Friday, December 29, 2006

I'm Back...

Sorry for the lack of posts recently but you know how the holidays get. Oscar world is getting very exciting with numerous critics awards being dolled out (which I will have a breakdown for you in no time at all), and buzz shifting dramatically away from Dreamgirls. I have reviews of Dreamgirls, Pursuit of Happyness, and Apacolypto on the way along with complete prediction changes.

Things are heating up dramatically.

If you would like me to research the history of any given critics group for their past accuract let me know which one and I will include it on the breakdown later this week. Let me know...

Thursday, December 14, 2006

The Globes Are...Interesting...

'Bobby" gets a Best Drama nod, Ryan Gosling gets snubbed, Leonardo gets two lead nominations, Chiwetel Ejiofor for "Kinky Boots", "Babel" leads the race with nods, Toni Collette for lead actress, two Clint Eastwood director nominations missing, Foreign Film being the most exciting race, and the wide open nature of supporting actor are just a few of the strange developments that the Globe revealed.

Who gets help?

Babel gets a huge boost here and could likely defeat The Departed in Drama race. HFPA loves the type of movie Babel is (set internationaly with four languages).

Dicaprio and Eastwood get double nominations each which mean nothing other than they could split their own vote come voting time.

Dreamgirls could lose to Borat, which would be ridiculous and further proof that HFPA is a sucker for political commentary despite its cinematic merit.

Emily Blunt for Supporting Actress!!! I loved her performance in The Devil Wears Prada and was hoping it would get the type of recognition Will Ferrell got last year. Who knows, maybe it could be more for her?

United 93 gets completely shut out, but then again so did Munich, Capote, and Crash last year.

Big help for Peter O'Toole is was starting to fade from memory in the shadow of Forest Whitaker, same thing for Will Smith.

HUGE boost for Mark Wahlberg and Ben Affleck here, could Affleck walk away with a win? Eddie vs. Jack vs. Ben vs. Brad. WIDE OPEN here.

Big help for Adriana Barraza and Maggie Gyllenhaal who seemed to be all but forgotten in the major critic groups.

Dreamgirls and Little Miss Sunshine get snubbed from the Screenplay categories and Half Nelson gets shut out completely. Not a huge surprise there.

Flags of Our Fathers gets the snub that everyone was expecting and Little Children takes its place.

It is important to understand that the Globes are not exactly a precursor. The voting ballots for the Oscars will be turned in by the time the show airs, but the nominations have some effect, but a minimal one at best. The Globes are an awards show by themselves and the HFPA do not act to influence anything other than themselves. This is why so many view the Globe nominations as crazy, but they are only mixed up when viewed under the scope of the Oscars. So relax, and enjoy the circus

Updates coming soon with predictions. A LOT to think about.

Globe Nominations

Picture, Drama:
"Babel"
"Bobby"
"The Departed"
"Little Children"
"The Queen"

Actress, Drama:
Penelope Cruz, "Volver"
Judi Dench, "Notes on a Scandal"
Maggie Gyllenhaal, "Sherrybaby"
Helen Mirren, "The Queen"
Kate Winslet, "Little Children"

Actor, Drama: Leonardo DiCaprio, "Blood Diamond"
Leonardo DiCaprio, "The Departed"
Peter O'Toole, "Venus"
Will Smith, "The Pursuit of Happyness"
Forest Whitaker, "The Last King of Scotland"

Picture, Musical or Comedy:
Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan"
"The Devil Wears Prada"
"Dreamgirls"
"Little Miss Sunshine"
"Thank You for Smoking"

Actress, Musical or Comedy:
Annette Bening, "Running With Scissors"
Toni Collette, "Little Miss Sunshine"
Beyonce Knowles, "Dreamgirls"
Meryl Streep, "The Devil Wears Prada"
Renee Zellweger, "Miss Potter"

Actor, Musical or Comedy:
Sacha Baron Cohen, "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan"
Johnny Depp, "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest"
Aaron Eckhart, "Thank You for Smoking"
Chiwetel Ejiofor, "Kinky Boots"
Will Ferrell, "Stranger than Fiction"

Supporting Actress:
Adriana Barraza, "Babel"
Cate Blanchett, "Notes on a Scandal"
Emily Blunt, "The Devil Wears Prada"
Jennifer Hudson, "Dreamgirls"
Rinko Kikuchi, "Babel"

Supporting Actor:
Ben Affleck, "Hollywoodland"
Eddie Murphy, "Dreamgirls"
Jack Nicholson, "The Departed"
Brad Pitt, "Babel"
Mark Wahlberg, "The Departed"

Director:
Clint Eastwood, "Flags of Our Fathers"
Clint Eastwood, "Letters from Iwo Jima"
Steven Frears, "The Queen"
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, "Babel"
Martin Scorsese, "The Departed"

Screenplay:
Guillermo Arriaga, "Babel"
Todd Field and Tom Perrotta, "Little Children"
Patrick Marber, "Notes on a Scandal"
William Monahan, "The Departed"
Peter Morgan, "The Queen"

