Category: Oscars

  • Oscars One-Hit Wonders: 8 Actors Who Disappeared From Critical Glory

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    On February 22, the Academy Awards will crown Hollywood’s best and the brightest.

    While an Academy Award usually signals the start (or culmination) of an incredibly varied and fruitful career, it can also be a blip. Here are 8 actors (and a director and screenwriter) who more-or-less disappeared from critical glory after winning Oscar gold.oscars one-hit wonders

  • Oscars 2015: The Rest of the Races

    US-ENTERTAINMENT-FILM-OSCAR-NOMINATIONSIs everyone finally ready to move on from the “Selma” vs. “American Sniper” throwdown? It seems so, not just because the ideological battle between them is artificial and increasingly irrelevant, but also because so much else was going on this week — Blizzard Juno, the Sundance Film Festival, the Super Bowl. No doubt movie partisans were relieved to have something else to talk about. And besides, there was plenty going on in the Oscar race. Oscar office pool bettors: take note.

    Among this week’s Oscar race developments:

    • The big winners Friday night at the 65th Annual ACE Eddie Awards, given to film and TV editors, were “Boyhood” (Best Drama), “The Grand Budapest Hotel” (Best Comedy), “The LEGO Movie” (Best Animated Feature), and “Citizenfour” (Best Documentary). Why should you care? Not just so you can fill out the Editing category in your office Oscar pool (where “Boyhood” and “Budapest” are competing against “American Sniper, “The Imitation Game,” and “Whiplash“), but also because the Eddies are a good predictor of the Academy Award for Best Picture. In seven of the past 12 years, the Eddie-winning comedy or drama has gone on to win the top Oscar. Of course, given Oscar’s preference for drama over comedy, “Budapest’s” Eddie win may not mean much. “Boyhood’s” does, especially since rival “Birdman” (which competed for the comedy Eddie against “Budapest”) isn’t even nominated for an editing Oscar. The “LEGO” win is also a consolation prize for a movie not nominated for a Best Animated Feature Oscar. But the “Citizenfour” win helps confirm that film’s frontrunner status in the Academy’s documentary category.

    • The following night saw the handing out of the Art Directors Guild Awards, given for production design. The ADG recognizes narrative features in three categories: period films (which went to “Grand Budapest Hotel”), fantasy films (the winner was “Guardians of the Galaxy”), and contemporary films (the prize went to “Birdman”). So, more good news for “Budapest,” especially since the other two winners aren’t even nominated for Production Design Oscars. (The other Academy nominees in the category are “The Imitation Game,” “Interstellar,” “Into the Woods,” and “Mr. Turner.”) “Budapest” art director Adam Stockhausen would probably have the edge anyway for his ornate work on filmmaker Wes Anderson’s typically intricate, dollhouse-like set, but Saturday’s ADG prize also shows he’s a favorite among his peers this year. “The Theory of Everything” didn’t win any prizes, but stars Eddie Redmayne and Felicity Jones were both there; perhaps the Academy voters will take notice of their ubiquity and give them trouper points for being willing to show up anywhere to campaign for their film.

    • Saturday night also saw the 42nd annual Annie Awards, recognizing the best in animation. “How to Train Your Dragon 2” won best feature, which is good to know for those of us confused by the Academy’s failure to nominate “The LEGO Movie.” The winner of the Golden Globe as well, “Dragon 2” finally gives the LEGO-less category a frontrunner. (The other nominees are “Big Hero 6,” “The Boxtrolls,” “Song of the Sea,” and “The Tale of the Princess Kaguya.”) The Annie for Best Animated Short went to Disney’s “Feast,” now the presumptive frontrunner in an Oscar category that also includes “The Bigger Picture,” The Dam Keeper,” “Me and My Moulton,” and “A Single Life.”

    • “Still Alice” expanded this week to 84 theaters, giving more critics nationwide the chance to review the Alzheimer’s drama, and the consensus of raves for Julianne Moore seems to confirm the judgment of the Academy and every other group that nominated her for Best Actress. The five-time nominee’s hold on the category is now more solid than ever.

    • Monday marks the annual Oscar nominees’ luncheon, which is a surprisingly crucial stop on the campaign trail. It’s where the voters learn whether the nominees can play nice. That shouldn’t matter of course — it’s the work, right? — but it does, as no voter or nominee wants to be responsible for a boorish acceptance speech that casts the Academy in an unflattering light for having given a trophy to an ingrate. So the luncheon is an event where actors dine with an pose for photographs with sound effects editors, where the Academy brass try in vain to remind nominees to keep their speeches under 45 seconds if they win, and where everyone gushes to the journalists present how excited they are to meet Meryl Streep. In other words, it’s a casual-dress rehearsal for the real thing, and despite the enforced camaraderie, everyone had better know their place.
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  • ‘Frozen’ Songwriters Creating Oscars Musical Number

    US-OSCARS-PRESS ROOMWith Neil Patrick Harris aboard to host the Oscars, we knew there’d be singing and dancing. But it seems like viewers will get singing and dancing of the highest caliber.

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced that Oscar-winning husband-and-wife songwriters Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez will pen “an original multimedia, musical sequence” for the Feb. 22 ceremony.

    Titled “Moving Pictures,” the number will feature an “incredibly special song for Neil Patrick Harris and special guests,” according to Oscar producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron. The Lopezes are thrilled to work with Harris, who has hosted the Tonys and Emmys, but is emceeing the Oscars for the first time.

    Harris, meanwhile, couldn’t resist a little “Frozen” joking in his own announcement on Twitter:


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  • Oscars 2015: It’s a Real Race, But Not Between the Movies You Think

    US-ENTERTAINMENT-FILM-OSCAR-NOMINATIONSRemember just a couple weeks ago, in the days leading up to the Oscar nominations, when there was so much handwringing about how, instead of the populist slate the Academy might have preferred, all the likely nominees were obscure little films that few moviegoers had seen, meaning there would be little rooting interest for viewers and the ratings for the Academy Awards ceremony would plummet? Well, that’s not a problem anymore.

