If the Oscars were created to encourage appreciation for cinema, then this batch of 22 nominated films in eight of the top categories offers a whole lot to be excited about. Here’s our guide to where to stream the ones available online (which is most of them).
That said, the nominees for the 94th Academy Awards are a strange batch. Due to the pandemic and last year’s Oscars being skewed, this year’s awards are only concerned with films released between March 1 and December 31, 2021 rather than an entire year. Apart from that, it’s a pretty typical batch of nominees. There are great movies nominated in too few categories, mediocre movies nominated in too many categories, great movies not nominated at all, some diversity but not enough, too many biopics, too many safe choices, too few risky choices, too few genre films, and so on.
The 94th Annual Academy Awards will be held March 27, 2022. Cable subscribers can watch on their local ABC channel. Cord-cutters can watch a live stream on ABC.com or the ABC app or—with a TV tuner and antenna—on their ABC channel. Other ways to watch include subscribing to TV streaming service, such as FuboTV, Hulu + Live TV, YouTube TV. Check our guide to the best TV streaming services for our recommendations.
And now for the nominees, in alphabetical order:
Being the Ricardos

Lucille Ball (Nicole Kidman) and Desi Arnaz (Javier Bardem) face several life-changing hurdles during a week of shooting their hit TV show in Being the Ricardos.
Amazon Studios
Writer/director Aaron Sorkin provides a sturdy framework for this biopic of Lucille Ball (Nicole Kidman) and Ricky Ricardo (Javier Bardem), telling their story over the course one week in 1953 in which Lucy is publicly accused of being a Communist. The performances carry it all along with a nifty bounce.
Stream from Amazon Prime Video
Nominations: Best Actor (Javier Bardem), Best Actress (Nicole Kidman), Best Supporting Actor (J.K. Simmons)
Belfast

Nine year-old Buddy (Jude Hill) has a laugh with his Gran (Judi Dench) and grandpa (Ciarán Hinds) during the Troubles in Belfast.
Focus Features
Kenneth Branagh’s black-and-white movie about a nine-year-old boy growing up in Ireland during the Troubles could have had more sheer visceral impact, but its kids’-eye point of view manages to capture innocence and hope, and a sense of community, as well as inevitable violence. Judi Dench and Ciarán Hinds as the grumpy Gran and the wise, funny old grandpa respectively are standouts.
Stream from: Available for online rental for $19.99
Nominations: Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor (Ciarán Hinds), Best Supporting Actress (Judi Dench), Best Director (Kenneth Branagh), Best Original Screenplay, Best Sound, Best Original Song (“Down to Joy” by Van Morrison)
CODA

Child of deaf adults Ruby (Emilia Jones) shares a rare quiet moment with her father (Troy Kotsur) in CODA.
Apple TV+
Writer/director Sian Heder wraps her drama in a comfy, familiar “young adult” framework, but she fills it with fresh, stirring material, bursting with life. Ruby (Emilia Jones), the Child of Deaf Adults of the title, works on a fishing boat with her father and brother, and operates as the family translator, but wishes to pursue singing—something her family doesn’t understand.
Stream from Apple TV+
Nominations: Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor (Troy Kotsur), Best Adapted Screenplay
Don’t Look Up

Astronomers Dr. Randall Mindy (Leonardo DiCaprio) and Kate Dibiasky (Jennifer Lawrence) attempt to prepare the world for an approaching comet in Don’t Look Up.
Netflix
A comet threatens to destroy the Earth and no one cares. This often angry, frequently unfunny satire packed with seven Oscar-winning or Oscar-nominated stars was a huge hit for Netflix, but widely polarizing, eliciting strong responses both pro and con. Whichever way you feel about it, it certainly has the power to get some kind of reaction.
Stream on Netflix
Nominations: Best Picture, Best Original Screenplay, Best Editing, Best Score
Drive My Car

Theater director Yūsuke Kafuku (Hidetoshi Nishijima) adjusts to life with his stoic new driver, Misaki Watari (Tōko Miura) in Drive My Car.
Janus Films
In this brilliantly modulated Japanese masterpiece adapted from Haruki Murakami’s short story, a theater director’s life takes a turn when he’s assigned a driver while preparing a production of Uncle Vanya. Best Director-nominated Hamaguchi brilliantly uses the film’s vast, three-hour running time to dig deeper into characters and spaces, finding multitudes.
Stream on: HBO Max
Nominations: Best Picture, Best Director (Ryusuke Hamaguchi), Best Adapted Screenplay, Best International Feature
Dune

Paul Atreides (Timothée Chalamet) and his mother Lady Jessica (Rebecca Ferguson) adjust to a new life on the desert planet Arrakis in Dune.
Warner Bros.
This updated big screen adaptation of Frank Herbert’s classic sci-fi tale of desert planets, spice, giant worms, and blue eyes is so big it runs more than 2.5 hours and is still only half a movie. But director Denis Villeneuve manages a good balance of spectacle and smoothness, covering up the story’s cumbersome parts, even if it can’t altogether overcome dullness.
Stream on: Available for online rental for $5.99
Nominations: Best Picture, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, Best Production Design, Best Costume Design, Best Sound, Best Makeup/Hairstyling, Best Score, Best Visual FX
Encanto

