First off, I loved the new announcement ceremony. It makes it more like a mini-production, rather than just a press conference. It gave a moment between categories, rather than just rattling them off and having to wait until the ticker at the bottom relays them to really process the nominations. Anyway, there are some random inclusions, as usual, but not a ton of shockers. This was made even more interesting by having it take place in front of all of the major awards shows. We still know nothing. I like that. Well, check out what the Academy decided to single out this year and my brief thoughts on it. Enjoy and happy awards season!
Best
Picture
Amour
Amour
Argo
Beasts
of the Southern Wild
Django
Unchained
Les
Miserables
Life
of Pi
Lincoln
Silver
Linings Playbook
Zero
Dark Thirty
Predicted: 7 for 9
Reactions: So, it appears even in a year such as this,
where there are a clear five films that have stood above the rest throughout
the precursors, there are still going to be 9 films nominated. I predicted 8
would be the number. 5% of first place votes seems very significant to me, but
maybe it is this spread out every year. I predicted The Master and The Best
Exotic Marigold Hotel for the top 9, which were replaced by Amour and Beasts of the Southern Wild. What this says to me is that Micheal
Haneke might be the most popular foreign director in the world (first BP nom
for a foreign film since Crouching Tiger,
Hidden Dragon), and nearly every year will have that no-budget indie that
will get taken all the way from Sundance to the “Big Dance”. This is not too
bad of a lineup. It is much better than the train wreck of Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close and War Horse last year. It is a solid group for a solid, somewhat
below average year overall.
Preliminary prediction: Silver Linings Playbook
Best Director
Michael Haneke – Amour
Ang Lee – Life of Pi
David O. Russell –
Silver Linings Playbook
Steven Spielberg –
Lincoln
Benh Zeitlin – Beasts of the Southern Wild
Predicted: 3 for 5
Reactions: Wait a minute…what? Where’s Ben Affleck!? Really,
Academy? Seriously? Come on. That movie screamed Oscar and was probably the
most complex direction of the year. He is one of the best directors working
right now, makes three home runs in a row, the third of which totally catered
to your style, and you cannot nominate him, why? Because he’s Ben Affleck. The
day after we see the Baseball Writers of America becoming the story in the
sports world by not giving anyone access to the Hall of Fame and making what
amounts to a political decision not to put a certain era of players into a
baseball museum, the Oscar voters do something similar by deciding to snub the
best director of the year just because he used to be a lousy actor and used to
fill the tabloids with his love life and whatnot. Give me a break. What do you
want the guy to do? Anyway… I digress. I predicted 3 correctly, missing Haneke
and Zeitlin by predicting Affleck and Bigelow. I cannot believe that two of the
stone cold locks of the season did not make it into the most important
category, but hey it was a surprise right? Sure, but not in the category we
like to see them in.
Preliminary Prediction: Steven Spielberg – Lincoln
Best Actor
Bradley Cooper – Silver Linings Playbook
Daniel Day-Lewis –
Lincoln
Hugh Jackman – Les Miserables
Joaquin Phoenix – The Master
Denzel Washington –
Flight
Predicted: 4 for 5
Reactions: I knew that last spot would come down to John
Hawkes and Hugh Jackman. Jackman was average and one of the worst parts of Les Mis, but he was the lead in a movie
the Academy loved. So I guess that is good enough for them. But not for Ben
Affleck. I am surprised they didn’t give him the producing shaft and give 2
noms to Clooney instead. Here we have what appears like a one horse race, but I
have a sneaky feeling that DDL might get a challenge from Phoenix. They clearly
didn’t love The Master, but three
acting noms is huge. They might want to give it one of them and not give
Day-Lewis a third Oscar when he doesn’t really work all that often. Wishful
thinking, maybe/probably…
Preliminary Prediction: Daniel Day-Lewis – Lincoln
Best Actress
Jessica Chastain –
Zero Dark Thirty
Jennifer Lawrence –
Silver Linings Playbook
Emmanuelle Riva – Amour
Quvenzhane Wallis –
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Naomi Watts – The Impossible
Predicted: 3 for 5
Reactions: I had former winners Rachel Weisz and Marion
Cotillard in for Wallis and Riva. I love the fact that the oldest ever and
youngest ever Best Actress nominees are in the same category. Wallis was
terrific in her movie, and definitely deserved to be singled out, but judging by
my predictions, I clearly did not think Beasts
would be this popular. This category only has two contenders, and judging by
the massive love for SLP, I gotta
think it is going the way of the budding superstar.
