Monday, January 23, 2017

2016 Oscar Nomination Predictions

Best Picture
1. La La Land
2. Moonlight
3. Manchester by the Sea
4. Lion
5. Arrival
6. Hell or High Water
7. Hidden Figures
8. Hacksaw Ridge
If 9: Fences
If 10: Nocturnal Animals
Alternates: Silence, Florence Foster Jenkins, Loving
Potential Spoilers: Captain Fantastic, Jackie

Best Director
1. Damien Chazelle, La La Land
2. Barry Jenkins, Moonlight
3. Kenneth Lonergan, Manchester by the Sea
4. Dennis Villeneuve, Arrival
5. Martin Scorsese, Silence
Alternates: Garth Davis, Lion; David Mackenzie, Hell or High Water; Tom Ford, Nocturnal Animals
Spoilers: Pablo Larrain, Jackie; Ken Loach, I, Daniel Blake

Best Actor
1. Casey Affleck, Manchester by the Sea
2. Denzel Washington, Fences
3. Ryan Gosling, La La Land
4. Viggo Mortensen, Captain Fantastic
5. Andrew Garfield, Silence
Alternates: Andrew Garfield, Hacksaw Ridge; Joel Edgerton, Loving
Spoilers: Jake Gyllenhaal, Nocturnal Animals; Tom Hanks, Sully; Adam Driver, Paterson

Best Actress
1. Emma Stone, La La Land
2. Natalie Portman, Jackie
3. Meryl Streep, Florence Foster Jenkins
4. Isabelle Huppert, Elle
5. Ruth Negga, Loving
Alternates: Amy Adams, Arrival; Annette Bening, 20th Century Women; Emily Blunt, The Girl on the Train
Spoilers: Taraji P. Henson, Hidden Figures; Rebecca Hall, Christine

Best Supporting Actor
1. Mahershala Ali, Moonlight
2. Jeff Bridges, Hell or High Water
3. Dev Patel, Lion
4. Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Nocturnal Animals
5. Kevin Costner, Hidden Figures
Alternates: Hugh Grant, Florence Foster Jenkins; Lucas Hedges, Manchester by the Sea
Spoilers: Simon Helberg, Florence Foster Jenkins; Ben Foster, Hell or High Water; Andre Holland, Moonlight

Best Supporting Actress
1. Viola Davis, Fences
2. Michelle Williams, Manchester by the Sea
3. Naomie Harris, Moonlight
4. Nicole Kidman, Lion
5. Octavia Spencer, Hidden Figures
Alternates: Janelle Monae, Hidden Figures; Greta Gerwig, 20th Century Women
Spoilers: Janelle Monae, Moonlight; Hayley Squires, I, Daniel Blake; Elle Faning, 20th Century Women

Best Adapted Screenplay
1. Barry Jenkins and Tarell Alvin McCraney, Moonlight
2. Eric Heisserer, Arrival
3. Luke Davies, Lion
4. Allison Schroeder and Theodore Melfi, Hidden Figures
5. Tom Ford, Nocturnal Animals
Alternates: August Wilson, Fences; Jeff Nichols, Loving; Andrew Knight and Robert Schenkkan, Hacksaw Ridge
Spoilers: Jay Cooks and Martin Scorsese, Silence; Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick, Deadpool

Best Original Screenplay
1. Kenneth Lonergan, Manchester by the Sea
2. Damien Chazelle, La La Land
3. Taylor Sheridan, Hell or High Water
4. Matt Ross, Captain Fantastic
5. Jared Bush, Byron Harris, Phil Johnson, Jennifer Lee, Rich Moore, Jim Reardon, Josie Trinidad, Zootopia
Alternates: Efthymis Filippou and Yorgos Lanthimos, The Lobster; Nicholas Martin, Florence Foster Jenkins
Spoilers: Maren Ade, Toni Erdmann; Mike Mills, 20th Century Women; Paul Laverty, I, Daniel Blake

Best Cinematography
1. La La Land
2. Arrival
3. Moonlight
4. Silence
5. Lion
Alternates: Nocturnal Animals, Jackie, The Jungle Book
Spoilers: Hell or High Water; Hail, Caesar!

Best Costume Design
1. La La Land
2. Jackie
3. Florence Foster Jenkins
4. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
5. The Dressmaker
Alternates: Hidden Figures; Hail, Caesar!; Allied
Spoilers: Captain Fantastic, Kubo and the Two Strings

Best Film Editing
1. La La Land
2. Arrival
3. Moonlight
4. Manchester by the Sea
5. Hell or High Water
Alternates: Hacksaw Ridge, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Nocturnal Animals
Spoilers: Lion, Sully

Best Makeup and Hairstyling
1. Florence Foster Jenkins
2. A Man Called Ove
3. Deadpool
Alternates: Star Trek Beyond; Suicide Squad; Hail, Caesar!; The Dressmaker

Best Original Score
1. La La Land
2. Lion
3. Moonlight
4. The BFG
5. Nocturnal Animals
Alternates: Florence Foster Jenkins, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Hidden Figures, Jackie
Spoiler: Kubo and the Two Strings

Best Original Song
1. "City of Stars," La La Land
2. "How Far I'll Go," Moana
3. "Can't Stop the Feeling," Trolls
4. "Drive It Like You Stole It," Sing Street
5. "The Rules Don't Apply," Rules Don't Apply
Alternates: "Audition (The Fools Who Dream)," La La Land; "We Know the Way," Moana; "Runnin," Hidden Figures
Spoilers: "The Great Beyond," Sausage Party; "Letters to the Free," 13th

Best Production Design
1. La La Land
2. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
3. Hail, Caesar!
4. Nocturnal Animals
5. The Handmaiden
Alternates: Arrival, Jackie, Doctor Strange
Spoilers: Silence, Hacksaw Ridge

Best Sound Editing
1. Arrival
2. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
3. Hacksaw Ridge
4. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
5. Deadpool
Alternates: La La Land, Deepwater Horizon, Sully
Spoilers: Kubo and the Two Strings, Zootopia

Best Sound Mixing
1. La La Land
2. Arrival
3. Rouge One: A Star Wars Story
4. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
5. The Jungle Book
Alternates: Hacksaw Ridge, Deepwater Horizon, Sully
Spoilers: 13 Hours, Sing

Best Visual Effects
1. The Jungle Book
2. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
3. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
4. Arrival
5. Kubo and the Two Strings
Alternates: Doctor Strange, Captain America: Civil War, Passengers, Deepwater Horizon, The BFG

Best Animated Feature
1. Zootopia
2. Kubo and the Two Strings
3. Moana
4. My Life as a Zucchini
5. Finding Dory
Alternate: The Red Turtle, Your Name
Spoilers: Sausage Party, April and the Extraordinary World, The Little Prince

Best Documentary Feature
1. 13th
2. Fire at Sea
3. I Am Not Your Negro
4. Life, Animated
5. The Eagle Huntress
Alternates: O.J.: Made in America; Cameraperson; Weiner
Spoilers: Hooligan Sparrow, Tower

Best Foreign Language Film
1. Toni Erdmann
2. A Man Called Ove
3. Land of Mine
4. The Salesman
5. Land of Mine
Alternates: The King's Choice, Paradise, My Life as a Zucchini, It's Only the End of the World

Animated Short:
1. Piper
2. Une Tete Disparait (The Head Vanishes)
3. Inner Workings
4. Blind Vaysha
5. Pearl
Alternates: Pear Cider and Cigarettes, Borrowed Time, Happy End, Sous Tes Doights (Under Your Fingers), Once Upon a Line

Documentary Short:
1. Joe's Violin
2. The White Helmets
3. Extremis
4. The Mute's House
5. Watani: My Homeland
Alternates: The Other Side of Home, 4.1 Miles, Close Ties, Frame 394, Brillo Box (3cent Off)

Best Live Action Short
1. Grafitti
2. Nocturne in Black
3. Bon Voyage
4. Ennemis Interieurs (Domestic Enemies)
5. Les Fremissements du The (The Way of Tea)
Alternates: Timecode; Mindeski (Sing); La Femme et le TGV; The Rifle, The Jackle, The Wolf and the Boy; Silent Nights

Sunday, February 28, 2016

2015 Oscar Reactions

16 OUT of 24!!!! UGHHHHHH!!!!
So I got Picture, Supporting Actor, Original Song, Sound Editing, Sound Mixing, Visual Effects, Animated Short, and Documentary Short wrong. That's the worst I've done since 2010, but no expert got above 19/24 and the best Metacritic user got 21/24.