Mirabel Madrigal, the only non-magical member of a magical family, must try to hold things together when their magic begins to wane in Encanto.
Disney
A non-magical woman, Mirabel Madrigal, in an all-magic family must find a way to keep her world from coming apart in this gloriously colorful, forward-thinking Disney film. It’s arguably the most sheerly magical Disney movie in some time, and Lin Manuel-Miranda’s songs are the best since the days of Howard Ashman and Alan Menkin.
Stream on Disney+
Nominations: Best Animated Film, Best Score, Best Song (“Dos Oruguitas”)
The Eyes of Tammy Faye

Tammy Faye Bakker (Jessica Chastain), wife of televangelist Jim Bakker, grapples with fame and controversy The Eyes of Tammy Faye.
Searchlight Pictures
This biopic on the disgraced televangelist Jim Bakker and his garishly made-up wife Tammy Faye never rises above trash, and it fails to make us care much about these two, but—as in most biopics—the actors do a great deal of heavy lifting, and certain moments are undeniable stunners.
Streaming on HBO Max
Nominations: Best Actress (Jessica Chastain), Best Makeup/Hairstyling
Flee

A man, known as Amin Nawabi, takes animated form to tell the true story of his escape from Afghanistan into Denmark in the documentary Flee.
Neon
In this animated, Danish-language documentary, an unnamed man (he’s given the pseudonym “Amin Nawabi”) describes his harrowing trials and tribulations escaping from Afghanistan after the rise of the mujahideen. The animation provides a slight remove from the story, but also brings it closer, elevating it well above a standard talking-head piece, and the storytelling is never less than gripping.
Streaming on Hulu
Nominations: Best Animated Film, Best Documentary, Best International Feature
King Richard

Driven, determined Richard Williams (Will Smith) trains his daughters Venus and Serena to become tennis champions in King Richard.
Warner Bros.
A biopic about future tennis stars Venus and Serena Williams, this drama focuses on the unyielding attempts of their father to shape them into champions, as well as the counterbalancing influence of their mother, to bring them straight out of Compton and into the international spotlight.
Streaming: Available for online rental ($19.99)
Nominations: Best Picture, Best Actor (Will Smith), Supporting Actress (Aunjanue Ellis), Best Original Screenplay, Best Editing, Best Song (“Be Alive” by Beyoncé)
Licorice Pizza

Alana Kane (Alana Haim) takes the wheel for an adventure with Gary Valentine (Cooper Hoffman, left) in the San Fernando Valley of 1973 in Licorice Pizza.
United Artists Releasing
Paul Thomas Anderson’s endlessly rambling film is one of his loosest efforts—it barely has a story—and it’s also one of his funniest. It’s easy to forgive its wandering, and its occasionally creepy factors, and enjoy scenes like Bradley Cooper’s hilarious few minutes onscreen, or Alana Haim piloting a gasless truck through the L.A. hills.
Streaming: You’ll need to go to the theater for this one
Nominations: Best Picture, Best Director (Paul Thomas Anderson), Best Original Screenplay
The Lost Daughter

While on vacation, college professor Leda Caruso (Olivia Colman) has an encounter that makes her re-consider her past choices in The Lost Daughter.
Netflix
Maggie Gyllenhaal made her feature writing and directing debut with this story of a middle-aged woman looking back on, and reacting to, her choices around motherhood. The movie can be frustrating, and the rhythm of the flashbacks versus the modern-day sequences don’t always work, but Gyllenhaal’s slow, gauzy touch is an effective vehicle to explore her themes.
Stream on Netflix
Nominations: Best Actress (Olivia Colman), Best Supporting Actress (Jessie Buckley), Best Adapted Screenplay
Luca

Sea monsters Alberto and Luca visit the land of the humans and take a ride with their human friend Giulia in Luca.
Disney/Pixar
Last summer’s Pixar film was less profound than Soul or Inside Out, but it offered something like a vacation: sun and fun on the Italian Riviera. It’s about two sea monsters—one shy and tentative, the other an outgoing rapscallion—who head to the surface to explore the world of humans. It’s not as perfectly balanced as other Pixar efforts, but it has a lot of joy and laughs.
Stream on Disney+
Nomination: Best Animated Film
The Mitchells vs. the Machines

The Mitchell family—(left to right) teen Katie, mom Linda, dad Rick, and son Aaron, plus dog Monchi and two friendly robots—must save the world from the machine apocalypse in The Mitchells vs. the Machines.
Netflix
All odd angles and off-kilter shapes, this lovably fast and zany animated feature is a celebration of creativity. It tells the story of a Simpsons-like family who, through sheer luck (or perhaps stupidity), somehow survive the machine apocalypse, and, subsequently must stop a Siri-like overlord and save the planet.
Stream on Netflix
Nomination: Best Animated Film
Nightmare Alley