Preliminary Prediction: Jennifer Lawrence – Silver Linings Playbook
Best Supporting Actor
Alan Arkin – Argo
Robert De Niro – Silver Linings Playbook
Philip Seymour
Hoffman – The Master
Tommy Lee Jones – Lincoln
Christoph Waltz – Django Unchained
Predicted: 4 for 5
Reactions: I had it written where it was possible that
Waltz could get in over DiCaprio. I almost expected it, but I went the other
way. The Academy really went out of their way to not be predictable this year.
They snubbed some of the biggest contenders in several categories. I have no
problem with the group of former winners, though. It is by far the most wide
open acting category in years. Which winner will they want to give a second
Oscar to first? It won’t be Arkin, who received the throw-away nomination of
the year with no chance of winning. Waltz was really a lead, so maybe they go
that way? Hoffman gave one of the performances of the year and probably has the
best chance of winning in his movie. Tommy Lee Jones has the critical favorite
role in the leading nomination-getter. There is two-time winner Robert De Niro
in the most popular film with actors. I feel that with all of the Academy members
who look up to De Niro and want a comeback so badly that a win here would finally
be their way of re-validating him. The Golden Globe snub is still confusing to
me, but it happens sometimes.
Preliminary Prediction: Robert De Niro – Silver Linings Playbook
Best Supporting Actress
Amy Adams – The Master
Sally Field – Lincoln
Anne Hathaway – Les Miserables
Helen Hunt – The Sessions
Jacki Weaver – Silver Linings Playbook
Predicted: 4 for 5
Reactions: Well, I had Jacki Weaver on my longlist back
in like July. After the precursors started and she didn’t show up anywhere, I
knew it was over for her. It’s a random nomination, but a good one. She is a
great character actress. I had Nicole Kidman getting that fifth spot. This
award is going to Anne Hathaway, but that doesn’t matter. Can anyone name the
last time we had a movie with nominees in all four acting categories?...anyone…
That’s right, Reds. 1981. That is how
unprecedented the love the Academy has for Weinstein…err…Silver Linings Playbook. That is an incredible achievement. This is
a solid group of nominees, actually. And it is official…Amy Adams: the next
Thelma Ritter. She is nominated for every remotely serious movie she does, yet
never really comes close to winning. That has to change.
Preliminary Prediction: Anne Hathaway – Les Miserables
Original Screenplay
Amour – Michael Haneke
Django Unchained – Quentin Tarantino
Flight – John Gatins
Moonrise Kingdom – Wes Anderson, Roman
Coppola
Zero Dark Thirty – Mark Boal
Predicted: 4 for 5
Reactions: I always look for that random screenplay
nomination (The Messenger, Margin Call, In Bruges) to tell me what indie is going to be one of the best
movies of the year. The only oddball nom we got was freaking Flight. Horrible. I went against my
better judgment and put The Master in
the fifth spot. This is an interesting category. Amour seems to be this year’s Talk
to Her. Zero Dark Thirty might not
be as surefire a winner here like we thought, and Django might have a bit more backing than we thought. It is an
interesting race here, but for now, I am going with the upset.
Preliminary Prediction: Amour – Michael Haneke
Adapted Screenplay
Argo – Chris Terrio
Beasts of the Southern Wild – Lucy Alibar,
Benh Zeitlin
Life of Pi – David Magee
Lincoln – Tony Kushner
Silver Linings Playbook – David O.
Russell
Predicted: 4 for 5
Reactions: It appears all is forgiven with David O.
Russell. I guess they can’t do the same for Affleck. Ok, I will stop now. But
seriously they probably would have snubbed his movie here if he had received a
writing credit. Ok, really done now. Continuing the trend, I had Beasts out in favor of The Perks of Being a Wallflower, which I
thought would have a big fan base, but I guess not. This one is over before it
even starts.
