Tag: Oscar race

  • DGA Awards: Campion Wins Another Major Precursor En Route to Oscar

    DGA Awards: Campion Wins Another Major Precursor En Route to Oscar

    Of all the above-the-line categories, Best Director is the closest to being locked as Campion will likely sweep the precursors on her way to Oscar glory.

    This precursor is also an important one for the Doc race. Stanley Nelson won for Attica and though I’m not saying that Summer of Soul missing here will move it from frontrunner status, I do think it’s vulnerable for a film like Flee to take the prize at the last second.

    Here are the DGA results:

    Theatrical Feature Film
    Paul Thomas Anderson, “Licorice Pizza”
    Kenneth Branagh, “Belfast”
    **WINNER Jane Campion, “The Power of the Dog”
    Steven Spielberg, “West Side Story”
    Denis Villeneuve, “Dune”

    First-Time Feature Film Director
    **WINNER Maggie Gyllenhaal, “The Lost Daughter”
    Rebecca Hall, “Passing”
    Tatiana Huezo, “Prayers for the Stolen”
    Lin-Manuel Miranda, “tick, tick…BOOM!”
    Michael Sarnoski, “Pig”
    Emma Seligman, “Shiva Baby”

    Documentary
    Jessica Kingdon, “Ascension”
    **WINNER Stanley Nelson, “Attica”
    Raoul Peck, “Exterminate All the Brutes”
    Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, “Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)”
    Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi & Jimmy Chin, “The Rescue”

    Drama Series
    Kevin Bray, “Succession”: “Retired Janitors of Idaho”
    **WINNER Mark Mylod, “Succession”: “All the Bells Say”
    Andrij Parekh, “Succession”: “What It Takes”
    Robert Pulcini & Shari Springer Berman, “Succession”: “Lion in the Meadow”
    Lorene Scafaria, “Succession”: “Too Much Birthday”

    Comedy Series
    **WINNER Lucia Aniello, “Hacks”: “There Is No Line”
    MJ Delaney, “Ted Lasso”: “No Weddings and a Funeral”
    Erica Dunton, “Ted Lasso”: “Rainbow”
    Sam Jones, “Ted Lasso”: “Beard After Hours”
    Mike White, “The White Lotus”: “Mysterious Monkeys”

    Movies for Television and Limited Series
    **WINNER Barry Jenkins, “The Underground Railroad”
    Barry Levinson, “Dopesick”: “First Bottle”
    Hiro Murai, “Station Eleven”: “Wheel of Fire”
    Danny Strong: “Dopesick”: “The People vs. Purdue Pharma”
    Craig Zobel, “Mare of Easttown”

    Variety/Talk/News/Sports – Regularly Scheduled Programming
    Paul G. Casey, “Real Time With Bill Maher”: “Episode 1935: Fareed Zakaria, Chris Christie, Eric Adams”
    Jim Hoskinson, “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert”: “Episode 1105”
    **WINNER Don Roy King, “Saturday Night Live”: “Keegan-Michael Key; Olivia Rodrigo”
    David Paul Meyer, “The Daily Show with Trevor Noah”: “Episode 26112”
    Paul Pennolino & Christopher Werner, “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver”: “Episode 830 – Season Finale”

    Variety/Talk/News/Sports – Specials
    Ian Berger, “The Daily Show with Trevor Noah Presents Jordan Klepper Fingers the Pulse – Into the Magaverse”
    Bo Burnham, “Bo Burnham: Inside”
    **WINNER Paul Dugdale, “Adele: One Night Only”
    Stan Lathan, “Dave Chappelle: The Closer”
    Glenn P. Weiss, “The 43rd Annual Kennedy Center Honors”

    Reality Programs
    Joseph Guidry, “Full Bloom”: “Final Floral Face Off”
    Patrick McManus, “American Ninja Warrior”: “1304: Qualifiers 4”
    Ramy Romany, “Making the Cut”: “Brand Statement”
    Ben Simms, “Running Wild with Bear Grylls”: “Gina Carano In The Dolomites”
    **WINNER Adam Vetri, “Getaway Driver”: “Electric Shock”

    Children’s Programs
    James Bobin, “The Mysterious Benedict Society”: “A Bunch of Smart Orphans”
    Michael Lembeck, “The J Team”
    Phill Lewis, “Head of the Class”: “Three More Years”
    **WINNER Smriti Mundhra, “Through Our Eyes”: “Shelter”
    Jeff Wadlow, “Are You Afraid of the Dark?”: “The Tale of the Darkhouse”

    Commercials
    Steve Ayson (MJZ), Anthem, Mattress Firm – Droga5
    Kathryn Bigelow (Smuggler), Hollywood In Your Pocket, iPhone 13 – Media Arts Lab
    Ian Pons Jewell (Reset), ECG, Apple Watch – Apple; Sleep, Apple Watch – Apple; Time, Squarespace – Squarespace; Your Mom’s Short Ribs, Instacart – Goodby Silverstein
    Henry-Alex Rubin (Smuggler), Teenage Dream, Sandy Hook Promise – BBDO – New York
    **WINNER Bradford Young (Serial Pictures x Somesuch), Super. Human., Channel 4 Paralympics – 4Creative

    Source: The Wrap

  • Post-Oscar Nominations Analysis

    Post-Oscar Nominations Analysis

    BEST PICTURE

    A stat that I want to mention is that no Best Picture winner in at least the last 10 years has won the award without being at least nominated for a Picture award, Best Director, and Best Screenplay at the Golden Globes.