That's five wrong of the six categories I was worried about. The experts went 17/24. They got the 2 sound categories right (I got them wrong), but I got one short category right (Live Action Short), but they got them all wrong (their third place predictions won all 3 categories. Suck it, experts!). The shorts continue to plague me (I just KNEW World of Tomorrow would be too heady for them. Bear Story made so much sense.)!!

But whatever, I don't even care. That show was fun. And there were a ton of welcome surprises! Mad Max wins 6 awards (and kept The Revenant down to 3 awards)! Ex Machina for Visual Effects! Mark Rylance over Stallone (BAFTA called that one, just like they did with Alan Arkin beating Eddie Murphy for 2006)! And yasss Spotlight!! That horrible Spectre song was a low note, though (ugh, I knew The Hunting Ground was too obscure for them).

I guess Spotlight winning Best Picture really validates the people that put stock in the preferential ballot going to the movie with the most consensus. The Revenant was too divisive!

Oh, and for what it's worth: Ex Machina winning Visual Effects (such a dumb category, but honestly the most shocking Oscar win I've seen in at least the last 5 years. NO ONE saw that happening.) and Mad Max winning Sound Mixing were the only Oscar wins without any precursors and the only 2 tech wins that didn't corespond with BAFTA wins. So I was on the right track sticking to the precursors and BAFTAs. And Spectre won the Globe so it had a precursor and Gaga's song didn't. Remember that for next year, Sammy!

 Some records broken tonight:
- Spotlight was the first Best Picture winner to win just 2 Oscars since The Greatest Show on Earth for 1952.
- Ex Machina was the first non-Best Picture nominee to beat a Best Picture nominee in Visual Effects since Tora! Tora! Tora! beat Patton for 1970.
- Alejandro G. Innarritu was the first back-to-back Best Directing winner since Joseph L. Mankiewicz for 1950.

Some records still intact:
- No late-breaking movie to come out in December has won Best Picture since Million Dollar Baby for 2004. Don’t rush your movie! You gotta play festivals and not wait until December for people to see your movie or you won’t win, bro!
Last Best Picture winners:
2015: Spotlight: premiered at Venice, played at Telluride right after.
2014: Birdman: premiered at Venice, played at Telluride
2013: 12 Years a Slave: premiered at Telluride.
2012: Argo: premiered at Telluride.
2011: The Artist: premiered at Cannes, played at Telluride.
2010: The King’s Speech: premiered at Telluride.
2009: The Hurt Locker: premiered at Toronto 2008, didn’t come out in US theaters until summer 2009.
2008: Slumdog Millionaire: premiered at Telluride.
2007: No Country For Old Men: premiered at Cannes, played at Telluride.
2006: The Departed, last movie not to play festivals, but came out in theaters in October.
2005: Crash: released in theaters in May.
2004: Million Dollar Baby: last late entry, December release to win Best Picture.
- No movie directed by the same director has EVER won back-to-back Best Picture trophies.

Interesting! Time to start predicting next year’s Oscars!

2015 Oscar Predictions

Aside from a tumultuous Best Picture race, we have a pretty boring Oscar race in general.

After I only got 17 out of 24 correct in my predictions last year, this year I decided to just follow the precursors and stop trying to call surprises. I made a huge list and tallied all of the major precursor wins in all of the categories (minus the shorts) in the last ten years, and I realized that the Oscars are always exclusively following precursors nowadays. I noticed that there used to be about four Oscar wins every year that that won the Oscar without winning at least one major precursor beforehand. But last year Big Hero 6 was the only Oscar winner without any precursors, and in 2013 there were none. This year's precursor wins have been almost universally the same, so I'm pretty sure we're in for a boring Oscar night.

The one major precursor that has recently been foretelling future Oscar wins the best is the BAFTA. Last year I ignored many of the BAFTA wins (Whiplash for Sound Mixing and Editing and Grand Budapest for Score), and I got my predictions wrong! How dare I?! The BAFTAs often choose weird winners in some of their main categories (like acting and screenplays), but they usually do a really good job predicting the 8 below-the-line categories that they share with the Oscars: Cinematography, Editing, Costume Design, Makeup, Production Design, Sound (aka Sound Mixing), Original Music (aka Original Score), and Visual Effects. Last year they accurately predicted all 8 of these categories, and in 2012 and 2013 they went 6 for 8. This has increased since 2012, when BAFTA changed their rules for voting. It used to be the whole British Academy picked the nominees and then the individual branches picked the winners, but now it's the opposite: branches pick nominees and the Academy picks the winners, which is the same way the Oscars do it. The BAFTAs are also the last major group to announce winners in mid-February, the same time that the Academy is filling out their ballots, and they can often show where the race stands in the last lap of the race. So this year I'm going with all 8 of the BAFTA winners in the tech categories. This is probably an overcorrection, but almost all of their wins correspond with wins from BFCA (Critics Choice Awards) and the various guilds. (Last night while searching around on Twitter, I came across this guy using math to come up with Oscar predictions. He's basically just following precursors, too. So he has the same predictions that I have, which makes me feel slightly vindicated.)

The only categories I could see the Oscars straying from BAFTA would be the sound categories and Visual Effects. There's always a chance for an out-of-nowhere Oscar win that can fuck over my predictions, but I'm not even going to attempt to predict anything like that happening. So, yeah, the only categories giving me a headache right now are Sound Editing, Sound Mixing, Visual Effects, and the goddamn short film categories. These are the only categories I'm predicting differently than what most of the experts are predicting, which you can read about in Metacritic's report. I'll explain my problems with each when I get to that category.

Here we go!

Best Picture:
1. The Revenant (DGA, BAFTA, Globes - Drama)
2. Spotlight (SAG - Ensemble,  BFCA)
3. The Big Short (PGA)
4. Mad Max: Fury Road
5. Room
6. The Martian (Globes - Musical/Comedy)
7. Bridge of Spies
8. Brooklyn
Will Win: The Revenant (expert's choice)
Could Win: The Big Short or Spotlight
Should Win: Mad Max: Fury Road

I explained this category yesterday. If The Big Short wins Film Editing earlier in the night, it will probably surprise (the same way Crash did for 2005) in Best Picture. But The Revenant is definitely the one to beat at this point. I'm rooting for a Spotlight upset, though!

Best Director:
1. Alejandro G. Innaritu, The Revenant (DGA, BAFTA, Globes)
2. George Miller, Mad Max: Fury Road (BFCA)
3. Adam McKay, The Big Short
4. Tom McCarthy, Spotlight
5. Lenny Abrahamson, Room
Will Win: Alejandro G. Innaritu (experts' choice)
Could Win: George Miller (or Adam McKay)
Should Win: George Miller

Inarritu won the DGA so that probably means this race is sewn up. I guess George Miller could maybe surprise, but I doubt it. And if Big Short surprises in Best Picture, maybe Adam McKay goes along with it, but I really doubt that.

Best Actor:
1. Leonardo DiCaprio, The Revenant (SAG, BAFTA, BFCA, Globes - Drama)
2. Michael Fassbender, Steve Jobs
3. Bryan Cranston, Trumbo
4. Eddie Redmayne, The Danish Girl
5. Matt Damon, The Martian (Globes - Musical/Comedy)
Will Win: Leonardo DiCaprio (experts' choice)
Could Win: None
Should Win: Michael Fassbender

Done deal.

Best Actress:
1. Brie Larson, Room (SAG, BAFTA, BFCA, Globes - Drama)
2. Saoirse Ronan, Brooklyn
3. Cate Blanchett, Carol
4. Charlotte Rampling, 45 Years
5. Jennifer Lawrence, Joy (Globes - Musical/Comedy)
Will Win: Brie Larson (experts' choice)
Could Win: None
Should Win: Charlotte Rampling

Done deal.

