New York
How Oscar Nominee ‘Anora’ Subverted the Brooklyn Cinderella Story
That location is everything turns out to be a truth nearly as relevant to romantic comedies as it is to real estate. If you cannot recall where two characters find each other or rekindle something long dormant, then the rest of the movie probably isn’t worth remembering.
There is nearly nothing forgettable about Sean Baker’s “Anora,” which picked up six Oscar nominations on Thursday, among them best picture and best director, a film virtually unsurpassed in its use of place and architecture to make the thematic arguments at its core.
The best romantic comedies deliver aggressively on geography, so much so that to ask where “Four Weddings and a Funeral” or “Love, Actually” or any Nora Ephron film is set, can seem like wanting to know which of the ancient empires belonged to Caesar. By now, even if you have not seen “Anora,” you have likely heard that it is a Brooklyn love story with Brooklyn drawn well beyond the parameters of bourgeois cliché.
We are many, many subway stops away from open shelving and tastefully patinated kitchen fixtures, away from people falling in love because they both dig Elizabeth Bishop or Wellfleet in the off-season.
Vanya encounters a stripper named Anora — or Ani — at a club in Hell’s Kitchen and eventually asks her to see him exclusively, a transactional arrangement that suits her because she finds herself as attracted to his endearingly goofy sense of exploration as she is to his cash.
We are in “Pretty Woman” territory but also in a place where the accompanying expectations are skillfully subverted. Ani is animated by a beguiling innocence, just as Julia Roberts’s Beverly Hills sex worker was, but also carries with her an anger, deeply ingrained, from which the relationship with Vanya brings only a short reprieve.
Like other Sean Baker films — “The Florida Project,” “Red Rocket” — “Anora” immerses itself in the indignities experienced on the less-resourced side of the class divide. For a while in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the genre of romantic comedy seemed distinguished by a certain gendered leveling up in the vein of “Pygmalion” and classic Regency fiction — a sweet and intuitively smart (if not Wellesley-pedigreed) woman would meet a guy of much higher social standing, and her fortunes would soar both in terms of a fulfilling relationship in which she finds herself as well as the great apartments and country houses that happen to come along with it.
“Pretty Woman” is the one obvious box-office-shattering example; two years before came Mike Nichols’s “Working Girl,” in which Melanie Griffith took the Staten Island Ferry every day to a secretarial job on Wall Street that left her demeaned by a waspish female boss and then redeemed by the love of a kindhearted titan and a shot at showing off her native talent for orchestrating corporate mergers.
Decades earlier, in the 1940s, a similar dynamic took hold in comedies like “Ball of Fire” and “The Lady Eve,” when the culture, getting dragged out of the Great Depression by an aristocratic president, was eager to appreciate the view that the elites were the good guys.
“Anora” calibrates itself to other realities. It shrewdly asks how much mobility — particularly the kind acquired through marriage — is really possible in a place like 21st-century New York or anywhere the wealthy can sequester themselves from the less lucky.
When Ani meets Vanya’s terrible parents right after they land in town by private jet to break up her relationship with their son, she naïvely assumes that they will like her if she tries hard enough, that her polite and mannered way of speaking will make the matter of her profession irrelevant. It is a peculiar aspect of the conversations that have come up around the film that “Anora” is described as a Cinderella story when it is attuned to very different transitions and awakenings, to princely behaviors coming where you might not anticipate them.
“Anora” shifts effortlessly between the keys of mournfulness and farce, exiling the romantic comedy from the place where it has been so comfortable for so long, the whole universe of tasteful, cosmopolitan money. In the 1970s, the philosopher Stanley Cavell coined the phrase “comedies of remarriage” to refer to those Hollywood films of the 1930s and ’40s in which a certain world order is re-established (usually in Connecticut, he joked) when two like minds reunite after a divorce or separation (or the realization that the other person, long-ago shipwrecked and thought to be dead, really isn’t; see “My Favorite Wife”).