    There’s finally one bona fide blockbuster among the Best Picture nominees: “American Sniper,” which has grossed more than $200 million at this writing and may reach $300 million by the time the Oscar show is telecast, four weeks from now.

    What’s more, there’s a genuine cultural battle being fought, at least on the op-ed pages, in blogs, and on cable talk-fests, between “American Sniper” and “Selma.” Not that this makes much sense; aside from Best Picture nominations and questions about their historical accuracy, the two films have little in common. Plus, the films aren’t as easily shoehorned into political boxes as their supporters and detractors would suggest. After all, “Selma” is a portrait of a moment of moral decision in which neither the traditional right nor the establishment left comes off looking good. And “American Sniper,” a film made by a conservative-minded director who nonetheless openly opposed the Iraq War, is confoundingly ambiguous. Clint Eastwood says his movie is an antiwar film, but try telling that to flag-wavers in the audience cheering on Bradley Cooper’s Chris Kyle as he blows away the bad guys. Despite what Eastwood says, “Sniper” does not take an overt position on the morality of the Iraq War, of war in general, or of Chris Kyle’s actions in combat, with the film noting only the toll that warfare seems to take on the warrior’s soul and on his family back home.

    At any rate, the box office has already decided the battle between the two films in “Sniper”‘s favor. “Selma” has taken in $39 million so far, just one-fifth of “Sniper”‘s earnings, and it’s not likely to do more than $90 million by the time the Academy Awards ceremony rolls around. If it does make that much, that would be a very good number for a movie with a $20 million budget that has no big stars and focuses on a painful moment in American history that most U.S. moviegoers are too young to remember. It also means there would be a lot of “Selma” fans around to watch the awards show. But they’ll be far outnumbered by “American Sniper” fans. (Of course, you could be a fan of both…)

    And yet, none of this matters because neither film is going to win Best Picture. Sure, the sheer box office prominence of “American Sniper” will be impossible for Academy voters not to notice, and its six nominations over “Selma’s” two gives it a statistical edge, but it’s still not going to win any of the top prizes. (Sorry Bradley Cooper, but Best Actor will almost certainly go to Michael Keaton‘s comeback role in “Birdman” or Eddie Redmayne‘s physical transformation into the paralyzed Stephen Hawking in “The Theory of Everything.”)

    Rather, the race still belongs to “Boyhood” and “Birdman,” with “The Grand Budapest Hotel” close behind. At this point, “Boyhood” and “Birdman” are neck-and-neck. Sure, “Boyhood” has won nearly every precursor award except two, but they’re big ones: the Producers Guild Award and the Screen Actors Guild award for Best Ensemble (the SAG equivalent of Best Picture). Given out this past Saturday, the PGA prize went to “Birdman,” and so did the SAG prize the next day. The PGA prize is a strong indicator of the eventual Oscar Best Picture trophy (which also goes to a film’s producers); the last seven PGA winners, and 18 out of the last 25, have gone on to win the Oscar. As for the SAG award, there’s a strong overlap between the SAG membership and the actor’s branch of the Academy, the biggest professional bloc among Academy voters. They’re not a majority, but Sunday’s win suggests “Birdman” has a lot more Academy support than previously estimated.

    Actually the Academy already seemed to have shown “Birdman” more love than “Boyhood,” granting Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu’s surreal comedy nine nominations to six for RIchard Linklater’s drama. (Yes, that’s the same number as “American Sniper,” but “Boyhood” earned a directing nomination for Linklater, while “Sniper” failed to do so for Clint Eastwood. Historically, it’s very rare for a film to win Best Picture without a Best Director nomination.)

    Meanwhile, “Budapest” remains a potential spoiler. It has nine nominations, like “Birdman,” and it’s won a handful of precursor awards, including Best Comedy at the Golden Globes and Critic’s Choice Awards earlier this month. Until the weekend after the Oscar nominations, it was, for almost all of 2014, the top-grossing film among this year’s Best Picture nominees, with a take of $59 million. (It’s since been surpassed by “The Imitation Game,” with $61 million, and of course, “American Sniper.”) The Academy’s traditional lack of respect for comedies will hurt “Budapest” even more than it will the semi-dramatic “Birdman,” perhaps leaving the field open for “Boyhood,” but at least “Budapest” still has some numbers in its favor.

    So by all means, “American Sniper” fans, come swell the ranks of Oscar-show viewers, drive up the ratings, and convince the Academy governors that expanding the Best Picture category from five nominees to as many as 10 wasn’t a mistake. But don’t be surprised if “Sniper” doesn’t win much, and don’t blame its losses on liberal politics. After all, “Selma” isn’t going to take the brass ring either. In the likelihood of their shared eventual snubbing by the Academy, maybe “American Sniper” and “Selma” fans can at last find common ground.
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  • Oscars 2015: The Reasons for the Black Shutout Are More Complicated Than You Think

    Well, with last Thursday’s announcement of the Oscar nominations, the sometimes ratings-challenged Academy Awards got all the traditional media and online attention they could have wished for. Too bad almost all of the attention was negative.

    Usually, Oscar controversies are about taste — whether “Crash” was really better than “Brokeback Mountain,” or whether “Shakespeare in Love” was really better than “Saving Private Ryan.” This year’s controversy over “Selma,” however, is shining an unflattering light on Hollywood’s racial politics.

    The snubbing of “Selma” in every category except Best Song and, curiously, Best Picture — that’s only part of what has professional and amateur critics up in arms. As many have noted, this year is the first since 1998 that no actors of color have been nominated. The nominations list has drawn predictable condemnation from the likes of Spike Lee and Rev. Al Sharpton, who has threatened to go to Hollywood and take unspecified steps to remedy the situation. Even Cheryl Boone Isaacs, the president of the Academy, has felt compelled to address the outrage. Meanwhile, on Twitter, #OscarsSoWhite has become a trending hashtag.

