There is a quiet truth about the Emmy race for outstanding television movie, and it runs directly counter to everything the Oscars have trained pundits to expect. At the Academy Awards, the safest path to a best picture nomination is the prestige drama. At the Emmys, the movie category can be where comedies and other genres thrive.
Part of this is simply supply. The serious, awards-minded films that once might have premiered as stand-alone TV movies now almost always arrive as a limited series, where the runway is longer, and the campaign budgets are bigger. What remains in the movie field skews toward the streaming crowd-pleaser, and television voters, perhaps freed from the cinephile guilt that haunts Oscar season, tend to recognize (and reward) the pics that are flat-out fun to watch. Look at some of the past winners in this category, which include the live-action animated-hybrid âChip ân Dale: Rescue Rangers,â the musical biopic âWeird: The Al Yankovic Story,â the comedy âQuiz Ladyâ and last yearâs action-thriller victor âRebel Ridge.â
When you consider the buzziest contenders this cycle, sitting at the top of the list is Netflixâs âRemarkably Bright Creatures,â an adaptation of the bestselling novel starring legendary actress Sally Field as a woman who befriends an octopus. But whatâs interesting is what surrounds it. Prime Videoâs âDeep Coverâ is a brisk action comedy with Orlando Bloom, sitting right next to Netflixâs âPeople We Meet on Vacation,â drawn from Emily Henryâs beach-read juggernaut, an unapologetic romance. HBO Maxâs late-season drop âMiss You, Love Youâ leans into the same warmth with Allison Janney and Andrew Rannells leading the charge. At the same time, Huluâs comedic-action pic âMike and Nick and Nick and Aliceâ with Vince Vaughn and James Marsden rounds out a top five built largely on charm.
The pattern only becomes more apparent as you look outward at the entire field. Huluâs âSwiped,â the Bumble origin story with Lily James, and Netflixâs love story âRuth and Boazâ feature the kind of accessible, emotionally legible hooks that can play well with a broad audience. Prime Videoâs âTom Clancyâs Jack Ryan: Ghost Warâ with John Krasinski, demonstrates how genre material, action and suspense alike, slide comfortably into a conversation that the Oscars would likely wall off. Prime Videoâs entire roster rounds out an eclectic Friday night movie night that also includes the fantasy continuation âGood Omens 3â and the action-comedy âHeads of Stateâ with John Cena. Even Disney+ is hoping for some love with âA Very Jonas Christmas Movie,â featuring the Jonas brothers steering a holiday romp.
None of this is a knock on the work. If anything, it reflects a healthier relationship with populism than the film academy has managed throughout its existence. TV has always understood that great entertainment is a craft achievement, and the movie category has effectively institutionalized that belief. A polished rom-com or a sharply executed thriller is not penalized for being pleasurable. In fact, it can be rewarded for sticking the landing.
Campaigners, meanwhile, donât want to overplay their hands. In recent years, TV movies have seldom earned additional nominations outside the category. âWeird: The Al Yankovic Storyâ in 2022 was the last to do so, pulling in major nods including writing and lead actor for Daniel Radcliffe.
In a category increasingly defined by comfort viewing and genre confidence, the crowd-pleaser doesnât have to be a compromise candidate. It can be the frontrunner.