I Am DB

January 9, 2013

Oscars 2012: Nominations Eve

Filed under: Movies,Oscars — DB @ 7:03 pm
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It hardly seems possible that it’s been a year since I was fretting over whether or not to predict Best Picture nominations for The Tree of Life and Moneyball, but here we are again, and The Tree of Life and Moneyball have been replaced by The Master and Django Unchained. If you actually tried to read any of my Oscar season posts last year, you probably only finished a month ago, not just because they are tediously long and detailed, but because you inevitably tried to gouge your eyes out or inflict some other sort of bodily harm that required months of physical and psychological therapy to overcome. Let me just say that I’m glad you’re doing better. You were foolish to bother reading. I’m really just writing these things for myself. But if you’re a glutton for punishment, then this post is for you.

A couple of interesting things about this year’s Oscars before we get started. First, the Academy shifted their timeline this year. Nominations are usually announced later in the month, but this year’s date was set for January 15, then pushed up to January 10. It might not seem like a big deal to move the nominations up by two weeks or ten days, but when you consider how crowded the end of the year is with pedigree films, the condensed timeline puts increased pressure on Academy members to see all the movies in even less time. It was challenging enough before, just given the glut of contenders that come out of the gate in November and December (an exasperating problem in and of itself, which I’ve talked about before), but now with ballots due back to the Academy on January 3, voters would have to cram even harder…or just not bother seeing all the contenders. It’s the smaller, lower-budget movies that will be neglected, as more members probably sought out the hyped late releases like Django Unchained and Les Misérables. The award ceremony itself will still take place at the end of February, creating a much longer period between the announcement of the nominees and Oscar night. Voting for the awards won’t even start until February 8. The Academy justified the move by saying that voters and the public will now have more time to see the nominated films. But doesn’t it make more sense that voters be given time to see as many movies as possible before selecting who they want to nominate? Ideally, by the time the nominees are announced, Academy members should already have seen the nominated films…because they surveyed the field and decided what to nominate. But alas, I should know better than to invoke logic when it comes to Hollywood. As the Grande Dame of awards shows, the Oscars rule the season, and any changes to its timeline set off a chain reaction among other award-bestowing bodies.

The other unknown this year just reared its head recently. This is the first year that the Academy has offered e-voting as an alternative to paper ballots, and word emerged over the holidays that voters who had opted for that system were experiencing serious technical difficulties. Comments from Academy members collected by The Hollywood Reporter indicated that some of them might just give up out of frustration and not vote at all. Older voters who are less computer-savvy might be in this boat, although a follow-up story in the Reporter cited younger members like Morgan Spurlock as running into problems. This may be blown out of proportion and turn out to have little impact, but if it is legitimate, and if significant numbers of members skip voting, it could change the dynamic of the race, especially if those voters are the older faction who might tend to sway the nominations away from edgier material like The Master and toward more traditional fare like Les Misérables. Either way, the Academy extended the voting deadline by a day, to January 4. And I’m making my predictions on the assumption that this won’t be a big issue…that is, that the Academy will be just as old-fashioned as ever.

So with that said…here comes the hurt.

BEST PICTURE
Argo
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Django Unchained
Les Misérables
Life of Pi
Lincoln
The Master
Moonrise Kingdom
Silver Linings Playbook
Zero Dark Thirty

Best Picture remains a particularly tricky guessing game since there could be anywhere from five to ten nominees, depending on how many people vote and how they rank their selections. According to Steve Pond, the expert Oscar data guru who writes for TheWrap.com, a small but passionate group of supporters can be enough to lift a movie into the Best Picture race (though actually winning the award takes broader consensus). Given that last year saw a field with nine nominees, and it was widely considered to be a weak year for movies, I’m betting that the stronger slate from 2012 will max the category out at the full ten. Then again, Pond proposes that with so many viable choices, the votes could be so spread out that fewer films will hit the number they need to secure a nomination.

Back in the days of five nominees, we’d almost certainly have Argo, Les Misérables, Lincoln, Silver Linings Playbook and Zero Dark Thirty. I figure that Life of Pi and Moonrise Kingdom are close behind, which leaves three potential nominees and six movies that would seem to have a reasonable shot. I’m uncertain how Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master will fare with Academy members. It’s a critical darling, but is it too esoteric for the Academy? They embraced There Will Be Blood, which was tonally and even thematically similar, but The Master lacks that film’s catharsis, and its ambiguity has frustrated many viewers. Still, I think the contingent of voters that rallied behind The Tree of Life last year will also place The Master high on their list.

James Bond’s latest adventure Skyfall earned a surprise nomination from the Producer’s Guild of America, but that body tends to include a few smart popcorn movies that did big box office. Admired as Skyfall is, I don’t see the Academy embracing it as a Best Picture nominee. Nor are The Dark Knight Rises or The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey likely to make to the cut, even though the Academy’s failure to nominate the former’s 2008 predecessor is understood to be one of the reasons the category was expanded to more than five nominees in the first place, and even though the latter’s trio of predecessors were all nominated for Best Picture. Neither 2012 entry in these respective series were quite as admired, and without the PGA nomination, chances for Best Picture recognition from the Academy are slim to none.

Django Unchained has been a consistent presence on critic’s awards lists, and though it doesn’t seem like typical Academy fare, the same was true of Inglourious Basterds, which did extremely well in 2009. We’ll see if controversy over the film’s depiction of slavery derails its chances here. There’s also last summer’s low budget indie sensation Beasts of the Southern Wild, a highly original fable that has captivated critics and, like Django, been a fixture on critics’ lists.

I’m neglecting to include The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel among my final picks. This sweet but slight early summer release has apparently remained a favorite of many Academy members and could displace The Master, Django or Beasts (I think the other seven are safe). It managed Screen Actor’s Guild nominations for Best Ensemble Cast (the guild’s equivalent of a Best Picture award) and a Supporting Actress nomination for Maggie Smith, as well as Golden Globe nominations for Best Musical/Comedy Picture and Best Actress in a Musical/Comedy for Judi Dench. With actors making up the largest voting branch of the Academy, the SAG nominations can be a good indicator, and Marigold did well there whereas Django and Beasts went un-nominated. But Beasts was ineligible for SAG recognition due its use of non-SAG actors, and Django, as one of the last films of the year that was ready for screening, may not have been seen by enough SAG voters in time for their mid-December nominations. So watch out for Marigold.

Personal: Argo, Django Unchained, Les Misérables, Lincoln, Moonrise Kingdom, Silver Linings Playbook, Zero Dark Thirty

BEST DIRECTOR
Ben Affleck – Argo
Kathryn Bigelow – Zero Dark Thirty
Tom Hooper – Les Misérables
Ang Lee – Life of Pi
Steven Spielberg – Lincoln

Affleck and Bigelow are the two locks here, and most would probably say the same about Spielberg and Hooper, though I could see either of them becoming the category’s big “snub” – Hooper because Les Misérables seems to have as many detractors as it does supporters, and Spielberg because as good as Lincoln is, his guiding hand might be overlooked in favor of the movie’s stellar acting and writing. Lincoln is sure to be a big player this year, but if Spielberg were left out in the cold, it wouldn’t be the first time; famously, The Color Purple‘s 11 nominations did not include one for its director. Just this morning, the British Academy of Film and Television Arts announced their nominees, and although Lincoln led the field with 10 nominations, Spielberg was passed over. But I don’t think he’ll be shut out tomorrow. (Incidentally, Les Misérables followed Lincoln with nine BAFTA nominations, but like Spielberg, Tom Hooper was overlooked. Instead, Tarantino and Michael Haneke joined Affleck, Bigelow and Lee.)

So if I’m right about Spielberg, Hooper, Bigelow and Affleck, who gets the fifth spot? I’m going with Ang Lee for his admired tackling of a story that was deemed by many to be unfilmable. But there are a few others in play for a nomination. David O. Russell is nipping at the edges for his assured work on Silver Linings Playbook, and the strength shown by Django Unchained places Quentin Tarantino in the conversation. In a category that often recognizes a Hollywood outsider or someone with a less mainstream, more challenging or intellectual film to offer, do not count out German director Michael Haneke for the French film Amour, about an elderly couple coming to grips with the wife’s impending death. Unfortunately, Amour is one of the few movies in contention that I haven’t been able to see yet, so I can’t speak to it myself. (It opens in the Bay Area the day after the nominations are announced, and I didn’t have access to an early screening.) But based on the critical acclaim and awards its received so far, and the history of the Director’s branch, Haneke has an excellent chance. There’s also a possibility that Paul Thomas Anderson could nab that “auteur” spot for The Master. I’d love to say that Moonrise Kingdom director Wes Anderson has a shot too, but I don’t think he’s got much hope here.

My Best Director commentary would have ended there, but the Director’s Guild of America announced their nominees yesterday, and wouldn’t you know it, they chose the same five that I did. That gives me pause, since the DGA and the Oscar nominees rarely line up exactly. What to do? Nothing, I think. I’m taking my chances that this will be one of those uncommon years when the DGA and the Academy are aligned. But I’m probably wrong.

Personal: Ben Affleck, Wes Anderson, Tom Hooper, David O. Russell, Steven Spielberg

BEST ACTOR
Bradley Cooper – Silver Linings Playbook
Daniel Day-Lewis – Lincoln
John Hawkes – The Sessions
Joaquin Phoenix – The Master
Denzel Washington – Flight

The no-brainer nominee here is of course Daniel Day-Lewis for his astonishing performance in Lincoln. In a just world, he would be duking it out with The Master‘s Joaquin Phoenix when it comes time to pick a winner, but Phoenix’s once-assured nomination is now significantly less assured. That may be because the unfiltered, self-deprecating actor, previously nominated for Gladiator and Walk the Line, had some harsh things to say about the awards circuit back in October. The initial reaction to his comments was that he had just blown his chances (not that he cared, obviously). But almost immediately after that, there was a second wave of coverage pointing out that Phoenix’s comments might not be so harmful after all, since most of his fellow actors probably agree with him even if they wouldn’t say so quite as publicly or bluntly. I will add that Phoenix never mentions the Oscars specifically in his comments; rather, he was addressing the whole idea of campaigning for awards, and there are many stops on that trail before arriving at the Kodak Theatre. And while those remarks do include a point about the absurdity of pitting actors against each other, his general point was, again, more about the campaigning process. (And for what it’s worth, direct criticisms of the Academy Awards and the idea of actors competing against each other were voiced by Dustin Hoffman early in his career, as well as Sean Penn all throughout his; that didn’t stop the Academy from honoring each of them twice…nor did it stop them from accepting.) In another interview a few weeks later, Phoenix didn’t back away from this statements, but he did clarify them, acknowledging the benefit his career has received from past Oscar nominations. Phoenix wasn’t the only actor to decry the process this season; Anthony Hopkins had similar things to say while promoting his film Hitchcock. But although there was a point a few months ago when Hopkins was thought to be in the mix for a nomination, his chances have faded away, and his remarks don’t appear to be a factor.

When the awards season began in early December, I expected Phoenix to collect a fair share of Best Actor mentions, but so far he’s only been cited five times (though several groups have nominated him or named him as a runner-up), whereas Daniel Day-Lewis has been recognized 23 times. Not that Day-Lewis is undeserving by any stretch, but I did expect Phoenix to come up more frequently, especially since his comments would have little bearing on how critics vote. Then when he was left off the Screen Actor’s Guild list of Best Actor nominees, that was shocker. Who knows if his comments came into play or not, but in the end, I think the Actor’s branch of the Academy will find his incredible performance hard to resist. Or maybe I’m just too hopeful to admit defeat.

Whatever happens with Phoenix, Best Actor spots for John Hawkes as a disabled polio survivor seeking to lose his virginity in The Sessions and Denzel Washington’s troubled pilot in Flight are safe bets. Vying for the remaining slot (or slots) are most likely Bradley Cooper and Hugh Jackman, who joined Day-Lewis, Hawkes and Washington on the SAG list (and both of whom, along with Phoenix, were nominated for the other three significant precursor prizes – the Broadcast Film Critics Association’s awards, the Golden Globes (given out by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association) and now BAFTA. If the other four performers make the cut, it’s tough to say whether Cooper or Jackman will be the lucky fifth. Both Silver Linings Playbook and Les Misérables have a lot of support and admirers. I worry that Cooper isn’t taken seriously enough yet as an actor to get the nomination, even though his performance easily deserves it. Jackman, on the other hand, has shown a command of drama, comedy, action, musicals…he can do it all, and his peers know it. He seems more “Academy-friendly,” which probably makes him a safer bet than Cooper. But I’m taking a chance – perhaps foolishly fueled by my own hopes for Cooper – and predicting that Jackman will just miss out.

A few other names have been floating around as possibilities, including Jack Black for Bernie and Denis Lavant for the French film Holy Motors, but I think the only person who stands a chance at a surprise break-in is Richard Gere for his captivating, understated performance as a wealthy financial manager under severe personal and professional pressures in Arbitrage. Gere has been around a long time, has never been nominated (he was the only major cast member of Chicago to miss out), and is highly regarded by his fellow actors. I don’t think he’ll be able to muscle into such a competitive category, but it’s not out of the question.

Personal: Bradley Cooper, Daniel Day-Lewis, Richard Gere, Joaquin Phoenix, Denzel Washington

BEST ACTRESS
Jessica Chastain – Zero Dark Thirty
Marion Cotillard – Rust and Bone
Jennifer Lawrence – Silver Linings Playbook
Emmanuelle Riva – Amour
Naomi Watts – The Impossible

This is a tough category to predict. Jessica Chastain and Jennifer Lawrence are sure things, but the other three are all vulnerable. They all come from films that are difficult to watch at times (or so I’ve heard about Amour, given its subject matter) and may not have been at the top of Academy members’ must-see lists in December…cause nothing says “holiday cheer” like tsunamis, leg amputations and the encroaching death of the elderly. Both Amour and Rust and Bone are French films, and performances in foreign languages often face an uphill battle. Of course, Cotillard won Best Actress a few years ago for a French film, so she has history on her side, not to mention the trifecta of nominations from the Screen Actor’s Guild, Broadcast Film Critics and Hollywood Foreign Press Association (and now BAFTA too). Plus she’s an international star by now, with a presence in Hollywood films like The Dark Knight Rises and Inception. Emmanuelle Riva has few of these advantages. She’s unknown in America, and she was overlooked by SAG and the HFPA (which is surprising, since you would think the Hollywood Foreign Press Association would be particularly attuned to performances in other languages). In her favor is that Amour has received a lot of attention, her performance has been universally hailed as a moving and beautiful piece of work, and she too got a BAFTA nomination today. If enough Academy members see the film, they may not be able to deny her.

Naomi Watts, like Cotillard, also has nominations from the BFCA, HFPA and SAG on her side, and she is certainly a known and respected actress in Hollywood. Her performance as a mother battered by the 2004 tsunami in Thailand has won several prominent admirers. Reese Witherspoon wrote a letter of praise to Watts, which was published in Entertainment Weekly, and Angelina Jolie hosted a screening of the film, applauding not just Watts, but also Ewan McGregor and the young actors who play their children. Such efforts by one actor on behalf of another can sometimes do the trick. Javier Bardem can attest to this; his longshot Best Actor nominations for Before Night Falls and Biutiful were likely both helped by support from such Hollywood luminaries as Winona Ryder and Jack Nicholson for the former, and Julia Roberts, Ryan Gosling and Sean Penn for the latter. On the other hand, Watts’ character spends a fair portion of the movie immobile and inactive. I don’t know if that will matter much, as she’s certainly moving and strong in her other scenes. But I could see it working against her, with voters perhaps feeling she doesn’t get to “do” enough.

