Academy Announces Oscar Rule Changes: AI Protections, Expanded International Eligibility
New 99th Oscars rules require human-performed roles and human-authored screenplays, while allowing multiple nominations per actor and international films to qualify via festival wins
L'essentiel
- The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has announced significant rule changes for the 99th Oscars, including explicit AI protections requiring acting roles to be demonstrably performed by humans with consent and screenplays to be human-authored.
- The changes also allow actors to receive multiple nominations in the same category and let international films qualify by winning top prizes at major festivals like Cannes, Venice, or Sundance, shifting from country-based to filmmaker-based eligibility.
- The rules go into effect for 2026 films.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
The Academy's rules and eligibility standards have always evolved alongside technologies such as sound, color, and CGI. The 2026 changes represent the organization's first explicit stance on AI-generated content in acting and writing categories.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has announced several significant rule changes for the 99th Oscars, including AI protections for actors and writers as well as expanded eligibility for international films. In a statement to NPR, the Academy on Saturday said the changes are in response to listening to the global filmmaking community and addressing barriers to entry in its eligibility process. The Academy added that its rules and eligibility standards have always evolved alongside technologies such as sound, color, and CGI, and that AI is no different. Awards rules and guidelines are reviewed and refined each year.
Among the most noteworthy changes, the Academy now explicitly states that only roles, "demonstrably performed by humans with their consent" are eligible for Acting awards. In other words, AI creations like the much-hyped Tilly Norwood cannot hope to win a Best Actress Oscar anytime soon. Particle6, the production company behind Norwood, did not immediately respond to NPR's request for comment on Saturday about its creations' ban from consideration. In March, Norwood commented, "Can't wait to go to the Oscars!" in an Instagram post announcing its newly released music video. The Academy also requires screenplays to be "human-authored" and said it reserved the right to investigate the use of generative AI in any submission.
Meanwhile, qualifying flesh-and-blood human actors can now be nominated for multiple performances in the same category if those performances get enough votes to land in the top five. So, someone like Anne Hathaway, who has five major movies scheduled for release in 2026, could now theoretically sweep the nominations – though that outcome seems extremely unlikely. "If an actor has an extremely prolific year, might we even see someone swallow up three of the five nominations?," wrote Deadline's awards columnist and chief film critic Pete Hammond about the changes. "Probably won't happen, but it's now possible." Under previous rules, an actor could only receive one nomination per category. If they had two high-ranking performances in Best Actor, for example, only the one with the most votes would move forward.
International films prioritizes filmmakers over countries. While international films can still be the official selection of their countries, now they can qualify by winning the top prize at a major international festival such as the Palme d'Or at Cannes, the Golden Lion at Venice, or the World Cinema Grand Jury Prize at Sundance. Historically, countries "owned" the nomination, and only one film per country was allowed. The new rules allow multiple films from the same country to compete if they are critically acclaimed, and it shifts the honor from a geopolitical entity to the filmmakers themselves.
The changes have prompted a largely positive reaction from the film community on social media, such as on the popular The Shade Room entertainment and celebrity-focused Instagram feed, where commenters widely praised the "human-only" move to protect creative jobs. The Academy's Awards Committee oversees the rules in tandem with branch executive committees, the International Feature Film Executive Committee and the Scientific and Technical Awards Executive Committee. The rules are scheduled to go into effect next year, covering films released in 2026.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
Other award bodies (BAFTA, Golden Globes) will likely adopt similar AI protections
Probable · En quelques mois
Film festivals may adjust their eligibility requirements to align with Oscar changes
Possible · En quelques mois
Questions ouvertes
- How will the Academy verify that roles were 'demonstrably performed by humans'?
- What investigation powers does the Academy have regarding generative AI use?
- Will festival-winning films still need country sponsorship for Oscar consideration?