Best Supporting Actor:
1. Sylvester Stallone, Creed (BFCA, Globes)
2. Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies (BAFTA)
3. Mark Ruffalo, Spotlight
4. Christian Bale, The Big Short
5. Tom Hardy, The Revenant
Will Win: Sylvester Stallone (experts' choice)
Could Win: None (or Mark Rylance)
Should Win: Mark Rylance

So because Stallone wasn't nominated for a SAG and a BAFTA, some people are maybe calling him weak. But did you see the standing ovations he's been getting? People really want this to happen (for whatever the fuck reason). For a while I was thinking Mark Ruffalo could surprise here and indicate a Spotlight Best Picture win, but that's pretty much my own fan fiction.

Best Supporting Actress:
1. Alicia Vikander, The Danish Girl (SAG, BFCA)
2. Kate Winslet, Steve Jobs (BAFTA, Globes)
3. Rooney Mara, Carol
4. Jennifer Jason Leigh, The Hateful Eight
5. Rachel McAdams, Spotlight
Will Win: Alicia Vikander (experts' choice)
Could Win: Kate Winslet
Should Win: Rooney Mara (although if I wanted to give it to someone who's actually supporting I would go with Kate Winslet)

This is the only main category with a little bit of suspense, since Kate Winslet won the SAG and the BAFTA. Alicia Vikander was nominated for Ex Machina at those two awards shows, though, so technically Winslet hasn't beaten her for The Danish Girl yet. I wouldn't be totally surprised, but Vikander is definitely heavily favored.

Best Adapted Screenplay:
1. Adam McKay and Charles Randolph, The Big Short (WGA, BAFTA, BFCA)
2. Emma Donoghue, Room
3. Drew Goddard, The Martian
4. Phyllis Nagy, Carol
5. Nick Hornby, Brooklyn
Will Win: Adam McKay and Charles Randolph, The Big Short (experts' choice)
Could Win: None
Should Win: Emma Donoghue
(WGA = Writers Guild of America)

Done deal.

Best Original Screenplay:
1. Tom McCarthy and John Singer, Spotlight (WGA, BAFTA, BFCA)
2. Peter Docter and Bob Peterson, Inside Out
3. Andrea Berloff, S. Leigh Salvidge, and Alan Wenkus, Straight Outta Compton
4. Alex Garland, Ex Machina
5. Mark Chapman, Joel Coen, and Ethan Coen, Bridge of Spies
Will/Should Win: Tom McCarthy and John Singer, Spotlight (experts' choice)
Could Win: None

Done deal.

Best Cinematography
1. The Revenant (ASC, BAFTA, BFCA)
2. Mad Max: Fury Road
3. Sicario
4. Carol
5. The Hateful Eight
Will/Should Win: The Revenant (experts' choice)
Could Win: None (or Mad Max: Fury Road)
(ASC = American Society of Cinematographers)

Done deal. Emmanuel Lubezki's third win in a row!

Best Costume Design
1. Mad Max: Fury Road (CDG - Fantasy, BAFTA, BFCA)
2. Cinderella
3. Carol
4. The Danish Girl (CDG - Period)
5. The Revenant
Will Win: Mad Max: Fury Road (experts' choice)
Could Win: Cinderella or The Danish Girl
Should Win: N/A (I didn't see Cinderella because I refuse to watch any of these live action Disney remakes because I find them wholly unnecessary)
(CDG = Costume Designers Guild)

The experts seem to find this race really difficult to call. I guess because Mad Max doesn't look like any other recent winner in this category, and Cinderella does. They usually do GOWNS! in this category. But Cinderella isn't prestigious at all. And it hasn't won any precursors (it was researching this category that led me to make my giant precursor chart in the first place). Last year Grand Budapest beat Maleficient and Into the Woods, which both had more traditional Oscar-winning costume design. And Mad Max won the BAFTA and BFCA, which have both accurately predicted the winner in this category since 2008. So I'm not worried.

Best Film Editing
1. Mad Max: Fury Road (ACE - Drama, BAFTA, BFCA)
2. The Big Short (ACE - Musical/Comedy)
3. The Revenant
4. Spotlight
5. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Will Win: Mad Max: Fury Road (experts' choice)
Could Win: The Big Short
Should Win: Mad Max: Fury Road
(ACE = American Cinema Editors)

For the longest time I was predicting a Big Short upset in this category that would go along with its Best Picture win, but I think The Big Short really lost momentum during voting time. I guess maybe The Revenant could also maybe steal it, but they almost always go fast and exciting in this category, so that's either Mad Max or Big Short.

Best Makeup and Hairstyling
1. Mad Max: Fury Road (MUAHS, BAFTA, BFCA)
2. The Revenant
3. The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared
Will Win: Mad Max: Fury Road (expert's choice)
Could Win: The Revenant
Should Win: N/A (I've never even heard of that third movie)
(MUAHS = Makeup and Hairstylists Guild)

Mad Max has won everything so far, so I have to predict it. This is one of the few categories that tends to have a mind of its own (usually because the only frontrunners don't pass the qualifying round from this branch). I would totally not be surprised if The Revenant stole this category, too, if it's doing a sweep. It doesn't seem that terribly likely, though.

Best Original Score
1. The Hateful Eight (BAFTA, BFCA, Globes)
2. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
3. Bridge of Spies
4. Carol
5. Sicario
Will Win: The Hateful Eight (expert's choice)
Could Win: None (or Star Wars: The Force Awakens)
Should Win: Carol

Done deal. I guess maybe Star Wars as a huge upset if they want to give John Williams his 6th Oscar after 14 consecutive losses.

Best Original Song
1. "Til it Happens to You," The Hunting Ground
2. "Writing's On the Wall," Spectre (Globes)
3. "Earned It," Fifty Shades of Grey
4. "Simple Song #3," Youth
5. "Manta Ray," Racing Extinction
Will Win: "Til it Happens to You" (experts' choice)
Could Win: "Writing's On the Wall"
Should Win: N/A (I've listened to them all, and my favorite is "Earned It," but since I won't watch Spectre or 50 Shades of Grey and I've never even heard of Racing Extinction, I don't know how they were used in the film, so I can't really say).

I kinda think this is maybe a closer race than we might think it is, mostly because this category is such a dumpster fire. Lady Gaga and Diane Warren have been campaigning really hard for "Til it Happens to You," and Warren should finally get her first win after 8 nominations. But I definitely wouldn't count out "Writing's On the Wall," just because it's from the more widely-seen film. God, it's so terrible, though.

Best Production Design:
1. Mad Max: Fury Road (ADG - Fantasy, BAFTA, BFCA)
2. The Revenant (ADG - Period)
3. Bridge of Spies
4. The Danish Girl
5. The Martian (ADG - Contemporary)
Will Win: Mad Max: Fury Road (experts' choice)
Could Win: Bridge of Spies or The Revenant
Should Win: Mad Max: Fury Road
(ADG = Art Directors Guild)

Done deal. Well, I guess maybe The Revenant could win this if it sweeps, but I doubt it. It barely has any sets! It's fun that Mad Max has been winning everything for its car designs. But I think it's weird that even though it's an action movie, it was positioned as the big crafts contender this year (costumes, makeup, sets--the same way Grand Budapest was last year) and not a lot of the action-heavy categories. Which leads me to...

Best Sound Editing
1. Mad Max: Fury Road (MPSE)
2. The Revenant (MPSE)
3. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
4. Sicario
5. The Martian
Will Win: The Revenant
Could/Should Win: Mad Max: Fury Road (experts' choice)
(MPSE = Motion Picture Sound Editors)

So Mad Max has been the frontrunner in both of the sound categories all year, but then The Revenant won the BAFTA and the CAS, so I definitely had to switch my Sound Mixing prediction. Usually one film wins both of the sound categories (Gravity, Hugo, Inception, Hurt Locker, Bourne Ultimatum). If they do split, however, usually it's because one film wasn't nominated in both categories. It's usually a music-driven movie that wins Sound Mixing and an action movie that wins Sound Editing. Sound Editing used to be called Sound Effects Editing and Sound Mixing used to just be called Best Sound, so it's helpful to think of Sound Editing as "best sound effects," even if it's a lot more complicated than that. So Whiplash won last year when it wasn't nominated in Sound Editing and so did Les Miserables for 2012 and Dreamgirls for 2006. The one example that I found is Slumdog Millionaire was actually nominated for both sound categories and only won Sound Mixing for 2008. So maybe The Revenant follows that trajectory and maybe Mad Max wins Sound Editing. Oh, and great, the MPSE announced their awards last night, and The Revenant and Mad Max tied there. Ugh. Whatever, I think that's favorable for The Revenant, since Mad Max was the frontrunner to win that guild. I'm sticking with The Revenant in both categories, but I'm definitely not confident.

