Oscar voters will no longer be able to skip watching some of the nominated films.
The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences announced on Monday a new requirement for its members. Moving forward, members must watch all nominated films in each category in order to be eligible to vote in the final round of Oscar voting. Previously, Oscar voters were only encouraged to view the nominees and vote in categories where they felt knowledgeable.
In recent years, there has been a growing emphasis on which films are watched by academy members as a key determinant in the final outcomes. Furthermore, the disclosure of anonymous Oscar ballots has revealed instances where members admitted to not watching certain noteworthy films or failing to complete longer nominations.
In addition to the new film-watching requirement, the academy introduced several other regulations on Monday. These rules cover various issues such as AI, filmmakers who are refugees, and the recently added casting category.
In the best international film category, the academy will now allow filmmakers with refugee or asylum status to be represented by a country not their own. The rule change keeps in place the broad apparatus of how international nominees are submitted through countries, but it tweaks eligibility.
The regulation now reads: “The submitting country must confirm that creative control of the film was largely in the hands of citizens, residents, or individuals with refugee or asylum status in the submitting country.”
Critics have long called on changes to the nominating process for best international film because it leaves the submission process in the hands of governments, not the academy. That’s left dissident filmmakers working under authoritarian or undemocratic regimes with limited pathways to reaching the Oscars.
Last year, for instance, the Iranian filmmaker Mohammad Rasoulof fled Iran before he was to be flogged and imprisoned for eight years in order to release his film “The Seed of the Sacred Fig.” Germany, where Rasoulof settled, submitted it for the Oscars and it was nominated. But other filmmakers, including Rasoulof’s friend and countryman Jafar Panahi, have released films without a mechanism for submission.
The rule change notably won’t alter the Oscar prospects for filmmakers who haven’t fled their home countries or change anything for films passed over by their nation’s selection committees.
The academy also ruled that the use of generative artificial intelligence tools “neither help nor harm the chances of a nomination.” How significantly AI is used in filmmaking has, as in other industries, been a much-debated topic in Hollywood. In this year’s Oscar race, Brady Corbet’s “The Brutalist” was a subject of some controversy after its editor said that AI had been used to enhance the Hungarian dialogue of stars Adrien Brody (who ultimately won best actor ) and Felicity Jones (who was nominated for best supporting actress).
“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,” the academy said Monday.
The film academy also set down some rules for its new achievement in casting Oscar. After a preliminary round of voting to determine a shortlist of 10 films, members of the casting branch will be invited to a “bake-off” presentation from the shortlisted films, including a Q&A with nominees.
Earlier in April, the academy announced a new category for stunt design, but that award won’t begin until the 2028 Oscars.
The 98th Academy Awards will take place on Sunday, March 15, 2026, live from the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood at 7 p.m. EST/4 p.m. PT on ABC.
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