On the campaign trail is Oscar-winner Aaron Sorkin (“The Social Network”), the writer-director of well-reviewed Netflix courtroom drama “The Trial of the Chicago 7,” about the 1968 Chicago Democratic Convention riots as well as the subsequent trial, who is participating in various virtual conversations and tributes from the safety of his home office, from my recent Writers Guild Foundation interview and recent awards in Mill Valley, Middleburg, and Montclair, to the upcoming SFFILM Awards Gala on December 9.
The Oscar races for Adapted and Original Screenplay are coming into focus as well. Sorkin is among several honorees at the upcoming Annual Final Draft Awards to be presented (online) on March 2, 2021. He will accept the Final Draft Zeitgeist Award, “honoring a writer whose work speaks powerfully to the culture and what’s going on in the world right now,” stated a press release.
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Two Storyteller Awards will be presented to two other Oscar winners: Steve McQueen (“12 Years a Slave”), whose hit festival series “Small Axe” (November 20, Prime Video), will receive the Storyteller Award (TV), and Sofia Coppola will get the Storyteller Award (Film) for her father-daughter New York comedy “On The Rocks” (AppleTV+). The Final Draft Awards will also honor two rising writers with New Voice Awards, for television (Ramy Youssef, for his Hulu series “Ramy”) and film (Radha Blank, for Netflix’s “The Forty-Year-Old Version”).
SFFILM
Every year, it seems, there are far more Adapted Screenplay Oscar contenders, with scripts based on plays, novels, and other prior work, than Original. Auteurs often earn greater respect from Academy voters. This year’s batch include directing nominee Paul Greengrass (“United 93”), who adapted Paulette Jiles’ post-Civil War novel “News Of The World” (December 25, Universal) with writing nominee Luke Davies (“Lion”); Oscar-winner Charlie Kaufman (“Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”), who adapted twisty comedy “I’m Thinking of Ending Things” (Netflix) from Iain Reid’s novel; Chloé Zhao, whose road movie “Nomadland” (Searchlight) is adapted from Jessica Bruder’s memoir; and writer-director Ramin Bahrani, who adapted India rags-to-riches tale “The White Tiger” (Netflix) from the Man Booker Prize-winning novel by Aravind Adiga.
Also adapted from novels are Lee Daniels’ biopic “The United States vs. Billie Holiday” (Paramount), adapted by playwright Suzan-Lori Parks from the novel by Johann Hari, and the Jane Austen classic “Emma” (Focus), adapted by Eleanor Catton (“The Luminaries”) for rookie director Autumn de Wilde. See our Adapted Screenplay Oscar Predictions here. Simone Comi/Venezia/IPA/Shutterstock Besides Sorkin and Coppola, many Original Screenplay auteurs are in the Oscar running this year: Oscar-winner Spike Lee (Netflix’s Vietnam drama “Da 5 Bloods,” written by Lee and fellow-“BlacKkKlansman” Oscar-winner Kevin Willmott, Danny Bilson and Paul De Meo); Oscar-nominated Christopher Nolan (Warner Bros.’ time-twister “Tenet”); Oscar-winner Pete Docter (Pixar’s animated “Soul”), who shares writing credit with Mike Jones and Kemp Powers (“One Night in Miami”); Sundance and Berlin prize-winner Eliza Hittman (Focus’ abortion drama “Never Rarely Sometimes Always”); Lee Isaac Chung (A24’s autobiographical Sundance jury and audience award-winner “Minari”); and Miranda July (Focus’ black family comedy “Kajillionaire”). Not taking credit for rewriting his late father Jack Fincher’s “Mank” (Netflix) script is David Fincher, who directs the sprawling slice-of-Hollywood-life about screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz, who co-wrote Orson Welles’ 1941 classic “Citizen Kane.” See our Original Screenplay Oscar Predictions here. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.