As releases of new film came to a halt due to coronavirus pandemic, there are plans to postpone the Academy Awards ceremony next year by four months.

Such an idea has been planned for the first time in 93 years.

The organisers are in talks to push back the ceremony, which was scheduled to be held on February 28 next year. It might be pushed back to May or June.

Many Hollywood studios have already been informed about the “longer release window for their films to be eligible for nomination”.

The Oscar season usually begins after the summer, with studios releasing their awards season contenders in November and December. The Academy members vote in January.

Amid the ongoing worldwide lockdown due to the virus crisis, several movies have been pushed back as cinemas remain shut. Movies which have been pushed back include: James Bond movie “No Time To Die”, “Top Gun: Maverick”, “Mulan” and Marvel’s “Black Widow”.

“The ongoing coronavirus crisis has caused waves in the industry and has decimated plans for so many releases this year. The Oscars organisers have been in talks for weeks about whether the ceremony can go ahead given so many releases have been pushed back,” said a source.

“There would be a mutiny if changes weren’t made and the industry could be totally ravaged if film studios held back their offerings until the 2022 ceremony to be eligible,” the source added.

“What they’re proposing is pushing back the ceremony, which was going to take place on February 28, to either late May or early June.

Doing this means films forced to postpone their release dates can put them out later this year or in early 2021 knowing they will still be eligible for the Oscars,” said the source.

“Film studios have been informed of the plans and are now drawing up their release dates accordingly. But with everything still so up in the air, it’s all rather tentative at the moment,” added the source.

Last month, the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences announced a change in rules and eligibility requirements for the 2021 Oscars, making movies of streaming services eligible to win the golden statuettes.