![]() ![]() “But I’m surprised by how many people enjoy that complexity.” That’s to be expected. “Look, I love this film myself-I don’t think it’s perfect or anything, but it does do something, it’s got some strength, it’s a little mysterious and hypnotic,” she says. But the Campion I met five months ago, curious as to whether her work would be embraced at all, still comes through. She’s grateful to be connecting with audiences for a film she worked so hard on, that she’s so proud of. She’s giddy about competing with directors she admires, like Paul Thomas Anderson. ![]() As Kidman puts it to Vanity Fair, this is Campion’s “victory lap.” Campion is enjoying herself, certainly. Backed by an aggressive Netflix campaign, Campion, 67, has flown around the world for screenings, tributes, and celebrations, the kind of treatment reserved for legends of the medium. ![]() (It’s nominated for 12 Oscars, more than any other film.) This marks the crowning moment for a generation-defining filmmaker. ![]() A riveting and wrenching study of loneliness, masculinity, and repression set in ’20s Montana, it’s 2021’s most decorated movie-winner of more best-picture and director awards than any other title and positioned for a strong showing at the Academy Awards. The Power of the Dog took Campion to Italy, then New York London, then France. A guide to Hollywood’s biggest races Arrow ![]()
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