    It’s a little too easy to blame this year’s awards slate on old-fashioned racism. After all, this is the same Academy that, last year, named “12 Years a Slave” Best Picture, nominated Steve McQueen for Best Director, nominated Chiwetel Ejiofor for Best Actor, nominated Barkhad Abdi for Best Supporting Actor, and named Lupita Nyong’o Best Supporting Actress. And Alfonso Cuaron became the first Latino to win Best Director. And this year, Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu could become the second; his film “Birdman” tied with “The Grand Budapest Hotel” for most nominations this year (nine each), including Best Picture. Conversely, Clint Eastwood failed to score a nomination for himself for directing “American Sniper,” even though the film was cited for Best Picture and several other categories. Did he not get the nomination because he’s white? Or because the liberals in the Academy still won’t forgive him for his chair speech at the Republican National Convention in 2012?

    Still, this year’s sudden white-out seems fishy. But if it’s not straight-out racism, a lot of other excuses have been trotted out to explain it. A lot of awards-season voters didn’t receive “Selma” DVD screeners in time. The controversy over the film’s historical accuracy may have soured some Academy members on the film. (Though similar controversies over the factuality of “Foxcatcher” and “The Imitation Game” didn’t keep those films from getting a slew of nominations.) Or maybe this was just such a strong year for films that there just wasn’t room to recognize the contributions of black people to the industry this year.

    This last reason sounds especially specious. Not to slight the Best Actor nominees this year, but was David Oyelowo’s performance as Rev. Martin Luther King in “Selma” — the one element of the movie no one seemed to find fault with — not worthy to be included among them? And aside from “Selma,” was Chadwick Boseman’s performance as James Brown in “Get On Up” a lesser achievement than those of the white actors nominated for biopic roles this year? Did Gugu Mbatha-Raw not deserve consideration for her starring roles in “Belle” or “Beyond the Lights”? Was Chris Rock’s screenplay for “Top Five” not worthy of inclusion? Did cinematographer Bradford Young, who shot both “Selma” and “A Most Violent Year,” not deserve a nod? Did not one black person do Oscar-worthy work this year?

    Rather, the problem seems more complicated and systemic. It’s been pointed out that the Academy membership is 94 percent white. This, in turn, is probably reflective of what the film industry looks like as a whole, especially behind the camera. As Chris Rock has noted, people in Hollywood tend to hire other people who resemble themselves. That’s not necessarily racism, just a failure of imagination, an inability to think outside the box. The Academy Awards seem to work the same way; voters tend to choose nominees from their own background unless (like last year) they’re given a compelling reason not to.

    The answer to the problem, then, seems to require a more diverse Academy membership. Which is something that Academy president Boone Isaacs (who is the Academy’s first black president) says her organization is working toward. Addressing the nomination controversy, she told the Associated Press, “In the last two years, we’ve made greater strides than we ever have in the past toward becoming a more diverse and inclusive organization through admitting new members and more inclusive classes of members,” Without directly criticizing this year’s slate of nominees or the process that created it, she added, “And, personally, I would love to see and look forward to see a greater cultural diversity among all our nominees in all of our categories.”

    Of course, for her to add more minority folk to the Academy roster, there have to be more of them finding work in Hollywood. Which ultimately means there has to be more diversity in the executive suites among those who make hiring decisions, both in front of and behind the camera.

    It would make economic sense. After all, according to the Motion Picture Association of America, Latinos go to the movies more often than other Americans, and white people go less often. (African-Americans make up 12 percent of frequent moviegoers, consistent with their numbers in the populace as a whole.) Yet it’s only recently that the studios have recognized Latinos as a market worth courting, or that African-Americans want to see more than just Tyler Perry and Kevin Hart movies. The current box-office success of “Selma” and its overwhelmingly positive word-of-mouth (measured by a rare A+ grade at CinemaScore) suggests that, not only are black audiences hungry for more substantive and dramatic stories in which they can see their own hopes and aspirations reflected on screen, but that some white viewers are interested in such stories as well.

    The studio system in general is not poised to make such films, not because of racism but because the distributors are wedded to the blockbuster business model. All their eggs are in the giant-acton-spectacle basket, since such movies return hundreds of millions of dollars. Modestly budgeted dramas like “Selma” (or “The Theory of Everything” or “The Imitation Game,” for that matter) aren’t part of the business plan because their returns, while profitable, are also modest. These may be the kind of movies that win Oscars, but the major studios have all but abandoned that business to the independents. Again, it’s more about a failure of imagination than outright bigotry.

    Perhaps the wisest perspective on the situation comes from erstwhile firebrand Spike Lee, whom the Oscars famously snubbed 25 years ago for directing the landmark “Do the RIght Thing,” a movie that the Academy ultimately overlooked for Best Picture in favor of “Driving Miss Daisy,” a comforting racial fable that, a quarter-century later, looks quaintly patronizing at best. Talking to the Daily Beast, Lee pointed out that the ultimate arbiter of quality is not the Academy but history. Today, he pointed out, “nobody is talking about motherf—in’ ‘Driving Miss Daisy.’ That film is not being taught in film schools all around the world like ‘Do the Right Thing’ is.” He added. “You can’t go to awards like the Oscars or the Grammys for validation. The validation is if your work still stands 25 years later.”
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  • Oscar Nominations 2015: Snubs and Surprises

    87th Academy Awards Nominations AnnouncementEverything is not awesome.

    The Oscar nominations are always full of snubs and surprises, but the one that’s probably causing the most gasping and eyebrow-raising after Thursday morning’s announcement of the nominees is the absence of “The LEGO Movie” from the Best Animated Feature list. If ever there were a gimme in your Oscar pool, that would have been it.

    Of course, there are plenty of other shockers — notably, that “Selma” was ignored in every category except Best Original Song and still managed to eke out a Best Picture nomination, and that “Gone Girl” was shut out of every category except Best Actress. And there were many other unexpected inclusions and disappointing omissions, as you’ll see below.

