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Oscar predictions.
January 26, 2011

Most people are waiting until later to do these, but I wanted to get this out of my system before I get sick of hearing about the Oscars.

BEST PICTURE

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

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Rabbit Hole is a great little drama that’s not getting much year-end attention, and people seem to have forgotten about The Ghost Writer, one of my favorite films of 2010. Pretty solid selection otherwise.

SHOULD WIN: Well, Inception was my favorite movie of the year. Several others on here come close, but no other movie in 2010 wowed me as much, or gave me as much to talk about.

WILL WIN: There are plenty of nominations we can rule out straight away. Black Swan and The Fighter are both gaining award season momentum for their standout performances, but while the Academy will likely honor them as such, that’s the most they can hope for. Inception could have been a dark horse if Nolan had received a Best Director nomination; as it stands, it can only hope to dominate the technical categories. Kids is a comedy, and can more realistically expect to be honored for its screenplay; same for Toy Story 3 and the animated category. True Grit won’t win, just because. 127 Hours and Winter’s Bone are in danger of going home empty-handed.

That leaves The King’s Speech and The Social Network. The former seems to be the frontrunner, being an Oscar-friendly historical drama that leads the pack with 12 nominations total. Honestly, though? I just don’t see it happening. In recent years the Academy has been ever-so-slightly edging away from awarding its highest honor to this sort of awards season bait, and The Social Network still easily classifies as something they’d like: relevant, well-written, well-acted, highly-regarded and damn good.

I’m betting on The Social Network. The only thing going against it is that the Academy Awards don’t usually follow the footsteps of the Golden Globes, but I see them making an exception this year.


BEST DIRECTOR

Darren Aronofsky – Black Swan
Joel Coen, Ethan Coen – True Grit
David Fincher – The Social Network
Tom Hooper – The King’s Speech
David O. Russell – The Fighter

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Obviously, Christopher Nolan. It takes so much ingenuity to make a movie like Inception work as well as it did. You can’t tell me with a straight face that little character dramas like The Fighter and The King’s Speech took more skill to direct. And while I know it’s not popular, Enter the Void is one of 2010’s most inventive movies, and its visionary director, Gaspar Noé, deserves a mention for that.

SHOULD WIN: Black Swan was the only movie where the direction actually jumped out at me, but I think I’d still vote for the energetic work by Fincher, whose last several films have demonstrated considerable range on his part.

WILL WIN: Best Picture and Best Director almost always go to the same film. There have been plenty of exceptions, but even if The King’s Speech goes on to win the top award, I can’t see the Academy giving this one to anybody other than Fincher.


BEST ACTOR

Javier Bardem – Biutiful
Jeff Bridges – True Grit
Jesse Eisenberg – The Social Network
Colin Firth – The King’s Speech
James Franco – 127 Hours

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: There were too many this year to be condensed to a mere five, but off the top of my head: Aaron Eckhart in Rabbit Hole, Robert Duvall in Get Low, George Clooney in The American, Ryan Reynolds in Buried, Jim Carrey in I Love You Philip Morris, and Leonardo DiCaprio in Shutter Island. And Ryan Gosling’s snub for Blue Valentine is the biggest shocker of all, especially considering that his co-star, Michelle Williams, was nominated.

SHOULD WIN: James Franco, quite easily in my book.

WILL WIN: Firth gave precisely the sort of performance that the Academy loves. He gave a way better performance last year in A Single Man and Franco showed far more range this year, but nevertheless, Firth is the safest bet.


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

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: I don’t know if she’d qualify for this year’s awards since the movie was released overseas in 2009, but Noomi Rapace gave, bar none, the best female performance of the year in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Other omissions include Tilda Swinton in I Am Love and Gemma Arterton in The Disappearance of Alice Creed.

SHOULD WIN: There’s a lot that I admire about Natalie Portman’s work in Black Swan, but I’m surprised to find myself leaning in the direction of the effortlessly natural Bening, who stood out in a fine ensemble cast in Kids.

WILL WIN: Had Hailee Steinfeld been nominated in this category instead of the supporting race, this would be a whole different ball game. As it stands, Portman hasn’t lost any momentum (even by the unfortunately-timed release of an Ashton Kutcher rom-com) and is the safe bet. Still, if there’s an upset, it’ll be Bening.


BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Christian Bale – The Fighter
John Hawkes – Winter’s Bone
Jeremy Renner – The Town
Mark Ruffalo – The Kids Are All Right
Geoffrey Rush – The King’s Speech

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Both Justin Timberlake and especially Andrew Garfield were robbed for not being recognized for their work in The Social Network. Also, newcomer Miles Teller was a standout in Rabbit Hole.

SHOULD WIN: Man, tough one. I was very impressed with Renner, but wished the movie had given him more to do. The rest were all good as well (and it’s nice to see Ruffalo got a nod), but I’ll have to vote for Rush, who was the best thing about The King’s Speech.