So if any of these ladies don’t come through, who else are we looking at? Top of the list is Quvenzhané Wallis (pronounced Kwah-VENN-Jah-Nay), who floored critics as Hushpuppy, the six year-old protagonist of Beasts of the Southern Wild. With no previous acting experience, Wallis anchored the film with an honest and natural performance that has had many predicting an Oscar nomination since the summer. I could definitely see it happening, but I have reservations. Her age, for starters. Child actors have been nominated before, but she would be the youngest ever, and at six years-old (when she made the movie; she’s now nine), will some voters feel that her performance, engaging as it is, isn’t acting so much as simply existing in a state of vulnerability and innocence that goes along with her age?

With SAG and Golden Globe nominations (and now BAFTA) to her credit, Helen Mirren has a shot for her performance in Hitchcock, but I don’t see it happening, maybe because it just seems undeserved to me. Mirren is solid in the film, but there’s nothing about her performance that stands out as one of the year’s best. If she makes it at the expense of Riva or Cotillard, it will be more about voters not seeing those actresses’ films than about Mirren’s actual work. Rachel Weisz received glowing reviews from critics for her work in The Deep Blue Sea, and she even won a couple of precursor awards and a Golden Globe nomination, but it’s a small film lacking the necessary buzz to attract enough viewers to carry Weisz to a nomination. Still, she could be one of the morning’s big surprises. It’s also possible, though unlikely, that Helen Hunt will sneak into this category for The Sessions. Fox Searchlight is promoting her as Best Supporting Actress, but several critics groups have nominated her in the lead category, and voters here could do the same. They tend to stick with the studio’s recommendation, but will occasionally go another way, as they did in 2008 when they nominated Kate Winslet for The Reader in the lead category rather than supporting.

Personal: Jessica Chastain, Marion Cotillard, Helen Hunt, Jennifer Lawrence, Naomi Watts

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Alan Arkin – Argo
Robert DeNiro – Silver Linings Playbook
Philip Seymour Hoffman – The Master
Tommy Lee Jones – Lincoln
Christoph Waltz – Django Unchained

The list of nominees in this category could easily match my predictions, but there is so much strong work in the running that plenty of other names could work their way in as well. Arkin, Hoffman and Jones have each been nominated by SAG, the HFPA, the BFCA and BAFTA, and the bulk of the critics awards so far have been split between Hoffman and Jones. So those two are well positioned, and Arkin is almost certain to be there as well. The remaining two slots are fairly open. DeNiro was left off the list of Golden Globe and BAFTA nominees, but scored with SAG and the BFCA. Waltz, meanwhile, only got the Golden Globe nomination, but has been cited by several critics groups as the season has gone on, and scored BAFTA recognition today. Waltz is also competing with his co-star Leonardo DiCaprio, who also got a Golden Globe nomination and could just as easily make the final five. Javier Bardem surprised many with SAG and BFCA nominations for his playful, determined villain in Skyfall, and while I don’t expect he’ll make it in the end, Bardem should never be written off. (He got the BAFTA seal of approval today as well.) Then there’s Matthew McConaughey, who had a banner, career-resurrecting year with excellent performances in Bernie, The Paperboy, Killer Joe (or so I’ve heard; haven’t seen it yet) and the one for which he’d most likely be nominated, Magic Mike.

That’s the pool from which the final five will probably be pulled, but there are a number of other actors who could conceivably pop up, either fueled by widespread critical acclaim or general admiration for their movies. That list includes Dwight Henry for Beasts of the Southern Wild, John Goodman for Argo, Jason Clarke for Zero Dark Thirty and Ewan McGregor for The Impossible. None of them have the momentum they would surely need to break through, but they have just enough spoiler potential to keep things interesting. In addition to all the actors mentioned so far, I could name another half-dozen, at least, who are worthy of recognition in this category. Michael Fassbender in Prometheus, Jim Broadbent in Cloud Atlas, David Oyelowo in The Paperboy, Benicio del Toro in Savages, Guy Pearce in Lawless, Scoot McNairy in Killing Them Softly, Ezra Miller in The Perks of Being a Wallflower…none of them have a chance in hell, but along with all the people with better odds, their work shows that when it comes to Supporting Actors, there’s been an abundance of riches this year.

Personal: Jason Clarke, Robert DeNiro, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Ewan McGregor, Christoph Waltz

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Amy Adams – The Master
Sally Field – Lincoln
Anne Hathaway – Les Misérables
Helen Hunt – The Sessions
Maggie Smith – The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

Despite minimal screentime, Hathaway has dominated the critics awards so far, and is a sure bet here. (Her well-reviewed performance in The Dark Knight Rises doesn’t hurt.) Sally Field and Helen Hunt are on equally solid footing, allowing for the small chance that voters will elevate Hunt to Best Actress. There’s also the possibility that if enough votes do place her there, she could fall short in both categories and wind up out of it altogether. But I expect she’ll make it, and that she’ll remain in the Supporting category. Amy Adams has been a mainstay on critics’ lists of nominees, but her performance is subtle and comes in a movie that, as I mentioned in the Best Picture section, may or may not find favor with Academy members. Her omission from the SAG nominees also makes her a bit vulnerable. Still, the Academy loves Adams. She’s been nominated three times since 2005, and in two of those cases I incorrectly predicted she would be overlooked. I won’t make the same mistake again…which probably means she’ll be overlooked. But I’m sticking with her anyway. She got a boost today from BAFTA, and could also be helped by the good notices she earned as Clint Eastwood’s daughter in the baseball drama Trouble with the Curve.

That just leaves Maggie Smith, who is by no means a sure thing. She did get a SAG nomination, and as I said, I’ve read that The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel has been resonating with actors, a fact that is also evident from the SAG nomination for Best Ensemble Cast. On the other hand, the SAG voting body is much larger and more eclectic than the Actors branch of the Academy. And Smith’s performance, while entertaining, is really just a variation on her Downton Abbey character. But people love her on Downton Abbey, so…

All eyes are on two actresses in particular for filling out this category: one is a big name and past Oscar winner, the other is a longtime working actress with little name recognition. The big name/past winner is Nicole Kidman, who plays a saucy sexpot in director Lee Daniels’ southern-fried drama, The Paperboy. Although the movie was generally derided, it did have some avid supporters (it received an extended standing ovation at the Cannes Film Festival), and Kidman was mentioned even that far back as a possible contender. But the movie’s poor reviews upon its US release in October seemed to knock Kidman out of contention…until she got surprise SAG and Golden Globe nominations. Now it’s just a question of whether the movie – or at least Kidman’s committed performance – are to the Academy’s tastes.

The other contender everyone is curious about is Ann Dowd, from the small indie movie Compliance. She plays a fast food restaurant manager who receives a phone call from a policeman claiming that a young, pretty employee at the restaurant has stolen from a customer, and that she must help him interrogate her until he can come to the location personally. As it turns out,  something far more sinister is at play. Dowd has worked steadily since the early 90’s, appearing in such films as Philadelphia, Marley & Me, Apt Pupil and Flags of Our Fathers, and TV shows including Freaks and Geeks, The X-Files, Louie and, like every working actor under the sun, Law & Order (multiple versions, multiple times). I remember Dowd best for her brief but wonderful performance as Natalie Portman’s mother in Garden State. She won rave reviews for Compliance, but it was a surprise to everyone when the National Board of Review – considered to be one of the five major critics organizations handing out awards – named her the year’s Best Supporting Actress. Then the BFCA nominated her, and several other regional critics groups have done the same. Because Compliance was such a low-budget and low-grossing film, its distributor Magnolia Pictures could not afford to send DVD screeners to guild and Academy members. But seeing an opportunity to take her career to a new level, Dowd is self-financing a campaign in the hopes of getting voters to see the film and consider her work. Such efforts, when backed by notices from critics, do sometimes pay off. In 1987, Sally Kirkland landed a Best Actress nomination alongside Meryl Streep, Glenn Close, Cher and Holly Hunter for her film Anna, and in 1991 Michael Lerner’s efforts on his own behalf got him a Best Supporting Actor nomination for Barton Fink. A lot of people are rooting for Dowd, but she faces a steep uphill battle. (Compliance just came out on DVD this week, so I watched it last night. It’s a disturbing, thought-provoking movie, and Dowd is indeed excellent.)

Beyond the ladies mentioned, few other names are in the running. Academy darling Judi Dench has earned some deserved recognition for Skyfall, and newcomer Samantha Barks has been cited by some critics groups or Les Misérables, but both face long odds for an Oscar nomination. There’s been some talk around RoseMarie DeWitt for Your Sister’s Sister and Kelly Reilly for Flight, but that talk has been too quiet. Ditto for Emma Watson, who garnered a few nominations early in season from regional critics groups for The Perks of Being a Wallflower, but has lost what little steam she had. I wish the conversation included Salma Hayek for Savages, Susan Sarandon for Arbitrage and even Emily Blunt for Looper, but those are just wishful thinking.

Personal: Ann Dowd, Sally Field, Anne Hathaway, Salma Hayek, Susan Sarandon

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Michael Haneke – Amour
Quentin Tarantino – Django Unchained
John Gatins – Flight
Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola – Moonrise Kingdom
Mark Boal – Zero Dark Thirty

Mark Boal, who won this award for The Hurt Locker, and Wes Anderson, who hasn’t been nominated since The Royal Tenenbaums (and shares credit with Roman Coppola, son of Francis) are the category’s locks, and the only thing that keeps me from saying the same of Quentin Tarantino is Django‘s controversial subject matter. But I do expect QT to make the cut. Acclaimed foreign language films often find recognition from the writer’s branch, so Michael Haneke could be celebrated here rather than in the Best Director race (or in addition to a Best Director nomination). But I’m not convinced of his chances, nor of John Gatins’ for Flight.

The most likely alternates would be Paul Thomas Anderson for The Master and Rian Johnson for the crafty sci-fi film Looper. Flight, The Master and Looper were all nominated by the Writer’s Guild of America (as were Moonrise Kingdom and Zero Dark Thirty), but as always, it’s important to remember that the WGA deems films ineligible if they fail to meet certain criteria. Tarantino has never been a member of the guild, so his scripts never qualify for recognition. Shouldn’t be a problem for his Oscar chances. Haneke was also out of the running for the WGA. These notable ineligibilities  allowed scripts dancing on the edge to slide in. The question is, of Flight, Looper and The Master, which is most “on the edge?”

Paul Thomas Anderson has been Oscar nominated for his Boogie Nights, Magnolia and There Will Be Blood scripts, and with all the critical acclaim, The Master might seem like a no-brainer. But I question its chances for the same reasons I brought up in the Best Picture section. With only five slots as opposed to Best Picture’s ten, I’m not sure where The Master will fall. I’m really intrigued to see how the Academy reacts to it. Meanwhile, Rian Johnson is considered one of the more original filmmaking voices working right now (he deserved a nomination in 2006 for his debut film, Brick), and Looper has received a number of wins and nominations from the critics. But is it really the Academy’s taste? They don’t often go for sci-fi, and when they do, the stories tend to have weightier issues than Looper offers (see District 9, Inception, Children of Men). I could see Looper being this year’s 50/50 – a film that garnered a lot of screenwriting honors last year, including a WGA nod, but was ultimately passed over by the Academy (sorry, Joseph Gordon-Levitt). Still the script is clever enough, and Rian Johnson admired enough by fellow writers, that he could easily earn his first nomination. Flight is probably the clearest “fringe” candidate here, an admired film all all around, but one that just doesn’t have quite enough muscle to punch through in most races other than Best Actor. In a weaker year, it would be firmly in contention for Best Picture and Best Director. So if it stands a chance anywhere else, this is the place. What would seem to be the story of a plane crash and its aftermath is really a deeper character study of a flawed man fighting his demons, and it’s an impressive piece of work.

There are some smaller, independent films that might have stood a better chance in a different year, including Damsels in Distress, Safety Not Guaranteed and Your Sister’s Sister, but they aren’t in play as things stand. The only film I could see popping up out of left field is Arbitrage, Nicholas Jarecki’s carefully-plotted dramatic thriller/character study. It’s set in the same world of financial power players as last year’s surprise nominee Margin Call. But although that film was considered a longshot, it was discussed as a possibility. I’ve heard little mention of Arbitrage as a contender here. Too bad.

Personal: Arbitrage, Django Unchained, Flight, Moonrise Kingdom, Zero Dark Thirty

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Chris Terrio – Argo
Lucy Alibar & Benh Zeitlin – Beasts of the Southern Wild
David Magee – Life of Pi
Tony Kushner – Lincoln
David O. Russell – Silver Linings Playbook

Argo, Lincoln and Silver Linings Playbook are sitting pretty here. Life of Pi stands a strong chance, considering that the book has long been called unfilmable. However that may have been less a case of it posing challenges as an adaptation, and more about the technical challenges of having a tiger as a main character, interacting in extremely close proximity with a human. Will voters assign substantial credit to screenwriter David Magee for making the story work on film? I’m guessing yes, but I could be wrong. I haven’t read the book, but from what I understand, one of Magee’s major changes was the expansion of the story’s framing device, and the addition of a new character within that device to whom the adult Pi tells his story. I’ve seen even a few positive reviews of the movie describe these scenes as a bit clunky, so I wonder if that will matter.

Beasts of the Southern Wild is the other selection I could see going either way. It was not eligible for the WGA award, but I figure that its power and originality will impress fellow writers. Should voters decide against Pi or Beasts, they may turn to The Perks of Being a Wallflower. Stephen Chobsky adapted his own acclaimed, popular novel and directed the film, which received terrific reviews and has been cited by several critics groups so far, as well as the WGA. But again, I sense another 50/50 situation here – a movie that critics rally behind but that just doesn’t resonate with enough Academy members to land it a spot. It’s got a good chance, but it’s no guarantee.

Les Misérables could get swept up in what is sure to be a wave of nominations, but is it really seen as an achievement in screenwriting, especially when the dialogue is almost entirely sung? Another possibility – though a real longshot – is Cloud Atlas. Like Life of Pi, it was considered an unfilmable novel, but those who appreciated the film would probably praise Tom Tykwer, Andy Wachowski and Lana Wachowski for the creative choices they made in reworking the book’s structure for film.

Personal: Argo, Cloud Atlas, Lincoln, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Silver Linings Playbook

BEST ANIMATED FILM
Brave
Frankenweenie
The Painting
ParaNorman
Wreck-It Ralph

21 films were eligible for the award this year, meaning we’ll get a full slate of five nominees. And while there were enough strong offerings distributed by Hollywood studios to fill out the category, it’s likely that at least one of the nominees will be something from the foreign market that most American audiences have never heard of. Two such films – Chico and Rita and A Cat in Paris –  broke into the race last year, displacing the mighty Pixar’s Cars 2. The previous year, France’s The Illusionist made the final list over hits like Despicable Me and Tangled, and The Secret of Kells came out of nowhere the year before that. With members of the animation branch clearly in touch with what’s happening in the broader field, expect one or two of the nominees to come from the world of indie animation (which usually means foreign). Kells, Chico, and A Cat in Paris were all distributed by a specialty company called GKIDS, which has four films on the eligibility list this year. InContention.com’s Kris Tapley provided a nice gallery-style rundown of most of the eligible films, and based on his descriptions and comments, my guess is that The Painting and The Rabbi’s Cat stand the best chance of breaking through. Beyond the GKIDS offerings, one promising contender could be A Liar’s Autobiography: The Untrue Story of Monty Python’s Graham Chapman, just due to universal love for Python. But given all these indie and foreign entries that I’ve never seen or heard of, I’m pretty much just throwing darts.