    Best Picture

    The Academy, which may pick between five and 10 Best Picture nominees, has chosen nine for the last few years, but this year, it only picked eight. The biggest oddity here is the inclusion of “Selma,” since support for that movie seems to have all but evaporated over the last couple of weeks, given the controversy over the screenplay’s historical accuracy. That cost the film nominations in every category it was eligible for except Best Song (for Common and John Legend’s “Glory”) and this one. It’s awfully rare for a movie to earn a Best Picture nod without also earning recognition for directing, screenwriting, or acting.

    The 2009 rule change that allowed the voters to nominate more than five films was supposed to make the category more populist, allowing for bigger commercial hits that also had artistic merit. (In other words, movies like Christopher Nolan’s “Interstellar.”) But “Interstellar” isn’t here (though it did earn five nominations, for Original Score and some technical categories), and neither is “Gone Girl,” widely expected to be among the nominees. Nor are such $100 million critic- and crowd-pleasing movies as “Into the Woods” and “Unbroken.” That means the biggest hit among the Best Picture nominees is “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” at $59 million, though “American Sniper” could eventually overtake it when it goes into wide release.

    At the other end of the spectrum, the Academy usually includes one independent film that was a critical darling if not a box office hit. (Call it the “Beasts of the Southern Wild” slot.) This year, “Foxcatcher,” “Nightcrawler,” and “Whiplash” were all fierce contenders for that slot. “Whiplash” managed to grab the brass ring, along with four other nominations. “Foxcatcher” got five as well, but not Best Picture. “Nightcrawler,” despite a recent groundswell of support among critics and awards group, also got left out of every Oscar category except Original Screenplay.

    Best Director

    Of course, since this category is limited to five nominees, at least three of the Best Picture candidates were doomed to be snubbed here. In fact, the voters snubbed four of the Best Picture-nominated directors: Clint Eastwood (“American Sniper”), Ava DuVernay (“Selma”), James Marsh (“The Theory of Everything“) and Damian Chazelle (“Whiplash”). “Foxcatcher” director Bennett Miller (an Oscar favorite since the days of “Capote” and “Moneyball”) grabbed the nomination that seemingly belonged to Chazelle, even though Miller’s movie didn’t even score a Best Picture nomination. Meanwhile, the surprising lack of love for “Gone Girl” extended to this category; tough luck, David Fincher. Similarly, with “Into the Woods” and “Unbroken” out of the running for the top prize, Rob Marshall and Angelina Jolie didn’t earn directing nominations either.

    Best Actor

    The most shocking snub here is that of “Selma” star David Oyelowo, whose performance as Martin Luther King seemed to be the one thing about the movie that no one could fault. Instead, Bradley Cooper, considered something of a longshot for “American Sniper,” managed to hit the target. (Then again, Cooper is also a producer of “American Sniper,” and the actors among the Academy voters like it when fellow actors create their own opportunities.) Left out were longer shots Jake Gyllenhaal of “Nightcrawler” and Ralph Fiennes of “The Grand Budapest Hotel.”

    Best Actress

    The big surprise here — and it’s a happy one — is the inclusion of Marion Cotillard for “Two Days, One Night.” After all, it’s a foreign language performance in a film that barely played in American theaters, and while it had won numerous critics’ awards, it was considered too low-profile to be on Oscar’s radar. Guess not.

    Then again, Cotillard’s inclusion meant no nomination for Jennifer Aniston, widely assumed to be a strong candidate for her atypically dramatic turn in “Cake.” (After all, it was the same kind of performance that earned Steve Carell a nomination for “Foxcatcher.”) Also unexpectedly ignored was Amy Adams, who just picked up a Golden Globe on Sunday for “Big Eyes.” And of course, Hilary Swank (“The Homesman”) and Emily Blunt (“Into the Woods”), both longshots, were left out. Rosamund Pike’s nomination wasn’t a surprise, but what was surprising was that hers was the only nomination “Gone Girl” received.

    Best Supporting Actor

    This was the most predictable category in this year’s Oscar race. There were really only six viable contenders for the five slots, and as expected, the one left without a chair when the music stopped was Christoph Waltz of “Big Eyes.”

    Best Supporting Actress

    Laura Dern was considered a longshot for her role in “Wild,” but she made it in. The other four slots went to widely predicted contenders. Dern’s inclusion meant a somewhat surprising snub for Jessica Chastain (“A Most Violent Year“). The “Into the Woods” and “Nightcrawler” waves that never materialized also meant snubs for Anna Kendrick and Rene Russo, respectively.

    Best Original Screenplay

    As in other categories, four of the five slots were easily predictable. The fifth went, surprisingly, to “Nightcrawler,” earning the crime drama its only nomination. That left no room for “Selma,” though the late-breaking controversy over the movie’s factuality had probably doomed its chances. Somewhat surprising is the omission of biopic “Mr. Turner,” since writer/director Mike Leigh is an Academy favorite, and since the movie earned four other nominations.

    Best Adapted Screenplay

    The big shocker here was the snubbing of Gillian Flynn’s “Gone Girl” screenplay, widely admired as a deft and suspenseful adaptation of her own tricky novel. It had been considered a sure thing, along with “The Theory of Everything” and “The Imitation Game,” which both made the cut. “Whiplash” was a late entry to the game, thanks to a baffling Academy ruling that deemed it an adapted screenplay instead of an original, but voters managed to find it on the ballot, so its nomination is a pleasant surprise. So is that of “Inherent Vice,” a thorny literary adaptation that didn’t get recognized anywhere else on the nominations list except for its period costumes. “American Sniper” was also considered something of a longshot, so its inclusion over Nick Hornby’s adaptation of the challenging memoir “Wild” is also somewhat unexpected.

