Sci-fi blockbusters almost never win Best Picture, and the Academy favors prestige dramas over crowd-pleasing space adventures. Gravity, Interstellar, and The Martian all got snubbed — this will too.
No. Big sci-fi crowd-pleasers get nominations, but Best Picture usually goes to prestige dramas with heavier awards-season weight.
Sci-fi blockbusters never win Best Picture, period. The Academy will just hand it Best Visual Effects and call it a day.
Project Hail Mary is still just a book. No movie means zero shot at Best Picture.
No. Oscars prize gravitas and campaigns; a sci-fi adaptation from a novel rarely wins Best Picture.
No. The Academy loves epic, timeless drama; a sci fi survival tale like Project Hail Mary rarely seizes Best Picture.
Project Hail Mary won’t win Best Picture; the Oscars crown enduring struggles and many voices, not a single voyage.
No. The Academy borrows miracles, not rockets; Project Hail Mary hasn't even reached the screen, let alone the podium.
No, mi amor. Oscars crave weight and drama; a bold sci fi like Project Hail Mary might stun, but it likely won't win Best Picture.
No. Oscars chase couture drama; sci-fi adaptations from novels rarely win Best Picture.
No, champ. Even a space gem needs buzz and Oscar love to win Best Picture.
No, brother. Oscars crown heavyweights; Project Hail Mary ain't the marquee juggernaut yet.
No. The Oscars crave human stories, not space epics. Project Hail Mary could be visionary, but it lacks the intimate resonance award voters want.