Foreign Language:
"Apocalypto," USA
"Letters from Iwo Jima," USA/Japan
"The Lives of Others," Germany
"Pan's Labyrinth," Mexico
"Volver" Spain

Animated Film:
"Cars"
"Happy Feet"
"Monster House"

Original Score:
Alexandre Desplat, "The Painted Veil"
Clint Mansell, "The Fountain"
Gustavo Santaolalla, "Babel"
Carlo Siliotto, "Nomad"
Hans Zimmer, "The Da Vinci Code"

Original Song:
"A Father's Way" from "The Pursuit of Happyness"
"Listen" from "Dreamgirls"
"Never Gonna Break My Faith" from "Bobby"
"The Song of the Heart" from "Happy Feet"
"Try Not to Remember" from "Home of the Brave"

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

San Francisco Critics Love 'Little Children'

Best Picture – Little Children
Best Director – Paul Greengrass, United 93
Best Actor – Sacha Baron Cohen, Borat
Best Actress – Helen Mirren, The Queen
Best Supporting Actor – Jackie Earle Haley, Little Childen
Best Supporting Actress – Adriana Barraza, Babel
Best Screenplay – Little Children
Best Foreign Film – Pan’s Labyrinth

BFCA Noms

Almost everything nominated is in my top five or the FYC sections...I think I am on the right track here. Look for some prediction updates after the Globes announce their nominations.


BEST PICTURE:
Babel
Blood Diamond
The Departed
Dreamgirls
Letters from Iwo Jima
Little Children
Little Miss Sunshine
Notes on a Scandal
The Queen
United 93

BEST ACTOR:
Leonardo DiCaprio – “Blood Diamond”
Leonardo DiCaprio – “The Departed”
Ryan Gosling – “Half Nelson”
Peter O’Toole – “Venus”
Will Smith – “The Pursuit of Happyness”
Forest Whitaker – “The Last King of Scotland”

BEST ACTRESS:
Penelope Cruz – “Volver”
Judi Dench – “Notes on a Scandal”
Helen Mirren – “The Queen”
Meryl Streep – “The Devil Wears Prada”
Kate Winslet – “Little Children”

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR:
Ben Affleck – “Hollywoodland”
Alan Arkin – “Little Miss Sunshine”
Adam Beach – “Flags of Our Fathers”
Djimon Hounsou – “Blood Diamond”
Eddie Murphy – “Dreamgirls”
Jack Nicholson – “The Departed”

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS:
Adriana Barraza – “Babel”
Cate Blanchett – “Notes on a Scandal”
Jennifer Hudson – “Dreamgirls”
Rinko Kikuchi – “Babel”
Catherine O’Hara – “For Your Consideration”
Emma Thompson – “Stranger Than Fiction”

BEST ACTING ENSEMBLE:
Babel
Bobby
The Departed
Dreamgirls
Little Miss Sunshine
A Prairie Home Companion

BEST DIRECTOR:
Bill Condon – “Dreamgirls”
Clint Eastwood – “Letters from Iwo Jima”
Stephen Frears – “The Queen”
Paul Greengrass – “United 93”
Martin Scorsese – “The Departed”

BEST WRITER:
Michael Arndt – “Little Miss Sunshine”
Guillermo Arriaga – “Babel”
Todd Field and Tom Perrotta – “Little Children”
Zach Helm – “Stranger Than Fiction”
William Monahan – “The Departed”
Peter Morgan – “The Queen”

NYFCC Winners

New York Film Critics Circle Awards...

PICTURE: United 93
Runners Up: The Queen and The Departed

DIRECTOR: Scorsese, The Departed
Runners Up: Stephen Frears, The Queen and Clint Eastwood, Letters...

ACTOR: Forest Whitaker, The Last King Of Scotland
Runners Up: Ryan Gosling and Sacha Baron Cohen

ACTRESS: Helen Mirren, The Queen
Runners Up: Judi Dench and Meryl Streep

SUPPORTING ACTOR: Jackie Earle Haley, Little Children
Runners Up: Eddie Murphy and Steve Carell

SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Jennifer Hudson, Dreamgirls
Runners Up: Shareeka Epps and Catherine O'Hara

SCREENPLAY: The Queen
Runners Up: The Departed and Little Miss Sunshine

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Washington DC Film Critics Weigh In...

PICTURE: United 93
DIRECTOR: Martin Scorsese, The Departed
ACTOR: Forest Whitaker, The Last King Of Scotland
ACTRESS: Helen Mirren, The Queen
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Djimon Hounsou, Blood Diamond
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Jennifer Hudson, Dreamgirls
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Little Miss Sunshine
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Thank You For Smoking
BREAKTHROUGH: Jennifer Hudson, Dreamgirls
ENSEMBLE: Little Miss Sunshine
FOREIGN FILM: Pan's Labyrinth
DOCUMENTARY: An Inconvenient Truth
ANIMATED: Happy Feet

LAFCA Awards 'Letters' and 'The Queen'

Picture:
Letters From Iwo Jima
Runner Up: The Queen

Director:
Paul Greengrass, United 93
Runner Up: Clint Eastwood, Flags of our Fathers and Letters From Iwo Jima

Actor:
TIE Sacha Baron Cohen, Borat AND Forest Whitaker, The Last King Of Scotland

Actress:
Helen Mirren, The Queen
Runner Up: Penelope Cruz, Volver

Supporting Actor:
Michael Sheen, The Queen
Runner Up: Sergi Lopez, Pan's Labyrinth

Supporting Actress:
Luminata Gheorghiu, The Death of Mr. Lazarescu
Runner Up: Jennifer Hudson, Dreamgirls

Screenplay:
The Queen
Runner Up: Little Miss Sunshine

New York FIlm Critics Online Awards...