    Best Animated Feature

    The absence of “The LEGO Movie” will probably provoke the most outrage of anything in the nomination announcement. The acclaimed “The Book of Life” is also inexplicably absent. On the other hand, “The Tale of the Princess Kaguya,” from the beloved Japanese animation house Studio Ghibli, is a pleasant surprise, given the film’s weak box office. As for the film that grabbed what most thought was the “LEGO” nomination, it’s the all-but-unknown “Song of the Sea,” a movie that opened here in late December and is only playing at three theaters. It’s barely been on the awards radar, but it’s from Irish animator Tomm Moore, whose “The Secret of Kells” earned a similar surprise nomination five years ago. Meanwhile, “LEGO” fans will have to be satisfied with a Best Song nomination for “Everything Is Awesome.” At least that has a good shot at a win at the Oscar ceremony on February 22.
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  • Oscar Nominations 2015: The Complete List

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    Weeks of wild speculation, informed theorizing, splashy profile pieces, lunches where movie stars awkwardly make conversation with bloggers and occasionally aimless prognostication finally come down to this one morning: the morning where the nominations for the 87th annual Academy Awards are announced. The big show, hosted by the endlessly delightful Neil Patrick Harris, doesn’t air until February 22nd. But this morning is when the hand wringing really begins in earnest.

    There are a bunch of really handsome, talented people that are going to have a really good morning and even more that are going to be horribly disappointed (luckily they have the whole “handsome and talented” thing to lessen the blow). This has been one of the more unpredictable Oscar seasons in recent memory, without clear frontrunners or surefire favorites. So strap in — this is going to be a wild morning!

    Best Animated Feature Film
    Big Hero 6
    The Boxtrolls
    How to Train Your Dragon 2
    “Song of the Sea”
    The Tale of the Princess Kaguya

    Best Documentary Feature
    Citizenfour
    Finding Vivian Maier
    Last Days in Vietnam
    Salt of the Earth
    Virunga

    Best Film Editing
    Sandra Adair, “Boyhood
    Tom Cross, “Whiplash
    William Goldenberg, “The Imitation Game
    Joel Cox and Gary Roach, “American Sniper
    Barney Pilling, “The Grand Budapest Hotel

    Best Production Design
    “The Grand Budapest Hotel”
    “The Imitation Game”
    Interstellar
    Into the Woods
    Mr. Turner

    Best Animated Short Film
    “The Bigger Picture”
    “The Dam Keeper”
    “Feast”
    “Me and My Moulton”
    “A Single Life”

    Best Documentary Short Subject
    “Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1”
    “Joanna”
    “Our Curse
    “The Reaper”
    “White Earth”

    Best Live Action Short Film
    “Aya”
    “Boogaloo and Gram”
    “Butter Lamp”
    “Parvaneh”
    “The Phone Call”

    Best Original Song
    “Glory” by Common and John Legend, “Selma
    “Lost Stars” by Gregg Alexander, Danielle Brisebois, Nick Lashley and Nick Southwood, “Begin Again
    “Everything Is Awesome” by Shawn Patterson, “The LEGO Movie
    “I’m Not Gonna Miss You,” by Glen Campbell, “Glenn Campbell: I’ll Be Me”
    “Grateful,” “Beyond the Lights

    Best Sound Editing
    American Sniper
    Birdman
    The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies
    “Interstellar”
    Unbroken

    Best Sound Mixing
    “American Sniper”
    “Birdman”
    “Interstellar
    “Unbroken”
    “Whiplash”

    Best Visual Effects
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    “Interstellar”
    X-Men: Days of Future Past

    Best Actor
    Steve Carell, “Foxcatcher
    Bradley Cooper, “American Sniper”
    Benedict Cumberbatch “The Imitation Game”
    Michael Keaton, “Birdman”
    Eddie Redmayne, “The Theory of Everything

    Best Actress
    Marion Cotillard, “Two Days, One Night”
    Felicity Jones, “The Theory of Everything”
    Julianne Moore, “Still Alice
    Rosamund Pike, “Gone Girl
    Reese Witherspoon, “Wild

    Best Supporting Actor
    Robert Duvall, “The Judge
    Ethan Hawke, “Boyhood”
    Edward Norton, “Birdman”
    Mark Ruffalo, “Foxcatcher”
    J.K. Simmons, “Whiplash”

    Best Supporting Actress
    Patricia Arquette, “Boyhood”
    Laura Dern, “Wild”
    Keira Knightley, “The Imitation Game”
    Emma Stone, “Birdman”
    Meryl Streep, “Into the Woods”

    Best Cinematography
    Emmanuel Lubezki, “Birdman”
    Roger Deakins, “Unbroken”
    Robert D. Yeoman, “The Grand Budapest Hotel
    Dick Pope, “Mr. Turner”
    Lukasz Zal and Ryszard Lynzewski, “Ida

    Best Costume Design
    Colleen Atwood, “Into the Woods”
    Anna B. Sheppard, “Maleficent
    Milena Canonero, “The Grand Budapest Hotel”
    Jacqueline Durran, “Mr. Turner”
    Mark Bridges, “Inherent Vice

    Best Director
    Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, “Birdman”
    Richard Linklater, “Boyhood”
    Bennett Miller, “Foxcatcher”
    Wes Anderson, “The Grand Budapest Hotel”
    Morten Tyldum, “The Imitation Game”

    Best Foreign Language Film
    “Ida”
    Leviathan
    Tangerines
    Timbuktu
    “Wild Tales”

    Best Makeup and Hairstyling
    “Foxcatcher”
    “The Grand Budapest Hotel”
    “Guardians of the Galaxy”

    Best Original Score
    Hans Zimmer, “Interstellar”
    Alexandre Desplat, “The Imitation Game”
    Johann Johannsson, “The Theory of Everything”
    Alexandre Desplat, “The Grand Budapest Hotel”
    Gary Yershon, “Mr. Turner”

    Best Adapted Screenplay
    Graham Moore, “The Imitation Game”
    Damien Chazelle, “Whiplash”
    Anthony McCarten, “The Theory of Everything”
    Jason Hall, “American Sniper”
    Paul Thomas Anderson, “Inherent Vice”

    Best Original Screenplay
    Richard Linklater, “Boyhood”
    Alejandro González Iñárritu, Nicolás Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris, and Armando Bo, “Birdman”
    Wes Anderson and Hugo Guinness, “The Grand Budapest Hotel”
    Dan Gilroy, “Nightcrawler
    E. Max Frye and Dan Futterman, “Foxcatcher”