As for the films I’m more familiar with, there’s a chance that the similar ground covered by Frankenweenie and ParaNorman could result in one of them being left out. They’re both really good and I can’t imagine either being omitted, but if one is, and/or if another more mainstream film makes it in, Rise of the Guardians, Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax and The Pirates! Band of Misfits are the best bets. I found The Lorax to be muddled and disappointing, but it was nicely animated and a huge hit. Rise of the Guardians had its moments, but I don’t think it’s as good as any of the other movies I’m betting on. Pirates was amusing, and will appeal to branch members who like Aardman’s unique visual style, but I’m not sure it can go all the way.

It’s a shame that Studio Ghibli’s The Secret World of Arietty is not eligible, due to its 2010 release in Japan. Ghibli has another film in the running, called From Up on Poppy Hill, but it hasn’t yet received a wide release in the US.

Personal: Brave, Frankenweenie, ParaNorman, The Secret World of Arietty, Wreck-It Ralph

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Danny Cohen – Les Misérables
Claudio Miranda – Life of Pi
Janusz Kaminski – Lincoln
Mihai Malaimare, Jr. – The Master
Roger Deakins – Skyfall

As we move into the below-the-line, crafts-oriented categories, it becomes apparent what a gorgeous year it’s been for film. This category, as well as Art Direction and Costume Design, boast a wealth of outstanding work that make it difficult to predict what will make the cut, and assuring that no matter what does, there will be excellent, deserving films left off the list. Life of Pi and The Master are probably on solid ground. Skyfall is a good bet too. I’m not sure about Les Misérables. The movie’s detractors cite the camerawork as one of their major problems with it, and initially I left it off my list. But this morning, the American Society of Cinematographers weighed in with their nominations, citing Anna Karenina, Les Misérables, Life of Pi, Lincoln and Skyfall. I originally included Django Unchained and Zero Dark Thirty among my five predictions, but that meant my list and the guild’s only had two films in common. It’s unlikely there would be that wide a gap, so I’ve adjusted my list. We’ll see if I should have stuck to my guns.

What else is in the running? Batman Begins and The Dark Knight both scored nominations in this category, but did The Dark Knight Rises add anything or raise the bar? Probably not. Beasts of the Southern Wild, Moonrise Kingdom, Cloud Atlas, The Impossible and ASC-annointed Anna Karenina all feature excellent work that could score here. I favor the latter two, and would also love to see Silver Linings Playbook under consideration, though I don’t think it will nab many votes. This category favors visually impressive work, whereas the camera in Silver Linings is more about bringing the audience into intimate proximity with its characters in a way that helps the storytelling but isn’t concerned with what’s “pretty.” (The same could be said of Zero Dark Thirty, but the section of the film that depicts the Navy SEAL raid raises its chances.)

Personal: Les Misérables, Life of Pi, The Master, Silver Linings Playbook, Skyfall

BEST FILM EDITING
Argo
Les Misérables
Lincoln
Silver Linings Playbook
Zero Dark Thirty

Argo and Zero Dark Thirty are in for sure (and happen to have an editor in common – William Goldenberg, who edited Argo solo and shared duties on Zero Dark Thirty with Dylan Tichenor). This category tends to largely coincide with Best Picture nominees, and in the days of five nominees in that category, three or four of them would usually land here too. Musicals also do well here, so Les Misérables is probably in. It could go either way with Lincoln and Silver Linings. I would love to see Cloud Atlas earn a spot, but there’s little reason to expect it will happen given the mixed reviews and poor box office. Skyfall could break in – well-respected and assembled action films sometimes do. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey should also be mentioned, if only because all three Lord of the Rings movies were nominated. But they were all up for Best Picture too, which probably won’t happen here. Their prestige status and potential as Best Picture nominees also puts Django Unchained, The Master, and Life of Pi on the list of possibilities.

Personal: Argo, Cloud Atlas, Les Misérables, Silver Linings Playbook, Zero Dark Thirty

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
Anna Karenina
Cloud Atlas
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Misérables
Moonrise Kingdom

Previously known as Best Art Direction, this category has been more accurately renamed as Best Production Design, since the award is given to Production Designers and Set Decorators…but not Art Directors. Still, the types of films recognized are unlikely to change, which is good news for period pieces and sci-fi/fantasy films. Meaning that at last, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey and Cloud Atlas have a chance. Cloud Atlas, in particular, scores on both counts thanks to its varied settings and time periods, from the mid-1800’s to a decaying urban metropolis in the year 2144.

Voters could decide that The Hobbit doesn’t offer enough from Middle Earth that we haven’t seen already, but I’m banking on it nonetheless. Wes Anderson’s movies always have a unique look, yet have never been nominated here before (The Life Aquatic‘s omission was the most glaring). The Art Directors Guild passed over Moonrise Kingdom in its nominations last week, but I have a good feeling that the movie’s lasting appeal and potential Best Picture nomination could help it here.

Although my guesses all have good odds, there’s some excellent work that could just as easily make the list. I’m probably making a mistake not including Lincoln, but I’m operating on a guess that it will take a backseat to flashier, prettier options. The Master and Argo are period pieces, but they’re relatively contemporary compared to the more ornate period films that tend to draw nominations like moths to a flame. Still, either one of them could slide in, as could the interstellar look of Prometheus. Life of Pi has a colorful storybook quality that might charm voters, and although no one else is talking about it, I would be remiss not to mention Dark Shadows, as Tim Burton’s movies are almost always Design contenders. The Shadows sets looked a bit fakey to me, and not in a deliberate, stylized way, so I don’t expect them to go the distance, but Burton films will always be considered.

Personal: Anna Karenina, Cloud Atlas, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Moonrise Kingdom, Prometheus

BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Anna Karenina
Django Unchained
Mirror Mirror
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Misérables

Once again, Academy members are faced with a wealth of great work and the inevitability of several films that deserve to win falling short of even a nomination. As with Production Design, period pieces are catnip to these voters, so Anna Karenina is the year’s champ when it comes to Oscar-friendly period frocks. If voters can remember all the way back to March, the colorful and elaborate costumes from Mirror Mirror should land a spot, and  Snow White and the Huntsman stands a strong chance as well. Argo, A Royal Affair, Lincoln and Cloud Atlas all have a hat (or a ball gown or a tweed suit) in this tight race, as does Moonrise Kingdom. This is also another category where Tim Burton movies do well, so Dark Shadows is in the mix again, and probably has a better chance than it does for Production Design.

Personal: Django Unchained, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Les Misérables, Mirror Mirror, Moonrise Kingdom

BEST ORIGINAL SONG
Learn Me Right – Brave
Freedom – Django Unchained
Song of the Lonely Mountain – The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Suddenly – Les Misérables
Skyfall – Skyfall

This has been a troubled category in recent years, hitting bottom last year when the absurd rules resulted in only two nominees. Responding to the negative feedback, the rules were changed last summer. Whereas the category had been operating under a point system so bizarre that a team of the world’s brightest mathematicians cried “bullshit” when asked to explain it, the music branch simplified things by reverting to an earlier system: members of the music branch will simply vote for up to five selections from the list of eligible songs, and the five songs with the highest tally will be nominated. Members will still judge the songs based on the clip from each movie in which the song appears (if it plays over the end credits, that’s the context in which voters will hear it), but now a DVD with all those clips will be sent to them, instead of the members having to attend a special screening.

So we have an assured slate of five nominees this year, which will be chosen from a whopping 75 eligible tunes. Don’t worry; I’m not about to cover all of them (although if that would interest you, TheWrap.com’s Steve Pond went through them all and offered his thoughts). With such a long list, trying to guess what five songs the music branch will go for is a fool’s errand. The only choices I feel safe with are “Skyfall” and “Suddenly.” New songs written for film adaptations of musicals by the original composers, as “Suddenly” is, almost always land a nomination. It happened with Evita, Dreamgirls, Chicago, The Phantom of the Opera, Little Shop of Horrors…and I expect it will happen here too.  As for Adele’s seductive title track from Skyfall, I’m thrilled to see it qualify. Many pundits thought it wouldn’t, given that it incorporates traces of the original James Bond theme. The rules clearly state that a song’s words and music must be written specifically for the movie in question, so “Skyfall” was feared ineligible. But the branch came through…I’d like to think because they said, “Screw the rules; maybe Adele will perform at the Oscars!” Only three James Bond theme songs – the title tracks from Live and Let Die and For Your Eyes Only, and The Spy Who Loved Me‘s “Nobody Does it Better” – have been nominated before, but it would be a surprise and disappointment if “Skyfall” didn’t join them. Still, knowing how this branch has operated in the past, either song could miss the boat.

Rather than attempt to cover a small sampling of the 75 potentials, I’ll just mention two ineligible songs that I would really have liked to see here. The first is “The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre,” a great little rock tune written by E Street Band guitarist and Sopranos star Steven Van Zandt, from the movie Not Fade Away. Unfortunately, Van Zandt gave the song to a Swedish group called the Cocktail Slippers in 2009, when he produced their album, so it’s already been recorded and released. (Spotify users can listen to the movie version here.)

The other ineligible song that deserves to be here is “Safe and Sound,” the Taylor Swift/Civil Wars collaboration from The Hunger Games. This one is out of the running due to yet another of the music branch’s bonehead rules: a song which only plays over the end credits has to be the first song over the credits to qualify. In this case, “Safe and Sound” followed Arcade Fire’s “Abraham’s Daughter” (which is eligible, and is a cool song, but probably not the Academy’s taste). Seriously, this makes no fucking sense. If the song is written for the movie and is actually used in the movie (not just on the soundtrack album), it should be eligible. Period. Who gives a shit if it’s the second song in the credits?

Apparently the morons in the Academy’s music branch do.

The biggest problem with my predictions is that I like all the songs. Plus, the odds of three of my personal selections making the Academy’s list are slim. It’s almost certain that at least one overly earnest, sentimental or forgettable song will be included, so I should pick one from a higher profile movie just to boost my odds. Then again, if I’m bound to miss a couple anyway, I’d rather miss by predicting something good than something crappy.

Personal: Freedom, Who Did That to You (Django Unchained), Song of the Lonely Mountain, Safe and Sound, Skyfall

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
Dario Marianelli – Anna Karenina
Alexandre Desplat – Argo
Mychael Danna – Life of Pi
John Williams – Lincoln
Thomas Newman – Skyfall

With Best Original Song, voters will often go with tracks from an obscure or lesser known film, but the Original Score nominees are always more mainstream and high-profile, so although there are 104 eligible scores, most of them can probably be discounted. Those I’m predicting, as well as the unduplicated choices on my personal list, all have a legitimate shot at the final five. Beyond those, I’d guess there are three strong possibilities, starting with Jonny Greenwood for The Master. His wildly original score for There Will Be Blood was disqualified for containing too much previously existing music, but The Master – while similar in style – hit no such obstacles. It’s definitely unique, but perhaps too much so for the music branch’s taste? I’m not sure. Danny Elfman’s Hitchcock score pays playful homage to an older era of Hollywood films (so does his Frankenweenie score, for that matter) and Hollywood itself, which could appeal to voters’ sense of fun and nostalgia. And Alexandre Desplat created another subtle but distinctive score for Zero Dark Thirty…not unlike what he did for Argo. I’d be surprised if both were nominated, and Argo‘s score has received more notices and attention. But maybe that’s just because it’s been out longer.

I’d like to think Cloud Atlas is a sure-fire nominee, but I have a feeling it won’t make it. I hope I’m wrong.

Personal: Beasts of the Southern Wild, Cloud Atlas, The Dark Knight Rises, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Lincoln

BEST MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Lincoln
Men in Black 3

The name of this category has been changed from Best Makeup, to reflect that hairstyling is also supposed to be considered, and although that has always been the case, the nominees tend to focus more on the makeup and prosthetics. We’ll have to see if hair becomes reflected in the nominees more often as time goes on. I’m not sure it will.

As always, the Makeup and Hairstyling branch announced seven semi-finalists in December, and the three nominees will be chosen from that list through a bake-off event. In addition to my three guesses above, the remaining contenders are Hitchcock, Les Misérables, Looper and Snow White and the Huntsman. More consideration of hairstyling might have earned The Hunger Games a spot on that list, but no such luck. It also would have been nice to see The Impossible here, for the creation of wounds and injuries suffered by tsunami victims. Still, the most shocking omission is Cloud Atlas, which radically transformed all of its principal actors with multiple looks and styles, including different ages, races and genders. Sure, there were a few that looked a little awkward, but overall the work was fantastic, and boasted incredible variety. A disappointing oversight.

Looper‘s main use of makeup was making Joseph Gordon-Levitt look a bit more like Bruce Willis, but I’d be surprised if that’s enough to net a nomination. Transforming Anthony Hopkins into Alfred Hitchcock is more dramatic work, but really it just looks like Anthony Hopkins if he were heavier; he didn’t look anything like Alfred Hitchcock. Still, it’s a drastic enough alteration that it could make the grade. Snow White and Huntsman and The Hobbit feature the same kind of work – a lot of it used for dwarves – and there’s also a lot in common between Les Misérables and Lincoln. I think in the case of each pair, the latter will win out. The most fantastical contender of the bunch is Men in Black 3, which featured a wide variety of impressive creature designs from legendary artist Rick Baker. He’s won seven times, and will probably add a 12th nomination (13th, if you count one for Visual Effects) to his tally.

Personal: Cloud Atlas, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Lincoln

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
The Avengers
Cloud Atlas
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Life of Pi
Prometheus

As is the case with Makeup and Hairstyling, the Visual Effects branch selects a list of semi-finalists, then holds a bake-off to showcase the work so members can vote for the nominees. In this case, there were ten shortlisted films, which will yield five nominees. In addition to those above, The Amazing Spider-Man, The Dark Knight Rises, John Carter, Skyfall and Snow White and the Huntsman are in play. The branch tends to overlook subtle or practical effects, which will probably eliminate Dark Knight and Skyfall. John Carter‘s effects looked a bit silly and overly CG, so I’m guessing that’s out too.

As for what’s in, The Hobbit and Life of Pi should be locks. The Avengers had a lot of different kind of complicated effects, and the work was top notch, so I’m sure it will make the list. While none of the work in Cloud Atlas or Prometheus breaks new ground, they both look great and the effects are nicely integrated into the respective stories. Still, either could conceivably be swapped out for Spider-Man or Snow White. If I recall, The Lizard – Spider-Man‘s villain – had a similar problem as John Carter‘s aliens; it looked too CG-fake, and might drag down the movie’s chances. But two of the three previous Spidey movies made the cut, so it has a shot. Snow White could go either way, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see it come through.