    The only two films that received those nominations were The Power of the Dog and Belfast.

    Another notable stat is that in the preferential era, only one Best Picture-winning film (Birdman which was made to look like it was filmed in one shot) was not nominated in Best Editing as well. Of The Power of the Dog and Belfast, only the former film has been nominated for Best Editing. What this tells me is that I am even more confident about having The Power of the Dog as my Best Picture winner.

    Nominations snubs and surprises:

    Drive My Car!!! It’s fantastic that we live in a world where a 3-hour Japanese film can get nominated for Best Picture (in addition to Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay). Many were predicting it but it’s still great to see.

    Tick, tick, BOOM! misses and Nightmare Alley makes it in. Though tick, tick, BOOM! had CCA and PGA, it apparently did not have the level of support that Nightmare Alley had. I think this inclusion shows how powerful of a campaigning machine Searchlight is. They almost always get at least one of their films in, even when they don’t seem like they have very much support. I don’t think any other distributor could’ve pushed Nightmare Alley into Best Picture.

    BEST DIRECTOR

    Denis Villeneuve’s snub here was pretty shocking and I’m still surprised as I thought someone like Branagh was more likely to miss for Hamaguchi. Well, Campion still has this win secured and I can easily see her sweeping all the major directing precursors on the way to the Oscars.

    BEST ACTOR

    What’s interesting to me is that Being the Ricardos received three acting nominations (Javier Bardem, Nicole Kidman, and J.K. Simmons) yet didn’t hit Original Screenplay and ended up not making Picture. I had a feeling that Sorkin wasn’t going to get a Screenplay nod since the writers branch historically aligns more with critics than other branches, but the fact that the film got the acting nods it did shows to me how much the Academy is infatuated with biopic performances and specifically, portrayals of Hollywood figures.

    Anyways other than Bardem, the other four men (Cumberbatch, Smith, Garfield, and Washington) have been locked in for a while and all of them got in. My winner prediction at this point is Cumberbatch.

    BEST ACTRESS

    Lady Gaga missing and Penelope Cruz getting in were definitely big surprises. Gaga was the only actress to get nods from all of the major precursors and they still didn’t nominate her, showing to me that they really were not too keen on House of Gucci, which didn’t even get a Costume Design nomination (it only received a nod in Makeup & Hairstyling).

    In other news, Kristen Stewart. who missed at both SAG and at BAFTA (which went 0 for 5 with the Oscar Best Actress field this year), got in at the Oscars and was the sole nomination for Spencer. Now that she has been nominated, she definitely has a chance to win though I still think Kidman has the best chance though Stewart or Colman are close behind.

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

    Plemons’ inclusion here is indicative of the broad support The Power of the Dog has. For a chamber drama like The Power of the Dog to be the nomination leader (12) is really an achievement and it makes me even more confident about predicting it for the win. And it’s great to see Plemons finally receive an Oscar nomination after being in six Best Picture nominees in the last seven years. As I mentioned previously JK Simmons was a surprise inclusion here, and slightly less surprisingly, Bradley Cooper missed.

    Cooper was in Licorice Pizza for less than ten minutes but was seen in the predictions of many. The fact that both Alana Haim and Cooper missed as well as Andy Jurgensen in Editing shows that Licorice Pizza is most definitely not a top-3 Best Picture contender and might even miss an Original Screenplay win (which would be maddening as Paul Thomas Anderson needs an Oscar ASAP).

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

    This was the first-announced award of the presentation and when I saw it, I knew we were in for a very interesting slate of nominees. Jessie Buckley and Judi Dench got in while Caitriona Balfe and Ruth Negga missed. Balfe’s omission is especially surprising as she, like Lady Gaga in Best Actress, hit all the major precursors and was included by many to be the best part of Belfast. To me, her exclusion is even more surprising than Gaga’s since her film is a top-tier Best Picture contender. Dench was instead this category’s representation for Branagh’s film and has now received eight nominations in twenty-four years.

