Entertainment | The Hurt Locker Hurt Locker Producer Banned From Oscars Chartier first nominee un-invited for Oscar campaigning By Jane Yager Posted Mar 3, 2010 5:39 AM CST Copied Screeenwriter Mark Boal, director Kathryn Bigelow, producers Greg Shapiro and Nicolas Chartier, with their awards for Best Film with The Hurt Locker at the British Academy in London, Feb. 21, 2010. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan) For the first time ever, an Oscar nominee has been banned from attending the Academy Awards. The Hurt Locker co-producer Nicolas Chartier earned the ire of the academy with an email campaign telling friends to push academy members to support his movie over "that $500M film" (best picture rival Avatar). Bad move—the academy prohibits nominees from smearing the competition, and Chartier's invitation to the Sunday ceremony has been revoked. Should Hurt Locker win best picture, Chartier won't be joining the film's other producers on stage, but will have to "receive his Oscar statuette at some point subsequent to the March 7 ceremonies," the academy says. The academy has in the past withdrawn studios' allotted tickets to punish violators of its rules against Oscar campaigning, but Chartier is the first actual nominee to be denied entry to the awards. Read These Next A former NFL Pro Bowler has died at age 36. Backlash for Trump nominee who said he has 'a Nazi streak.' The massive AWS failure exposed a big problem with the internet. A man ended up dead after trying to steal from Spirit Halloween. Report an error