    Best Picture
    “American Sniper”
    “Birdman”
    “Boyhood”
    “The Grand Budapest Hotel”
    “The Imitation Game”
    “Selma”
    “The Theory of Everything”
    “Whiplash”

    The Oscars, hosted by Neil Patrick Harris, will air live on ABC on Sunday, Feb. 22, at 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT.OSCAR NOMINATIONS 2015

  • Oscars 2015: Predicting the Nominations

    oscars 2015 nomineesThis year’s Oscar race has been a thorny one to predict. Despite the emergence early on of a few front-runners in each category — overall, the race has been dominated by “Boyhood” and “Birdman,” with “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” “The “Theory of Everything,” and “The Imitation Game” close behind — it’s those last few slots on the ballot in each category that are driving prognosticators nuts. Does “Selma” still have a strong shot in its eligible categories, or has the backlash soured Academy members? Is “Whiplash” big enough to make a dent outside the Supporting Actor category? Is “Nightcrawler” too creepy for the Academy?

    We’ll find out on Thursday, January 15, at 8:30 a.m. ET / 5:30 a.m. PT, when the Academy announces this year’s nominees. Meantime, here are Moviefone’s best guesses as to who will earn a seat when the music stops on Thursday and who’ll be left standing outside the circle.

    Best Picture

    The Academy may pick between five and 10 nominees for its top prize. The last couple of years, they’ve picked nine, and that’s likely to continue this year. “Boyhood” and “Birdman” are certain to be among them, and they will almost certainly be joined by “The Grand Budapest Hotel.” Adding to the group will almost surely be some of this year’s most celebrated biopics, including “The Theory of Everything” and “The Imitation Game.” “Selma,” too, will probably be a nominated biopic, despite the current contretemps over its fudging of history. “American Sniper” is a bit more of a longshot, as is “Unbroken.” The odds are longer still for “Gone Girl,” though it’s the biggest hit to date of any of the Oscar contenders. Its box office could be enough to earn it a mention (the Academy wants so desperately to be more populist and thereby drive up the ceremony’s TV ratings), though it doesn’t hurt that it was actually a well-crafted thriller that’s sure to receive at least one other major nomination and possibly three (see below). Conversely, “Big Eyes” barely made a dent at the box office; despite likely nominations for a performance or two, it almost certainly won’t crack the top category. “Into the Woods” could make it, though, following the path trod by “Les Miserables” a couple years ago. And the Academy likes writer/director Mike Leigh enough to make “Mr. Turner” a dim possibility. Finally, there are well-regarded indies “Foxcatcher” and “Whiplash,” at least one of which will squeeze in.

    Best Director

    Unfortunately, only five of the Best Picture nominees, at most, can earn Best Director nods. “Boyhood’s” Richard Linklater and “Birdman’s” Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu are the only locks here, though the fondness for “Grand Budapest Hotel” shown so far by the BAFTAs, the Golden Globes, and now the Directors Guild of America could extend to the Academy as well, meaning Wes Anderson is a near-certainty as well. Speaking of the Directors Guild — usually a very accurate predictor in this category — their nominations, announced on Tuesday, include those three names, plus Oscar favorite Clint Eastwood (“American Sniper“) and little-known British director Morten Tyldum (“The Imitation Game”). They snubbed “Gone Girl’s” David Fincher and “Selma’s” Ava DuVernay, though the latter could have suffered because the guilds didn’t get screeners of her movie. The Academy did, however, and the current groundswell of support for “Selma” could mean an Oscar nomination for her instead of Tyldum. On the other hand, Tyldum’s DGA nod means his closest rival, “The Theory of Everything” director James Marsh, is probably out of luck at the Oscars. So are longshots Bennett Miller (“Foxcatcher”), Damian Chazelle (“Whiplash”), Rob Marshall (“Into the Woods”), Angelina Jolie (“Unbroken”)

    Best Actor

    “Birdman” comeback-star Michael Keaton is a lock. So are British biopic actors Eddie Redmayne (“The Theory of Everything”), Benedict Cumberbatch (“The Imitation Game”), and probably David Oyelowo (“Selma”). That leaves a slot that could go to fellow Brits Ralph Fiennes (“The Grand Budapest Hotel”) or Timothy Spall (in another biopic, “Mr. Turner”), but look for it to go to “Foxcatcher’s” Steve Carell, since his transformation from popular comic actor to chilly, unrecognizable villain is the kind of backstory the Oscars love. The one possible surprise would be a vote for Jake Gyllenhaal‘s creepy turn in “Nightcrawler,” but then, that performance has already received a surprising amount of awards love this season. As for Bradley Cooper, on top of his game in “American Sniper”: your turn will come, but probably not this year.

    Best Actress

    The one sure thing in this category is Julianne Moore as an early-onset Alzheimer’s patient in “Still Alice.” The love for “The Theory of Everything” probably means Felicity Jones will be here, too. And while few loved “Big Eyes,” the Academy probably hasn’t yet run out of love for Amy Adams, so she’s a likely contender, too. Reese Witherspoon‘s “Wild” made a respectable-sized splash, and Oscar loves a comeback, so she’s got a good shot. Rosamund Pike‘s tricky “Gone Girl” performance will probably round out the category. There’s a possibility, though that Jennifer Aniston will oust one of the weaker candidates (that is, anyone but Moore), since her dramatic transformation in “Cake” plays to the same backstory as Carell (beloved TV comic in an unflattering, vanity-free dramatic turn). Oh, and while critics have loved past Oscar-winner Marion Cotillard in both “Two Days, One Night” and “The Immigrant,” those movies don’t seem to have been on Oscar’s radar. Neither was “The Homesman,” so tough luck, Hilary Swank. “Into the Woods” has been huge, but Meryl Streep will suck up all that movie’s oxygen, so Emily Blunt probably won’t land a Best Actress nomination this time.

