The stellar $55 million box-office debut of "The Martian" this weekend marks a return to form for Ridley Scott, and raises the prospect that the acclaimed director could be in line to take another run at his first Oscar victory.
Academy voters don't — at least consciously — factor box-office performance in when they make nominations, but broad commercial success drives buzz and certainly can't hurt.
"The Martian" is Scott's best sci-fi opening ever, ahead of "Prometheus," "Alien" and "Blade Runner," and second overall only to "Hannibal," which rolled out to $58 million in 2001.
"Because 'The Martian' feels very much like a director's movie, I think he's got a good shot," said Rentrak senior analyst Paul Dergarabedian about Scott's chances of scoring an Oscar nomination.
Scott is a true auteur, who leaves his stamp on virtually every movie he touches, Dergarabedian note. That includes the brilliant and decidedly dark outer space horror of "Alien" to the watershed futuristic world of "Blade Runner."
The British director's box-office hits include "Hannibal," "American Gangster," "Gladiator" and "Thelma & Louise." He earned Best Director nominations for the latter two, as well as the 2001 drama "Black Hawk Down" about a devastating U.S. military raid in Somalia. But even when "Gladiator" was named Best Picture, the directing award went to Steven Soderbergh for "Traffic." However, "The Martian" could change that.