Best Sound Mixing
1. Mad Max: Fury Road
2. The Revenant (BAFTA, CAS)
3. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
4. The Martian
5. Bridge of Spies
Will Win: The Revenant
Could/Should Win: Mad Max: Fury Road (experts' choice)
(CAS = Cinema Audio Society)

Best Visual Effects
1. Star Wars: The Force Awakens (BAFTA, VES)
2. Mad Max: Fury Road (BFCA)
3. The Martian
4. The Revenant
5. Ex Machina
Will/Should Win: Star Wars: The Force Awakens (experts' choice)
Could Win: Mad Max: Fury Road
(VES = Visual Effects Society)

It should be an easy call to just predict Star Wars. It's the most effects-driven (Mad Max has a lot of practical effects), and it won the VES and the BAFTA. The only thing giving me pause is this record that a film not nominated in Best Picture hasn't beaten another film(s) nominated for Best Picture in this category since 1970. Star Wars isn't nominated for Best Picture, while Mad Max and The Revenant are. So I really don't know. I see a couple of people predicting The Revenant, which would make me barf everywhere. Win an Oscar for one bear scene. Ugh. Whatever, trends get broken all the time, so I'm sticking with Star Wars.

Best Animated Feature
1. Inside Out (BAFTA, BFCA, Globes)
2. Anomalisa
3. Shaun the Sheep Movie
4. When Marnie Was There
5. Boy and the World
Will/Should Win: Inside Out (experts' choice)
Could Win: None

The donest deal.

Best Documentary Feature
1. Amy (BAFTA, BFCA)
2. The Look of Silence
3. Cartel Land
4. Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Walk to Freedom
5. What Happened, Miss Simone?
Will Win: Amy (experts' choice)
Could Win: None (or Cartel Land)
Should Win: The Look of Silence

Done deal.

Best Foreign Language Film:
1. Son of Saul (BFCA, Globes)
2. Mustang
3. A War
4. Theeb
5. Embrace of the Serpent
Will/Should Win: Son of Saul (experts' choice)
Could Win: None (or Mustang)

Done deal. Although... Son of Saul is pretty hard to watch. It should be fine now that the whole Academy votes for ALL the categories, but I wouldn't be completely shocked if Mustang or even A War shocked here.

Best Animated Short
1. Sanjay's Super Team
2. World of Tomorrow
3. Bear Story (Historia De Un Orso)
4. Prologue
5. We Can't Live Without Chaos
Will Win: World of Tomorrow
Could Win: Sanjay's Super Team (experts' choice) or Bear Story
Should Win: World of Tomorrow

UGHHHHH the shorts drive me so crazy. I think I used to have more success when I didn't actually watch them. Since there aren't any precursors to draw from, I usually look at what the experts are predicting and then change one or two for my own predictions. Here's how it has worked out the past 5 years:
2010: 0 right, Experts: 1 right
2011: Me: 2 right, Experts: 2 right
2012: Me: 2 right, Experts: 2 right
2013: Me: 2 right, Experts: 1 right
2014: Me: 1 right, Experts: 3 right

God, last year pissed me off. I can't help but think after the experts got all 3 correct last year that maybe The Academy is just following frontrunners more often in this category, but.... nah, I'm mostly doing my own thing. I better get at least 2 right!!

Okay, fine, so for animated short. Sanjay's Super Team is obviously the frontrunner because it's Pixar and was the most widely-seen, after playing before The Good Dinosaur. Bear Story looks like the type of cute/whimsical animation that often wins here. But then you have World of Tomorrow fucking everything up! It premiered at last year's Sundance, it's on Netflix, it's genius, it was all over film twitter, so obviously that should win, too, right? But the Academy isn't film twitter. It's so far and away the best film and it's the only one with dialogue, but maybe it's too heady for The Academy? And it's way longer than the rest. But it's also the most crudely animated, and they usually like pretty animation here. I could really make an argument for any of these three winning. But... fuck it, I'm going with World of Tomorrow.

Best Documentary Short
1. Body Team 12
2. Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah
3. Chau, Beyond the Lines
4. A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness
5. Last Day of Freedom
Will Win: Claude Lanzmann
Could Win: Body Team 12 (experts' choice) or A Girl in the River
Should Win: A Girl in the River

I have no idea why Body Team 12 is the frontrunner here. Maybe because it's the shortest, so therefore the most digestible? I guess it might have the biggest campaign behind it (HBO, Olivia Wilde) but it has absolutely no narrative development. I'm going with Claude Lanzmann because it's about the Holocaust and a legendary filmmaker/film. It's really unremarkable looking, though. Hmm.. Maybe Chau because it's about an artist, but it was really hard to look at :X. And A Girl in the River is definitely the best one, but eh.. I don't know. They don't usually pick the best contender in this category.

Best Live Action Short
1. Ave Maria
2. Shok
3. Stutterer
4. Day One
5. Everything Will Be Okay (Alles Wird Gut)
Will Win: Stutterer
Could Win:  Shok (experts' choice) or Ave Maria
Should Win: Everything Will Be Okay

Maybe I'm crazy but Stutterer instantly jumped out to me as looking like the kind of enjoyable/mini-Indie movie that has won this category the past couple of years. I'm again totally baffled by Ave Maria being the frontrunner, because it thought it was terrible. I guess I could see it winning because maybe it's the only funny one. And Shok was garbage, but it's really heart-rending and it has gotten a really strong campaign. I just saw it's now overtaken Ave Maria as the frontrunner, according to the experts, but I'm sticking with Stutterer. Whatever.

K done bye.

Saturday, February 27, 2016

Explaining the 2015 Best Picture Race

This year's Best Picture contest has been crazy. We've had a three-way race all season between Spotlight, The Big Short, and The Revenant, all winning at least one of the main six precursors: PGA (Producers Guild of America), DGA (Directors Guild of America), SAG (Screen Actors Guild) Best Ensemble prize, BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts), the Golden Globes (Hollywood Foreign Press Association), and the BFCA (Broadcast Film Critics Association, also known as the Critics Choice Awards).

Okay, so, the normal way an awards season goes is...
Phase 1: Pre-Nominations: The Critics and the Golden Globes
So, there are a shit-ton of regional critics groups representing the critics from different cities and states that all announce winners throughout December and early January. They usually coalesce to make a frontrunner in many of the categories. Most of the time these winners also correspond with the winner of the Critics Choice Awards, so I tend to use the Critics Choice winners as a representation of all the critics (even though the BFCA is just a random group of like 50 critics who often just like to predict the future Oscar winners). The Golden Globes also announce their winners around this time, but the HFPA are a bunch of foreign journalists who sometimes have weird ass taste. So, even though the critics and the Globes voters aren't actually members of the Academy, they have televised awards shows where you get to see people collecting wins and making speeches, and they can build momentum toward a future Oscar win.

Phase 2: Post-Nominations: The Guilds and BAFTA
The Academy is composed of 6,000+ members from various branches across the movie industry. Many Academy member are also members of larger guilds. The directors branch of the academy, for example, is around 500 directors. There's also a Directors Guild (DGA) that has like 15,000 members. And they give out their own awards. This is when you often start seeing momentum changing. Last year Boyhood was winning everything in Phase 1, and then Birdman won PGA, DGA, and SAG in Phase 2 and then eventually Best Picture. The same thing happened in 2010 between The Social Network and The King's Speech.