    Jessie Buckley’s inclusion was a welcome surprise and I think it really exemplifies the main theme of this year’s nominees as a whole. The Oscars are not going to lean in to calls to become more populist. With Buckley’s nod here, the three above-the-line nominations for Drive My Car, and the nomination for Penelope Cruz, among other inspired picks (including The Worst Person in the World’s inclusion over Being the Ricardos in Original Screenplay), the Academy seems to be defiantly ignoring requests to become more aligned with the tastes of the general population (such as the movement to try to get Spider-Man: No Way Home a Best Picture nomination). While this is probably good news for lovers of international and more daring cinema, the Oscars do run the risk of alienating people, though it seems that the Academy could not care less, and that mindset could show up in who they choose as their winners in March.

  • 2022 Oscar Nominations: ‘The Power of the Dog’ Leads With 12

    2022 Oscar Nominations: ‘The Power of the Dog’ Leads With 12

    The day we’ve all been waiting for is finally here. The 2022 Oscar nominations were announced this morning and featured many snubs and surprises. I’ll get into those in a post coming soon so here are the nominations.

    Here are the Academy Award nominations, in the order they were announced this morning:

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

    Jessie Buckley (The Lost Daughter)
    Ariana DeBose (West Side Story)
    Judi Dench (Belfast)
    Kirsten Dunst (The Power of the Dog)
    Aunjanue Ellis (King Richard)

    BEST COSTUME DESIGN

    Cruella (Jenny Beavan)
    Cyrano (Massimo Cantini Parrini)
    Dune (Jacqueline West)
    Nightmare Alley (Luis Sequeira)
    West Side Story (Paul Tazewell)

    BEST SOUND

    Belfast
    Dune
    No Time to Die
    The Power of the Dog
    West Side Story

    BEST ORIGINAL SCORE

    Don’t Look Up (Nicholas Britell)
    Dune (Hans Zimmer)
    Encanto (Germaine Franco)
    Parallel Mothers (Alberto Iglesias)
    The Power of the Dog (Jonny Greenwood)

    BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

    CODA (Sian Heder)
    Drive My Car (Ryusuke Hamaguchi & Takamasa Oe)
    Dune (Eric Roth, Jon Spaihts & Denis Villeneuve)
    The Lost Daughter (Maggie Gyllenhaal)
    The Power of the Dog (Jane Campion)

    BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

    Belfast (Kenneth Branagh)
    Don’t Look Up (Adam McKay & David Sirota)
    Licorice Pizza (Paul Thomas Anderson)
    King Richard
    The Worst Person in the World

    BEST ANIMATED SHORT

    Affairs of the Art
    Bestia
    Boxballet
    Robin Robin
    The Windshield Wiper

    BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT

    Ala Kachuu — Take and Run
    The Dress
    The Long Goodbye
    On My Mind
    Please Hold

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

    Ciarán Hinds (Belfast)
    Troy Kotsur (CODA)
    Jesse Plemons (The Power of the Dog)
    J.K. Simmons (Being the Ricardos)
    Kodi Smit-McPhee (The Power of the Dog)

    BEST FILM EDITING

    Don’t Look Up (Hank Corwin)
    Dune (Joe Walker)
    King Richard (Pamela Martin)
    The Power of the Dog (Peter Sciberras)
    Tick, Tick… Boom! (Myron Kerstein & Andrew Weisblum)

    BEST MAKEUP & HAIRSTYLING

    The Eyes of Tammy Faye
    House of Gucci
    Coming 2 America
    Cruella
    Dune

    BEST ANIMATED FEATURE

    Encanto
    Flee
    Luca
    The Mitchells vs. The Machines
    Raya and the Last Dragon

    BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

    Ascension
    Attica
    Flee
    Summer of Soul
    Writing With Fire

    BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT

    Audible
    Lead Me Home
    The Queen of Basketball
    Three Songs for Benazir
    When We Were Bullies

    BEST ORIGINAL SONG

    “Be Alive” — Beyoncé Knowles-Carter & Darius Scott (King Richard)
    “Dos Oruguitas” — Lin-Manuel Miranda (Encanto)
    “Down to Joy” — Van Morrison (Belfast)
    “No Time to Die” — Billie Eilish & Finneas O’Connell (No Time to Die)
    “Somehow You Do” — Diane Warren (Four Good Days)

    BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

    Dune (Greig Fraser)
    Nightmare Alley (Dan Lausten)
    The Power of the Dog (Ari Wegner)
    The Tragedy of Macbeth (Bruno Delbonnel)
    West Side Story (Janusz Kaminski)

    BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE

    Drive My Car (Japan)
    Flee (Denmark)
    The Hand of God (Italy)
    Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom (Bhutan)
    The Worst Person in the World (Norway)

    BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN

    Dune (Zsuzsanna Sipos & Patrice Vermette)
    Nightmare Alley (Tamara Deverell & Shane Vieau)
    The Power of the Dog (Grant Major & Amber Richards)
    The Tragedy of Macbeth (Stefan Dechant & Nancy Haigh)
    West Side Story (Rena DeAngelo & Adam Stockhausen)