    Best Supporting Actor

    J.K. Simmons‘s hard-charging jazz teacher in “Whiplash” is a sure bet for a nomination — and probably the win. The love for “Boyhood” will earn a nod for Ethan Hawke; ditto for “Birdman” and Edward Norton. Mark Ruffalo is a likely fourth for “Foxcatcher.” Christoph Waltz has won this prize twice in recent years; that won’t stop him from earning a nomination for “Big Eyes,” though it will keep him from winning. But instead of Waltz, the fifth slot could easily go to Robert Duvall in “The Judge,” since he’s been an Oscar favorite for decades (he’s been nominated seven times and won once). Plus, if he wins, the 84-year-old would beat Christopher Plummer‘s record as the oldest acting winner ever.

    Best Supporting Actress

    “Boyhood” co-star Patricia Arquette has been the favorite in this category since last summer; that won’t change on Thursday. Emma Stone will ride the wave of “Birdman” love to a nomination as well. Meryl Streep will set a record with her 19th nomination, for her “Into the Woods” witch. (Sorry, Anna Kendrick, but that will be the movie’s only nomination in this category.) Keira Knightley seems all but a certainty for “The Imitation Game.” Jessica Chastain has been earning all kinds of awards love for “A Most Violent Year,” even though almost no one in America has seen the film yet. And that’s five. Sorry, Rene Russo (“Nightcrawler”) and Laura Dern (“Wild”), but this isn’t your year.

    Best Original Screenplay

    “Boyhood” and “Birdman” will be duking it out here, as elsewhere. “Foxcatcher” benefits from being one of the few biopics not based on a book. Same with Mike Leigh’s “Mr. Turner.” That last one could get ousted by the higher profile “Selma” script written by Paul Webb, but the controversy over its historical accuracy and the reports that director DuVernay essentially rewrote it put a nomination in serious jeopardy. So the fifth slot will almost certainly go to Wes Anderson for “The Grand Budapest Hotel.” “Whiplash” should be here, but an Academy technicality has placed it in the adapted category, where, hopefully, Oscar voters have noticed its surprise inclusion.

    Best Adapted Screenplay

    “The Theory of Everything” and “The Imitation Game” — the “Boyhood” and “Birdman” of biopics — will duke it out here. “Gone Girl” will almost certainly get a nod; not only will the Academy admire the way first-time screenwriter Gillian Flynn performed the difficult task of adapting her twisty best-seller to the screen while keeping the suspense intact, but she’ll also offer the rare chance of nominating a woman. (Yeah, shouldn’t matter, but it will.) “Wild” and “Inherent Vice” are also difficult literary adaptations, but since few have read Thomas Pynchon, voters won’t recognize what an accomplishment Paul Thomas Anderson’s “Vice” screenplay is. That leaves room for perhaps “American Sniper” or “Unbroken,” also challenging biographical adaptations. If Oscar voters noticed “Whiplash’s” sudden appearance in this category’s ballot, it could squeeze in, too. “Into the Woods” is doubtful, as nominations for librettists who adapt their own musicals to the screen are rare. (Too bad, James Lapine.)
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  • ​Oscars 2015: Let the Mudslinging Begin

    Foxcatcher starring Steve Carell, Channing TatumIt was inevitable, with so many inspired-by-a-true-story films in the Oscar race, that there would be grumbling about the inaccuracies of various awards-contending movies. This year, however, all those complaints seemed to emerge at once, mostly during the past week. And the gripes are especially bitter, seemingly aimed not just at questioning the movies’ factuality but also at sabotaging their chances of winning awards. It’s this sort of mudslinging that has many observers wondering if those who complain are actually doing the bidding of campaigners for competing films and performers.

    The loudest trash talk last week came from gold-medal-winning Olympic wrestler Mark Schultz, who is played by Channing Tatum in the awards-contender “Foxcatcher.” Noticing that reviewers of the recently-released films have found a subtext of homosexuality in the movie (though it’s all in the way that creepy coach John du Pont, played by Steve Carell, behaves toward Schultz, and not in the wrestler’s own conduct), Schultz has taken to Facebook and Twitter to defend himself against what he claims are interpretations that are “jeopardizing my legacy.” The target of his ire, however, is not the critics but the movie, and director Bennett Miller in particular.

    Schultz’s late-blooming revulsion has made Oscar pundits curious, given that, just a few months ago, he was appearing alongside Miller at the movie’s Cannes premiere and was praising the film on the same social media outlets where he was now criticizing it. (Tatum, too, has said that Schultz helped him create his portrayal.) Did he only just recently read reviews that he felt questioned his heterosexuality, or did the campaigners behind some rival film put him up to it? After all, he didn’t just challenge the film’s accuracy; he threatened Miller’s career. As he tweeted last Wednesday, “YOU CROSSED THE LINE MILLER. WE”RE DONE. YOU’RE CAREER IS OVER. YOU THINK I CAN’T DO IT. WATCH ME.” (And that was just one of many of his anti-Miller tweets, some of which the wrestler has since deleted, but which were preserved by the Hollywood Reporter.) He took off the caps-lock for one tweet that read, “Everything I’ve ever said positive about the movie I take back. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it.”

    On Friday, his temper having perhaps cooled, Schultz took to Facebook, saying that his main point of contention with Miller was a recent interview in which Miller did not challenge a reporter’s question about a scene that the reporter felt implied a sexual relationship between the wrestler and du Pont. Schultz said he signed off only reluctantly on the scene in question, believing that Miller would clear up its ambiguity, at least in interviews. Schultz concluded by apologizing for unwittingly creating a media firestorm and undermining the work of those he collaborated with on the film. “I hope this will help in resolving any undue conflict these actions have created,” he wrote, but the damage to the film’s Oscar hopes may already have been done.

    There have also been complaints about “Selma,” notably from Joseph A. Califano Jr., who was an aide to President Lyndon B. Johnson, and who wrote an editorial in the Washington Post on December 26 complaining that the film made Johnson out to be too much of an obstacle to Martin Luther King’s planned voting-rights march in the title Alabama city. In fact, Califano claimed, the march was LBJ’s idea. He concluded that “the movie should be ruled out this Christmas and during the ensuing awards season.”