This is how the precursors have gone down the last five years:
2010:
The King's Speech: PGA, DGA, SAG, BAFTA (won Best Picture/Director)
The Social Network: Globes, Critics
2011:
The Artist: PGA, DGA, SAG, BAFTA, Globes, Critics (won Best Picture/Director)
The Help: SAG
2012:
Argo: PGA, DGA, SAG, BAFTA, Globes, Critics (won Best Picture, not nominated for Director)
2013:
12 Years a Slave: PGA (tie), BAFTA, Globes - Drama (won Best Picture)
Gravity: PGA (tie), DGA (won Best Director)
American Hustle: SAG, Globes - Musical/Comedy
2014:
Birdman: PGA, DGA, SAG (won Best Picture/Director)
Boyhood: BAFTA, Globes - Drama, Critics

Aside from 2013, when 12 Years a Slave just barely managed to win Best Picture away from Gravity, most years you have one film dominating the whole awards season (Argo, The Artist, The Hurt Locker, Slumdog Millionaire, No Country For Old Men, etc.). Or you have one film sweep the critics and then another film come in and sweep the guilds and Best Picture (The King's Speech vs. Social Network, Birdman vs. Boyhood).

But not this year! First Spotlight was the clear frontrunner ordained by the critics. Then The Revenant won the Globes. Then Spotlight won Critics Choice. Then The Big Short shocked at the PGA. Then Spotlight won the SAG Best Ensemble prize. Then The Revenant won the DGA, and finally The Revenant won the BAFTA. So that means this year we have:
The Revenant: DGA, BAFTA, Globes
Spotlight: SAG, Critics
The Big Short: PGA

We've had this crazy bouncing back and forth between these three movies all season, but it looks like we might have finally settled on The Revenant. It won the last two major awards and now it has the most amount of wins (like 12 Years a Slave did two years ago). The only thing that's really giving me pause is that The Big Short beat The Revenant at the PGA. The PGA and the Oscars both adopted "the preferential ballot" for determining Best Picture in 2009. This means that instead of just counting the number of votes for Best Picture, voters now have to rank all of the nominees from 1 to 8 (or 9 or 10, depending on the number of nominees that year). So the film that is ranked numbers 1, 2, or 3 on the most number of ballots (i.e. the consensus) should be the ultimate winner, rather than the film that may be number 1 on a lot of ballots but also number 7 or 8 (i.e. the passionate but divisive vote). Since adapting the preferential ballot, the PGA winner has matched the Best Picture winner every year. But then again, 12 Years a Slave and Gravity tied at the PGAs two years ago. So if Gravity would have had ONE more vote than 12 Years a Slave, Gravity would have won and the PGA wouldn't have matched the Best Picture Oscar winner that year. So maybe I'm putting too much stock in the PGA.

The PGA happened in late January, and I'm thinking that The Big Short might have lost some of its momentum since then. It hasn't won anything else since then. And now The Revenant seems to be the movie most people are talking about in February. It has certainly made the most money. Then again, American Sniper made $300+ this time last year and it only won one Oscar. And Gravity made like $200 million more than 12 Years a Slave and it lost. There are also a lot of records The Revenant will break if it wins Best Picture:

- First film to win Best Picture released in December since Million Dollar Baby for 2004 (and the first super early (sight unseen, like a year in advance) predicted winner since Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King for 2003.
- First film not nominated in either of the Best Screenplay categories at the Oscars since Titanic for 1997.
- First film not nominated for Best Ensemble at the SAGs since Braveheart for 1995.
And most importantly:
- First film ever by the same director to win Best Picture two years in a row (and only two other directors have won Director back-to-back: Joseph L. Mankiewicz for 1949-50 and John Ford for 1940-41)

Another possible record to consider:
The Big Short or Spotlight seem really unlikely to win any other category besides one of the Best Screenplay categories and Best Picture, so either of them would be the first Best Picture winner to win only 2 Oscars since The Greatest Show on Earth for 1952.

Then again, The Oscars are bucking tradition more often recently. Last year Birdman was the first film to win Best Picture without a Best Film Editing nomination since Ordinary People for 1980, and Argo was the first film to win Best Picture without a Best Director nomination since Driving Miss Daisy for 1989. So who knows?

Obviously, the problem this year is that none of the big 3 choices seem to be liked enough to become the consensus choice. The arguments against each film seem to be:
- Spotlight: too boring, unremarkable filmmaking
- Big Short: too Hollywood, from a comedy director, rough around the edges
- The Revenant: too violent, long, divisive, doesn't have really glowing reviews

So I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around what might actually be the consensus choice for The Academy. I would think that Spotlight would totally fit that role, because come on, who could dislike that movie? But I'm finding that people really just aren't WOWed by it. I keep hearing "it looks like a TV movie!" The response to Spotlight really reminds me of the response to Boyhood last year. I spend so much time on Film Twitter, so I tend to forget that the critics actually aren't representative of the average film-going public. The Academy members tend to land in some gray space between a film critic and an average viewer. The Revenant doesn't seem like a consensus choice to would favor the preferential ballot (like the generally agreeable Argo did in 2012), but I would have thought Birdman was going to be too weird for the Academy. I think the trick is to find a mixture of passion and consensus instead of just consensus. And Best Picture just needs to be exciting nowadays. The movies that people find boring don't win Best Picture anymore. Argo was exciting, after all. So was Birdman. I guess 12 Years a Slave was somewhat boring, but white guilt led the Academy to pick that movie because it felt IMPORTANT. And 12 Years a Slave had dynamic filmmaking, which is also really important nowadays. The Social Network was dynamic, but the Academy just didn't want to give Best Picture to the movie about Facebook. Just like they didn't want to give it to the movie about gay cowboys. Ugh. I can't.

But yeah, anyway! I actually feel pretty confident that The Revenant is going to win. I tend to really overthink what the Academy is going to do, but you can usually just tell when something FEELS like a Best Picture winner. And I think The Revenant just makes the most sense. It's just such a bummer because I thought that movie was... eh. It's pretty but it's dumb. And I thought The Big Short, which I definitely think is in 2nd place, was fun but messy. Both of those are my least favorite nominees in this category. Go figure! And the critics agree with me! Either of these two films will end up as the worst-reviewed Best Picture winner since Crash (SHUDDER!!). Whatever, I just want Mad Max to win, but that's not going to happen. Then I would prefer Spotlight, but I think that's running a distant third. We'll see! I'm over it. Lemme just go work on my predictions for next year's Oscars jajaja.

My Dream 2015 Oscar Ballot

Best Picture
1. Carol
2. Mad Max: Fury Road
3. Son of Saul
4. Inside Out
5. 45 Years
Runners-Up: The Duke of Burgundy, The Diary of a Teenage Girl, Spotlight, Tangerine, Room
Honorable Mentions: Sicario, The Look of Silence, Ex Machina, Girlhood, Brooklyn
(I would have had Phoenix, Jafar Panahi's Taxi, and Timbuktu on my runners-up, but they weren't eligible for this year's Oscars)

Best Director
1. George Miller, Mad Max: Fury Road
2. Todd Haynes, Carol
3. Lazlo Nemes, Son of Saul
4. Peter Strickland, The Duke of Burgundy
5. Sean Baker, Tangerine
Runners-Up: Celine Sciamma, Girlhood; Andrew Haigh, 45 Years; Mia Hansen-Love, Eden; Dennis Villeneuve, Sicario
Honorable Mentions: Spike Lee, Chi-Raq; Yann Demange, '71; Deniz Gamze Erguven, Mustang; John Crowley, Brooklyn; Alex Garland, Ex Machina
(I would have had Hsiao-Hsien Hou for The Assassin in my top 5, Abderrahmane Sissako for Timbuktu in my runners-up, and Damian Szifron for Wild Tales in my honorable mentions, but they weren't eligible)

Best Actor
1. Michael Fassbender, Steve Jobs
2. Geza Rohrig, Son of Saul
3. Michael B. Jordan, Creed
4. Christopher Abbot, James White
5. Jacob Tremblay, Room
Runners-Up: Paul Dano, Love & Mercy; Tom Courtenay, 45 Years; Andrew Garfield, 99 Homes; Jason Segal, The End of the Tour; Jack O'Connell, '71
Honorable Mentions: Ben Mendelsohn, Mississippi Grind; Abraham Attah, Beasts of No Nation; Felix de Givry, Eden; Matt Damon, The Martian; Bill Hader, Trainwreck