WILL WIN: Bale has been the frontrunner for this category for a while now, but The King’s Speech winning in total nominations changed that a bit. I could easily see the Academy siding with Rush, though if I must guess, I still say it’ll be Bale.


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

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Both Julianne Moore and Mia Wasikowska did fine work in The Kids Are All Right. And how the hell was Mila Kunis not nominated for Black Swan? Other female supporting roles that stuck out for me this year include Olivia Williams in The Ghost Writer, Violante Placido in The American, and Rebecca Hall in The Town.

SHOULD WIN: Steinfeld, frankly, deserves better than this; it was a lead role. Still, her placement here should make it easier for her to snatch up the award she very much deserves.

WILL WIN: Steinfeld.


BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

127 Hours
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winter’s Bone

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: I’ll say it again: The Ghost Writer is a damn taut political thriller. Plus, while I know it’s not exactly Oscar bait, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World is easily one of 2010’s funniest and cleverest films.

SHOULD WIN: Aaron Sorkin had the difficult task of making a movie about the creation of a web site entertaining. He succeeded. The Social Network wins this one.

WILL WIN: Even if it doesn’t go on to win big, The Social Network will almost certainly take home this prize.


BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

Another Year
The Fighter
Inception
The Kids Are All Right
The King’s Speech

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: In a category where the Academy traditionally recognizes comedies it doesn’t want to give Best Picture, it kinda sucks not seeing Cyrus on here.

SHOULD WIN: Whoa, what the hell is Inception doing here? I loved it, but the screenplay was the worst thing about it. Anyway, Kids was a very funny ensemble comedy with a cast of three-dimensional, well-established characters. It easily deserves this one.

WILL WIN: Like I said, the Academy does traditionally use this award to honor comedies that are well-regarded, and The Kids Are All Right fits. People are predicting that Inception might win as compensation for Nolan not getting a nod for direction; these people don’t realize that these other nominations are his compensation. The King’s Speech could win, but I wouldn’t bet on it.


BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM

How to Train Your Dragon
The Illusionist
Toy Story 3

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Nothing that I care about.

SHOULD WIN: Toy Story 3. The dragon movie was pretty good, but, I mean, c’mon.

WILL WIN: Toy Story 3 without breaking a sweat.


BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

Biutiful (Mexico)
Dogtooth (Greece)
In a Better World (Denmark)
Incendies (Canada)
Outside the Law (Algeria)

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Mother was one of my favorite films of the year. I’m sure there are plenty of others, but there are far too many obscure foreign-language films released every year to keep up with all of them.

SHOULD WIN: I haven’t seen any of these, and in fact had only heard of Biutiful until now. I’m not in a position where I can form an opinion on these, at least until they see a wider release schedule.

WILL WIN: This is always a very difficult category to predict. The thing about the Foreign Language Film award is that voters are required to have seen all five of the nominees before they’re allowed to choose a favorite (which you’d think would be the rule for every award, but here we are), and movies are often nominated for this award before they get an official release. So in many cases, the winner of this particular Oscar is a movie that no one’s really heard of.

The most famous example of this was in 2007, when everyone was betting on Pan’s Labyrinth taking home the Foreign Language Film award, only to see some movie called The Lives of Others snatching it up instead. Then the movie saw a stateside release a few months later, and people realized that, wow, it really is better!

So it’s impossible to say, especially without much in the way of a critical consensus for any movie on this list other than Biutiful. I’m gonna hazard a guess and say that Incendies will jump out and surprise everyone. We’ll see.


ART DIRECTION

Alice in Wonderland
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1
Inception
The King’s Speech
True Grit

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: This is where I start to get mad about Tron Legacy not really being nominated for anything. Regardless of what you thought of the story and script, it’s hard to deny that the movie looked and sounded pretty freakin’ awesome.

SHOULD WIN: Alice in Wonderland is the one that probably jumps out at most people, though it’s gotten to the point where I pretty much hate everything Tim Burton does, and I stand by the “more is not better” philosophy. Inception was one of the year’s most distinct-looking films, using color schemes to contrast parallel dream worlds and occasionally breaking the rules of physics to make otherwise normal-looking sets look just out of the ordinary. It’s a movie that had what Alice lacked: subtlety.

WILL WIN: Between this category and Costume Design, I’m guessing Alice in Wonderland will take one and True Grit will take the other. And I’d say Alice in Wonderland nabs this one.


CINEMATOGRAPHY

Black Swan
Inception
The King’s Speech
The Social Network
True Grit

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: I wouldn’t blame anyone for absolutely hating everything else about it, but the one thing that we can all agree on about Enter the Void was that its camerawork was the biggest technical marvel since Children of Men. Its snub here is a travesty.