    BEST VISUAL EFFECTS

    Dune
    Free Guy
    Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings
    No Time to Die
    Spider-Man: No Way Home

    BEST ACTRESS

    Jessica Chastain (The Eyes of Tammy Faye)
    Olivia Colman (The Lost Daughter)
    Penélope Cruz (Parallel Mothers)
    Nicole Kidman (Being the Ricardos)
    Kristen Stewart (Spencer)

    BEST ACTOR

    Javier Bardem (Being the Ricardos)
    Benedict Cumberbatch (The Power of the Dog)
    Andrew Garfield (Tick, Tick … Boom!)
    Will Smith (King Richard)
    Denzel Washington (The Tragedy of Macbeth)

    BEST DIRECTOR

    Paul Thomas Anderson (Licorice Pizza)
    Kenneth Branagh (Belfast)
    Jane Campion (The Power of the Dog)
    Steven Spielberg (West Side Story)
    Drive My Car (Ryûsuke Hamaguchi)

    BEST PICTURE

    Belfast
    CODA
    Don’t Look Up
    Drive My Car
    Dune
    King Richard
    Licorice Pizza
    Nightmare Alley
    The Power of the Dog
    West Side Story

    Source: AwardsRadar

  • Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Acting Categories

    Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Acting Categories

    The first four men are essentially locked for nominations as they have been for over a month now. My fifth pick is between DiCaprio and Bardem. As I’ve mentioned previously, Best Actor is often connected with Best Picture and while both DiCaprio and Bardem are in top-12 Best Picture contenders, DiCaprio is one of the biggest movie stars of the 21st century and is in the bigger Best Picture contender.

    BEST ACTOR

    Benedict Cumberbatch – The Power of the Dog – GG, CCA, SAG, BAFTA

    Will Smith – King Richard – GG, CCA, SAG, BAFTA

    Andrew Garfield – tick, tick…BOOM! – GG, CCA, SAG

    Denzel Washington – The Tragedy of Macbeth – GG, CCA, SAG

    Leonardo DiCaprio – Don’t Look Up – GG, BAFTA

    Could Jump In: Javier Bardem – Being the Ricardos – GG, SAG, Peter Dinklage – Cyrano – GG, CCA

    I don’t even know where to begin with this category. I think Lady Gaga and Nicole Kidman are locks but the last three slots seem very wide-open to me. Close behind Gaga and Kidman is Olivia Colman. Like Kidman, Colman has appeared at all the non-juried major precursors, though her BAFTA miss was slightly surprising.

    Speaking of BAFTA, their nominees in this category were chosen by a system where the whole academy voted on two nominees and a jury picked the other six. Lady Gaga was definitely one of those two picks and the other one was most probably Alana Haim, which leads me to believe that she will be nominated here as she was (presumably) second in voting at the BAFTAs

    BEST ACTRESS

    Nicole Kidman – Being the Ricardos – GG, CCA, SAG

    Lady Gaga – House of Gucci – GG, CCA, SAG, BAFTA

    Olivia Colman – The Lost Daughter – GG, CCA, SAG

    Jessica Chastain – The Eyes of Tammy Faye – GG, CCA, SAG

    Alana Haim – Licorice Pizza – GG, CCA, BAFTA

    Could Jump In: Kristen Stewart – Spencer – GG, CCA, Jennifer Hudson – Respect – SAG, Penelope Cruz – Parallel Mothers

    Kodi Smit-McPhee, Ciaran Hinds, and Troy Kotsur are all locks and Bradley Cooper, Jesse Plemons, Jared Leto, Jamie Dornan, and Ben Affleck are the only guys I think could fill those last two slots.

    The first actor I’m going to remove from the five is Ben Affleck. He fits the mold of a big actor those two groups like yet is in a film that is a non-entity in all other categories and misses out on an Oscar nod in the end (Jared Leto for The Little Things, Timothee Chalamet for Beautiful Boy, and Idris Elba for Beasts of No Nation are examples).

    I am going to put Bradley Cooper in that fourth slot. He is the biggest name in a top 5 Best Picture contender and is cited by many as their favorite part of the film. Even though he only has a SAG nod and is in the film for less than 10 minutes, he seems more secure than Leto, Dornan, or Plemons.

    The next actor I am going to take out is Dornan since I don’t think he has the body of work that Plemons has or the (inexplicable) industry respect that Jared Leto has. That means that last spot is between Leto and Plemons. I think Leto has a chance of getting a Razzie nomination for his performance but it’s also true that the Academy likes these prosthetic-laden roles. However, unlike Glenn Close for Hillbilly Elegy, Jared Leto’s Razzie-worthy work probably won’t be rewarded since he doesn’t have the overdue narrative that Close seems to have annually. That’s why I am going to go with Plemons, who has been in so many Best Picture nominees and has yet to been nominated for his consistently good work.