“Anora,” a screwball, might belong to a subgenre as yet unnamed — the comedy of repatriation, in which it is neither the very familiar nor the exotic that ultimately compels but the reckoning that brings you back to some vanished part of yourself.
Ani has witnessed the fantasy — the diamonds on demand, the house with a garage that can hold 10 cars. She has been to the ball, but she will leave no glass slipper behind.
New York
Video: Fans Show Up to the Parade in Their Best Knicks-Themed Attire
new video loaded: Fans Show Up to the Parade in Their Best Knicks-Themed Attire
transcript
transcript
Fans Show Up to the Parade in Their Best Knicks-Themed Attire
New York Knicks fans showed up in droves to a ticker-tape parade in Manhattan in their best orange and blue outfits to honor the N.B.A champions.
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“Patrick Ewing. He didn’t get a ring. But I wear your sneakers, bro. When I was in high school, back in the ’90s, Patrick Ewing, John Starks, they were the team that I rooted for in the ’90s. They didn’t make it. So as a tribute to him because this is where I started at being a fan, Patrick Ewing. Knicks hat in denim — I’m a denim fanatic. So I love denim — Knicks hat. And yeah, that’s it.” “This is my style. I usually dress like this every day. But I did a special Knicks edition. It’s all really fun. I start with my makeup. I did really cute flames on my eyes because the Knicks are fire. I don’t really know what I’m going to do before I put it on. I just figure it out along the way. Like, this is a piece of fabric and I just layer in stuff.” “This is from my online boutique and the hat I just bought on the way to the parade because I wanted to match the jumpsuit, and that’s how I came up with the outfit.” “She was ready to go, man.” “Can you show your fingernail?” “She’s been sleeping in her Jalen Brunson jersey for the last 10 weeks. We’ve been watching all the games. You want to tell them who’s your favorite player?” “Jalen Brunson.” “I’m pretty sure this jersey was actually made for a human baby. But they’re selling them around the block. And we threw it on Chester and everyone started clapping. So — he wears it well.” “Blue and orange.” “So I did blue and orange.” “It had to be orange and blue. “Orange and blue. Orange and blue.”
By Meg Felling, Jeremy Raff, Ang Li and David Cheung
June 18, 2026
New York
Video: The Democracy of The Dive Bar
new video loaded: The Democracy of The Dive Bar
By Anna Kodé, Gabriel Blanco, Haimy Assefa and Laura Salaberry
June 19, 2026
New York
Video: Knicks Fans Celebrate With Ticker-Tape Parade
“It’s been 53 years. I’ve been waiting that long.” “It’s been a very long time, a long time coming. And I’m so excited that my Knicks finally brought a championship home.” “Let’s go Knicks.” “I had to wake up at six o’clock.” “Knicks in five.” “Let’s go, Knicks.” “Let’s go, Knicks!” “We just moved to D.C. a few years ago, but we’re so happy to be back in New York, celebrating. Once we won we were like — we’re absolutely coming home. So, we had to bring Chester with us. I mean, he’s the biggest puppy Knicks fan there is. Chester, can you say Knicks in 5? Knicks in five.” “I got hurt a couple weeks ago, but this is the first time they’ve been to the finals since I was a year old. And so to be able to be here, this is a once-in-a-lifetime thing.” “My man’s out here with a boot and a Josh Hart jersey. My man’s got heart.” “It feels so overwhelming but overwhelming in a good way, where, like, I want to be — I want to, like, shoot some balls. I want to, like, just vibe with everyone because everyone’s here for one purpose, and that’s celebrating the Knicks.” “This has been like a uniting situation for New Yorkers, and I just can’t wait to feel the love from everybody.” “I think it’s a great equalizer, right? It brings everyone together. It doesn’t matter if you make $900,000 a year, if you make $50,000 a year. You’re united because of the Knicks.” “So often when this city comes together, it is because we are forced to by a moment of tragedy or adversity. What a gift it is to be brought together by pure, unfiltered joy.” “Most importantly, thank you to the fans. I’m not going to lie though, y’all all are some pretty hard critics, but we appreciate it. At least I do, appreciate it a lot.”
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