Picture: The Queen
Director: Stephen Frears, The Queen
Screenplay: The Queen
Actor: Forest Whitaker, The Last King Of Scotland
Actress: Helen Mirren, The Queen
Supporting Actor: Michael Sheen, The Queen
Supporting Actress: Jennifer Hudson, Dreamgirls TIE Catherine O'Hara, For Your Consideration
Ensemble: Little Miss Sunshine
Breakthrough: Jennifer Hudson, Dreamgirls
Documentary: An Inconcenvient Truth
Foreign Language: Pan's Labyrinth
Animated: Happy Feet
Score: The Illusionist

Top Ten:
Babel
The Fountain
Inland Empire
Little Children
Little Miss Sunshine
Pan's Labyrinth
The Queen
Thank You For Smoking
Volver
Water

Boston Film Critics Speak Out

Best Picture:
The Departed
Runner Up: United 93

Best Director:
Martin Scorcese, The Departed
Runner Up: Paul Greengrass, United 93

Best Actor:
Forest Whitaker, The Last King of Scotland
Runner Up: Ryan Gosling, Half Nelson

Best Actress:
Helen Mirren, The Queen
Runner Up: Judi Dench, Notes on a Scandal

Best Supporting Actor:
Mark Wahlberg, The Departed
Runner Up: TIE: Michael Sheen, The Queen and Alec Baldwin, The Departed/Running With Scissors/The Good Shephard

Best Supporting Actress:
Shareeka Epps, Half Nelson
Runner Up: Meryl Streep, The Devil Wears Prada

Ensemble:
United 93
Runner Up: The Departed

Screenplay:
The Departed
Runner Up: The Queen

Forgein Language:
Pan's Labyrinth
Runner Up: Volver

Documentary:
TIE: Deliver Us From Evil/Shut Up and Sing

New Filmmaker:
Ryan Fleck, Half Nelson

AFI Announces Top Ten

Babel
Borat: Cultural Learnings Of America For Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan
The Devil Wears Prada
Dreamgirls
Half Nelson
Happy Feet
Inside Man
Letters From Iwo Jima
Little Miss Sunshine
United 93


Anyone notice an absense? AFI left out The Departed for The Devil Wears Prada and Inside Man

HUGE shocker!

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Prediction Updates

Post NBR predictions are up and running without any huge changes. Actually, most of the more significant shifts are in the "For Your Consideration" sections. I am also ordering the predictions according to most likely to receive a nomination, instead of the my old way of alphabetizing it. Check it out.

More predictions after Globes and LA Critics announce

P.S. I LOVE how open the supporting Actress race is. Brittany Murphy????

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

NBR: Naturally Bizarre Recognition

Commentary Below

Variety Reports - LETTERS OF IWO JIMA BEST FILM!

Best Film: LETTERS FROM IWO JIMA
Best Director: MARTIN SCORSESE, The Departed
Best Actor: FOREST WHITAKER, The Last King of Scotland
Best Actress: HELEN MIRREN, The Queen
Best Supporting Actor: DJIMON HOUNSOU, Blood Diamond
Best Supporting Actress: CATHERINE O'HARA, For Your Consideration
Best Foreign Film: VOLVER
Best Documentary: AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH
Best Animated Feature: CARS
Best Ensemble Cast: THE DEPARTED
Breakthrough Performance by an Actor: RYAN GOSLING, Half Nelson
Breakthrough Performance by an Actress: (2)
JENNIFER HUDSON, Dreamgirls and RINKO KIKUCHI, Babel

Best Directorial Debut: JASON REITMAN, Thank You for Smoking
Best Original Screenplay: ZACH HELM, Stranger Than Fiction
Best Adapted Screenplay: RON NYSWANER, The Painted Veil


The top 10 from the National Board of Review:

"Letters From Iwo Jima"
"Babel"
"Blood Diamond"
"The Departed"
"The Devil Wears Prada"
"Flags Of Our Fathers"
"The History Boys"
"Little Miss Sunshine"
"Notes on a Scandal"
"The Painted Veil"


Um....wow. No Dreamgirls, no 9/11 films, no Little Children, no The Queen. I was on the edge of including Letters from Iwo Jima for the win, but I wasn't sure if the film was seen enough. The Devil Wears Prada and Blood Diamond get some pretty big boosts here, but I can't imagine that they would be put into the final five.