Personal: Same

BEST SOUND EDITING
The Avengers
Django Unchained
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Skyfall
Wreck-It Ralph

BEST SOUND MIXING
Argo
The Avengers
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Misérables
Zero Dark Thirty

Not much to say here, other than my annual declaration that I know little about sound editing and sound mixing, and even less about what members of this branch will be looking for or excited by. In the most basic and simplified terms, Sound Editing involves the creation in post-production of sounds that could not be captured while filming, and Sound Mixing involves the blending of all aural ingredients – from sound effects to dialogue to music – into a final package. Movies with a lot of action tend to dominate both categories, while musicals almost always find a place in Sound Mixing, along with prestige dramas such as past nominees Moneyball, The Social Network and The King’s Speech. Animated films – especially from Pixar – often land in both categories too, but if they only nab one of the two nominations, it’s usually Sound Editing. So Brave could wind up in one or both races, but I’m leaning toward Wreck-It Ralph, which has the more diverse soundscape when it comes to animation this year. Who knows. Based on past nominees, my own gut feelings, and a few other magical ingredients, these are my best guesses. I’m bound to get lucky on a few of them. But there are plenty of others that could find love in one or both of these categories, including The Dark Knight Rises, Lincoln, Prometheus, Looper, The Impossible, The Hunger Games, Life of Pi, Cloud Atlas, Flight or a dozen others I’ve failed to mention.

Personal: Every year, I advocate – to nobody in particular – for the sound categories to be combined into one, recognizing overall Sound Design. In that fantasy of mine (and in lieu of personal choices for the categories as they exist, since I wouldn’t know what to judge on), I’d go Argo, Django Unchained, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Les Misérables, Prometheus.

If you’ve made it this far, you are a disturbed individual, but I congratulate you.

There we have it. As usual, I’m not discussing Best Documentary, Best Foreign Language Film or any of the Best Short Film races, since my intake has been pitiful. As for everything else, we’ll see how I did when the nominees are announced by Emma Stone and this year’s Oscar host Seth MacFarlane tomorrow morning at zero dark thirty PST (actually about 5:38, but it will be dark enough).

January 23, 2012

Oscars 2011: Nominations Eve

Filed under: Movies,Oscars — DB @ 1:00 pm
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Predicting the nominees has been a bitch this year.

For starters, everyone seems to agree that 2011 wasn’t all that strong a year for movies. There was a lot of good and not much great…yet almost every category sports an abundance of worthy nominees. And while a few frontrunners are starting to emerge, no win feels inevitable. Usually by this time, the countless critics awards and initial guild nominations have helped clarify the field a bit, with at least one or two categories sporting a sure-fire winner. Not so this year. Without the usual sense of passion centered around a handful of films, things seem more prone to change between now and late February. All of which makes it an exciting race, but not an easy one to forecast. The new Best Picture rules don’t exactly help either. What new Best Picture rules, you may ask? Well let’s get the party started and find out…

Oh, a note for the nine of you that have actually read these in the past: normally I include my personal nomination picks for each category, but I’ve decided to hold off on that this year since there are still a few key movies that have yet to arrive in the Bay Area or which I just haven’t had a chance to see. They include The Iron Lady, We Need to Talk About Kevin, Coriolanus and Albert Nobbs. I missed the boat on a few others, including the acclaimed indie Tyrannosaur, but once again I’m pleased to say that I’ve seen pretty much everything that’s part of the conversation (I even saw Margaret during its super-quick theatrical run! ). Anyway, at some point between now and the awards, I’ll be sure to publish my own picks. Because I’m way smarter than the Academy.

BEST PICTURE
The Artist
The Descendants
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
The Help
Hugo
Midnight in Paris
Moneyball
The Tree of Life

Now then: rule changes. Note that on the list above, I’ve included eight movies. The especially astute among you will further note that eight is less than ten. Remember two years ago, when the Academy decided there would be ten nominees for Best Picture instead of the traditional five? The change benefited movies that, it’s safe to say, wouldn’t have made the cut on a five-film list. (Think The Blind Side, 127 Hours and District 9, to name a few.) Well last June, the Academy announced it was shaking up the process even further. The number of nominees will now fall somewhere between five and ten, and we won’t know the tally until the nominations are revealed.

Those of you familiar with Johnny Dangerously will understand if I pause at this point to quote Roman Maroni, who always had a colorful way of putting things.

Based on how many of the roughly 6,000 Academy members return their ballots and make selections in the Best Picture category, the accounting aces at PricewaterhouseCoopers will determine what percentage of first place votes a movie needs to earn in order to secure a nomination. According to the Academy’s press release on the topic, this new system means that the nominated films will more accurately reflect Academy members’ favorite movies. The downside is that because of the way the calculations work, a significant number of voters’ ballots will essentially be tossed out. It’s a system that favors consensus but means not every voting member will have their voice heard. For statistical nerds out there, Steve Pond of TheWrap.com is an expert in crunching Oscar numbers and has examined and explained the process in detail.

What this boils down to for schmucks like me is that predicting the Best Picture nominees just got a lot trickier. But schmucks we are, and predict we shall.

Count on The Artist and The Descendants, which have grabbed the lion’s share of the critics awards and each took home top Golden Globes recently (the former in the musical/comedy category, the latter for drama). The Help and Hugo are close to certain, and Midnight in Paris is probably in there too. After that, the real guesswork begins. Two movies with late December releases that were widely expected to be contenders are War Horse and Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close. But War Horse, despite strong reviews and good box office, has failed to gain traction with the industry. While cited by the Producers Guild of America and the American Cinema Editors, it went unnominated by the Writers Guild of America, the Directors Guild of America (which has been generous to Steven Spielberg over the years) and the American Society of Cinematographers. Those omissions hurt. Has War Horse been left out to pasture?

As for Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, it was the last move of the year to screen for critics and guilds, with some of the season’s first voting critic circles convening before they’d seen it. The lack of recognition by the Golden Globes and Screen Actors Guild could be due to ballots being cast before the movie was seen. But mixed reviews and the same lack of guild support slowing down War Horse‘s chances indicate the movie just hasn’t caught on. There have been a smattering of nominations from this group or that, and it could factor into a couple of races further down, but Best Picture no longer seems in the cards.

The unlikely beneficiary of those two movies’ lackluster showings appears to be The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, which in contrast to both, has scored big time with the guilds. It’s been nominated by the PGA, ACE, ACS and most surprisingly, the DGA and WGA. With all that support, its Oscar chances look better than anyone would have expected (and better than it probably deserves, but that’s another story). Then there’s The Tree of Life, Terrence Malick’s poetic rumination on life, death, the universe and really gorgeous swirls of color. It was admired by critics, and no doubt it has ardent supporters within the Academy. The question is whether it has enough to earn the necessary number of first place votes. Brad Pitt’s other 2011 effort, Moneyball, is a solid movie that garnered strong reviews and has one of the most acclaimed scripts of the year. It’s the kind of all-around admirable film that could absolutely find itself in the running.

An assured ten-picture field might have opened the conversation up to movies like The Ides of March, My Week with Marilyn, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Drive, or even some populist choices like Bridesmaids, Rango or Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2. (Don’t laugh; Potter was one of the year’s best-reviewed movies, and even within the industry a lot of people feel it deserves recognition as the closing chapter of the most financially successful franchise ever.)

War Horse could still muster the support it needs, while The Tree of Life may not have the necessary backing. Moneyball is a question mark too. But this is the list I’m going with.

BEST DIRECTOR
Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist
Alexander Payne – The Descendants
Martin Scorsese – Hugo
Woody Allen – Midnight in Paris
Terrence Malick – The Tree of Life

This category has three sure things: Hazanavicius, Payne and Scorsese. Two spots remain, and a lot of people are in the mix for them. The affection for Midnight in Paris will probably carry Woody Allen, but I wouldn’t call him a lock. Although The Help is a safe bet for Best Picture, its director Tate Taylor has been largely ignored throughout the season. The film’s direction isn’t especially dynamic (not that it needed to be), so he’ll probably fall prey to bigger names and bolder visions. If War Horse misses in Best Picture, it will kill any chance Spielberg has…which I sense isn’t much at this point anyway. David Fincher, on the other hand, could benefit from the lovefest that has swarmed Dragon Tattoo.

If the Academy goes with Hazanavicius, Payne, Scorsese, Allen and Fincher, it will match the DGA’s nominees five-for-five. That rarely happens. In the last 25 years, it’s only happened three times (1998, 2005, 2009). When the two bodies diverge, the Academy often favors an auteur or an indie filmmaker. (Mulholland Drive‘s David Lynch, City of God‘s Fernando Meirelles, The Sweet Hereafter‘s Atom Egoyan and Red‘s Krzysztof Kieslowski are among those who scored Oscar nods but weren’t cited by the DGA.) This year, that could mean good news for Drive‘s Nicolas Winding Refn, who took the Best Director prize at the Cannes Film Festival last summer. But Drive is feeling more like a critic’s darling and less like a movie that’s connecting within Hollywood. The more likely nominee would be Terrence Malick for The Tree of Life. While the movie is divisive and it certainly isn’t perfect, Malick is a visionary filmmaker and one who has the admiration of many colleagues. Whatever the movie’s chances in the Best Picture race, I think it has a good chance of landing here.

BEST ACTOR
George Clooney – The Descendants
Leonardo DiCaprio – J. Edgar
Jean Dujardin – The Artist
Michael Fassbender – Shame
Brad Pitt – Moneyball

With the assured presence of Clooney, Pitt and Dujardin, this category is shaping up to be a gathering of the Handsome Men’s Club. But as is usually the case, a number of strong candidates are left fishing for two available slots. Clint Eastwood’s J. Edgar didn’t pan out as an awards magnet, but DiCaprio has plenty of admirers for his excellent performance and scored nominations from the Broadcast Film Critics Association, SAG and the Golden Globes. The Academy likes DiCaprio, so his chances are good. (Like anybody who writes about the Oscars, by the way, I shall proceed to repeatedly reference “the Academy” as though it were a monolithic entity absorbing the consciousness of its many thousand members into one aggregated voice).

I’d say three actors are realistically vying for the fifth slot. Michael Fassbender had a great year, with acclaimed performances in four movies. Several groups have nominated him for Shame, though he was overlooked by SAG. Still, plenty of actors are sure to admire his nakedness. No, not that nakedness. Well, yeah, I guess that nakedness too. But I mean more his emotional nakedness. Next is Gary Oldman, who took center stage for the first time in years with Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. Fellow actors could feel that it’s time to pay tribute to one of the greats who has, amazingly, never been nominated. Still, the performance is so restrained and quiet. The Academy tends to favor flashier roles, and Oldman’s George Smiley is as buttoned-down as it gets. Then there’s Michael Shannon for the gripping indie film Take Shelter. Critics love the performance, and Shannon has the respect of his peers. But despite the September release, have enough voters made time to see it? He missed out on nominations from SAG, the Globes and the BFCA, which doesn’t bode well…but in 2009 he was ignored by the same groups and still scored a Supporting Actor nomination for Revolutionary Road. Can he do it again?

Woody Harrelson garnered ecstatic reviews as a self-destructive L.A. cop in Rampart, but it’s doubtful enough voters have seen the movie. SAG awarded a surprise nomination to Demián Bichir for his work as an immigrant father trying to provide for his teenage son in A Better Life, but again, the movie was probably too-little seen. SAG’s nominations don’t always match up with Academy’s, and Bichir – lacking name recognition and coming from  lower profile movie – seems the least likely to make Oscar’s cut. Ryan Gosling’s name keeps popping up as well, both for Drive and The Ides of March, but neither film is likely to earn him the necessary votes (and frankly, if he deserves a nomination for any of his work this year, I’d argue in favor of Crazy, Stupid, Love).

With DiCaprio and Fassbender vulnerable, this category is primed for a surprise or two.

BEST ACTRESS
Glenn Close – Albert Nobbs
Viola Davis – The Help
Meryl Streep – The Iron Lady
Tilda Swinton – We Need to Talk About Kevin
Michelle Williams – My Week With Marilyn

While all the major races this year have the rare excitement factor of lacking clear frontrunners, some are more up for grabs than others, starting with this one. Streep, Davis and Williams are the locks, and surprisingly, it’s Williams who has by far captured the most critics awards to date, plus a Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Musical/Comedy (neither of which her movie really fits into, but that sort of loose categorization is nothing new).

In addition to these three, SAG nominated Glenn Close for Albert Nobbs and Tilda Swinton for We Need to Talk About Kevin. (Both films have yet to go into wide release, so for those unfamiliar with them, here are the Cliff’s Notes: in Nobbs, Close plays a woman passing as a male butler in 19th century Ireland. Swinton, meanwhile, portrays a mother whose son commits a Columbine-like high school attack.) Close was an Oscar darling in the 80’s, racking up five nominations between 1982 and 1988. She’s never won the award, and has found more success on television over the last decade. While Nobbs is a small film struggling for attention, it could be seen as a homecoming for Close, whose peers may want to welcome her back with a nomination. As for Swinton, she’s managed to maintain a firm presence on the awards circuit so far despite appearing in exactly the kind of independent film that so often gets lost in shuffle among higher-profile year-end releases. Her buoyancy bodes well. Both movies opened in December for brief qualifying runs, so voters would have had to catch the movies during those theatrical windows or else made time at home to watch the screeners. This is not an uncommon practice and it certainly doesn’t stand in the way of work being nominated, but can two such movies make their mark in the same race?

A number of worthy actresses are waiting in the wings should Close or Swinton falter. Charlize Theron gave a bold, biting performance in Young Adult, but the character may be too unlikable to earn enough support. Elizabeth Olsen’s acclaimed breakout as a young woman who escapes a cult in Martha Marcy May Marlene has its fans, though probably not enough for her to pull through. Ditto for Kirsten Dunst, who earned stellar reviews as a deeply depressed bride in Melancholia. She took Best Actress at the Cannes Film Festival, but Cannes acclaim only occasionally translates to Oscar heat, and when it does it’s usually fueled by more critics awards than Dunst has collected. Personally, I gotta give a shoutout to the preternaturally gifted Saoirse Ronan, who gave a knockout performance in Hanna that should have her firmly in the Best Actress discussion. Alas, she’s been completely left out, so no luck there. The last viable contender – and the one with the best chance of cracking the final list – is Rooney Mara as the iconic heroine Lisbeth Salander in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. If the movie catches fire throughout the Academy the way its guild support indicates it might, Mara could easily ride that wave. But I think the category will match the SAG slate of Close, Davis, Streep, Swinton and Williams.

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Kenneth Branagh – My Week With Marilyn
Albert Brooks – Drive
Nick Nolte – Warrior
Christopher Plummer – Beginners
Max von Sydow – Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

Plummer is in for sure. Brooks seems like a safe bet given that he and Plummer have split nearly all the awards given out so far. Although Brooks was a no-show on SAG’s list, it’s hard to imagine he won’t make the Academy’s cut given all the citations already under his belt.

Jonah Hill scored key nominations from SAG and the Golden Globes for his change-of-pace work in Moneyball, and most pundits are considering him a sure thing. I have my doubts. I think Hill could find himself in the same boat as Mila Kunis did last year for Black Swan. Despite nods from the BFCA, Globes and SAG, she was left off Oscar’s list. Like Kunis, Hill gives a good performance that allows him to stretch, but there’s nothing special about it beyond that. Voters may think an Oscar nomination is a little more than he deserves at this point.