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

    Kodi Smit-McPhee – The Power of the Dog – GG, CCA, SAG, BAFTA

    Ciaran Hinds – Belfast – GG, CCA, BAFTA

    Troy Kotsur – CODA – GG, CCA, SAG, BAFTA

    Bradley Cooper – Licorice Pizza – SAG

    Jesse Plemons – The Power of the Dog – BAFTA

    Could Jump In: Jared Leto – House of Gucci – CCA, SAG, Jamie Dornan – Belfast – GG, CCA, Ben Affleck – The Tender Bar – GG, SAG

    The first three, DeBose, Balfe, and Dunst, are locked for nominations and the last two slots are really between three actresses: Ellis, Negga, and Dowd. Ellis and Negga have hit more precursors than Dowd and therefore have better chances of getting included. I was initially hesitant about including Negga but, in the last 10 years, two actresses Kathy Bates and Helen Hunt for the sole nominees for their respective films, and therefore my prediction of Negga being her film’s only nod has precedent.

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

    Ariana DeBose – West Side Story – GG, CCA, SAG, BAFTA

    Caitriona Balfe – Belfast – GG, CCA, SAG, BAFTA

    Kirsten Dunst – The Power of the Dog – GG, CCA, SAG

    Aunjanue Ellis – King Richard – GG, CCA, BAFTA

    Ruth Negga – Passing – GG, SAG, BAFTA

    Could Jump In: Ann Dowd – Mass – CCA, BAFTA

  • Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Best Picture and Best Director

    Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Best Picture and Best Director

    Six films: The Power of the Dog, Belfast, Dune, Licorice Pizza, West Side Story, and Don’t Look Up are undeniably locked for Picture nominations. CODA and King Richard follow close behind though I can see there being a world where either CODA or King Richard miss.

    The last two slots are a lot trickier in my eyes and I have honestly spent hours trying to decide on the films that will make those last two slots. There are five films that I think can get those last two slots: tick, tick…BOOM!, Drive My Car, Being the Ricardos, Nightmare Alley, and The Tragedy of Macbeth.

    One thing I am looking at is what films have passion behind them? I know for sure that Drive My Car has very passionate fans and critics and many international members have passionately supported it. The IMDb scores of these five films are as follows: Drive My Car (7.9), tick, tick…BOOM! (7.6), Nightmare Alley (7.3), The Tragedy of Macbeth (7.3), and Being the Ricardos (6.6). As you can see, after Drive My Car, tick, tick…BOOM! has the highest IMDb score and I feel that supporters of Andrew Garfield’s performance, Broadway lovers, and supporters of Lin-Manuel Miranda will push this film over the hump. Of these five films, it has also hit the most precursors.

    Being the Ricardos seems like a traditional nominee in this category: a biopic with the political turmoil of the subject’s time period in the background. However, the film’s Metascore (60) and mainly it’s IMDb score (6.6) really give me pause about predicting the film though it’s definitely in the 11th slot and could very well get in.

    BEST PICTURE

    The Power of the Dog (Netflix) – AFI, GG, CCA, PGA, BAFTA

    Belfast (Focus) – AFI (Special Award), NBR, GG, CCA, SAG, PGA, BAFTA

    Dune (Warner Bros.) – AFI, NBR, GG, CCA, PGA, BAFTA

    Licorice Pizza (MGM) – AFI, NBR, GG, CCA, PGA, BAFTA

    West Side Story (20th Century) – AFI, NBR, GG, CCA, PGA

    Don’t Look Up (Netflix) – AFI, NBR, GG, CCA, SAG, PGA, BAFTA

    CODA (Apple+) – AFI, GG, CCA, SAG, PGA

    King Richard (Warner Bros.) – AFI, NBR, GG, CCA, SAG, PGA

    tick, tick…BOOM! (Netflix) – AFI, GG, CCA, PGA

    Drive My Car (Janus) –

    Could Jump In: Being the Ricardos (Amazon) – PGA, Nightmare Alley (Searchlight) – AFI, NBR, CCA, The Tragedy of Macbeth (A24/Apple+) – AFI, NBR

    I think that there are really two possibilities for what can occur here, the DGA five of Campion, Villeneuve, Spielberg, PTA, and Branagh get in or Hamaguchi replaces Branagh. I don’t see anything else happening and I am going to play it safe as I think all of these filmmakers, Branagh included, have enough respect as directors unlike previous people who have missed here like Aaron Sorkin or Peter Farrelly. Even if Drive My Car gets into BP, I think Hamaguchi has a better shot in Adapted Screenplay than here in Director.