Djimon Hounsou and Catherine O'Hara get HUGE kudos here and their performances are now back on the market. The Painted Veil and Stranger Than Fiction grab some screenplay noms that are somewhat expected, but still surprising.

Forest Whitaker gets a renewal of the buzz that had long since faded, and is now reentering the frontrunner battle with Peter O'Toole.

This is very very interesting now.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Quick Thank You

Last Tuesday, I put up a counter at the bottom of the blog to see how much the page is being viewed, and I am proud to say that after one week, I have 424 hits. That is probably small pickens to the larger bloggers out there, but I just started. Thanks to those who read. Thanks so much.

It's Question Time

You will have to answer this one a little later than tonight since it lines up with the NBR announcements.

Given that the NBR's top ten had all five Best Picture nominees last year, which five of the top ten do you think will get the nominations? And if NBR missed one movie that will get the nod, what is it?


Go to town! Be realistic.

Updates on Predictions...

I will have a full update on predictions tomorrow night barring the release of the NBR announcements. But for fun, here are the NBR predictions from moi.

Best Picture: The Queen vs. The Departed vs. Little Miss Sunshine
Advantage: The Departed

Top Ten:
The Queen
The Departed
Dreamgirls
Babel
United 93
Little Miss Sunshine
Flags Of Our Fathers
Little Children
Half Nelson
Children Of Men

Best Actor: Ryan Gosling vs. Peter O'Toole
Advantage: Gosling

Best Actress: Helen Mirren vs. Kate Winslet vs. Maggie Gyllenhaal
Advantage: Mirren

Best Supporting Actress: Rinku Kikuchi vs. Jennifer Hudson
Advantage: Hudson

Best Supporting Actor: Jack Nicholson vs. Alan Arkin vs. Brad Pitt
Advantage: Nicholson

Best Director: Martin Scorsese vs. Stephen Frears
Advantage: Scorsese

Breakthrough Actor: Sacha Baron Cohen vs. Adam Beach
Advantage: Adam Beach

Breakthrough Actress: The loser of supporting actress vs. Shareeka Epps
Advantage: Epps

Best Adapted Screenplay: Little Children vs. Thank You For Smoking
Advantage: Little Children

Best Original Screenplay: Babel vs. The Queen
Advantage: Babel

Best Debut Director: Ryan Fleck

Best Documentary: An Inconvenient Truth

Best Foreign Language Film: Volver vs. Pan's Labyrinth
Advantage: Volver

Best Ensemble: Little Miss Sunshine vs. United 93
Advantage: Little Miss Sunshine

Best Animated Feature: Happy Feet vs. A Scanner Darkly
Advantage: Happy Feet

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Quickies

Babel



Alejandro González Iñárritu's recent depiction into the morose connectivity of us all brings up a lot of seemingly important and timely questions without ever truly answering any of them. Though technically beautifully crafted, Iñárritu's story of the intertwining lives surounding the attack of an American tourist (Blanchett) in Morocco and the subsequent search for understading loses its impact simply because it tries too hard. Instead of being a subtle foray into the paradox of lost communication in a time of universal similarity, Babel gets bogged down by a hit-you-over-the-head simplicity that has doomed other films such as The Woodsman to mediocrity.

The acting is superb and the diretion to match, but nothing can make up for the script that tries too hard. Yes, we get that we don't understand each other any more, but what more can the film offer other than that all too obvious assertion? Ultimately, the most interesting storyline, Rinku Kikuchi's brilliantly crafted deaf-mute character, seems to be the least involved with any of the film's other major players. Sure, she acts as the only representation of someone who literally cannot communicate her words or emotions, but it remains unclear if Babel is a story that uses one event as a microcosm for a larger issue, or one event plus a random person.

It could not have been crafted more beautifully with its precise direction, emotionally draining acting, and haunting score, but Babel falls apart, ironically, in it's overcommunication.

Grade: C+

Satellite Noms Announced

The Satellite Awards tend to nominate a larger group of people, and because they separate their nominations into comedy and drama like the Globes do, they tend to make things pretty exciting. The Satallite Awards narrow the field, but by nominating almost 7 films/performances per category, they introduce some new names too. Which is just fun. Here's the breakdown...

Dreamgirls - 11
Flags Of Our Father - 10
Babel - 8
The Departed - 6
Little Miss Sunshine - 5
The Queen - 4
Litte Children - 4
Notes On A Scandal - 3

Duh! - The Ones We Expect

  • Helen Mirren - Nominated for lead actress. Helps her buzz which many feared would fade. A win would be nice though.

  • Dreamgirls - Knocking out 11 nominations, it leads the pack for the first time, which is not the last time the film will have that distinction.

  • Judi Dench - Will she ever not be nominated?

  • Jack Nicholson - Heeeeeeeere's Jack!


  • Nice! - The Ones That Needed It

  • Ryan Gosling and Half Nelson - Gosling is starting to become an automatic mention with his ISA nomination and Half Nelson sweeping the Gothams. A snub here would have hurt though. It helps that the film picked up the best pic nod as well.