Preliminary Prediction: Lincoln – Tony Kushner
Cinematography
Anna Karenina
Django Unchained
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Skyfall
Predicted: 3 for 5
Reactions: I had Zero
Dark Thirty and The Master in and
Anna Karenina and Django out. That is a great oddball
choice by the Academy, though, putting Robert Richardson’s terrific work in
this category. Too bad it was at the expense of The Master, one of the more impressive camera jobs in years. I can
only hope that Roger Deakins takes this for his magnificent work on Skyfall, but it isn’t happening. There
is a massive epic with CGI, you know... That has to win…
Preliminary Prediction: Life of Pi
Anna Karenina
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Predicted: 5 for 5
Reactions: BOOM! My first/only perfect category, even if
I can’t remember that they changed the name of it. Everything here is about
normal. Costume dramas, more CGI, yawn…
Preliminary Prediction: Lincoln
Costume Design
Anna Karenina
Les Miserables
Lincoln
Mirror Mirror
Snow White and the Huntsman
Predicted: 4 for 5
Reactions: I had Cloud
Atlas in for Snow White and the Huntsman.
Two Snow White films in the same
category? Nice. Neither of them are winning this.
Preliminary Prediction: Les Miserables
Sound Mixing
Argo
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Skyfall
Predicted: 2 for 5
Reactions: I had Zero
Dark Thirty, The Dark Knight Rises,
and The Avengers in and Lincoln, Argo, and Skyfall out. I
forgot that this is a sneaky important category. Most winners are mentioned
here. It is just crazy that Argo gets
the shaft in Director, but it is everywhere else it needs to be.
Preliminary Prediction: Les Miserables
Editing
Argo
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Silver Linings Playbook
Zero Dark Thirty
Predicted: 4 for 5
Reactions: I had Les
Miserables in for SLP. So, if
history is any indication, we officially have three films with a chance: Silver Linings Playbook, Lincoln, and Life of Pi. For the record, Ordinary
People (1980) was the last to win Best Picture without an Editing
nomination (that is probably what cost Brokeback
Mountain the top prize), and no film since Driving Miss Daisy (1989) has won without a Directing nomination.
Interesting developments.
Preliminary Prediction: Zero Dark Thirty
Sound Editing
Argo
Django Unchained
Life of Pi
Skyfall
Zero Dark Thirty
Predicted: 2 for 5
Reactions: I had The
Dark Knight Rises (shut out, by the way), The Avengers, and Looper
in for Argo, Django, and Zero Dark Thirty.
Nothing really to comment on here. Life
of Pi really is this year’s Hugo
and Argo somehow pops up in an action
movie category. Alright…
Preliminary Prediction: Skyfall
Visual Effects
The Avengers
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Life of Pi
Prometheus
Snow White and the Huntsman
Predicted: 3 for 5
Reactions: I had John
Carter and The Dark Knight Rises
in for Prometheus and Snow White. This appears to be a
competitive category, but recently this award seems to be going to contenders.
Preliminary Prediction: Life of Pi
Makeup and Hairstyling
Hitchcock
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Miserables
Predicted: 1 for 3
Reactions: I had Looper
and Men in Black 3 in for Hitchcock and The Hobbit. This is a very standard Oscar category. I guess I went
with a couple underdog ones, since they do like to throw a Norbit or Click in there every
once in a while.
Preliminary Prediction: Les Miserables
Song
“Before My Time” –
Chasing Ice
“Suddenly” – Les Miserables
“Pi’s Lullaby” – Life of Pi
“Skyfall” – Skyfall
“Everybody Needs a
Friend” – Ted
Predicted: 2 for 5
Reactions: I had the Paul
Williams Still Alive, Brave, and Hunger Games songs in for Chasing Ice (what?), Life of Pi, and Ted. Second time in three years that the host is nominated at his
ceremony. If I am not mistaken, I believe that a Bond film has never won in
this category, so Oscar will find a way to screw this up too.
Preliminary Prediction: “Everybody Needs a Friend” – Ted
Score
Anna Karenina
Argo
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Skyfall
Predicted: 3 for 5
Reactions: I had The
Master and Zero Dark Thirty in
for Skyfall and Anna Karenina. Is it just me, or is Anna Karenina one of the most curiously underperforming movies this
year? No real box office, tons of early buzz, four technical nominations. I am
still trying to figure out what happened to Keira Knightley. Let’s see…Argo’s score is certainly this year’s Michael Clayton/The Hurt Locker, the one that we will just have to take the voters’
word for it because no one remembers it. Wow, they really hated The Master. Skyfall here? Awesome. I kinda wish we would have seen one major
nom for it, the second best of all the Bond films, but oh well.
