think it’s really about a focus on the filmmakers and less a focus of the country.”

Actors can now be nominated for more than one award in a category

The acting branch is catching up with the rest of the academy in allowing an actor to be nominated for more than one performance in a single category. If, say, this year’s best actor winner Michael B. Jordan has two extraordinary leading performances in two different films in 2026, he could possibly get two best actor nominations.

This is standard practice in the other categories. In 2001, at the 73rd Oscars, Steven Soderbergh was nominated for best director for both “Traffic” and “Erin Brockovich,” winning the prize for the former.

The organization also clarified the eligibility of original songs used during a film’s end credits. For songs in which the first music cue plays over the end credits, that song must overlap with at least the film’s last 15 seconds before the credits roll in order to be considered eligible. This year’s original song winner, “Golden” was a key part of “KPop Demon Hunters” and used several times throughout the film.

“We never stop looking at ways to improve our eligibility process,” Taylor said.



‘Being Heumann,’ About a Disability Rights Activist, to Open Toronto Film Festival

Judith Heumann, special advisor for International Disability Rights at the US Department of State, speaks at the opening session of the China-US Coordination Meeting on Disability in Beijing, April 12, 2016. (AP)
Judith Heumann, special advisor for International Disability Rights at the US Department of State, speaks at the opening session of the China-US Coordination Meeting on Disability in Beijing, April 12, 2016. (AP)
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‘Being Heumann,’ About a Disability Rights Activist, to Open Toronto Film Festival

Judith Heumann, special advisor for International Disability Rights at the US Department of State, speaks at the opening session of the China-US Coordination Meeting on Disability in Beijing, April 12, 2016. (AP)
Judith Heumann, special advisor for International Disability Rights at the US Department of State, speaks at the opening session of the China-US Coordination Meeting on Disability in Beijing, April 12, 2016. (AP)

“Being Heumann,” director Siân Heder's film about the late disability rights activist Judith Heumann, will open the 51st Toronto International Film Festival.

Festival organizers announced Tuesday that “Being Heumann,” starring Ruth Madeley as Heumann, will make its world premiere on the opening night of the Canadian festival Sept. 10. The festival runs through Sept. 20.

Heumann, who died in 2023, has been called the “mother of the disability rights movement” for her longtime advocacy and for lobbying for what eventually led to the federal Americans with Disabilities Act. Heumann, who lost the ability to walk at age 2, was also a central figure in the Oscar-nominated 2020 film “Crip Camp.”

“Being Heumann” is Heder's follow-up to the 2021 film “CODA,” which won best picture at the Academy Awards. The win marked a milestone for the deaf community and signaled the first time a streamer, Apple, won Hollywood's top award. Apple is also releasing “Being Heumann.”

“We’re thrilled to open this year’s Festival with Siân Heder’s inspiring follow-up to her Oscar winning ‘CODA,’” Cameron Bailey, chief executive of TIFF, said in a statement. “'Being Heumann' features an electric performance from Ruth Madeley in the story of Judy Heumann, a world-changing advocate for accessibility.”

The festival, one of the premiere launching pads of fall movies, also announced gala world premieres of Susanna White's legal thriller “Prima Facie,” starring Cynthia Erivo, and of Hur Jin-ho's Korean thriller “The Assassin(s).”


Clooney to Get Lifetime Award at Venice Film Festival

George Clooney appears at the screening of the film "The Boys In The Boat" in London on Dec. 3, 2023. (AP)
George Clooney appears at the screening of the film "The Boys In The Boat" in London on Dec. 3, 2023. (AP)
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Clooney to Get Lifetime Award at Venice Film Festival

George Clooney appears at the screening of the film "The Boys In The Boat" in London on Dec. 3, 2023. (AP)
George Clooney appears at the screening of the film "The Boys In The Boat" in London on Dec. 3, 2023. (AP)

US actor, director and producer George Clooney will receive a lifetime achievement award at this year's Venice film festival, organizers said on Monday.

Clooney, 65, called the award "a tremendous honor".

"It also probably means I'm old, but I'll take it," he said in a statement released by the annual festival.

This year's edition will run between September 2 and 12 and the jury will be led by US actress Maggie Gyllenhaal.

Clooney, who is also known for his political activism and humanitarian work, is a regular at the gathering on the Venice Lido.

Clooney's breakthrough role was in the medical drama "ER". He has since starred in dozens of films, including "Syriana" for which he won an Oscar for best supporting actor.

Venice festival director Alberto Barbera called Clooney "a complete and charismatic artist, impassioned and original".


Netflix Nods to Nostalgia with New ‘Little House on the Prairie’ TV Series

The Netflix logo is seen at the Netflix Tudum Theater in Los Angeles, California, US, Sept. 14, 2022. (AFP)
The Netflix logo is seen at the Netflix Tudum Theater in Los Angeles, California, US, Sept. 14, 2022. (AFP)
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Netflix Nods to Nostalgia with New ‘Little House on the Prairie’ TV Series

The Netflix logo is seen at the Netflix Tudum Theater in Los Angeles, California, US, Sept. 14, 2022. (AFP)
The Netflix logo is seen at the Netflix Tudum Theater in Los Angeles, California, US, Sept. 14, 2022. (AFP)

For Australian actor Luke Bracey, joining Netflix's 2026 adaptation of the classic 1935 book "Little House on the Prairie" represents the return of a story that resonates across generations.

The show portrays a family in the 19th-century American West that goes through ups and downs but ultimately holds on to its love for one another — a theme Bracey believes is timeless.

"It's no mistake, and it is no accident, that the story and the family are so loved by so many people for so long," ‌said Bracey, who plays ‌Charles Ingalls, the father of central character Laura ‌Ingalls.

Both ⁠the "Little House on ⁠the Prairie" series and books are based on the real-life experiences of Laura Elizabeth Ingalls Wilder, who drew inspiration from her own childhood in a pioneer family. The series of books was published in the 1930s and 1940s.

The story has also been adapted before, most notably in a 1970s television series that ran ⁠on NBC until 1983.

Netflix's "Little House on the ‌Prairie" follows the Ingalls family as ‌they navigate frontier life while engaging with settler-colonial and Indigenous narratives.

Alongside Bracey ‌as Charles Ingalls, the Ingalls family includes Laura, portrayed by ‌Alice Halsey; Crosby Fitzgerald as Laura's mother, Caroline; and Skywalker Hughes as Mary, Laura's older sister.

While the show highlights many heartfelt themes, Halsey reflected on the challenges Laura faced growing up as a girl in the ‌1800s.

"I think boys had more privileges," she said.

"Girls didn't have the same opportunities that ⁠boys had ⁠back then. Girls didn't get to learn as much as boys did," she added, noting that if she had lived in Laura's time, she wouldn't have been able to pursue many of the things she loves today.

The story of the pioneering family's struggles and successes is led by creator and showrunner Rebecca Sonnenshine and has already been renewed for a second season ahead of its Season 1 premiere.

"We got to make so many amazing and just perfect memories last season, and now we get the chance to go back and make more," Hughes said.

The eight-episode series arrives on Netflix on Thursday.