  • Kate Winslet - Buzz has practically dissappeared. This puts her back on the map.

  • Forest Whitaker - Same situation as Winslet. Snub was possible here...good that it didn't happen.

  • Adam Beach and Flags - Not on anyone's top five anymore. This nod helps bring him back into discussion, along with a film many are dropping from their predictions.

  • Abigail Breslin - If she had been dropped here, a lot of doubt would have surrounded her buzz.

  • Aaron Eckhardt, Gretchen Mol, and Annette Bening - For similar reasons. They NEED buzz.



  • What!? - The Ones That Are Confusing

  • Leonardo Dicarpio - Lead for Blood Diamond and supporting for The Departed!? Category Confusion strikes again!

  • Aurora Borealis - Joshua Jackson and Donald Sutherland get nods for lead and supporting respectively. Is there anything here? The movie was well received by the critics, so I guess you never know.

  • Will Ferrell and Joseph Cross - Nice to get the critical praise, but it probably stops here for them, lest the globes shake things up.

  • Toni Collette - With all the hooplah about Breslin and Arkin, no one has been even close to predicting her in most top ten lists, let alone top five. Cool, but out of nowhere.


  • Where!? - The Ones That Are Missing
  • Will Smith - Huge buzz usually translates to letdowns a la Memoirs and it appears like Smith might be another one. Perhaps the performance is good enough to make an incredible trailer, but not a movie. But he will probably bounce back. We need more info!

  • Michael Sheen - Wow, this could hurt him. The movie belongs to Mirren as it is, and if he can't separate himself a little bit, then he could be forgotten.

  • Eddie Murphy - Surprising! Some prognosticators have Murphy taking home gold come Kodak Theater time, but he fails to deliver here. Could just be a blip in the radar, but I think supporting actor is WIDE open.

  • United 93 or WTC - They were not having the 9/11 films. Not even a little bit. This could be indicative of the future, but hopefully only for WTC, since United 93 is a vastly superior film than most in the running for the short list. cough Babel cough.

  • Shareeka Epps - This could have sent her buzz out of the house, but she fails to garner a nod here. Perhaps she's being Gyllanhaal'ed.

  • Adriana Barraza - Eeek! Many thought she was on the upswing for her powerhouse of a performance in Inarittu's ensemble, but the lack of a nomination here says otherwise.


  • Things are just getting interesting and I can't wait to see how this pans out.

    Tuesday, November 28, 2006

    Question To The Readers

    I am getting kind of tired of the Oscar pundits of the web telling me what public opinion is, so I thought I would ask you guys a question directly. It seems like a more direct way to gauge what is and isn't popular or what does or does not have public backing. If this is successful, I will probably keep this up every Tuesday, and as the race continues the questions will get more and more specific. Let me know.

    Question:
    What is the one film or performance that is truly underrated?

    ISA Nods.

    Could be one of many "In honor of..." nods Robert Altman could receive. Happy to see recognition for The Painted Veil and A Guide To Recognizing.... Helps Little Miss Sunshine and Half Nelson the most though. Go Shareeka!


    SPECIAL DISTINCTION AWARD
    David Lynch and Laura Dern

    BEST FEATURE
    American Gun
    The Dead Girl
    Half Nelson
    Little Miss Sunshine
    Pan’s Labyrinth

    BEST DIRECTOR
    Robert Altman - A Prairie Home Companion
    Jonathan Dayton & Valerie Faris - Little Miss Sunshine
    Ryan Fleck - Half Nelson
    Karen Moncrieff - The Dead Girl
    Steven Soderbergh - Bubble

    BEST FIRST FEATURE

    Day Night Day Night
    Man Push Cart
    The Motel
    Sweet Land
    Wristcutters: A Love Story

    BEST SCREENPLAY

    Neil Burger - The Illusionist
    Nicole Holofcener - Friends with Money
    Ron Nyswaner - The Painted Veil
    Jason Reitman - Thank You For Smoking
    Jeff Stanzler - Sorry, Haters

    BEST FIRST SCREENPLAY

    Michael Arndt - Little Miss Sunshine
    Anna Boden & Ryan Fleck - Half Nelson
    Goran Dukic - Wristcutters: A Love Story
    Dito Montiel - A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints
    Gabrielle Zevin - Conversations with Other Women

    BEST FEMALE LEAD

    Shareeka Epps - Half Nelson
    Catherine O’Hara - For Your Consideration
    Elizabeth Reaser - Sweet Land
    Michelle Williams - Land of Plenty
    Robin Wright Penn - Sorry, Haters

    BEST MALE LEAD

    Aaron Eckhart - Thank You For Smoking
    Ryan Gosling - Half Nelson
    Edward Norton - The Painted Veil
    Ahmad Razvi - Man Push Cart
    Forest Whitaker - American Gun

    BEST SUPPORTING FEMALE

    Melonie Diaz - A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints
    Marcia Gay Harden - American Gun
    Mary Beth Hurt - The Dead Girl
    Frances McDormand - Friends with Money
    Amber Tamblyn - Stephanie Daley