SHOULD WIN: As beautiful a job as Wally Pfister did bringing Inception’s unique imagery to life, I’m ultimately going to side with Matthew Libatique and his incredible Steadicam work on Black Swan, an important factor in conveying the intensity of its otherwise harmless-looking ballet scenes and Natalie Portman’s level of commitment to her role.

WILL WIN: And I see Black Swan winning, too. But don’t be surprised if the voters lean in Inception’s favor.


COSTUME DESIGN

Alice in Wonderland
I Am Love
The King’s Speech
The Tempest
True Grit

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Centurion pops into my head. Also, Tron Legacy.

SHOULD WIN: Again, most would likely go with Alice in Wonderland, but I’m sick of Tim Burton’s overachieving production design. I’d probably vote for True Grit, which employs genre tropes in visually arresting ways.

WILL WIN: Again, between this and Art Direction, I suspect Alice in Wonderland will take one and True Grit will get the other. My guess goes to True Grit winning this one.


EDITING

Black Swan
The Fighter
The King’s Speech
127 Hours
The Social Network

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: In what sick, twisted universe was The King’s Speech a bigger triumph of editing than Inception? To take an idea like Inception’s and simply make it watchable, delicately juggling between several different dream worlds in such a way that viewers can make the most of what should be a baffling concept, is a remarkable achievement. There was a bit of an uproar over this omission and it’s well-deserved. Oh, and while I hated the movie itself, the Bourne-esque action sequences in Salt were masterfully executed.

SHOULD WIN: The Social Network should win for the Facemash sequence alone.

WILL WIN: And it will. The Social Network all the way.


MAKEUP

Barney’s Version
The Way Back
The Wolfman

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: I hate to keep bringing up this movie, but turning Angelina Jolie into a man at the end of Salt was pretty damn cool. Some Splice love wouldn’t hurt, either.

SHOULD WIN: I haven’t seen the first two, but there’s no way whatever their makeup artists pulled off was as cool as Rick Baker’s work in The Wolfman.

WILL WIN: Baker has deservedly won six Oscars in his lifetime. The Wolfman will earn him his seventh.


ORIGINAL SCORE

127 Hours
How to Train Your Dragon
Inception
The King’s Speech
The Social Network

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Where the fuck is Daft Punk?

SHOULD WIN: As cool as it would be to see Trent Reznor win an Oscar (so he can stop pretending to be proud of his Golden Globe), Hans Zimmer churned out the year’s most iconic score in Inception. It would be a crime to give it to anyone else.

WILL WIN: And I’m betting Inception will win him his first Academy Award since his work on The Lion King. Given how much the guy works, he certainly deserves it.


ORIGINAL SONG

“Coming Home” – Country Strong
“If I Rise” – 127 Hours
“I See the Light” – Tangled
“We Belong Together” – Toy Story 3

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: I can’t think of anything.

SHOULD WIN: I haven’t seen Country Strong or Tangled and I don’t remember the songs from the other two. I’d sure like to see 127 Hours walk away with something come Oscar night, though, so I guess I’ll go with that.

WILL WIN: I’m hearing ”Coming Home” from Country Strong is the best contender, and the Academy has famously good taste in this category, so there you go.


SOUND EDITING

Inception
Toy Story 3
Tron Legacy
True Grit
Unstoppable

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Meh. I generally put sound design out of my mind when I watch movies, so I don’t have a strong opinion on this one.

SHOULD WIN: Just so we’re clear, sound editing is the art of actually creating and recording the sound effects used in movies. And Tron Legacy’s digital world relies heavily on otherworldly audiovisual design, so that’s my vote.

WILL WIN: Animated movies, especially Pixar films, tend to have a good shot at winning this one. So, Toy Story 3.


SOUND MIXING

Inception
The King’s Speech
Salt
The Social Network
True Grit

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Meh.

SHOULD WIN: Meh.

WILL WIN: Inception.


VISUAL EFFECTS

Alice in Wonderland
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1
Hereafter
Inception
Iron Man 2

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH TRON LEGACY

SHOULD WIN: It’s not a movie that’s as heavily reliant on digital effects work as a few of the others, but Inception was still one of the year’s most technically impressive and visually striking films.

WILL WIN: I see Inception winning, but Alice in Wonderland could pull a surprise victory if it loses in Makeup and Costume Design.


DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

Exit Through the Gift Shop
Gasland
Inside Job
Restrepo
Waste Land

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Waiting for Superman is the obvious one. I’m not exactly a documentary aficionado so there are probably far more that deserve mentions, but that’s the one that stands out for me as an obvious omission.

SHOULD WIN: I’ve only seen two of these. Exit Through the Gift Shop was quite good, but Restrepo was incredible. I can’t imagine that any of the other three are more fascinating.

WILL WIN: The only thing going against Restrepo is its minimalist approach to documentation. Otherwise, it will almost assuredly win.


DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT

Killing in the Name
Poster Girl
Strangers No More
Sun Come Up
The Warriors of Quigang

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Gee, there are so many that I don’t want to leave anything out.

SHOULD WIN: This is one of the categories everyone’s always clueless about. Killing in the Name is titled after a Rage Against the Machine song, so I guess I’m voting for that one.

WILL WIN: The Warriors of Quigang sounds like it’s about warriors, which is pretty cool.


SHORT FILM (ANIMATED)

Day & Night
The Gruffalo
Let’s Pollute
The Lost Thing
Madagascar, a Journey Diary

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Derp.

SHOULD WIN: Oh hey, I actually remember Day & Night from Toy Story 3! Not as laugh-out-loud as Pixar’s shorts often are, but it’s also got a ridiculously clever idea behind it.

WILL WIN: Sure, why not? Day & Night.


SHORT FILM (LIVE ACTION)

The Confession
The Crush
God of Love
Na Wewe
Wish 143

NOTABLE OMISSIONS: Ha.

SHOULD WIN: Na Wewe has a funny name.

WILL WIN: Wish 143. Total guess.

Most recent blog posts from Mike Suskie...

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Masters Masters - January 26, 2011 (08:46 PM)
Wow.
Suskie Suskie - January 26, 2011 (08:53 PM)
"Write for yourself," right?
asherdeus asherdeus - January 26, 2011 (10:11 PM)
Don't have much to add, as I didn't see many of these movies (of the best picture noms, I only saw four), but this is an impressive and informative wrap up. Thanks man!
honestgamer honestgamer - January 26, 2011 (11:13 PM)
Great job on this, Mike!
Suskie Suskie - January 27, 2011 (12:08 AM)
Thanks! Good luck reading all of it.
Masters Masters - January 27, 2011 (03:29 AM)
Haha, I did make it all the way through. I was just stunned at how thorough you were. The "nice job" type blandishments hardly qualify.

Anyway, as usual, I've seen none of the best picture nominees. =\
qxz qxz - January 27, 2011 (05:23 AM)
Wow! Quite a thorough list you have there, Suskie.

What I don't comprehend is why the list of Best Picture nominees, which was originally a modest five entries, was expanded to ten. I just think it's overkill.
Leroux Leroux - January 27, 2011 (06:05 AM)

Check out Gasland. I wouldn't bet against that one.
darketernal darketernal - January 27, 2011 (08:32 AM)
Is there a douchy, pretentious move in the run, that deals with the "important" questions, such as disease, war, poverty, or gay rights?

If so, that movie will win, no matter how atrociously bad it really is.
joseph_valencia joseph_valencia - January 27, 2011 (10:48 AM)
The expanded Best Picture lists seems to be a throwback to the old-school Academy Award ceremonies. (When "Gone with the Wind" won in 1939, it was up against nine other movies too.) They've mainly adopted it to ensure that commercial movies, such as "Inception" and "Toy Story 3," make onto the list.

I like that the new setup enables animated movies to make it onto the nominee list, even if they don't have a snowball's chance in hell of winning.
joseph_valencia joseph_valencia - January 27, 2011 (02:20 PM)
Actually, "The Social Network" is very much about social networking. The network of relationships and connections Mark Zuckerberg makes throughout the movie are core to the story. They are both the key to his character's rise and his downfall.

I think Best Editing is going to "127 Hours" or "The Social Network." Like "Inception," the editing in "Social Network" allows a really complex story to flow coherently. On the other hand, I've heard a lot of talk about the decapitation scene in "127 Hours," the impact of which seems to owe a lot to editing.
Suskie Suskie - January 27, 2011 (02:30 PM)
The arm-cutting scene in 127 Hours is just really raw, especially after so much tension and buildup. (He contemplates the act several times throughout the movie and at one points stabs himself as a test run.) Frankly, one of the biggest contributing factors in that scene is the score -- though I still don't think Rahman will win for that, especially since he just won for another Boyle movie two years ago.

On the subject of The Social Network: Not only is it very much about social networking, but but it also answers the question of why the internet and social networking are such a huge part of young people's lives today. It's been said that the movie "defines a generation," and I really don't think that's an exaggeration. I mean, the movie's not an accurate depiction of Facebook's creation by any means; its purpose was to delve into the mindset of its creation.

Edit: Oh, and about Jeremy Renner. Like I said, I was more impressed with the performance than I was with the role, as I feel the script didn't give him enough to do. He seemed like a ticking time bomb of a character an I kept waiting for his "big scene," but he stayed out of the spotlight. You're right in saying that Garfield is more worthy of a nomination than Timberlake, but I was very impressed with both, more so than I was with Renner.
goatx3 goatx3 - February 09, 2011 (08:34 AM)
notable omissions for original song should include the entire TRON Legacy soundtrack. i mean, really... come on, oscar people.

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