    BEST DIRECTOR

    Jane Campion – GG, CCA, DGA, BAFTA

    Denis Villeneuve – GG, CCA, DGA

    Steven Spielberg – GG, CCA, DGA

    Paul Thomas Anderson – CCA, DGA, BAFTA

    Kenneth Branagh – GG, CCA, DGA

    Could Jump In: Ryusuke Hamaguchi – BAFTA

  • Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Original and Adapted Screenplay

    Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Original and Adapted Screenplay

    Licorice Pizza, Belfast, and Don’t Look Up are all essentially guaranteed nominations in this category. Being the Ricardos has hit all the major precursors and if the film gets into Picture, the film is also guaranteed a nod here. The Oscars seemingly don’t like Sorkin as much as everyone else does (the screenplay snub for Steve Jobs best exemplifies this), but I think that Being the Ricardos, as the competition in this category isn’t as strong as Steve Jobs’ competitors were, will hang on for a nomination. However, it’s also true that in the last 10 years, in both original and adapted screenplay, 2 of the 100 nominees (Joker (59) and Jojo Rabbit (58)) had Metascores that were not green. Both Don’t Look Up (49) and Being the Ricardos (60) have yellow Metascores and while Don’t Look Up is a top 6 Best Picture contender like Joker and Jojo Rabbit, Being the Ricardos is not. Thus, the Sorkin film is vulnerable for a miss and I think Wes Anderson and The French Dispatch have the best chance of taking his spot, however I am going to play it safe and keep Sorkin in.

    BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

    Licorice Pizza – GG, CCA, WGA, BAFTA

    Belfast – GG, CCA, BAFTA

    Don’t Look Up – GG, CCA, WGA, BAFTA

    Being the Ricardos – GG, CCA, WGA, BAFTA

    King Richard – CCA, WGA, BAFTA

    Could Jump In: The French Dispatch – WGA, Mass, Parallel Mothers

    I am pretty confident about this five. The first three especially since all of them will be Best Picture nominees. The last musical to be nominated in adapted screenplay was Chicago in 2003, though it’s also true that since Chicago only two musicals, Les Miserables and La La Land, have been nominated for Best Picture and La La Land was nominated for Best Original Screenplay. Still, West Side Story’s star does seem to be falling somewhat after missing a BAFTA Best Film nomination. If Olivia Colman somehow misses Best Actress, I don’t see it receiving a nomination here but that’s not very likely. If Drive My Car gets in anywhere it’s here and the film has enough support to do that. (Note: The Power of the Dog, The Lost Daughter, and Drive My Car were all ineligible at WGA)

    BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

    The Power of the Dog – GG, CCA, USC, BAFTA

    CODA – CCA, WGA, BAFTA

    Dune – CCA, WGA, USC, BAFTA

    The Lost Daughter – CCA, USC, BAFTA

    Drive My Car – BAFTA

    Could Jump In: West Side Story – CCA, WGA, tick, tick…BOOM! – WGA

  • Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Sound, Original Song, Original Score

    Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Sound, Original Song, Original Score

    Dune, West Side Story, and No Time to Die have racked up all three major precursor nods in this category and should increase that total come Tuesday morning.

    Avengers: Endgame and Avengers: Infinity War were never able to make into Best Sound though both films did not get CAS noms (only MPSE). No Way Home has both MPSE and CAS noms and could be the first Marvel film to break into a sound category since Black Panther.

    BEST SOUND

    Dune – MPSE, CAS. BAFTA

    West Side Story – MPSE, CAS, BAFTA

    No Time to Die – MPSE, CAS, BAFTA

    The Power of the Dog – MPSE, CAS

    Spider-Man: No Way Home – MPSE, CAS

    Could Jump In: Belfast – MPSE, A Quiet Place Part II – MPSE, BAFTA, Last Night in Soho – MPSE, BAFTA

    This one is extremely hard to predict. The only ones I am confident about making it in are No Time to Die and Encanto. Other than those two films, I am not committed to anything else getting in. It’s a constantly shuffling lineup in my mind but I think I’m going to go with Respect, King Richard, and Don’t Look Up. CCA has a very good track record and I know they’ll have three of their nominees get in at the least.

    BEST ORIGINAL SONG

    No Time to Die – GG, CCA, SCL

    Encanto – GG, CCA

    Respect – GG, SCL

    King Richard – GG, CCA

    Don’t Look Up – CCA, SCL

    Could Jump In: Belfast – GG, The Harder They Fall – CCA, SCL, Four Good Days – SCL, CODA, Annette

    Dune and The Power of the Dog are absolutely locked and will be battling it out for the win. I think Don’t Look Up and The French Dispatch are pretty close behind as well as they have hit three major precursors each. The last slot is between Encanto, Spencer, and Parallel Mothers, and while I love Jonny Greenwood’s Spencer score, Encanto is getting a lot of attention for its music in recent weeks and that can only help it here.