Best Actress
1. Charlotte Rampling, 45 Years
2. Cate Blanchett, Carol
3. Brie Larson, Room
4. Rooney Mara, Carol
5. Bel Powley, The Diary of a Teenage Girl
(I would have had Ronit Elkabetz from Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem and Nina Hoss from Phoenix, but they weren't eligible for the Oscars this year)
Runners-Up: Teyonah Parris, Chi-Raq; Saoirse Ronan, Brooklyn; Karidja Toure, Girlhood; Arielle Holmes, Heaven Knows What; Elisabeth Olsen, Queen of Earth
Honorable Mentions: Blythe Danner, I'll See You in My Dreams; Lily Tomlin, Grandma; Sidse Babett Knudsen, The Duke of Burgundy; Juliette Binoche, Clouds of Sils Maria; Rinko Kikuchi, Kumiko, The Treasure Hunter

Best Supporting Actor
1. Benicio del Toro, Sicario
2. Idris Elba, Beasts of No Nation
3. Oscar Isaac, Ex Machina
4. Jason Mitchell, Straight Outta Compton
5. Emory Cohen, Brooklyn
Runners-Up: Stanley Tucci, Spotlight; Alexander Skarsgard, The Diary of a Teenage Girl; Pierre-Yves Cardinal, Tom at the Farm; Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies; Michael Shannon, 99 Homes
Honorable Mentions: Kyle Chandler, Carol; Michael Stuhlbarg, Steve Jobs; Richard Jenkins, Bone Tomahawk; John Cena, Trainwreck; Jason Statham, Spy

Best Supporting Actress
1. Julianne Moore, Maps to the Stars
2. Cynthia Nixon, James White
3. Alicia Vikander, Ex Machina
4. Kristen Wiig, The Diary of a Teenage Girl
5. Assa Sylla, Girlhood
Runners-Up: Sarah Paulson, Carol; Kate Winslet, Steve Jobs; Katherine Waterston, Queen of Earth; Elizabeth Banks, Love & Mercy; Kristen Stewart, Clouds of Sils Maria
Honorable Mentions: Tessa Tompson, Creed; Rose Byrne, Spy; Jada Pinkett Smith, Magic Mike XXL; Jessica Chastain, Crimson Peak; Phyllis Smith, Inside Out
(I would have has Erica Riva for Wild Tales in my honorable mentions, but she wasn't eligible)

Best Original Screenplay
1. Tom McCarthy and John Singer, Spotlight
2. Alex Garland, Ex Machina
3. Pete Docter, Josh Cooley, and Meg LeFauve, Inside Out
4. Sean Baker and Chris Bergoch, Tangerine
5. Celina Sciamma, Girlhood
Runners-Up: Mia and Sven Hansen-Love, Eden; Ramin Bahrani, Amir Nader, and Bahareh Azimi, 99 Homes; Anna Buylaert, John Maclean, Slow West; Taylor Sheridan, Sicario; Peter Strickland, The Duke of Burgundy
Honorable Mentions: Kevin Willmott and Spike Lee, Chi-Raq; Oren Moverman and Michael Alan Lerner, Love & Mercy; Lazlo Nemes and Clara Royer, Son of Saul; Deniz Gamze Erguven and Alice Winoccour, Mustang; Paul Weitz, Grandma
(Robit and Shlomi Elkabetz for Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem, Demian Szifron for Wild Tales. and Anna Muylaert for The Second Mother not eligible)

Best Adapted Screenplay
(Disclaimer: I'm just going based on what I think is the best script. Since I don't read books (ew), I don't really know who did the best job actually adapting previous material)
1. Aaron Sorkin, Steve Jobs
2. Andrew Haigh, 45 Years
3. Emma Donoghue, Room
4. Phyllis Nagy, Carol
5. David Marguilles, The End of the Tour
Runners-Up: Marielle Heller, The Diary of a Teenage Girl; Nick Hornby, Brooklyn; Adam McKay and Charles Randolph, The Big Short; Ronald Brownstein and Joshua Safdie, Heaven Knows What; Drew Goddard, The Martian
Honorable Mentions: George Miller, Brendan McCarthy, and Nick Lathouris, Mad Max: Fury Road; Cary Joji Fukunaga, Beasts of No Nation; Ryan Coogler and Aaron Covington, Creed; Keiko Niwa; Masashi Ando, Hiromasa Yonebayashi, and David Freedman, When Marnie Was There; Charlie Kaufman, Anomalisa
(Cristian Petzold and Harun Farocki for Phoenix not eligible)

Best Cinematography
1. The Revenant
2. Son of Saul
3. Mad Max: Fury Road
4. Carol
5. Creed
(I would have had The Assassin but it wasn't eligible)

Best Costume Design
1. Brooklyn
2. Mad Max: Fury Road
3. Carol
4. Crimson Peak
5. The Duke of Burgundy

Best Makeup and Hairstyling
1. Mad Max: Fury Road
2. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
3. Crimson Peak

Best Film Editing
1. Mad Max: Fury Road
2. Carol
3. Sicario
4. Creed
5. Steve Jobs

Best Original Score
1. Carol
2. It Follows
3. Sicario
4. Mad Max: Fury Road
5. Steve Jobs

Best Original Song
1. "Flashlight," Pitch Perfect 2
2. "I'll See You in My Dreams," I'll See You in My Dreams
3. "Seems Like Summer," Shaun the Sheep
4. "Simple Song #3," Youth
5. "Fighting Stronger," Creed

Best Production Design
1. Crimson Peak
2. Mad Max: Fury Road
3. Brooklyn
4. The Duke of Burgundy
5. Carol

Best Sound Editing/Mixing
1. Mad Max: Fury Road
2. Ex Machina
3. Sicario
4. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
5. Love & Mercy

Best Visual Effects
1. Mad Max: Fury Road
2. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
3. The Walk
4. Ant-Man
5. Ex Machina

Best Animated Feature:
1. Inside Out
2. Shaun the Sheep Movie
3. Boy and the World
4. Anomalisa
5. When Marnie Was There

Best Documentary Feature:
1. The Look of Silence
2. Amy
3. Listen to Me Marlon
4. Cartel Land
5. Best of Enemies

Best Foreign Language Film:
(Only considering the official submissions from each country in this category)
1. Son of Saul (Hungary)
2. Mustang (France)
3. Embrace of the Serpent (Colombia)
4. The Assassin (Taiwan)
5. The Club (Chile)

Thursday, January 14, 2016

2014 Oscar Nominations Reactions/Predictions Update

NOOOOOO CAROLLLLL!!!!

I just had a feeling that was coming. I was hearing "IT'S TOO CHILLY!!" ever since it premiered at Cannes in May. Aside from Carol's Best Picture snub, it was a pretty predictable set of nominations, except Ridley Scott missing Director, Quentin Tarantino and Aaron Sorkin missing in the screenplay categories, and maybe "See You Again" in Best Original Song. There was nothing like last year when they only gave Selma 2 nominations, they snubbed Jake Gyllenhaal for Actor in Nightcrawler, Gillian Flynn in Adapted Screenplay for Gone Girl, LEGO Movie in Animated, Life Itself in Documentary, and Force Majuere in Foreign Language.

I ended up going 79% of my predictions correct, which is the best I've ever done. I could have gotten above 80%, but I decided to go against the grain a little bit and not predict Sylvester Stallone in Best Supporting Actor or Jennifer Jason Leigh in Best Supporting Actress, and I went out on a limb in both of the sound categories. Damn! And all year I was predicting Tom Hardy would get nominated for The Revenant, but then he wasn't showing up anywhere and I think I let my personal preference affect my predictions, so I went with Jacob Tremblay instead. I could have gotten all 20 acting nominations right! I got 5/5 in Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Cinematography, and Best Animated Short (a short category! Those are always impossible to predict!). I only missed one in every category except Director, Supporting Actor, Production Design, and Documentary Short (where I got 3/5) and Original Song (where I got 2/5). I'm also kind of kicking myself for missing Embrace of the Serpent in Best Foreign Language. Even though I was predicting it for the past couple of weeks, I followed some other Oscar predictors and switched to the Belgian entry. I knew my foreign language predictions were too Europe-heavy!