Preliminary Prediction: Life of Pi
Documentary
5 Broken Cameras
The Gatekeepers
How to Survive a Plague
The Invisible War
Searching for Sugar Man
Predicted: 3 for 5
Reactions: I had This
is Not a Film and Ai Weiwei in
for 5 Broken Cameras and The Gatekeepers. I am not too familiar
with any of these because none of them have really been widely released or
publicized this year. This category is always a bit strange, anyway. I will
just take a stab at a semi-upset.
Preliminary Prediction: The Invisible War
Foreign Language Film
Amour
War Witch
No
A Royal Affair
Kon-Tiki
Predicted: 4 for 5
Reactions: I had The
Intouchables in for A Royal Affair.
I really thought that was the winner in this category. I never know what to
think here. Sometimes the clear favorite (Pan’s
Labyrinth, for instance) loses despite several nominations. Sometimes that
movie (like last year’s An Education)
was winning regardless. Sometimes that favorite (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly) is not even submitted by its
country for eligibility in this category. I am not sure whether they just love Amour that much and will give it
whatever it can, or whether they will want it to really compete for the top
awards and not hold it back. I just cannot go against it, though.
Preliminary Prediction: Amour
Animated Feature
Brave
Frankenweenie
ParaNorman
The Pirates! Band of Misfits
Wreck-It Ralph
Predicted: 3 for 5
Reactions: I had From
Up on Poppy Hill and Rise of the
Guardians in for ParaNorman and The Pirates. This category is really
wide open. I am not sure if they want Tim Burton to be a winner yet, but this
would be a way to give him a back-handed award, rather than a Best Director. Eh…just
for the hell of it, I am going with my heart.
Preliminary Prediction: Wreck-It Ralph
Overall
predictions: 72/107; 67.29% (69.23% in 2012)
Without the last 5
categories: 57/82; 69.51% (73.17% in 2012)
On the Big 8
categories: 33/44; 75.00% (79.55% in 2012)
So, I was slightly down from last year, which was
slightly down from the year before that. I attribute that to not seeing as many
movies the last couple years. Plus, this year was just weird, especially for
the top categories. No real off-the-wall Tommy Lee Jones – In the Valley of Elah-esque shockers, but just some minor
surprises. I can and will do better next year!
5 coolest first-time nominees:
(there is no way I
can come up with 10 this year)
1. Seth MacFarlane
2. Adele
3. Bradley Cooper
4. Quvenzhane Wallis
5. Roman Coppola
10 worst snubs:
1. Ben Affleck for Best Director
2. The Master
for Best Cinematography, Sound Mixing, and Best Original Score
3. Leonardo DiCaprio for Best Supporting Actor
4. Looper for
Best Original Screenplay
5. The Hunger Games
for Best Production Design
6. Kathryn Bigelow for Best Director (I am assuming)
7. Abraham Lincoln:
Vampire Hunter for Best Visual Effects
8. The Perks of
Being a Wallflower for Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Supporting Actress
(Emma Watson)
9. Matthew McConnaugey for Best Actor (Killer Joe) and Best Supporting Actor (Magic Mike)
10. Richard Gere for Best Actor (getting used to that…)
So, after a discussion with Terry, we came up with the
best possible comparison of this year to a past year: 1998. The huge Spielberg
production was the odds-on favorite (Saving
Private Ryan/Lincoln). There is a
beloved foreign film nominated for Best Picture, Director, Acting, Screenplay,
etc. (Life if Beautiful/Amour). There is the misunderstood and
unconventional military movie (The Thin
Red Line/Zero Dark Thirty). There
is the popular costume drama (Elizabeth/Les Miserables)…bit of a stretch on that
one, I know. There is probably the best movie of the year that got major snubs
come nomination morning (The Truman Show/Argo). The movie that is going to take
the whole thing, however, is the dark horse comedy distributed by the
Weinsteins (Shakespeare in Love/Silver Linings Playbook). They will
still throw Spielberg his directing bone, but the crowd-pleaser is the movie
that will somehow come out on top for Best Picture. It will be interesting to
see how the next few days shape the race, with the Critics Choice Awards
tonight and the Golden Globes in three days. I love this time of year!
