BSS
  19 Feb 2023, 13:54

Everything Everywhere' duo win top Hollywood directing prize

LOS ANGELES, Feb 19, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - "Everything Everywhere All At Once"
won top honors from Hollywood's directors Saturday, as the quirky indie sci-
fi movie from two relatively unknown young filmmakers upstaged more famous
rivals ahead of next month's Oscars.

Directing double-act Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, both 35, fended off
competition from the likes of Steven Spielberg to win the prize for best
feature film at the Directors Guild of America's annual gala in Beverly
Hills.

"What the hell? Guys, thank you so much. This has been an incredible year for
our little film that somehow keeps going," said a visibly shocked Kwan.

The movie stars Michelle Yeoh as an immigrant laundromat owner undergoing a
tax audit who becomes drawn into an inter-dimensional battle to save the
multiverse from a powerful villain.

It became a huge word-of-mouth hit last year, has grossed more than $100
million worldwide, and holds the most Academy Award nominations this year
with 11.

Kwan and Scheinert, collectively referred to as "Daniels," made their start
directing music videos, and were previously best known for the oddball Daniel
Radcliffe comedy "Swiss Army Man."

Scheinert thanked his co-director Kwan "for putting up with me when I asked
to make our movie weirder."

"Thank you for making our movie so much braver and more vulnerable. What an
honor... this is crazy!"

- 'Shark movies' -

The DGAs, though not broadcast on television, offer highly prestigious
recognition from the industry's top directors, and are now in their 75th
year.

They are also considered a key Oscars predictor. Seventeen of the past 19 DGA
winners have gone on to also win best director at the Academy Awards that
year.

The other directors nominated by the DGA were Martin McDonagh ("The Banshees
of Inisherin"), Todd Field ("TAR"), Joseph Kosinski ("Top Gun: Maverick") and
Spielberg, for his semi-autobiographical childhood memoir "The Fabelmans."

It was Spielberg's 13th DGA nomination -- he has won three times -- and
nearly every nominee and winner on Saturday evening name-checked the famous
director.

Spielberg himself admitted he had been "terrified" that audiences would watch
his latest, deeply personal film and respond: "So what? Your childhood wasn't
all that interesting!"

He joked that he had also dreaded being told: "Please get back to making
scary movies, shark movies, alien movies. Those were fun."

But, he concluded, "I have been calling 'Action!' for 55 years. So why the
hell not?"

- 'Sacrificed their lives' -

Elsewhere on Saturday, Sara Dosa won best documentary for "Fire of Love," her
film about two French volcano scientists who fell in love and became
celebrities for their daredevil and up-close approach to research.

"Katia and Maurice (Krafft) literally sacrificed their lives for their
filmmaking," said Dosa.

"They died while attempting to capture a shot of a pyroclastic surge, which
is one of the world's deadliest forces.

"But 'Fire of Love' is not about Katia and Maurice's deaths, it's about how
they lived.

"And they lived in love with each other and with volcanoes."

Charlotte Wells won the best first-time feature award for "Aftersun," but did
not attend, with Britain's BAFTAs due to take place in London less than 24
hours after the DGA gala.

The independent film stars Paul Mescal as a troubled, single Scottish father
trying to reconnect with his young daughter on a summer holiday in Turkey.

On the television side, Bill Hader won his third DGA for directing "Barry,"
the dark hitman comedy in which he also stars.

The drama prize went to "Euphoria" director Sam Levinson, for the gritty HBO
series about teenagers battling with addiction, infidelity and abuse, which
stars Zendaya.

The movie season-capping Academy Awards take place this year on March 12.