My Personal lows of the morning:
- Carol snubs in Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Production Design (obviously)
- Jacob Tremblay snub in Best Supporting Actor
- Aaron Sorkin snub for Steve Jobs in Best Adapted Screenplay
- Idris Elba snub in Best Supporting Actor (I had a feeling that was coming, though. I never really thought the Academy would go for a movie on Netflix)
- Jennifer Lawrence getting nominated in Joy. I mean, yeah, fine, she's good. But I'm just so sick of her, and we were so close to Joy getting 0 nominations! They could have done Rooney Mara or Alicia Vikander in the lead category instead.
- Ugh, The Danish Girl is there in several categories. No one should have been eligible for that terrible movie. Alicia Vikander should have been nominated for Ex Machina instead. And lolol Adam McKay is a Best Director nominee for The Big Short. That movie has no business being in the Oscar race at all
- Another year of all white nominees. Michael B. Jordan in Creed, Jason Mitchell in Straight Outta Compton, Oscar Isaac in Ex Machina, and Benicio Del Toro in Sicario all deserved to be in the conversation and none of them really were. Get it together, Academy!
- Ew Sam Smith's terrible Spectre song made it.
- Listen to Me Marlon really should have gotten nominated for Best Documentary, but I didn't think that would actually happen.

My Highs:
- Even though Jacob Tremblay didn't make it in, I'm really happy Room got in Best Picture, Best Director (biggest surprise in the top 8 categories), and Best Adapted Screenplay. Even though I had Room as a strong player in Picture and Director back in October/November, it had fallen down my and most experts' predictions after I missed almost all the guilds.
- I can't believe Charlotte Rampling happened! Even though she looked like a good bet because that category pretty much emptied out (and the CATEGORY FRAUD! conversation proved to be a red herring, like I had a hunch it would be), I didn't really trust the Academy would give 45 Years a chance. Best nomination of the morning.
- A bunch of Mad Max nominations (including costumes!)! So, okay, they didn't go for Carol, but they went for the second best movie of the year that really seemed like it was going to be too weird (and a 4th sequel!) for them.
- They really went astray from those terrible SAG nominations, thank God. No Johnny Depp nomination for Black Mass! And no Helen Mirren for Trumbo! SAG went 13/20 for Oscar, which I'm pretty sure it's the lowest that overlap has ever been. Which I love! Less overlap with the guilds! More independent thinking!
- Johan Johannson's creepy score for Sicario making it in when no one was expecting it to. It was already on my own personal ballot.
- They really seemed to stay away from bad movies in Visual Effects (The Revenant and Ex Machina over Jurassic World or The Walk) Animated Feature (When Marnie was There, The Boy and the World, Shaun the Sheep over The Good Dinosaur and The Peanuts Movie), and Documentary Feature (Winter on Fire and What Happened Miss Simone over He Named Me Malala or Where to Invade Next).
- So glad Carter Burwell got his first ever nomination (which is insane) for his Carol score.
- Happy The Weeknd's "Earned It" made it in. And hey look, Antony is an Oscar nominee now, too.
--
Going forward, I'm excited that we have some suspense in 4 of the top 8 categories. It looks like Best Actor (Leo), Best Actress (Brie), Best Original Screenplay (Spotlight), and Best Adapted Screenplay (The Big Short) are locked up. If The Revenant wins both the PGA and DGA (like Birdman last year), then we're probably just looking at The Revenant for Picture and Director. If anything else wins one of those, we should be looking at a race for Best Picture between The Revenant and Spotlight. Maybe The Big Short but I doubt it. Even if Spotlight remains the frontrunner, I could see Inarritu or maybe George Miller winning Director. We'll probably figure out if it's going to be Alicia Vikander or Rooney Mara (or I guess maybe Jennfier Jason Leigh or Kate Winslet) for Best Supporting Actress after Critics Choice, SAG, and BAFTA. I'm hoping that remains a race up until the Oscar night, but that doesn't really happen anymore. Supporting Actor will probably remain a race up until the end because Sylvester Stallone isn't nominated for SAG or BAFTA. So I suspect Mark Rylance will win both of those so it should be a race between those two on Oscar night, with Mark Ruffalo as the potential spoiler. Ahh can't wait!

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

2014 Oscar Nomination Predictions

This has been a really fun Oscar season so far.

First, when the Oscar season officially began in December, the SAG nominations threw the Oscar experts for a loop with their seemingly random nominations. Oscars and SAGs usually line up really closely. In 2013 and 2012, 14 out of the 20 SAG nominees went on to Oscar nominations, but in every other year this decade they went 17/20, including last year (and 19/20 in 2009). So it already looked like we were in for a different race than we were expecting. Then Carol led the Golden Globe nominations and Mad Max lead the the Critics Choice nominations, Spotlight was winning all the critics groups and looking like the presumptive Best picture frontrunner, and we were looking at a wide open race.

Then in January, the guilds started announcing, and all of the sudden Spotlight missed an ACE (Editors Guild) nomination. Star Wars looked like it might enter the race with an ACE nomination, but then it missed a PGA (Producers Guild) nomination (every year the PGA predicts all but one or two of the eventual Best Picture nominees). All of the sudden Straight Outta Compton and Sicario were showing up at both guilds and at the WGA (Writers Guild), while early favorite Room didn't show up at any. Carol also missed a PGA nomination and a couple of other guilds but then led the BAFTAs (British Academy). Then on Sunday, The Revenant won Best Drama at the Globes over presumptive frontrunner Spotlight, and now we might have to rethink what the frontrunner really is. Finally, yesterday, the DGA (Directors Guild), released their 5 nominees and I think we're finally looking at a solid top 5 or 6.

I'm a little worried about Mad Max and Carol. They're the two critics' favorites this year (along with Spotlight), but I almost seems too good to be true that they both get nominated (Mad Max is too weird, Carol is too CHILLY, for whatever the fuck reason). I don't think either would get nominated in an old Top 5 Best Picture field. The new rule for Best Picture is any number of nominees between 5 and 10--you just need to get 5% of all first-place votes cast for Best Picture. We had 9 nominees for three years in a row, but then we got 8 nominees last year. I think last year we had more contenders than usual, which resulted in fewer nominees. That looks like the case this year, as well, so I'm going with 8 nominees again. I hope we get 10, though!

When it comes to the acting categories, the biggest question mark and topic of conversation is CATEGORY FRAUD!! When Rooney Mara (for Carol) and Alicia Vikander (for The Danish Girl) were announced to be campaigning in the Best Supporting Actress category, the internet cried foul! Category fraud happens every year (hello Best Supporting Actress Oscar winner Jennifer Connelly in A Beautiful Mind or Christian Bale in The Fighter), but it seemed to be a bigger news story this year than it ever has been. And the voters may have noticed, so we may see Vikander and/or Mara show up in lead instead of supporting or maybe one or both don't get nominated at all if they're splitting their own votes between the two categories (and Vikander might be splitting her own voters in supporting with her other performance in Ex Machina). Jacob Tremblay and Paul Dano could also see themselves getting nominated in lead instead of supporting.