Nick Nolte gives a moving performance in the underseen drama Warrior as a recovering alcoholic trying to reconcile with his grown sons after years of abuse that tore their family apart. The movie was well-received by critics and those who’ve seen it…but it doesn’t seem like many people have seen it. Then again, the movie came out way back in September, so they’ve had time. The SAG nomination has kept him visible, as have the frequent commercials for HBO’s new series Luck, in which Nolte stars. Lots of Academy members have HBO and have surely seen those spots. Plus, Nolte’s a survivor. Actors like that.

Max von Sydow garnered buzz in advance of Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close‘s release, but the movie has been such a nonstarter that it’s tough to gauge his chances. If the movie has a shot at any major nominations, he’s the best bet. But sentiment to honor a veteran who’s never won before may be siphoned off by Plummer.

Others in the mix are Viggo Mortensen for his dry, sly Sigmund Freud in A Dangerous Method; Patton Oswalt as Charlize Theron’s nerdy confidant in Young Adult (Oswalt has had audiences cracking up at various events throughout the season; never underestimate the effect that can have on voters); Armie Hammer, admired for his work as the Winklevii in last year’s The Social Network, got a SAG nod playing Hoover’s right-hand man (if you know what I mean, HOO-HA!) in J. Edgar; and Brad Pitt really deserves a nomination for his stern 1950’s father in The Tree of Life, but he’ll probably be honored solely for Moneyball.

There are a couple of blockbuster longshots,  like Alan Rickman for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2, in which he capped off a decade of inscrutability and finally revealed the true colors and pain beneath the pallid visage of Severus Snape. There was also a lot of talk last summer around Andy Serkis and his motion-capture performance as the gifted chimp Caesar in Rise of the Planet of the Apes. A few critics groups have nominated Serkis, but the fact is that actors vote for actors, and they just aren’t ready to recognize motion capture. I don’t think Serkis should make the list this time anyway, but I did think he deserved it for his performance as Gollum in The Two Towers, and I wish the Academy had recognized this work he’s pioneered over the last decade by giving him a Special Achievement Oscar this year. But that ship sailed in November. Perhaps down the line…

I think von Sydow will just squeak by, while Branagh has landed on enough lists by now to seem like a good bet. Few of these performances really thrill me though, so I’d love to see a truly-didn’t-think-it-would-ever-happen surprise like Corey Stoll for Midnight in Paris (he played Ernest Hemingway) or Kevin Spacey or Jeremy Irons for the financial crisis drama Margin Call.

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Bérénice Bejo – The Artist
Jessica Chastain – The Help
Melissa McCarthy – Bridesmaids
Octavia Spencer – The Help
Shailene Woodley – The Descendants

Chastain has had an amazing breakout year, and has been honored by various critics groups for her individual performances in The Help, The Tree of Life and Take Shelter, while other groups have cited her for all three films plus The Debt, Coriolanus and Texas Killing Fields. Some have posited that she will split her votes between various films and wind up shut out of the race, but most agree that she’ll score most of her votes for The Help, in which she took a potentially one-dimensional ditz and infused her with levels of depth. As long as she gets nominated for something, I don’t really care what it is.

Melissa McCarthy seems primed for Bridesmaids recognition, but a word of caution: performances this purely comedic – and comedies this broad, in general –  are seldom favored by the Academy. Sure, the past 25 years are spotted with comparable (to varying degrees) nominees, including Joan Cusack for In & Out, Robert Downey Jr. for Tropic Thunder, Marisa Tomei for My Cousin Vinny and Kevin Kline for A Fish Called Wanda (the latter two even won). But when it comes to comedy and the Academy, nothing is assured. McCarthy’s chances look good, bolstered by nominations from SAG, the BFCA and several critics groups (though not the Golden Globes). But if her name isn’t announced, don’t be too shocked.

If we go by the critics, The Descendants‘ Shailene Woodley would be a sure thing here. Tough to say whether or not the Academy will follow. Support for the movie overall could definitely carry her. And while the logic I used against Jonah Hill might seem applicable to Woodley as well – that she’s too young, or it’s too soon –  the Academy has a soft spot for young, emerging actresses. So whereas I likened Hill to Mila Kunis, Woodley may be more comparable to Hailee Steinfeld, nominated last year for True Grit. Then again, Woodley’s character isn’t nearly as colorful as Steinfeld’s, so…who knows how this will go.

Janet McTeer has done well on the circuit so far, joining Glenn Close with a gender-bending performance in Albert Nobbs. If enough voters have seen it, she could land here too. Vanessa Redgrave is said to be brilliant in Ralph Fiennes’ Shakespeare adaptation Coriolanus, but this is another case where the movie is unlikely to have been seen by enough people. Shame‘s Carey Mulligan is floating on the edge, and can’t be counted out completely if we consider that voters will have made time for that film based on all the buzz it generated. Her inclusion would be a surprise, albeit a pleasant one. In a move I still can’t wrap my head around, Academy voters saw fit a couple years ago to award Sandra Bullock an Oscar for The Blind Side; if Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close does make an impression on voters, Bullock’s fine performance could earn her a second nomination.

I’m giving Woodley a slight edge over McTeer, but what do I know?

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist
Mike Mills – Beginners
Annie Mumalo & Kristen Wiig – Bridemaids
Woody Allen – Midnight in Paris
Tom McCarthy – Win Win

The screenwriting categories are often the place where admired movies that can’t quite gain a foothold in other high profile races get their pat on the back. Think Lars and the Real Girl, American Splendor, The Squid and the Whale and Do the Right Thing. This year, there are a number of such films that could fill out a category which is already likely to include Midnight in Paris, Bridesmaids and The Artist. Diablo Cody, who won this award for Juno a few years ago, could be back with her uncompromising comedy Young Adult. She did earn a WGA nod, but that’s never a reliable indicator since so many scripts fail to qualify for the WGA due to arcane regulations. (The Artist, for example, was left off the WGA list but is considered an Oscar shoo-in). There’s Margin Call, Martha Marcy May Marlene, Take Shelter, Beginners, Win Win and 50/50 (the latter two earned WGA nominations and have popped up consistently with critics groups), all of which could reasonably make the cut.

The Tree of Life is always a possibility, but might be seen more as a triumph of directing that writing. I mean, that ending sequence…even Sean Penn has said he didn’t know what the hell was going on, and he starred in it. (True, he calls the script “magnificent,” but voters aren’t judging the actual script; they’re judging what makes it to the screen.) Animated and foreign films frequently earn a spot in the screenplay races, and this year such chances rest with Rango and the Iranian drama A Separation, respectively. But Rango hasn’t been cited with a comparable nomination by any other group that I’ve seen. A Separation has fared a little better, but unless voters caught up with it in the final days of voting, I’d be surprised to see it slide in.

My gut is telling me that 50/50 is going to miss, but I’m not at all confident that I’m right, or of what will take that fifth spot if I am. I’m going out on a long limb with Beginners, knowing full well that said limb is likely to snap underneath me.

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Alexander Payne and Nat Faxon & Jim Rash  – The Descendants
Steven Zaillian – The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Tate Taylor – The Help
John Logan – Hugo
Steven Zaillian and Aaron Sorkin – Moneyball

All five films above were nominated by the WGA, though the nod for The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo took many by surprise. Since the Adapted category wasn’t gutted by the guild as badly as the Original category, it’s tough to guess whether Dragon Tattoo got in by default of sorts or if it’s a real contender. There only seem to be a few other realistic candidates. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (which was among the ineligible for  the WGA) could go either way; did voters find it too confusing, or did they think it effectively streamlined an intricate, dense novel? War Horse doesn’t feel like it can go the distance here, and Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close remains a question mark. It doesn’t appear to have the support, but this is a movie that could turn out to surprise everyone.

I’m going with Dragon Tattoo, but it’s a toss-up with Tinker Tailor.

BEST ANIMATED FILM
The Adventures of Tintin
Cars 2
Puss in Boots
Rango
Winnie the Pooh

Enough animated movies were released this year to qualify for a five-movie race. Nineteen films are in the mix, and it will be interesting to see if the nominees are all from the mainstream or if something more obscure muscles in, as was the case two years ago when The Secret of Kells had everyone asking, “What the hell is The Secret of Kells?”

The Adventures of Tintin made the list of eligible movies and seems a certain nominee…unless members of the animation branch don’t see motion capture as equatable to hand-drawn or computer-generated work. But I’ll be surprised if it doesn’t make it. Kung Fu Panda 2 is just as gorgeously animated as the first film, but felt a little flatter to me. Still, it dives deeper into some of the characters and manages to be more than just a rehash of the original. From what I’ve heard, the same can’t be said for Happy Feet Two. Although the original won this award in 2006, the sequel doesn’t seem to have registered. Then there’s Cars 2. Though a huge box office hit, it’s the most critically spanked movie in Pixar’s history. I didn’t think it was nearly the dud that so many called it, but yeah, it has problems that Pixar’s movies just don’t usually have. Still, the immaculate animation can’t be denied. If it misses the cut, it will be the first Pixar movie to do so since this category’s inception in 2001. Hard to imagine Pixar not having a horse in the race. I wonder – are animators from rival studios relishing a misstep by the great and mighty Pixar, or are they not thinking in such vindictive terms? The answer could hold they key to the movie’s nomination fate. I think it’s gonna make it, but I’m basing my guess more on the quality of the animation than the overall movie…which is probably a miscalculation on my part.

The only sure thing is Rango. So watch out for really any one of my guesses to be trumped by Arthur Christmas or a Kells-like surprise.

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Guillaume Schiffman – The Artist
Jeff Cronenweth – The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Robert Richardson – Hugo
Emmanuel Lubezki – The Tree of Life
Janusz Kaminski – War Horse

I’m so on the fence about War Horse. It missed with the American Society of Cinematographers, and the movie’s general lack of support from the guilds must be taken into account. But I just can’t write it off. I have a feeling that it could still pull through. If it doesn’t, or if Dragon Tattoo misses out (the other three are safe bets), the ASC’s fifth choice – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy – could come in from the cold. Drive deserves to be here but probably won’t be, while Moneyball (shot by last year’s winner Wally Pfister) could be a surprise. It isn’t flashy, but it’s earned notices from critics and fellow cameramen. Other longshot possibilities might be The Descendants, Hanna, Melancholia, Anonymous and Midnight in Paris.

BEST FILM EDITING
The Artist
The Descendants
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Hugo
Moneyball

The editing category usually consists of prestige movies that are also in the running for Best Picture, as well as perhaps a really well constructed action movie (The Bourne Ultimatum and The Matrix are past winners). I don’t know if The Descendants will really show up here, but admiration for the movie and its overall positioning in the field so far make a reasonable guess. The Social Network took the prize last year, and its editors re-teamed with David Fincher for Dragon Tattoo, which once again seems to have the guild support it needs. The editor’s guild was one of the few that recognized War Horse, and I could see it replacing The Descendants or Moneyball, but I suspect it will miss with the Academy. I may be in the minority thinking that The Tree of Life could be a surprise contender, but so be it. For a movie that goes in some unusual directions, the editing helps the film retain a shape that gives it forward momentum. Drive would be great to see, but it might be competing for votes with Dragon Tattoo.

BEST ART DIRECTION
Anonymous
The Artist
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Hugo
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

The Harry Potter films have earned more nominations in this category than in any other. None have won yet, and while there weren’t many new locations in the final film, it’s obviously their last chance to recognize it. It could be omitted for being more of the same, but I’m banking on its inclusion. From a purely objective standpoint, Anonymous deserves to be here, but if voters feel the movie lacks narrative respectability, will they go for it? (It explores the idea that Shakespeare’s plays were written by someone else, and its critics were none too kind.) Who knows how voters think about these things, but I’m guessing they evaluate the work first and the film second. I’m not sure if Tinker Tailor can go the distance, but it’s earned some key nominations so far and has an understated elegance and lived-in feel.

This is a category that favors period pieces and fantasy, so examples of the former that could find their way in are Jane Eyre, War Horse or even The Help. A couple of years ago, Sherlock Holmes made the cut, so its nominated team could repeat with the sequel, Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows. Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides has a shot as well (the second Pirates film earned a nomination back in 2006). And bridging the gap between period and fantasy is Midnight in Paris, so that’s a potential spoiler too.

BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Anonymous
The Artist
The Help
Hugo
W.E.

Also a category that goes for period and fantasy films. Not that I’m totally confident of Anonymous getting in for Art Direction, but I’m even less confident here given that I see a broader slate of contenders in this race than I do for Art Direction. Still, I’m sticking with it. Madonna’s directorial debut W.E. was ripped by the critics, but the costumes look like just the kind of lavish threads the Academy loves. If The Tempest could get in last year, W.E. certainly could this year, and its nomination from the costume designers guild places it in the running.

But there are lots of fine feathered films jostling for position here, including Jane Eyre, My Week With Marilyn, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, A Dangerous Method and Midnight in Paris on the period end of the spectrum. Comic book adaptations Captain America: The First AvengerX-Men: First Class and Thor all have a shot, and I’d rank their chances in that order even though Captain America was the only one of the three ignored by the guild. Unintentionally campy mainstream entries like Red Riding Hood (which scored a guild nomination) or Immortals could show up, but I’d say Jane Eyre is the most likely to break through if any of my five picks are wrong. And surely a couple are.

BEST ORIGINAL SONG
Lay Your Head Down – Albert Nobbs (5)
Life’s a Happy Song – The Muppets (1)
The Living Proof – The Help (4)
Man or Muppet? – The Muppets (2)
Star Spangled Man – Captain America: The First Avenger (3)

39 songs – culled from 30 movies – are eligible for the award this year. A look at the list reveals a handful of movies that you probably haven’t heard of…unless maybe you worked on one of them. So the final list could include something unsung…though not literally, since, well…it’s a…it’s a song, so it has to be…sung. However, lacking the time to seek out and listen to all 39 options and therefore limiting myself to what I’m aware of, these are my predictions.

Under recently passed rules, no more than two songs from a single film can be nominated, so while I’d personally like to see “Pictures in My Head” from The Muppets make the list, I think it will be overshadowed by the two I’ve included. Elton John wrote songs for the animated film Gnomeo & Juliet, and one entitled “Hello Hello” has been nominated by a few critics groups as well as the Golden Globes. A known entity and former winner like Elton could wind up nominated. So could Zooey Deschanel, who contributed songs to Winnie the Pooh. Of the two that are eligible, “So Long” could make it in. Madonna won a Golden Globe for “Masterpiece” from her film W.E., but the song didn’t qualify for the Oscar.

As the press release linked above indicates, songs must be substantially integrated into the film or be the first music cue during the end credits in order to qualify. These 39 songs have obviously met that benchmark, but sometimes appearing over the end credits can be a detriment nonetheless. Also, the voting is scored in a particular way such that there’s no guarantee a full slate of five songs will be nominated. There could be as few as two, or it’s possible the category could be omitted altogether. There’s a strong enough slate (by Oscar’s historical standards, at least) to ensure the category will be included this year, but as there’s no way to know how many songs will make it, I’ve ranked them in the order I think they’re likely to show up.

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
Ludovic Bource – The Artist
Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross – The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Alexandre Desplat – Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Howard Shore – Hugo
John Williams – War Horse

Despite the questionable presence of War Horse in other races, respect for John Williams is likely to carry the movie handily into this category. Many are betting he’ll make it for The Adventures of Tintin as well. Personally I felt the relentless Tintin score was the equivalent of being bludgeoned over the head with a giant cartoon hammer for the movie’s entire running time, not a second of which seemed to go unscored. I’m probably letting my own reaction cloud my better judgement, but I’m leaving the movie off.