    “Selma” director Ava DuVernay was incredulous, posting a tweet in response, calling the notion that the Selma march was LBJ’s idea “jaw-dropping and offensive” to those who organized and participated in the march. In fact, Johnson did urge King to stage a media event to bring attention to the voting-rights issue, but he didn’t pick the place or suggest a march. Nor did the two men agree on the timing of the event; King favored immediate action, while Johnson wanted him to wait in order to avoid distracting Congress from the rest of the president’s agenda, both domestic (anti-poverty legislation) and foreign (America’s growing military commitment to the Vietnam War).

    Still, the movie seems to portray Johnson as more antagonistic to King and his goals than he actually was. Even Andrew Young, who was a longtime King associate before his own celebrated political career, has said that the movie gets everything right except for the relationship between the reverend and the president. Nonetheless, it’s one thing for Califano to question the on-screen portrayal of that relationship; it’s another for him to urge that “Selma” should “be ruled out” for awards consideration and that no one should see it. Again, conspiracy-minded Oscar experts have wondered: what made Califano go to such extreme lengths to dis the movie?

    Then there’s journalist Christian Caryl’s dismantling of “The Imitation Game” in the New York Review of Books. Caryl claims that director Morten Tyldum and screenwriter Graham Moore have gotten plenty wrong about World War II-era codebreaker and computing pioneer Alan Turing. Caryl writes that Benedict Cumberbatch has been directed to play Turing as a geeky, emotionless Vulcan, despite accounts by biographers and contemporaries who found him affable and charming. He says the movie also creates antagonisms between Turing and his co-workers and superiors that didn’t exist, downplays his effectiveness as a cryptographer in the early years of the war (preferring to stage a dramatic breakthrough later on), invents a blackmail subplot that didn’t happen, and makes Turing a martyr driven to suicide by government persecution over his then-illegal homosexuality. (Caryl says the circumstances surrounding his death are much more complicated and mysterious.) “Monstrous hogwash” is one of the kinder phrases the writer uses to describe the film, and he marvels that there hasn’t been more outrage about the picture among Turing experts and surviving members of his circle.

    These sort of complaints are par for the course whenever supposedly fact-based historical dramas compete at awards season, with grumblings about accuracy and portraying real-life figures in a more flattering light than they deserved having plagued recent contenders from “A Beautiful Mind” to “The King’s Speech.” Most notoriously, there was an outcry over “Zero Dark Thirty,” with political editorialists and bloggers griping that director Kathryn Bigelow and screenwriter Mark Boal gave too much credit to the use of torture on prisoners in yielding valuable information that led to the successful raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound in Pakistan. (Indeed, the recent Senate torture report seems to bear out this criticism.) As a result, “ZDT” went from being considered a surefire Oscar contender to a near-shutout at awards time, winning an Oscar only for Best Sound Editing.

    Then again, Bigelow and Boal were also targeted for criticism for their previous movie, “The Hurt Locker,” a fictional drama loosely based on Boal’s reporting about real-life bomb squad soldiers deployed in Iraq. Some real-life service members complained that the film not only made bomb defusers look more reckless than their real-life counterparts, but was also rife with inaccuracies about what military service in the Iraq War was like. (Then again, many service members stood up for the film’s accuracy; apparently, “The Hurt Locker” was truer to some people’s wartime experience than others.) None of the complaints kept the film from winning Oscars for Best Picture, Director, and Adapted Screenplay, but the gripes were especially bitter for a film that did not pretend to be a depiction of actual events or people, and that went out of its way to avoid making a political statement about the Iraq War.

    Three things about Oscar mudslinging: First, it’s seldom effective in derailing a movie’s awards chances, with “ZDT” a notable exception. Last year, there were mutterings about the factuality of “12 Years a Slave” (which went on to win Best Picture), “Dallas Buyers Club,” and “Captain Phillips,” all of which Academy members seemed to ignore.

    Second, it’s usually hard or impossible to trace complaints from third-party sources to a rival picture’s campaign. People often blame Harvey Weinstein, whose track record of brilliant Oscar campaigning on behalf of his company’s films is sometimes said to include anonymously-placed mudslinging against competing movies, but there’s never any proof. This week, however, there was a tweet bringing attention to Schultz’s complaints about Sony Pictures Classics’ “Foxcatcher” that came from an account named “WB Digital.” According to the Hollywood Reporter, Warner Bros. immediately denounced the account as a fake, though the studio later acknowledged that it was a real account belonging to an independent marketing consultant freelancing for the studio, which promptly suspended the account and fired the marketer. After all, the Academy takes campaigning violations very seriously; last year, it disqualified Best Song nominee “Alone Yet Not Alone” after ruling that composer Bruce Broughton, a member of the Academy’s music branch executive committee, had abused his authority by touting his song via e-mails to fellow Academy voters. No one contemplating a possible win in the major categories (picture, acting, directing, and screenwriting) wants to be disqualified over a wayward tweet.

    Third, the grumbling about accuracy seems to suggest a fundamental misunderstanding about the way historical dramas work. They’re not documentaries, and there’s always some speculation and fudging for dramatic purposes. Yeah, it’s probably not fair to Lyndon Johnson to portray him as a stumbling block to civil rights activism instead of a sympathizer who disagreed about tactics, and it may do a disservice to Turing to oversimplify his life story, but it may also make for more effective drama. Indeed, if Shakespeare had been held to the standards of modern-day screenwriters, historical dramas like “Richard III” would have been written off centuries ago as scurrilous slanders. Even historians will tell you that much of history is never settled, with arguments over interpretations of events continuing endlessly. “Selma,” “Foxcatcher,” and “Imitation Game” each offer their own interpretations; no doubt none of them will be the last word on the events they depict. Like most moviegoers, members of the Academy aren’t historians and shouldn’t be expected to serve as arbiters of what really happened. All they can do is determine which narratives work best as movies. The conversations about the truth will and should continue, and at least we can thank these films for starting those conversations. As DuVernay tweeted, “Bottom line is, folks should interrogate history. Don’t take my word for it or LBJ rep’s word for it. Let it come alive for yourself.”
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