    BEST ORIGINAL SCORE

    Dune – GG, CCA, SCL, BAFTA

    The Power of the Dog – GG, CCA, SCL, BAFTA

    Don’t Look Up – CCA. SCL, BAFTA

    The French Dispatch – GG, SCL, BAFTA

    Encanto – GG, SCL

    Could Jump In: Spencer – CCA, SCL, Parallel Mothers – GG, SCL

  • Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Film Editing, Cinematography, Costume Design

    Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Film Editing, Cinematography, Costume Design

    To me, Dune, Belfast, and The Power of the Dog are basically locks here. They usually have at least one genre film here which Dune fits the mold of and the top 2 Best Picture contenders are usually here as well. In a close fourth place I have Don’t Look Up which has only received a nod from ACE but has the kind of editing that this branch likes (McKay’s last two films The Big Short and Vice were nominated here as well) and with this film having that genre element to it as well I’m pretty confident about its inclusion.

    As always, the question is about what will fill the last slot. Licorice Pizza seems like the obvious choice here since its hit all the precursors yet I think it could end up like Once Upon a Time in Hollywood which is another auteur period comedy film that was often described as a “hangout” film. The laid-back nature of the film forces me to caution against predicting in this category that usually awards fast-paced and/or genre films.

    If Licorice Pizza doesn’t get in there are three films in my eyes that can realistically take its place: West Side Story, No Time to Die, or King Richard. I’ll start with King Richard since part of me thinks this film has the best chance to fill this last spot since sports movies (Ford v Ferrari, I, Tonya, and Moneyball) usually do well in this category. However, the film’s star has been falling a little recently and if there was more focus on the tennis action I think it would be a more popular pick here.

    West Side Story was edited by frequent Spielberg collaborator Michael Kahn (with Sarah Broshar as well) and if Kahn is nominated for West Side Story, he will receive his ninth editing nod and will become the most-nominated editor ever. West Side Story’s lack of an ACE nomination, however, is concerning and even though a film can be nominated without an ACE nod (last year’s The Father, for example), it’s definitely not very common.

    No Time to Die received nominations from both BAFTA and ACE so it has definitely received support but both Skyfall and Casino Royale received those two nominations and ended up empty-handed when it came to Best Editing at the Oscars. I am going to go with King Richard for now but my mind may change as time goes on.

    BEST FILM EDITING

    Dune – CCA, ACE, BAFTA

    Belfast – CCA, ACE, BAFTA

    The Power of the Dog – CCA, ACE

    Don’t Look Up – ACE

    King Richard – ACE

    Could Jump In: Licorice Pizza – CCA, ACE, BAFTA, West Side Story – CCA, No Time to Die – BAFTA, ACE

    Dune, The Power of the Dog, and The Tragedy of Macbeth are seemingly locked here for me. Belfast follows close behind as it hit both CCA and ASC and is a black-and-white top 2 Best Picture contender. I am pretty confident about predicting those four films and that last slot for me is between West Side Story and Nightmare Alley.

    Nightmare Alley has hit all the major precursors and has pretty flashy cinematography, yet West Side Story is undeniably the bigger Best Picture contender. Its cinematography is also flashy and Janusz Kaminski is definitely a legend in the industry. However, one thing that gives me pause is that a lot of the fantastic shots from West Side Story are homages to the original and I don’t know if that’ll work to the film’s benefit (oh they recreated some great shots!) or to its detriment (oh they just copied the original!).

    BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

    Dune – CCA, ASC, BAFTA

    The Power of the Dog – CCA, ASC, BAFTA

    The Tragedy of Macbeth – CCA, ASC, BAFTA

    Belfast – CCA, ASC

    West Side Story – CCA

    Could Jump In: Nightmare Alley – CCA, ASC, BAFTA, Licorice Pizza

    Three films, Dune, Nightmare Alley, and Cruella have hit all the major precursors. This branch seems to like only period or sci-fi/fantasy films. Those three previously-mentioned films fit that criteria so I think they’re safe.

    Most people have House of Gucci in their predictions but the film spends most of its time in the 80s and 90s (though some of the film takes place in the 70s) and the Academy hasn’t been as keen on awarding films that are set during that time period. Still, it’s true that fashion is a major part of the film and that aspect could help it. It’s also true that The Devil Wears Prada, which was about the contemporary fashion industry, was also nominated in this category.

    Cyrano is the kind of period piece that gets love in this category and Joe Wright’s films especially do very well here (four of his previous films, Pride and Prejudice, Atonement, Anna Karenina, and Darkest Hour were all nominated here and Anna Karenina actually won). West Side Story is very close though I think the other films may just be too strong for it.