I don’t have full confidence in any of these selections except The Artist, which is a slam dunk. (In fact, we can call that one for the eventual win right now.) Hugo could come up short, but I’m betting on it getting caught up in an overall sweep. Harry Potter is even less certain, but Alexandre Desplat has done a really nice job on these final two installments, and here is a last chance to recognize the series’ music. Desplat has other chances as well, with The Ides of March a possible option for recognition. Jane Eyre and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy both feature well-received scores, either of which could find a place on the final list. The Golden Globes list included the W.E. score by Abel Korzeniowski, but I’ve neither heard it nor heard much about it.

I’d love to see the Academy get adventurous and nominate The Chemical Brothers’ propulsive score to Hanna, but evidence over the last few years suggests that the music branch exhausted all their adventurous spirit on giving Oscars to Eminem in 2002 and Three 6 Mafia in 2005 (sing it with me everyone…).

Excerpts from some of these scores are available courtesy of The Playlist‘s look back at the best soundtracks of the year.

BEST MAKEUP
Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
The Iron Lady

The makeup branch has already narrowed the field of contenders down to seven movies, from which three will be chosen. In addition to those above, there’s The Artist, Hugo, Anonymous and Albert Nobbs. You’d think the limited field would make predicting easier, but this could be parsed out in a number of ways. Personally, I’m not sure what The Artist or Anonymous are doing here. From what I can tell, the makeup work consists mainly of creating era-appropriate hairstyles and applying facial hair. Fairly run-of-the-mill stuff. Ditto for Hugo, although the few sequences involving filmmaker George Méliès making his movies do feature some more elaborate and outwardly creative work. Still, the fact that The Artist and Hugo are Best Picture contenders sure to be recognized across a variety of categories means either or both could be swept in here.

No Harry Potter movie has been nominated for makeup before, but it’s the only one of the seven contenders that features “fantasy” work, which is almost always represented. Between Voldemort, a bankful of goblins and all the battle wounds, I think it will get in. When it comes to more realistic makeup, I think the aging work done in The Iron Lady will trump the efforts that make Glenn Close look masculine in Albert Nobbs (though I haven’t seen either film and can’t speak to the breadth or quality of work). Finally, there’s Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life, which I know nothing about other than it being a biopic of French singer Serge Gainsbourg. I’m including it among my final three because it’s such an obscure selection, which leads me to think it must have a lot of support to have made it past higher profile movies.

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Hugo
Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Transformers: Dark of the Moon
The Tree of Life

As with the makeup race, the visual effects contenders have already been narrowed down. The final five will be chosen from a list of ten featuring the five I’m predicting, along with Captain America: The First Avenger, Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, X-Men: First Class, Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol and the suspiciously sans-colon-in-title Real Steel. Say what you want about the Transformers movies, but their technical achievements are always superb. The first movie should have won this award, so I can only assume that too many Academy members felt a refusal to vote for it could be the difference between getting into heaven or going to hell. The second film wasn’t even nominated, but this third entry was better received by critics and audiences (which is hardly saying much), and c’mon – the work is undeniably impressive. I think it will make it.

The Tree of Life‘s effects are as old school in technique as they are in substance, but goddamn if they aren’t pretty to look at. It’s possible that branch members will appreciate the throwback in a world dominated by computer graphics (though to be fair, the movie does include some CGI). Current industry leaders may not be able to resist an opportunity to honor one of the pioneers, Douglas Trumbull, whose credits include 2001: A Space Odyssey, Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Blade Runner – movies that, along with Star Wars, probably inspired most of them to enter the field in the first place. Adding to its chances is the fact that the effects are featured front and center – they’re pretty much all you’re looking at for a good 20 minutes of the movie.

I can’t recall anything in Hugo that was especially impressive from an effects standpoint, but it’s the only certain Best Picture nominee that features effects prominently, and usually one such film makes the cut. Of the remaining five, the most likely spoilers are Captain America and Mission: Impossible. The former’s most notable achievement is making the impossibly buff Chris Evans look as scrawny as his 12 year-old self. (Seriously…I knew Chris Evans when he was 12, and that’s exactly what he looked like.) The result is good, but not quite seamless…and since it builds on work seen a few years ago in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, it might not be able to push through. As for Mission: Impossible, the effects are more subtle, which always means an uphill battle. But the film has been received with high praise from critics and audiences, and the work is solid. It could happen. I don’t see X-Men or Real Steel advancing, and although each of the previous Pirates movies has been nominated, I don’t remember anything in this one as elaborate or impressive as the first film’s skeleton pirates or the second and third films’ Davy Jones.

BEST SOUND EDITING
Rango
Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Super 8
Transformers: Dark of the Moon
War Horse

BEST SOUND MIXING
Hanna
Hugo
Super 8
Transformers: Dark of the Moon
War Horse

I always preface talk of sound awards by pointing out that I have no understanding of what really goes into creating sound for film, nor distinguishing between great, good or poor sound. As for the difference between sound editing and sound mixing, I’ve never been able to keep that straight either. For the curious among you, this short article from The Hollywood Reporter offers explanations of the two disciplines from some of its practitioners. So all of that said, my predictions in these two categories are always crapshoots where a couple of things are likely to stick. I’m relying on instinct; a review of past nominees; the wisdom of Gerard Kennedy, who covers below-the-line categories for the great Oscar website In Contention; and nominations from both The Cinema Audio Society and the Motion Picture Sound Editors.

I could list out other options that might score a nomination if any of those above miss, but there are so many possible contenders it seems pointless. So I’ll do it up Wheel of Fortune style. For the final puzzle on Wheel of Fortune, the contestant picks a few letters and then after seeing which ones turn up in the clue, they get to pick a few more. So here are four more movies that I would say have a good shot of showing up in one or both categories: The Adventures of Tintin, Cars 2, Drive and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Vanna, how’d I do?

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And so now we wait. As usual, I remain woefully uninformed in the areas of documentaries, foreign language films and short subjects…but do you really want to read any more of this crap? Tomorrow morning at the ungodly time of 5:38 PST, Academy president Tom Sherak and actress Jennifer Lawrence – past Best Actress nominee and future Hunger Games heroine – will announce the nominees. I’m sure you’d be tossing and turning tonight with anticipation, so I’m glad I was able to provide this commentary to put you to sleep. Sweet dreams…I leave you with the first Oscar promo of the season, which debuted a few weeks ago. They’re not wasting any time…

January 24, 2011

Oscars 2010: Nominations Eve

Filed under: Movies,Oscars — DB @ 1:34 pm
Tags: , , , ,

Lots of people talking about the Oscars are looking to February and discussing what will win, but I’d like to roll things back a little and actually let the nominations get announced before I start predicting the winners. It must seem awfully old-fashioned of me in this day and age, when so many awards are handed out before the Oscar nominations are even announced that the winners already seem like foregone conclusions. If you listen to the professionals, the endgame for this season has already been inscribed. The Social Network. David Fincher. Colin Firth. Natalie Portman. Christian Bale. Melissa Leo. Toy Story 3.

Yeah, it’ll probably look something like that. But humor me anyway. Since it has apparently become so boring to predict the winners, let’s a least relish the opportunity to predict the nominees – the one part of the process that can still offer some surprises. The winners may already be engraved in gold, but two things can always be expected at this stage: each category has a few slots up for grabs, and some great work is bound to go un-nominated. I for one don’t want to miss the opportunity to cry foul, so let’s not close the book on the 2010 award season before we’ve had a chance to milk it for all we can.

So here we go. My predictions, my personal picks and a little bit of commentary along the way.

Okay, a large amount of commentary along the way.

I should point out that as always, despite a solid effort, not being a Los Angeles-based professional in this game means there are a handful of movies I haven’t seen which might have impacted my personal choices, mostly in the below-the-line categories. Among this year’s possibly-award-friendly crop that I haven’t yet taken in: Biutiful, Another Year, Casino Jack, Megamind, Made in Dagenham, Four Lions, Love and Other Drugs, TRON: Legacy, The Tempest, Burlesque and Country Strong.

BEST PICTURE
Black Swan
The Fighter
Inception
The Kids Are All Right
The King’s Speech
The Social Network
The Town
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winter’s Bone

Early on I thought Black Swan would be too polarizing to get a Picture nomination, but it has been a constant presence in the precursor awards and no longer seems like a risky bet at all. I wonder if it would have as good a chance with only five slots. I think a five-film race would likely have been The Fighter, Inception, The King’s Speech, The Social Network and True Grit. I feel somewhat guilty playing into a narrative that suggests two tiers of nominees, but it’s hard not to go there.

Of this list, I’d say The Town and Winter’s Bone are the most vulnerable. The Town has reportedly done quite well with Academy members and it’s managed to hold its ground throughout the awards season thus far, which bodes well for its inclusion. Winter’s Bone, which fills this year’s token slot for the Little Indie That Could, has also made a strong showing thanks to the film critics associations and ten best lists that kept it alive at year’s end, long after its debut at Sundance. Acting and screenwriting nominations are likely, but I’m not sure if it will have enough support from the Academy-at-large to crack the top ten. If it doesn’t, 127 Hours is waiting in the wings to take its place. And while we haven’t been looking at a ten-film race for very long, last year offered at least one big surprise in the nomination for The Blind Side. A few more years of this will tell if we should always expect something unexpected; if we should, keep an eye out for Shutter Island and The Ghost Writer.

Personal Picks: Black Swan, Blue Valentine, The Fighter, The Ghost Writer, Inception, The King’s Speech, Never Let Me Go, The Social Network, Toy Story 3, True Grit

BEST DIRECTOR
Darren Aronofsky – Black Swan
Christopher Nolan – Inception
Tom Hooper – The King’s Speech
David Fincher – The Social Network
Joel Coen & Ethan Coen – True Grit

Where I have the Coen Brothers, the Director’s Guild of America nominated David O. Russell for The Fighter. I wasn’t sure what to do there. I went this way out of a sense that The Fighter may come off as more of an actor’s movie than a director’s movie, however much O. Russell is (of course) responsible for the movie being as good as it is. The Coens have become Academy favorites, and their stamp can be felt more on True Grit than O. Russell’s can on The Fighter – not a criticism; just an observation. But this could go either way.

I could also see Tom Hooper being overlooked despite the popularity of The King’s Speech. Hooper isn’t a big name (not that other directors, as the ones doing the voting, would care about that), plus for all its strengths, The King’s Speech doesn’t necessarily come across as a work of bold directorial vision the way Black Swan or Inception do. Still, I think it’s highly unlikely Hooper would be overlooked (even if he still hasn’t quite re-entered my good graces after his obnoxiously excessive use of dutch angles in HBO’s John Adams miniseries). And then there’s Christopher Nolan, who seems a lock for Inception but was snubbed in 2008 for The Dark Knight. Such a slight is unlikely to happen again, but maybe Nolan just leaves Academy members cold (he earned DGA nominations for both Memento and Knight, but has yet to earn an Oscar nod for Directing). With David O. Russell and the Coens vying for that fifth spot, and Danny Boyle’s impressive work on 127 Hours still in the ether, an out-of-left-field surprise seems unlikely. But I can’t say I’d be shocked if Roman Polanski were to sneak in for The Ghost Writer, an admired movie by an admired filmmaker.

Personal: Boyle, Aronofsky, Nolan, Polanski, Fincher

BEST ACTOR
Jeff Bridges – True Grit
Jesse Eisenberg – The Social Network
Colin Firth – The King’s Speech
James Franco – 127 Hours
Ryan Gosling – Blue Valentine

We have two sure things here in Firth and Franco. Beyond that, I think the field is somewhat open. Or at least, I can see vulnerabilities in each of the other frontrunners.  Let’s start with Jesse Eisenberg. I’m a big fan of his, so I’ve been pleased to see his strong showing in the season so far. But it’s surprised me too. His unique, high-strung energy and natural fast-paced speech rhythms can make it seem like he’s doing the same thing from film to film, which of course he isn’t. Additionally, the character he plays is not all that likable or sympathetic, which could be a factor voters consider. I think back a few years to Emile Hirsch’s sensational performance in Into the Wild, which some thought may have missed out on an Oscar nomination because voters didn’t like the character, saw him as too selfish, etc. Who knows if that’s true, and obviously it shouldn’t make a difference anyway, but that’s the Oscars for you. If these sorts of things matter, it could be a strike against Eisenberg. On the other hand, he’s part of a film that has much broader support than Into the Wild did; he’s been nominated for the four major pre-Academy prizes: the Golden Globe, the Broadcast Film Critics Association award, the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) award and the Screen Actor’s Guild award (Hirsch scored two of those four); and he’s also been named by quite a few more critics organizations than Hirsch was, including two that are among the more high-profile: the National Board of Review and the National Society of Film Critics (both of which skip right to naming a winner rather than having nominations). So things do look good for Eisenberg, but I’d say a snub is not out of the question.

Next, Jeff Bridges. Last year’s winner of this award will probably be back in the race, especially given the popularity True Grit seems to be enjoying with viewers in and out of the Academy. But while Bridges is a hoot in the role, is it really seen as one of the best performances of the year? I could see him getting squeezed out. As for Ryan Gosling, I worry that I’m letting my personal feelings cloud my judgment by including him. Not that he’s a longshot; he’s firmly in the running for a nomination. But Blue Valentine‘s unflinching look at a troubled marriage may be more than voters want to put themselves through. Still, actors vote for actors, and given the buzz out of Sundance around the film’s central performances – not to mention the controversy over the rating – I have to think people would look to see what the fuss was about. And I have to think they’d be pretty floored. Although neither of the film’s stars were nominated for a SAG award, the movie was a late release and SAG voters may not have had the chance to see it in time. I’m hoping the extra month or so will have allowed them to rectify that.

If any one of these guys is overlooked, a likely replacement is Robert Duvall for Get Low. I struggled with whether or not to include him. He has BFCA and SAG nominations in his favor, plus he’s Robert friggin’ Duvall. People love him. But have they seen the film? Casting a slightly wider net, the popularity of The Fighter could sweep Mark Wahlberg into the race, but his performance is overshadowed by the more colorful ones around him. He does a fine job, but I don’t see him breaking through. Aaron Eckhart has earned praise for his role as a grieving father in Rabbit Hole, but the award attention so far has all been around Nicole Kidman.

The biggest question mark for Best Actor has to be Javier Bardem in Biutiful. Word is that he went to hell and back for this role and gives an incredibly powerful performance, yet it’s been ignored all season long. Unfortunately, Biutiful has yet to open in San Francisco, and my obsession with seeing as many Oscar-potential movies as possible before the nominations did not extend to taking an L.A. day-trip. You gotta draw the line somewhere, I guess. I hear the film is pretty bleak, so it may be another one that voters shy away from. Then again, fellow actors like Sean Penn, Ryan Gosling, Josh Brolin and Ben Affleck have sung Bardem’s praises, and Julia Roberts hosted a screening to drum up support. It wouldn’t be the first time Bardem has had some help. Back in 2000, when he was barely known to American audiences, several Hollywood stars (I want to say Jack Nicholson and Winona Ryder were among the champions, but I can’t recall for sure) tried to draw attention to his performance in Before Night Falls. It paid off; he earned his first nomination. Can lightning strike twice? One glimmer of hope for Bardem is that he was nominated last week for a BAFTA award. Oscar voting had already closed by then, so the news couldn’t spur any undecided Academy members into action. But there is some overlap between the BAFTA and Academy membership, so perhaps his nomination suggests a growing awareness of the film and his work.