    BEST SUPPORTING MALE

    Alan Arkin - Little Miss Sunshine
    Raymond J. Barry - Steel City
    Daniel Craig - Infamous
    Paul Dano - Little Miss Sunshine
    Channing Tatum - A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints

    BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

    Arin Crumley - Four Eyed Monsters
    Anthony Dod Mantle - Brothers of the Head
    Guillermo Navarro - Pan’s Labyrinth
    Aaron Platt - Wild Tigers I Have Known
    Michael Simmonds - Man Push Cart

    BEST DOCUMENTARY

    A Lion in the House
    My Country, My Country
    The Road to Guantanamo
    The Trials of Darryl Hunt
    You’re Gonna Miss Me

    BEST FOREIGN FILM

    12:08 East of Bucharest (Romania)
    The Blossoming of Maximo Oliveros (Philippines)
    Chronicle of an Escape (Argentina)
    Days of Glory (France/Morocco/Algeria/Belgium)
    The Lives of Others (Germany)

    Check out the full list here

    Monday, November 27, 2006

    Forgot To Mention...

    Maggie Gyllenhaal as lead actress in Sherrybaby

    and...

    Ken Watanabe as lead actor in Letters From Iwo Jima


    With Gyllenhaal's recent Stockholm win and the crazy buzz about Letters, consider these two very strong darkhorses for nominations and maybe more. But for now they remain in the FYC category.

    Thursday, November 23, 2006

    Final Major Category Predicts

    ...At least until the precursors weigh in.

    We have a little less than a month before the Globes announce their noms and I thought it would be nice to finish out the predicts of the top six categories (acting, director, picture) before the rush of awards come out. There will be people we don't expect, and people we do, but it should be interesting.

    Picture

    Dreamgirls - It's first official rave review came out. Hundreds to follow.
    The Departed - Box office + Scorsese + Reviews = locked nom.
    The Queen - It's this year's Capote but better. Nominate it.
    Babel - I'm concerned about this one. Might be too "loved-it-or-hated-it" for a nom, but has strong buzz right now.
    Little Miss Sunshine - The category is too depressing, we NEED this.

    Director

    Martin Scorsese - The Departed - See above + overdue = Winner.
    Bill Condon - Dreamgirls - Film is too big not to give Condon the nod, but the win is another issue.
    Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu - Babel - Film may be divisive, but the directing is solid.
    Clint Eastwood - Letters From Iwo Jima - NO for Flags, YES for Letters. Academy loves him.
    Paul Greengrass - United 93 - Feels like he is still sort of buzzing, and might be the film's only chance.

    Actor

    Peter O'Toole - Venus - Due and raved. People love a comeback story.
    Will Smith - The Pursuit of Happyness - Everyone loves Smith, and the movie looks like feel good bait a la Finding Neverland
    Forest Whitaker - The Last King Of Scotland - Buzz has faded, but it was strong enough to last him.
    Ryan Gosling - Half Nelson - Critic awards WILL love him, and is a MAJOR darkhorse to win if he has the right momentum with precursors.
    Leonardo Dicaprio - The Departed - They better declare him lead soon, or Aaron Eckhardt and Matt Damon will take this spot.

    Actress

    Helen Mirren - The Queen - Yeah. There is no stopping her.
    Judi Dench - Notes On A Scandal - AMPAS loves her so much they would lick her shoes. Plus she plays creepy...and that works if done well.
    Kate Winslet - Little Children - Buzz is gone, but will it come back when the film releases wider?
    Penelope Cruz - Volver - Buzz has remained consistent and the only things holding her back are subtitles.
    Meryl Streep - The Devil Wears Prada - Continues to reinvent herself, and AMPAS continues to reward her. She's in.

    Supporting Actor

    Brad Pitt - Babel - Big stars are rewarded when they actually act.
    Eddie Murphy - Dreamgirls - Flashy role that no one else can offer in this race.
    Michael Sheen - The Queen - Beautiful performance powerful enough not to get trampled by Mirren's talent. He kept up with her, which is impressive.
    Jack Nicholson - The Departed - Umm...he was a lock after the first frame.
    Ben Affleck - Hollywoodland - That's right. Write it down.

    Supporting Actress

    Jennifer Hudson - Dreamgirls - She filled the role's shoes according to early notices. This American Idolist is Not Going anywhere.
    Cate Blanchett - Notes On A Scandal - Previous winner with a high profile year and a performance in an acting-central film opposite Dench makes for a nomination.
    Abigail Breslin - Little Miss Sunshine - Let's hope HFPA doesn't screw things up by putting her in lead.
    Rinko Kikuchi - Babel - Up and coming talent in a role so powerful she commands the film without a single word. A darkhorse to win.
    Adriana Barraza - Babel - Represents the pure sentiment of the film. Powerful and painful. Brilliant.

    There they are, and I would love to know what you think. COMMENT.