    BEST COSTUME DESIGN

    Dune – CCA, CDG, BAFTA

    Nightmare Alley – CCA, CDG, BAFTA

    Cruella – CCA, CDG, BAFTA

    Cyrano – CDG, BAFTA

    House of Gucci – CCA, CDG

    Could Jump In: West Side Story – CCA, CDG, Coming 2 America – CDG, The French Dispatch – BAFTA

  • Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Animated Feature, International Feature, Documentary Feature

    Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Animated Feature, International Feature, Documentary Feature

    This year, this five seems to be one of the easiest to predict and though we could see some curveballs I am pretty confident about these films being the ones that will be mentioned on Tuesday morning.

    BEST ANIMATED FEATURE

    Encanto – GG, CCA, Annie, BAFTA, PGA

    Flee – GG, CCA, Annie, BAFTA

    Luca – GG, CCA, Annie, BAFTA, PGA

    The Mitchells vs. the Machines – CCA, Annie, BAFTA, PGA

    Raya and the Last Dragon – GG, CCA, Annie, PGA

    Could Jump In: Belle – Annie, Sing 2 – Annie, PGA

    To come up with the nominees in this category a random group from throughout the Academy chooses the shortlist and another random group votes on the eventual five nominees. Because of this process, we might end up seeing some interesting nominees like Bhutan’s Lunana: A Yak In the Classroom or more likely, Mexico’s Prayers for the Stolen.

    As a result of this nominating method, it is possible that we will see from very unique picks that will snub many of the year’s most acclaimed films. However, I think I am just going to it play it safe and pick the top five most rewarded films.

    BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE

    Drive My Car – GG, CCA, BAFTA

    Flee – GG, CCA

    A Hero – GG, CCA

    The Worst Person in the World – CCA, BAFTA

    The Hand of God – GG, CCA, BAFTA

    Could Jump In: Compartment No. 6, Prayers For the Stolen, I’m Your Man, The Good Boss, Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom

    The most acclaimed documentary of the year is clearly Questlove’s Summer of Soul and many have mentioned it as the obvious frontrunner to win here. If the film does get nominated in this category, I think it has a very good chance at winning but I don’t think it will be nominated. The Academy has had a long-standing bias against docs that have consisted primarily of archival material and Summer of Soul fits this trend that led to the snubs of Apollo 11, Jane, and Won’t You Be My Neighbor. All of these films were also discussed as the frontrunners in their respective years and won the Critics’ Choice Award for Best Documentary Feature.

    With Summer of Soul out, there are two films that I think are essentially locked for nominations here: Flee and The Rescue. They have both performed fantastically at the precursors and will probably be battling it out for the win unless Summer of Soul gets nominated. The last three slots here are a lot more uncertain. I have a feeling that both Ascension and Procession will make it in. That last slot, to me, is between Writing With Fire, The First Wave, Attica, Faya Dayi, and The Velvet Underground.

    The Velvet Underground is largely composed of archival footage, so that’s out. Attica reminds me of last year’s nominee Crip Camp as it discusses an event that happened around 50 years ago and the actions and reforms that have been taken after that event. However, last year was a weaker year than this year is and I’m not sure if the largely archival nature of Attica will be to its benefit. Faya Dayi is a dreamy ethnographic film and as a result, I think it will be too small to get in here. Totally Under Control, another film about the COVID-19 pandemic, was totally ignored last year and I doubt people want to vote for a film about something that likely still consumes a large part of their daily lives and, as a result, I don’t think The First Wave will be nominated. That leaves Writing With Fire which has social relevancy and is not composed of largely archival footage.

    BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

    Flee – CCA, IDA, CEH, PGA, BAFTA

    The Rescue – CCA, CEH, PGA, BAFTA

    Ascension – CCA, CEH, PGA

    Procession – CCA

    Writing With Fire – IDA, PGA

    Could Jump In: Summer of Soul – CCA, IDA, CEH, PGA, BAFTA, Attica – CCA, The First Wave – PGA, Faya Dayi – IDA, CEH, The Velvet Underground – CEH

  • Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Live Action Short, Documentary Short, and Animated Short

    Final 2022 Oscar Nomination Predictions: Live Action Short, Documentary Short, and Animated Short

    There are some topics that the Academy highlights in these categories consistently but other than that, predictions in these categories are essentially throwing darts at a map.

    BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT

    The Long Goodbye

    When the Sun Sets

    Censor of Dreams

    Tala’vision

    You’re Dead, Helen

    Could Jump In: The Criminals, Frimas

    BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT

    The Queen of Basketball

    Camp Confidential: America’s Secret Nazis

    Terror Contagion

    Coded: The Hidden Love of J.C. Leyendecker

    Three Songs for Benazir

    Could Jump In: When We Were Bullies, Audible, Day of Rage

    BEST ANIMATED SHORT

    Robin Robin

    Us Again

    Namoo

    The Windshield Wiper

    Step Into the River

    Could Jump In: The Musician, Only a Child, Affairs of the Art