Stay tuned for our Fifth Annual Oscar Challenge! What do
you think of this year’s crop of nominees? Who are you predicting to win? Let
me know in the comments.
I never thought I'd say these words, but not nominating Ben Affleck is atrocious. Same with Bigelow. My suspicion is that Weinstein money was fueling a serious Silver Linings publicity blitz, and eliminating Affleck and Bigelow from Best Director virtually eliminates their films from serious contention for Best Picture. Is there any way we could tie the Weinsteins to the Steinbrenner family, the Koch Brothers, or Dick Cheney?
ReplyDeleteI like the '98 comparison, but I also see parallels with 2000. There's a critically lauded favorite with a ton of nominations ("Traffic" and "Lincoln") but with a screenplay too sophisticated for the average Academy voter, so instead give it to the dumb movie that everyone loves with money for publicity ("Gladiator" and "Silver Linings"). I think there's potential upset potential for "The Hangover" guy over Daniel Plainview (a la Russell Crowe in 2000). It's also a little 2008-like, with Jennifer Lawrence winning Best Actress for her second-best performance of the year.
And for the record, I didn't think Seth McFarlane or Emma Stone were funny. What was with trashing the Supporting Actor nominees? Unclassy. Just read the nominations, save the stupid jokes for the ceremony.
I knew the moment I saw "Silver Linings Playbook" it would win Best Picture. It has permanently tainted the 2008 Eagles season for me. Here's where it will rank in the all-time worst Best Pictures in the last 50 years IMO:
5. "In the Heat of the Night"
4. "Silver Linings Playbook"
3. "The Return of the King"
2. "Gladiator"
1. "Slumdog Millionaire"
Oh and don't get me started about the "Flight" screenplay nomination. Over "End of Watch," "Looper," and "Arbitrage." It's crap like that that erodes all credibility.
ReplyDeleteGood to know you are right with me on Affleck. And I don't even like the guy. In fact, I spent several years hating his guts. I was prepared to destroy "Gone Baby Gone" when it came out, but I don't hold that kind of grudge forever. I love his movies. It is not like I wouldn't recognize your boy Tom as a great QB just because I hate him.
ReplyDeleteI get the 2000 one, but "Traffic" was a much less conventional movie than "Lincoln".
With MacFarlane, he is trying to revitalize the Oscars, I think. Honetly, I liked his bit before more than his jabs at the nominees. I don't hink he trashed Supporting Actor. All 5 being former winners was something interesting that needed to be noted, just like the oldest and youngest ever Best Actress nominees bit. The sarcastic "What a breath of fresh air" was nothing. I especially liked the part about the only people being up are flying or having surgery. I always found it ironic that Hollywood gets screwed out of their own party by having the nominations announced at a ceremony at 5:30AM, because of course it has to be before the market opens and people in New York start work. The most Hollywood thing in the world forces everyone in Hollywood to get up at the ass crack of dawn because of more East Coast bias. It's everywhere.
I still have my doubts about "Silver Linings Playbook" winning it all, but yeah you called that way back before most people saw it. It is not going to be anywhere near as low on my list as "Gigi" or "Gladiator" or "The Best Years of Our Lives". It is just going into that lame category of uninspired choices that basically everything post-"No Country for Old Men" has gone into.
Oh, and you can add "Seven Psychopaths" and a couple animated films to that list as well. "Flight"...just wow.
Here is a story in the Huffington Post about the screenwriter of "Flight." Makes me have a lot more respect for him and a lot less anger about the nomination.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/10/john-gatins-oscar-flight_n_2450695.html?ncid=edlinkusaolp00000003
That is a great underdog story, I agree. At least the undeserving nom went to someone who is undeniably grateful for it. It makes so much sense that he wrote "Coach Carter". His filmography is about as unimpressive as they come for an Oscar nominee. Hopefully he will do more of these personal movies that have a shot at being good, rather than "Real Steal 2" and "Need for Speed". You would figure the success of "Flight" would change that, but maybe not. He appears happy to be writing trash and acting in the last three Eddie Murphy flops. But he seems to be a good guy...
ReplyDelete