    Thursday, November 09, 2006

    Supporting Updates

    Supporting Acting noms are always a little bit tricky, and can be confusing as hell. You never know if Judi Dench can win for an eight-minute role, or if William Hurt will get even get nominated for an equally brief role. Damn the power of Judi Dench! This year is no different with Babel's multiple supporting possibilities and Dreamgirls's buzz for someone who has never acted in a major picture before. So here's the run-down, and excuse me for not being so elaborate as the leading categories. There are simply...too many actors. Excuse the Amadeus reference.

    Supporting Actor:

    Jack Nicholson The Departed
    Eddie Murphy Dreamgirls
    Alan Arkin Little Miss Sunshine
    Jackie Earle Haley Little Children
    Brad Pitt Babel

    Here's the thing, the race is pretty open except for Mr. Nicholson. By switching to the supporting category, he almost locks himself into a nomination and possibly a trip to the podium.

    Murphy's flashy character is exactly the kind supporting categories love to recognize, and AMPAS loves to nominate actors they once thought were going to be a phenomenal presence at the Kodak over and over again.

    Alan Arkin stands the be the only man from Little Miss Sunshine to get nominated, despite equally brilliant performances from Carell and Kinnear. Never underestimate the power of a comeback story.

    Jackie Earle Haley is my out-there-but-not-so-out-there-pick with his performance in Little Children. The role is baity as hell, and he is a child star coming into his talent all over again. Again, never underestimate a comeback.

    Pitt is an interesting story. He is getting raves for a film that was once thought to be a critical darling, but stumbled out of the block. The question seems to be: will his performance overcome the unmet high expectations? I think so. He is present in the headlines, and that never hurts. Plus, he's pretty. Who doesn't want to see him gussied up come Oscar night?

    Here are the little more far-fetched For Your Consideration-ers:

    Michael Sheen The Queen
    Ben Affleck Hollywoodland
    James Cromwell The Queen (I am pulling for his beautiful performance over Sheen's)
    Djimon Hounsou Blood Diamond
    Stanley Tucci The Devil Wears Prada


    Now for the ladies!!! Even more confusing. Ugh....

    Abigail Breslin Little Miss Sunshine
    Cate Blanchett Notes On A Scandal
    Rinku Kinkuchi Babel
    Vera Farmiga The Departed
    Phyllis Sommerville Little Children

    That's right. I am not predicting Jennifer Hudson! Until the movie is reviewed, or, you know, seen at all, I remain skeptical about the American Idol-er. But let's break it down now.

    Abigail Breslin is the powerhouse backbone of the indie-hit Little Miss Sunshine and deserves to take home a statue just for having a powerful and commanding presence for a role that could have fallen flat as hell if anyone else played it. Yeah, even Dakota Fanning couldn't be that cute.

    Blanchett has the fortune of starring opposite Oscar favorite Judi Dench, and the trailer is hot like fire too, which generates massive buzz. The role looks risky, conflicted and baity too. It doesn't hurt that she has an Oscar already, and the snubbed status for her nomination for Elizabeth (Stupid Gwen Paltrow).

    Kinkuchi is storming onto the Oscar scene for her tragically beautiful portrayal of a deaf-mute in Babel. She's being called the stand out of the film, and in a movie with Pitt and Blanchett, that means a lot.

    Farmiga probably won't get nominated, but she is the only female in what I believe is an Oscar Best Picture winner and she's so underrated. With a character that can be identified with, she delivers a performance that is easily the most human this year's race has seen. She is real, and reality should be recognized.

    If Jackie Earle Haley is scary in Little Children then Phyllis Somerville is heartbreaking. After reading the book, she (not Winslet's character) is the one you feel for. The mother of a sex offender is a baity role to say the least, and if she doesn't get vast critic and guild precursor recognition, I will be shocked.

    Rounding out the top ten:

    Jennifer Hudson Dreamgirls (I had to cave a little bit)
    Adriana Barraza Babel
    Catherine O'Hara For Your Consideration
    Carmen Maura Volver
    Shareeka Epps Half Nelson

    Changes in leading categories:

    Actor stays the same pretty much, but I am putting Sacha Baron Cohen in for the hell of it.

    For Actress, I hate to say that Benning has dropped from the race because critics panned the film like no other, and Judi Dench is simply too powerful to be ignored.

    Tuesday, November 07, 2006

    The Question of Dreamgirls, The Case for Borat

    When trying to think of a topic for this week's column, I spent hours surfing the web for a semblance of importance concerning the Oscar race. The blogs all over the net are running dry, due to very slow couple of weeks. Until Borat roped in some 27 million in an under 1,000 theater count, and a staggering 96% RottenTomatoes rating (100% COTC), making it one of the best reviewed films of the year, falling in line with Oscar contenders The Queen, The Departed, and Little Miss Sunshine.

    So does Oscar have anything to offer for Borat?

    It seems to be the best screened film of the year, and the only internet buzzed movie that actually translated to the box office like Snakes On A Plane could not. Yet only David Poland of Movie City News was thinking that Sacha Baron Cohen could be considered for his acting.

    The Academy has nominated before comedies, but usually only the high-brow type of comedy that Borat doesn't appear to be. You can bet this genre comedy will get ignored, despite its critical appraisal, satirical pointedness, and box office success.