When you add this category placement confusion to already crowded fields in every category, we should be due for some surprises when the nominations are announced tomorrow morning. Since the fields are so wide this year (there are literally 11 legit contenders for Best Supporting Actor), I don't think there are too many crazy scenarios that we haven't thought of already, but here are a couple of surprises I could see happening but I'm too afraid to actually predict:
- Steve Carell surprises in Best Actor, replacing either Michael Fassbender, Eddie Redmayne, or Matt Damon and NOT Bryan Cranston (I could see this also see this happening with Michael B. Jordan or Jacob Tremblay)
- Joan Allen surprises in Best Supporting Actress over Rooney Mara, who gets snubbed in both categories.
- Son of Saul misses in Best Foreign Language and/or Amy misses in Best Documentary (I was right with my surprise snubs in both of these categories last year)

Best Picture:
1. Spotlight
2. The Revenant
3. The Big Short
4. The Martian
5. Bridge of Spies
6. Mad Max: Fury Road
7. Carol
8. Brooklyn
If 9: Room
If 10: Straight Outta Compton
Backup: Sicario
Potential Spoilers: Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Trumbo, Ex Machina, Steve Jobs, Inside Out

Best Director:
1. Alejandro G. Innaritu, The Revenant
2. Ridley Scott, The Martian
3. Tom McCarthy, Spolight
4. George Miller, Mad Max: Fury Road
5. Todd Haynes, Carol
Backups: Steven Spielberg, Bridge of Spies; Adam McKay, The Big Short
Spoilers: Denis Villenueve, Sicario; Laszlo Nemes, Son of Saul; F. Gary Gray, Straight Outta Compton

Best Actor:
1. Leonardo DiCaprio, The Revenant
2. Michael Fassbender, Steve Jobs
3. Eddie Redmayne, The Danish Girl
4. Bryan Cranston, Trumbo
5. Matt Damon, The Martian
Backups: Steve Carell, The Big Short; Jacob Tremblay, Room
Spoilers: Johnny Depp, Black Mass; Michael B. Jordan, Creed; Paul Dano, Love & Mercy

Best Actress:
1. Brie Larson, Room
2. Saoirse Ronan, Brooklyn
3. Cate Blanchett, Carol
4. Jennifer Lawrence, Joy
5. Charlotte Rampling, 45 Years
Back-Ups: Alicia Vikander, The Danish Girl; Rooney Mara, Carol
Spoilers: Maggie Smith, The Lady in the Van; Charlize Theron, Mad Max: Fury Road; Helen Mirren, Woman in Gold

Best Supporting Actor:
1. Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies
2. Christian Bale, The Big Short
3. Mark Ruffalo, Spotlight
4. Idris Elba, Beasts of No Nation
5. Jacob Tremblay, Room
Backups: Sylvester Stallone, Creed; Tom Hardy, The Revenant; Benicio Del Toro, Sicario
Spoilers: Michael Shannon, 99 Homes; Michael Keaton, Spotlight; Paul Dano, Love & Mercy

Best Supporting Actress:
1. Kate Winslet, Steve Jobs
2. Rooney Mara, Carol
3. Alicia Vikander, The Danish Girl
4. Rachel McAdams, Spotlight
5. Helen Mirren, Trumbo
Backups: Joan Allen, Room; Jennifer Jason Leigh, The Hateful Eight
Spoilers: Alicia Vikander, Ex Machina; Kristen Stewart, Clouds of Sils Maria; Jane Fonda, Youth

Best Adapted Screenplay:
1. Adam McKay and Charles Randolph, The Big Short
2. Drew Goddard, The Martian
3. Emma Donoghue, Room
4. Nick Hornby, Brooklyn
5. Aaron Sorkin, Steve Jobs
Backups: Phyllis Nagy, Carol; Alejandro G. Innaritu and Mark L. Smith, The Revenant; John McNamara, Trumbo
Spoilers: Charlie Kaufman, Anomalisa; Nico Lathoris, Brendan McCarthy, and George Miller, Mad Max: Fury Road

Best Original Screenplay:
1. Tom McCarthy and John Singer, Spotlight
2. Peter Docter and Bob Peterson, Inside Out
3. Mark Chapman, Joel Coen, and Ethan Coen, Bridge of Spies
4. Quentin Tarantino, The Hateful Eight
5. Alex Garland, Ex Machina
Backups: Taylor Sheridan, Sicario; Jonathan Herman, Andrea Berloff, S. Leigh Salvidge, and Alan Wenkus, Straight Outta Compton
Spoilers: Amy Schumer and Judd Apatow, Trainwreck; Oren Moverman and Alan Lerner, Love & Mercy

Best Cinematography
1. The Revenant
2. Mad Max: Fury Road
3. Sicario
4. The Hateful Eight
5. Carol
Backup: Bridge of Spies, The Martian
Spoilers: Son of Saul, Steve Jobs, Brooklyn

Best Costume Design
1. Brooklyn
2. Carol
3. Cinderella
4. The Danish Girl
5. Mad Max: Fury Road
Backups: Trumbo, Crimson Peak, Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Spoilers: The Revenant, Bridge of Spies

Best Film Editing
1. The Big Short
2. Mad Max: Fury Road
3. The Martian
4. The Revenant
5. Spotlight
Backups: Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Bridge of Spies, Sicario
Spoilers: Carol, Room

Best Makeup and Hairstyling
1. Mad Max: Fury Road
2. The Revenant
3. Mr. Holmes
Backups: The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared, Black Mass
Spoilers: Legend, Concussion

Best Original Score
1. The Hateful Eight
2. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
3. Carol
4. Bridge of Spies
5. The Danish Girl
Backups: Inside Out, Mad Max: Fury Road; Sicario
Spoilers: The Martian, Steve Jobs

Best Original Song
1. "Til it Happens to You," The Hunting Ground
2. "See You Again," Furious 7
3. "Simple Song #3," Youth
4. "Flashlight," Pitch Perfect 2
5. "The Light That Never Fails," Meru
Backups: "Earned It," Fifty Shades of Grey; "So Long," Concussion; "Writing's On the Wall," Spectre
Spoilers: "Love Me Like You Do," Fifty Shades of Grey; "Feels Like Summer," Shaun the Sheep Movie

Best Production Design:
1. Bridge of Spies
2. Mad Max: Fury Road
3. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
4. The Martian
5. Carol
Backups: The Danish Girl, The Revenant, Brooklyn
Spoilers: Cinderella, Crimson Peak

Best Sound Editing
1. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
2. Mad Max: Fury Road
3. The Martian
4. Inside Out
5. Sicario
Backups: The Revenant, Spectre, Jurassic World
Spoilers: Bridge of Spies, The Hateful Eight

Best Sound Mixing
1. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
2. Mad Max: Fury Road
3. The Revenant
4. The Martian
5. Straight Outta Compton
Backups: Bridge of Spies, Sicario, The Hateful Eight
Spoilers: Jurassic World, Spectre

Best Visual Effects
1. Mad Max: Fury Road
2. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
3. The Martian
4. The Walk
5. The Revenant
Backups: Jurassic World, Ant-Man
Spoilers: Tomorrowland, Ex Machina, Avengers: Age of Ultron

Best Animated Feature
1. Inside Out
2. Anomalisa
3. Shaun the Sheep Movie
4. The Good Dinosaur
5. Boy and the World
Backups: The Peanuts Movie, Khalil Gibran's The Prophet
Spoilers: When Marnie Was There, The Boy and the Beast

Best Documentary Feature
1. The Look of Silence
2. Amy
3. Cartel Land
4. Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Walk to Freedom
5. He Named Me Malala
Backups: The Hunting Ground, Where to Invade Next, Meru
Spoilers: Listen to Me Marlon, Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief

Best Foreign Language Film:
1. Son of Saul
2. Mustang
3. A War
4. The Brand New Testament
5. Theeb
Backups: Viva, Embrace of the Serpent, Labyrinth of Lies, The Fencer

Best Animated Feature
1. Bear Story (Historia De Un Orso)
2. World of Tomorrow
3. Sanjay's Super Team
4. We Can't Live Without Chaos
5. Prologue
Backups: If I Was God..., Carface (Autos Portraits), Love in the Time of March Madness, An Object At Rest, My Home

Best Documentary Short
1. Chau, Beyond the Lines
2. Body Team 12
3. A Girl in the River: A Price of Forgiveness
4. My Enemy, My Brother
5. 50 Feet From Syria
Backups: Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah, Minerita, The Testimony, Starting Point, Last Day of Freedom

Best Live Action Short
1. Ave Maria
2. Shok
3. Stutterer
4. Everything Will Be Okay (Alles Wird Gut)
5. Bis Gleich (Till Then)
Backups: Winter Light, Day One, Contrapelo (Against the Grain), The Free Man (Zi You Ren), Bad Hunter