Personal: Eisenberg, Firth, Franco, Paul Giamatti (Barney’s Version), Gosling


BEST ACTRESS
Annette Bening – The Kids Are All Right
Nicole Kidman – Rabbit Hole
Jennifer Lawrence – Winter’s Bone
Natalie Portman – Black Swan
Michelle Williams – Blue Valentine

Annette Bening and Julianne Moore have been pegged for nominations ever since The Kids Are All Right played at Sundance last year. But as awards season got underway, Moore found herself sitting on the sidelines while Bening not only got all the accolades, but was heralded the frontrunner. I’m not quite sure why Moore has been so unjustly overlooked, any more than I understand why Bening has been so celebrated. She’s great in the movie, but honestly her character is a variation on others we’ve seen her play before, and I actually felt her character was less interesting than Moore’s. Still, Bening’s nomination is a given; we’ll see if the Academy surprises us by honoring Moore as well. Either way, I think it’s safe to say that Bening’s frontrunner status has been eclipsed by Natalie Portman. But that’s a topic for a later post.

Jennifer Lawrence, the young breakthrough star of Winter’s Bone, has been nominated for just about every award possible, so she’s a safe bet, and Nicole Kidman is likely, though I wouldn’t say a lock. Michelle Williams is in the same boat as Ryan Gosling. In a just world she would be a sure thing, but it could go either way.

Who is poised to sneak in should any of these ladies fail to make the cut? Well, there’s Moore of course. Hilary Swank scored a surprise SAG nomination for Conviction, after being ignored by every other group. Swank did a fine job in the film, but I don’t think the performance merits award attention. Maybe SAG members couldn’t resist another Bening-Swank match-up. (Both of Swank’s Oscar wins for Best Actress came with Bening having been her strongest competition.) Swank’s SAG nomination was even stranger when considering that her co-star Sam Rockwell was not nominated. His performance had Oscar buzz for months in advance, and as usual the actor didn’t disappoint. He did get a few nominations along the way, but the positive word of mouth hasn’t amounted to much.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo‘s Swedish star Noomi Rapace has been mentioned, but I don’t think it will happen. A tougher call to make is Lesley Manville, the British actress who’s earned raves for her role in Mike Leigh’s Another Year. The Academy has been kind to Leigh’s films, but Manville doesn’t seem to have caught on. Though she has definite spoiler potential, I don’t feel confident in her chances. And there seems to be differing views on whether she should be in the Lead or Supporting category…a problem that also affects True Grit‘s Hailee Steinfeld, who I’ll talk about later since I believe she’ll be nominated in the Supporting category (though I definitely see her as a lead).

Personal: Lawrence, Carey Mulligan (Never Let Me Go), Portman, Steinfeld, Williams

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Christian Bale – The Fighter
Matt Damon – True Grit
Jeremy Renner – The Town
Mark Ruffalo – The Kids Are All Right
Geoffrey Rush – The King’s Speech

Almost always one of the toughest categories in terms of just not having enough room for all the worthy performances. My  against-the-grain prediction here is Damon. Including him is foolhardy given that there’s zero precedent in the season thus far. Which I just can’t wrap my head around. Damon is so damn good in this movie, and brings more depth to the part than I was expecting, having heard ahead of seeing it that he was primarily comic relief and that his part was really small…neither of which is true. I find it hugely surprising that he has been virtually shut out of the race thus far, and while it may be my personal appreciation of the performance overwhelming my good sense, I believe he stands an excellent chance of surprising everyone. If people are loving True Grit, how can Damon not be a huge part of the reason for it? And if voters fill the movie out in lots of other categories – which it seems likely they will – I just can’t imagine them not citing Damon too. Hell, if he got nominated last year for Invictus, this deserves to be a slam dunk.

The other risky call here – though much less so than Damon – is Jeremy Renner, a Best Actor nominee last year for The Hurt Locker. I couldn’t decide whether to go with him or with John Hawkes’ terrific performance in Winter’s Bone. Both have done well in the precursor awards, but neither well enough to be considered sure things. They each earned SAG nominations, but Hawkes missed out on both the Golden Globes and BFCA awards, while Renner scored both. That’s why I’m going with him, but it took me a while to commit. And hey, maybe they’ll both make it if I’m wrong about Damon.

Also in the mix – indeed, a highly possible spoiler – is Andrew Garfield, excellent as the moral center of The Social Network. Many consider him to be a lock, but I worry that his chances have faded somewhat and that voters are more focused on Eisenberg. Garfield’s co-star Armie Hammer, who superbly embodied the Winklevoss twins (while actually only embodying one of them, if we want to get technical), also deserves to be in the running. Unfortunately the field is just too crowded. But Armie will be okay; he’s just been cast opposite Leonardo DiCaprio in Clint Eastwood’s J. Edgar Hoover biopic. Earlier I mentioned Sam Rockwell, who has been relegated to a distant longshot at this point, and I’d be remiss not to mention two others who were excellent in a film that has been unjustly overlooked due to an ill-advised release strategy: Ed Harris and Colin Farrell in The Way Back. Peter Weir’s first movie in seven years, it was quietly released late in December for a one-week qualifying run in Los Angeles, and just went into wider release last Friday. That’s no way to handle a movie from so illustrious a filmmaker.

Personal: Bale, Damon, Garfield, Hawkes, Ruffalo

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Amy Adams – The Fighter
Helena Bonham Carter – The King’s Speech
Melissa Leo – The Fighter
Hailee Steinfeld – True Grit
Jacki Weaver – Animal Kingdom

So let’s talk about The Steinfeld Problem. As pointed out above, I clearly see her as a lead and believe she deserves to be nominated as such. The studio is campaigning her in the Supporting category, and most of the awards and nominations she’s received so far (and she’s received many) have placed her there. But Oscar voters don’t always follow the campaigning, and from what I’ve read, many are putting her down for Best Actress. It could happen. In 2008, Kate Winslet was promoted for Best Actress in Revolutionary Road and Best Supporting Actress for The Reader, but Academy voters chose to nominate her as a lead for the latter. In 2003, young actress Keisha Castle-Hughes was campaigned as a Supporting Actress for Whale Rider, but earned a surprise nomination in the Best Actress race. Which way will Steinfeld go? While she’ll surely earn a lot of votes in both categories, I think the Best Actress field is stronger than Supporting Actress, so if for no other reason than that, I suspect more will stick with Supporting Actress. Plus, those who want her to go all the way know she’ll stand a better chance of winning if she’s in the Supporting race. Kristopher Tapley, who runs the great Oscar website In Contention, reported on a conversation he had with True Grit producer Scott Rudin, who explained his reasons for Steinfeld being in the Supporting category. Tapley disagrees, and both make interesting cases. We’ve already established which side I’m on, and I agree with the point that True Grit is ultimately Mattie’s story, not Rooster’s…just one of the reasons Best Actress is where she belongs.

Moving on, I’ve included Jacki Weaver for Animal Kingdom, but I’m not confident that enough voters have seen the film. She’s made an impressive showing in the season to date, including BFCA and Golden Globe nominations, but she has no name recognition in Hollywood, which could hurt her given the film’s low profile. Still, I couldn’t think of anyone who seemed any more logical. Mila Kunis stands a chance for Black Swan, bolstered by the Golden Globe/BFCA/SAG trifecta. But I just don’t see the Academy nominating Kunis. Maybe it’s my own opinion that there’s nothing award-worthy about the performance (not to say Kunis doesn’t do a great job). Or maybe it’s the sense that she hasn’t quite earned her stripes yet (which wouldn’t matter in the case of newcomers like Jennifer Lawrence or Steinfeld, who give such knockout performances. Kunis’ work just doesn’t compare). But maybe I’m wrong. Her co-star Barbara Hershey is also a longshot candidate, but I think her part is too small to get her in. Lesley Manville, as mentioned in the Best Actress section, could show up here instead, and it’s even possible that Julianne Moore could land here, though that would be pretty unexpected at this point. Other names are floating on the outskirts – Dianne Wiest for Rabbit Hole, Olivia Williams for The Ghost Writer – but they seem like distant shots. I’ll stick with Weaver.

Personal: Adams, Marion Cotillard (Inception), Greta Gerwig (Greenberg), Leo, Rosamund Pike (Barney’s Version)

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Black Swan – Mark Heyman, Andres Heinz, John McLaughlin
The Fighter – Scott Silver, Paul Tamasy, Eric Johnson
Inception – Christopher Nolan
The Kids Are All Right – Lisa Cholodenko, Stuart Blumberg
The King’s Speech – David Seidler

It disappoints me to think that Black Swan will make the cut here since the screenplay is clearly the film’s weak link. It’s that much more a testament to Darren Aronofsky’s gifts as a filmmaker that the movie is so strong when its script is so “meh.” But with a lack of other strong contenders – or a lack of attention being paid to a broader range of contenders, I should say – I’m afraid it will likely score a spot. That same narrow scope will probably aid The Fighter as well, which is at least a good, solid script if not really one of the year’s very best.

Mike Leigh is always a possibility in this category, though I don’t get the sense that Another Year has extended its reach beyond being a critic’s darling. I could see Derek Cianfrance’s Blue Valentine sneaking in, which would be a pleasant and much deserved surprise, but I’m not holding my breath. The Writer’s Guild of America nominated the indie dramedy Please Give, but the guild is not the best barometer for the Oscars since its rules render so many would-be contenders ineligible. (A film has to be produced according to certain WGA guidelines in order to be qualify.) In fact, the first two films mentioned in this paragraph – along with The King’s Speech – were left out of consideration for this reason. With all three back in the running, I don’t see Please Give making the cut.

Personal: Animal Kingdom, Blue Valentine, Cyrus, Inception, The King’s Speech

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
127 Hours – Danny Boyle, Simon Beaufoy
The Social Network – Aaron Sorkin
Toy Story 3 – Michael Arndt
True Grit – Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
Winter’s Bone – Debra Granik, Anne Rosellini

This list looks solid and safe. If anything is vulnerable I’d say it’s 127 Hours, which seems to have faded somewhat from the general conversation (James Franco’s performance notwithstanding). Other worthy contenders that could slide in include The Ghost Writer, Rabbit Hole and The Town (which, along with I Love You, Phillip Morris, earned WGA nominations…likely  attributable to Toy Story 3 and Winter’s Bone being cockblocked by the guild).

Personal: Same

BEST ANIMATED FILM
Despicable Me
How to Train Your Dragon
Toy Story 3

I only recently caught Despicable Me, and was less impressed than I expected to be given all the acclaim and box office success. It was cute, but not much more. People seemed to love it though, and with Toy Story 3 locked in and How to Train Your Dragon nearly as certain, I’m guessing Tangled and The Illusionist will miss out. But maybe there’ll be an obscure shocker. Last year, nobody saw The Secret of Kells coming. It’s too bad that once again there will only be three nominees. There were 15 eligible films, and the rules state that only when there are a minimum of 16 can there be five nominees (at least 8 are required for the category to exist at all).

Personal: How to Train Your Dragon, Tangled, Toy Story 3

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Matthew Libatique – Black Swan
Wally Pfister – Inception
Jeff Cronenweth – The Social Network
Robert Richardson – Shutter Island
Roger Deakins – True Grit

Black Swan, Inception and True Grit are the sure bets here. Jostling for the remaining two spots are a handful of great contenders. The King’s Speech and The Social Network rounded out the American Society of Cinematographer’s list, though as is always the case with the guilds, there is rarely a complete match-up. I’m going with Shutter Island, but 127 Hours stands a good chance too. And if there are a few categories where The Way Back may actually be on voters’ radar, this could be one.

Personal: Black Swan, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I, Inception, Shutter Island, True Grit

BEST FILM EDITING
127 Hours
Black Swan
Inception
The King’s Speech
The Social Network

Personal: Black Swan, Inception, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, The Social Network, The Town

BEST ART DIRECTION
Alice in Wonderland
Inception
The King’s Speech
Shutter Island
TRON: Legacy

Personal: Get Low, The Ghost Writer, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I, Inception, Shutter Island

BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Alice in Wonderland
Burlesque
The King’s Speech
The Tempest
True Grit

Personal: Alice in Wonderland, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I, Shutter Island, The Tempest, The Wolfman (I haven’t actually seen The Tempest, but just based on some photos I can clearly see it deserves to be here.)

BEST ORIGINAL SONG
I See the Light – Tangled
If I Rise – 127 Hours
Shine – Waiting for Superman
We Belong Together – Toy Story 3
You Haven’t Seen the Last of Me – Burlesque

Honestly, I haven’t seen a single movie this year with an original song that left an impression on me. The five songs above have been the most oft mentioned in the season so far, so I’ll go with them. There are a couple of other songs from Burlesque that could conceivably make the cut, although “You Haven’t Seen the Last of Me” is apparently Cher’s big number, so I’m sure that will carry some weight. Tunes from Country Strong and The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader have been mentioned too, so perhaps one of them will make it in. Also, Eddie Vedder has a song from Eat Pray Love in the mix. I haven’t heard it, but considering that the Academy owes Vedder bigtime after snubbing his Into the Wild contributions back in ’07, maybe they can try to make it up to him now.

Personal: No opinion

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
A.R. Rahman – 127 Hours
Danny Elfman – Alice in Wonderland
Hans Zimmer – Inception
Alexandre Desplat – The King’s Speech
Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross – The Social Network

True Grit and Black Swan might have fared a chance here, but both were deemed ineligible due to the large percentage of pre-exisiting music used in the films. I can’t speak to that in the case of True Grit, but certainly Black Swan‘s score is largely built around Tchaikovsy’s Swan Lake. I hope Reznor and Ross make the cut. They’re considered frontrunners, and yet the music branch of the Academy is known for making some tone deaf decisions lately. I have a sneaking suspicion that Reznor and Ross’ outsider status could hurt their chances. Hopefully I’m imagining things.

Personal: The Ghost Writer (Alexandre Desplat), Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I (Desplat), Inception, Never Let Me Go (Rachel Portman), The Social Network

BEST MAKEUP
Alice in Wonderland
Barney’s Version
The Wolfman

The Makeup branch works differently than most other branches when it comes to voting, in that the list of contenders has already been whittled down to seven. These are the three I suspect will make the cut (Barney’s Version features nicely done aging makeup, something which often finds a place in the final three.) The remaining possibilities are The Fighter, True Grit, The Way Back and Jonah Hex.

Personal: Alice in Wonderland, Barney’s Version, The Way Back

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Alice in Wonderland
Inception
Iron Man 2
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I
TRON: Legacy

The Visual Effects branch also has preliminary rounds, but for the first time this year, five nominees will be selected from the list of seven, rather than the usual three. Given how much movies today use and rely on visual effects work, it’s nice to see that more films will be recognized…though I can’t quite understand the logic of sticking with the process as it’s been, seeing as only two films from the “semi-finals” will be omitted. The other two contenders this time around are Scott Pilgrim vs. the World and Hereafter. My memory of Scott Pilgrim is that the effects were perfectly fine, but not really award-caliber. Hereafter features a stunning tsunami sequence that is certainly worthy of recognition, but I’m not sure it’s enough to justify nominating the film. Alice in Wonderland‘s effects were inconsistent, but I think they’ll win out over Scott Pilgrim and Hereafter. I would like to have seen The Social Network in the running, for the incredibly impressive CGI of the Winklevii (which more than makes up for the overdone, digitally inserted cold breath), but Social didn’t even make the branch’s preliminary list of 15. Nor did Black Swan, which I’d say was also worthy of consideration. But Alice notwithstanding, and without having seen TRON yet, this looks like a good list.