Mentalist Stan Carlisle (Bradley Cooper) strikes a deadly deal with psychologist Dr. Lilith Ritter (Cate Blanchett) in Nightmare Alley.
Searchlight Pictures
Guillermo Del Toro’s follow-up to his Oscar-winner The Shape of Water is a remake of a 1947 film noir, expanded and given a sheen of lush color and glistening production design. But even with its enviable cast and mesmerizing sequences, its dispiriting, fatalistic story—which lasts 150 minutes—leaves you feeling beaten and bruised.
Stream on Hulu or HBO Max
Nominations: Best Picture, Best Cinematography, Best Production Design, Best Costume
Parallel Mothers

When their babies are born at the same time, teen single mom Ana (Milena Smit) and photographer Janis (Penélope Cruz) form a special bond in Parallel Mothers.
Sony Pictures Classics
The latest soap opera from acclaimed Spanish director Pedro Almodovar concerns two women, one middle-aged and one still in her teens, who give birth at the same time and become friends, with some twists. The story is a bit creaky, and a secondary storyline doesn’t quite fit, but it’s nevertheless a skillful movie, beautifully performed.
Stream on: You’ll need to go to the theater for this one, although it will be available for online rental soon
Nominations: Best Actress (Penélope Cruz), Best Score
The Power of the Dog

In 1925 Montana, brothers Phil (Benedict Cumberbatch) and George Burbank (Jesse Plemons) find their carefully-constructed world tumbling down with two new additions to the family in The Power of the Dog.
Netflix
The great Jane Campion (The Piano) returns with this brutal, dark Western, a visual glory and a thunderbolt to the heart. Two cattle rancher brothers, the new wife of one brother, and her son, become entangled in a poisonous relationship of manipulation and deceit. Campion brilliantly uses the film’s spaces and objects (a piano, paper flowers, etc.) to underscore the emotions.
Stream on Netflix
Nominations: Best Picture, Best Actor (Benedict Cumberbatch), Best Supporting Actor (Jesse Plemons), Best Supporting Actor (Kodi Smit-McPhee), Best Supporting Actress (Kirsten Dunst), Best Director (Jane Campion), Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, Best Production Design, Best Sound, Best Score
Raya and the Last Dragon

Warrior princess Raya must track down the world’s last dragon to defeat an evil force and set things right in Raya and the Last Dragon.
Disney
Disney’s other 2021 animated feature, this one has more complex fantasy storytelling, with exposition going back 500 years and a quest to assemble the five pieces of a magical gem to set things right. It’s less funny than Encanto, and less joyous, but it’s equally beautiful and exhilarating, with a welcome diversity added to the Disney catalogue.
Stream on Disney+
Nominations: Best Animated Film
Spencer

Princess Diana (Kristen Stewart) finds her life changed forever over a suffocating Christmas holiday in Spencer.
Neon
This deeply poetic, fascinating quasi-biopic imagines life for Princess Diana over the course of three days (Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, and Boxing Day), presumably in 1992 as she suffocates under the weight of the Royal Family and comes to a hard decision. It’s a great, meticulous, wrenching film that deserved many more nominations than it received.
Stream on Hulu
Nomination: Best Actress (Kristen Stewart)
tick, tick… BOOM!

Blocked playwright Jonathan Larson (Andrew Garfield) struggles to complete his first musical in the early 1990s in tick, tick… BOOM!
Netflix
Andrew Garfield’s whirlwind performance is the best thing about this energetic musical, an examination of a struggling, blocked playwright during a time when AIDS was ripping through the theater crowd. It’s based on a semi-autobiographical play by Jonathan Larson, better known as the creator of Rent, and the directing debut of Lin Manuel-Miranda.
Stream on Netflix
Nominations: Best Actor (Andrew Garfield), Best Editing
The Tragedy of Macbeth

Told of a prophecy, Macbeth (Denzel Washington) commits murder to become king in The Tragedy of Macbeth.
Apple TV+
The solo directing debut of Joel Coen, who has worked for decades with his brother Ethan, this black-and-white film is a flat-out masterpiece, a knife-edged, stark, severe adaptation of the play, and absolutely one of the greatest Shakespeare films ever made. Every image, hard and ghostly, enhances the horrific themes of power and guilt.
Stream on Apple TV+
Nominations: Best Actor (Denzel Washington), Best Cinematography, Best Production Design
West Side Story

Anita (Ariana DeBose, center) sings “America” in Steven Spielberg’s updating of the musical West Side Story.
20th Century Studios
It has its flaws—the romance doesn’t exactly burn, and it has a few draggy bits—but Spielberg’s epic remake is one of the most flat-out gorgeous films he (or anyone) has ever made, somehow finding the inner beauty of the urban ruins. Tony Kushner’s brilliant screenplay brings the old story up to the present day, with a more conscientious balance.
Stream on HBO Max or Disney+
Nominations: Best Picture, Best Director (Steven Spielberg), Best Cinematography, Best Production Design, Best Costume, Best Sound
Updated March 3 to report that the Oscar-nominated films Drive My Car and West Side Story are now available for streaming. You can watch the former on HBO Max and the latter on either HBO Max or Disney+.