Personal: Black Swan, Inception, Iron Man 2, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I, The Social Network

BEST SOUND MIXING
Black Swan
Inception
Iron Man 2
Toy Story 3
True Grit

BEST SOUND EDITING
Black Swan
Inception
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit

This is always a shot in the dark for me, as I never have and likely never will – no matter how many cool DVD special features on sound I watch – understand these two categories. To me, what should be honored – which I don’t think these two categories do, exactly – is overall sound design. How is sound used in the film? What impact does it have? How does it contribute to the experience of the movie? Sound mixing and sound editing obviously contribute to that, but I think I understand enough to know that neither covers the overall sonic experience of the film. I’m making the picks above based on a) instinct, b) the nominations by the Cinema Audio Society and Motion Picture Sound Editors and c) by looking at the nominees in years past and trying to extract some sort of logic from them. We’ll see how I do. The King’s Speech could certainly find a place on one or both of these lists, as could action movies like TRON: LegacyUnstoppable, Salt or Red. Musicals and animated films also tend to do well here, so perhaps Burlesque, How to Train Your Dragon or Tangled – which combines both – could show up.

Personal: If the category worked the way I, in my infinite ignorance, think it should, I’d be citing Black Swan, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I, Inception, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World and…ummm…maybe…I don’t know, lemme get back to you.

That’s as far as I can go. Unfortunately my intake of documentaries and foreign language films is embarrassingly paltry, and I know nothing of the contenders for the short film awards. So I’ll end with this point, to bring it all full circle: the awards pundits had pretty much declared The Social Network the winner of Best Picture, but guess what movie didn’t win the prize on Saturday night from the Producer’s Guild of America? The PGA went with The King’s Speech. Does that mean Speech is now a lock for the Oscar? No. Sometimes the PGA’s pick goes on to win the Oscar, sometimes it doesn’t. All it means is that a lot can happen in a month. Just ask Eddie Murphy, or the producers of Brokeback Mountain.

This thing can’t be over yet; it hasn’t even started.

February 1, 2010

Oscar ’09: Nomination Eve

Filed under: Movies,Oscars — DB @ 1:49 pm
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Another year, another impending Oscar announcement. But his year’s about-to-begin race is made more interesting by the 10-slot Best Picture factor. Choosing the 10 films I think are most likely to get nominated is tricky; there are a handful of obvious choices (and I think it’s clear what the big five would be if the category hadn’t been expanded this year), but two or three slots are up for grabs. I’m less certain than I was a few months ago that something all-out popular like The Hangover or Star Trek won’t make it in (Avatar‘s spot is of course secured). Hangover and Trek aren’t included on my final list of guesses, but whatever happens, there is a unique curiosity attached to this year’s announcement.

I’ll have to see how it shakes out after a couple years worth of evidence, but for now I’m open to the 10 nominee race. If it brings recognition to a few more small films and helps some smart, well-crafted popular hits earn some respect, I’m all for it. I know one of the chief arguments against the change is that the expansion dilutes the significance, making a nomination less meaningful, but I really don’t buy that. We’ve always had a system in which critics celebrate the year’s best through top 10 lists, and I’ve never heard anyone complain about that, so why shouldn’t the same number apply to the Oscars?

And to those who say they can’t find 10 movies worth nominating? Obviously some years are stronger than others, but anyone who claims to be a movie fan yet can’t find 10 films a year that mean something to them and are worthy of honoring probably don’t deserve their Academy membership. 274 films are eligible for this year’s Best Picture Oscar. You really can’t pick 10? Out of 274? (And as this article about tabulating the nominations illustrates, filling out all 10 is important; your vote might not get counted if you don’t, and by completing all 10 lines you might just be helping one of your lower-ranked choices make the cut.)

Anyway, I’ll get on with it. Here are my predictions, along with occasional commentary and my personal picks for each category. Can’t wait to see how it all goes down early (so painfully early) Tuesday morning when Anne Hathaway and Academy president Tom Sherak announce the nominees…

BEST PICTURE
An Education
Avatar
District 9
The Hurt Locker
Inglourious Basterds
Invictus
Precious
A Serious Man
Up
Up in the Air

Personal: Avatar, District 9, The Hurt Locker, In the Loop, Inglourious Basterds, Precious, The Road, Up, Up in the Air, Where the Wild Things Are

BEST DIRECTOR
James Cameron – Avatar
Kathryn Bigelow – The Hurt Locker
Quentin Tarantino – Inglourious Basterds
Lee Daniels – Precious
Jason Reitman – Up in the Air

These five picks line-up exactly with the Director’s Guild nominees, and though there are usually differences between the DGA’s list and the Academy’s, I can’t really see it going any other way.

Personal: Cameron, Bigelow, Tarantino, Daniels, Spike Jonze (Where the Wild Things Are),

BEST ACTOR
Jeff Bridges – Crazy Heart
George Clooney – Up in the Air
Colin Firth – A Single Man
Morgan Freeman – Invictus
Jeremy Renner – The Hurt Locker

I’m still not sold 100% on Renner’s chances. He did get a SAG nomination, and some other high-profile nominations along the way, but I still wonder if the performance is too subtle or internalized for voters to appreciate it. He’ll probably make it, but if anyone here is vulnerable, I’d say it’s him.

Personal: Bridges, Clooney, Matt Damon (The Informant!), Firth, Viggo Mortensen (The Road)

BEST ACTRESS
Sandra Bullock – The Blind Side
Helen Mirren – The Last Station
Carey Mulligan – An Education
Gabourey Sidibe – Precious
Meryl Streep – Julie & Julia

Personal: Mirren, Mulligan, Saoirse Ronan (The Lovely Bones), Sidibe, Streep

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Matt Damon – Invictus
Woody Harrelson – The Messenger
Christian McKay – Me and Orson Welles
Stanley Tucci – The Lovely Bones
Christoph Waltz – Inglourious Basterds

I’m admittedly going out on a long limb with McKay. Christopher Plummer is probably the better bet; he received SAG and Golden Globe nominations, had a busy year with Doctor Parnassus, Up and 9, and has never been nominated despite a long career full of terrific work. But despite all that, did people really love this performance so much as to call it out as one of their five favorites?

The other common prediction out there is Alfred Molina for An Education. Some Oscar pundits have been talking him up since the movie came out in October, but he has been almost entirely overlooked by other organizations (the Broadcast Film Critics nominated him; Golden Globes and SAG didn’t). That doesn’t necessarily mean he’s out; Michael Shannon managed to sneak in last year for Revolutionary Road without having earned high-profile pre-recognition. And like Plummer, Molina is another respected veteran who has never been nominated (and should have been, for Frida). Still, I don’t feel the momentum.

Not that McKay exactly has momentum or has fared much better than Molina in the run-up, but he has earned a few notices here and there from some of the small, regional critics groups. And he gives a magnetic performance that dominates the film. The question is whether enough people saw it.

Whatever happens, the one certainty is that this year’s Supporting Actor field is one of the weakest I can recall. This is usually one of the most competitive categories; this time it’s a struggle to find five strong contenders.

Personal: Robert Duvall (The Road), Harrelson, McKay, Tucci, Waltz

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Vera Farmiga – Up in the Air
Anna Kendrick – Up in the Air
Mo’Nique – Precious
Julianne Moore – A Single Man
Samantha Morton – The Messenger

While I’d love to see Morton get nominated, I’m not confident in that guess. I almost went with Penelope Cruz or Marion Cotillard for Nine, but I’m deferring to what I keep reading from Oscar writers in the field, which is that Nine just hasn’t connected with voters and has faded from their radar (at least in terms of top categories; I’m still counting on several below-the-line nominations).

Personal: Farmiga, Kendrick, Melanie Laurent (Inglourious Basterds), Mo’Nique, Morton

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
(500) Days of Summer
The Hurt Locker
Inglourious Basterds
A Serious Man
Up

Personal: (500) Days, Hurt Locker, Basterds, The Messenger, Moon

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
An Education
District 9
Fantastic Mr. Fox
Precious
Up in the Air

Personal: In the Loop, Precious, The Road, Up in the Air, Where the Wild Things Are

BEST ANIMATED FILM
Coraline
Fantastic Mr. Fox
Ponyo
The Princess and the Frog
Up

Personal (w/o seeing Ponyo yet): 9, Coraline, Mr. Fox, Princess and the Frog, Up

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Avatar
The Hurt Locker
Inglourious Basterds
Nine
A Serious Man

Personal: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Basterds, The Lovely Bones, Nine, A Serious Man

BEST FILM EDITING
Avatar
District 9
The Hurt Locker
Nine
Up in the Air

Personal: Same

BEST ART DIRECTION
Avatar
District 9
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus
Inglourious Basterds
A Serious Man

Personal: Avatar, Coraline, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Parnassus, The Road

BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Bright Star
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus
Inglourious Basterds
Nine
The Young Victoria

Personal: Bright Star, The Brothers Bloom, Parnassus, Nine, A Single Man

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
Avatar
The Informant!
A Serious Man
A Single Man
Up

Personal: The Brothers Bloom, Moon, The Road, A Serious Man, Up

BEST ORIGINAL SONG
Almost There – The Princess and the Frog*
Cinema Italiano – Nine*
I See You – Avatar
Somebody Else – Crazy Heart
The Weary Kind – Crazy Heart*

Last year, there were only three nominees, rather than the usual five. Not sure why that was, but my asteriks indicate the three I think will make it if that happens again.

Personal: Dove Of Peace (Bruno), Be Italian (Nine), Cinema Italiano, Friends on the Other Side (The Princess and the Frog), The Weary Kind

BEST MAKE-UP
District 9
The Road
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus

Personal: Same

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Avatar
Star Trek
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen

I’m uncertain on Transformers. I was really close to putting down District 9, which may well make it. I didn’t see the new Transformers, but I figure the effects are at least as good as in the first one, and those were great. Maybe there isn’t anything new and groundbreaking since the original, but that doesn’t make them any less impressive. The first film lost this award but should have won; even if this is more of the same, sequels get nominated all the time for building on the work of their predecessor.

On the other hand, nobody likes this movie except for 13 year-old boys and Michael Bay, so that might hurt its chances, paving the way for District 9.

Personal: Avatar, District 9, Where the Wild Things Are

BEST SOUND MIXING
Avatar
District 9
The Hurt Locker
Star Trek
Up

Personal: 9, Avatar, District 9, The Hurt Locker, Star Trek

BEST SOUND EFFECTS EDITING
Avatar
District 9
The Hurt Locker
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
Up

Personal: 9, Avatar, District 9, The Hurt Locker, Star Trek (same as above, since I know nothing about sound to begin with)

xx xx

January 21, 2009

Oscars 2008: Nominations Eve

Filed under: Movies,Oscars — DB @ 5:22 pm
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Okay kids, the nominations will be announced tomorrow. As I’ll be busy tonight obsessing over the season premiere of Lost, I couldn’t wait until the last possible minute to send out my predictions, as it seems has been my habit the last few times. So to whom it may concern, here’s the short version, along with some personal picks.

BEST PICTURE

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Frost/Nixon
Milk
Slumdog Millionaire

Most Likely Alternates: Doubt; Wall-E

Personal: The Dark Knight, Slumdog Millionaire, The Reader, Wall-E, The Wrestler

BEST DIRECTOR
David Fincher – The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Christopher Nolan – The Dark Knight
Ron Howard – Frost/Nixon
Gus Van Sant – Milk
Danny Boyle – Slumdog Millionaire

Most Likely Alternates: Mike Leigh – Happy-Go-Lucky; Jonathan Demme – Rachel Getting  Married

Personal: Fincher, Nolan, Howard, Boyle, Aronofsky (The Wrestler)

BEST ACTOR
Clint Eastwood – Gran Torino
Frank Langella – Frost/Nixon
Sean Penn – Milk
Brad Pitt – The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Mickey Rourke – The Wrestler

Most Likely Alternates: Richard Jenkins – The Visitor

Personal: Jenkins, Ben Kingsley (Elegy), Langella, Penn, Rourke

BEST ACTRESS
Anne Hathaway – Rachel Getting Married
Sally Hawkins – Happy-Go-Lucky
Melissa Leo – Frozen River
Meryl Streep – Doubt
Kate Winslet – Revolutionary Road

Most Likely Alternates: Angelina Jolie – Changeling; Kristin Scott Thomas – I’ve Loved You So Long

Personal (w/o having seen Frozen River or Wendy and Lucy yet): Blanchett (Benjamin Button), Hathaway, Thomas, Streep, Winslet

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Josh Brolin – Milk
Robert Downey, Jr. – Tropic Thunder
Philip Seymour Hoffman – Doubt
Heath Ledger – The Dark Knight
Dev Patel – Slumdog Millionaire

Most Likely Alternates: Eddie Marsan – Happy-Go-Lucky; Michael Shannon – Revolutionary Road

Personal: Brolin, Downey Jr., Ledger, Marsan, Brad Pitt (Burn After Reading)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Penelope Cruz – Vicky Cristina Barcelona
Viola Davis – Doubt
Taraji P. Henson – The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Marisa Tomei – The Wrestler
Kate Winslet – The Reader
Most Likely Alternates: Amy Adams – Doubt; Rosemarie DeWitt – Rachel Getting Married
Personal: Cruz, Davis, DeWitt, Tomei, Winslet

 

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Dustin Lance Black – Milk
Jenny Lumet – Rachel Getting Married
Woody Allen – Vicky Cristina Barcelona
Andrew Stanton, Pete Docter, Jim Reardon – Wall-E
Robert D. Siegel – The Wrestler

Most Likely Alternates: Too many to list

Personal: In Bruges, Milk, The Visitor, Wall-E, The Wrestler

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Eric Roth, Robin Swicord – The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Christopher Nolan, Jonathan Nolan, David S. Goyer – The Dark Knight
John Patrick Shanley – Doubt
Peter Morgan – Frost/Nixon
Simon Beaufoy – Slumdog Millionaire

Most Likely Alternates: The Reader, Revolutionary Road

Personal: Button, Dark Knight, Iron Man, The Reader, Slumdog

BEST ANIMATED FILM
Kung Fu Panda
Wall-E
Waltz With Bashir

Most Likely Alternate: Bolt

Personal (w/o having seen Waltz yet): Bolt, Panda, Wall-E

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Australia
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Revolutionary Road
Slumdog Millionaire

BEST FILM EDITING
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Frost/Nixon
Milk
Slumdog Millionaire

BEST ART DIRECTION
Changeling
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
The Duchess
Slumdog Millionaire

 

BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Australia
Changeling
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Duchess
Revolutionary Road

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Frost/Nixon
Slumdog Millionaire
Wall-E

BEST ORIGINAL SONG
Gran Torino – Gran Torino
I Thought I’d Lost You – Bolt
Jaiho – Slumdog Millionaire
Down to Earth – Wall-E
The Wrestler – The Wrestler

BEST SOUND
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Iron Man
Slumdog Millionaire
Wall-E

BEST SOUND EFFECTS EDITING
Iron Man
Quantum of Solace
Wall-E

BEST MAKE-UP
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Hellboy II

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Iron Man

 

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