    But I find it interesting that a movie no one has seen, save 20 screened minutes to generate buzz, is seen as the far and away front-runner now that Flags Of Our Fathers stumbled. Dreamgirls has everything that Chicago had: social commentary, flashy numbers, fleshy characters, and an opportunity for stars in Hollywood to prove themselves.

    The difference? Dreamgirls has it on paper. That's it. Certainly the case can be made that "clear frontrunners" in November tend to fail more than succeed. Shall we remember the intense Best Picture buzz for Memoirs Of A Geisha last year? Not to mention the fact that two "frontrunner" movies-from-Broadway have flopped in each of the last two years: The Producers and Phantom Of The Opera. Can't we wait until we see it, or hear anything from people who have seen it?

    The flashy Tony-winner will start screening in the next few weeks, and we will begin to see the true colors of this film. It is my opinion that the success or failure of the film rides on Jennifer Hudson's shoulders. Effie steals the show, and if Hudson doesn't rock out, the film won't have the legs to carry it to a win, much less a nomination.

    I'm not ready to put trust in a film that is relying on a sixth-place American Idoler to carry it. But I hope I'm wrong.

    Thursday, November 02, 2006

    Another Leading Lady?

    Last year, Ziyi Zhang could have been the first Asian to be nominated in the lead category for actresses for her role in Memoirs Of A Geisha but she fell short. This year, one of her co-stars, Gong Li, could snag a nod herself.

    Sony Pictures Classic annouced that they are launching a campaign for Gong Li and director Zhang Yimou for their work on Curse Of The Golden Flower, paving the way for what could be major buzz for Gong Li, and the Academy's first Asian nomination in the category.

    But with the likes of Mirren, Winslet, and Benning in the race, it will be an uphill battle for Gong Li to be honored in what is becoming a very close and competitive category.

    Tuesday, October 31, 2006

    Oscar Preview: Best Actress

    Well, this is one of the more interesting categories right now, seeing as how the field has narrowed ridiculously fast. There are about ten lovely ladies who are definitely in the race as of now, which is a lot more than we can say about other categories (cough supporting cough). Lets take a look...in no particular order.

    Annette Benning: Running With Scissors

    The film has been critically assaulted as something as bad as Jackass 2, or the Grudge 2, or any film with the number 2 in it, but Benning somehow stays in the race. Her character is eccentric, interesting, and just plain crazy. And if American Beauty taught us anything it's that Benning infuses a human-side to crazy that keeps the character from being caricature. Despite the fact that Hilary Swank isn't in the race to beat Benning out this year, I think we can be safe to say she won't be credited with the coveted "Oscar Winner" pre-fix.

    Penelope Cruz: Volver

    This is an interesting one. Especially since Robert Benigni is the only person to win an Oscar with a non-English speaking role. However, Cruz has been lauded at film festivals and early reviews as being a pure revelation. Basically, any media outlet that could predict her for an Oscar nomination has, and will continue to. Cruz's roles in American mainstream movies like Blow or Gothika might give her enough exposure to AMPAS voters that they not only recognize her, but vote for her.

    Helen Mirren: The Queen

    The frontrunner and soon to be winner of critic award after critic award, Mirren is locked into the shortlist. Her delicate and withdrawn performance is not only a stunning model of powerful restraint, but is simply awe-inspiring. But the power of a performance isn't enough for a win if the film isn't equally as powerful (See: Benning, or 2005's Huffman). Mirren need not worry though. The Queen is not carried by Mirren. Mirren helps it along, but the supporting performances, writing, and directing are just as flawless. Everything is going Mirren's way right now.

    Meryl Streep: The Devil Wears Prada

    You can never count out Meryl can you? Almost the moment the 2005 ceremony ended, bloggers were predicting Streep, but not for this popcorn film. Many thought a supporting nod for A Prairie Home Companion would be her fourteenth, not the stunning turn as dragon-lady Miranda Priestly in this summer's surprise hit The Devil Wears Prada. Probably the only outstanding aspect in the film (except for Stanley Tucci and Emily Blunt), Streep carries the film with a power that is so frightening you can't help but laugh as a defense mechanism. She signed her name on the top five this year with that beautifully depressing make-up free, red-eyed scene near the end that is so memorable, and voters are sure not to forget an actress that continues to reinvent herself.

    Kate Winslet: Little Children

    When discussing actresses who reinvent themselves (as I just was), no one comes to mind as clearly and powerfully as Kate Winslet. Donning a selective attitude towards choosing her roles, Winslet has created an embedded craving for her performances, and she never fails to deliver. Being only thirty, she has four Oscar noms, and a fifth on the way. The buzz for her nuanced self-conscious deglam performance in Todd Field's Little Children started out strong, but has dropped a little bit as Mirren's performance went into wider release. Wait for Little children to release a bit wider in America, and more people will start talking. Never underestimate the love for Kate Winset.

    This is an exceeding strong category this year, which was definitely needed after last year's lack luster leading category for the ladies. Rounding out the top ten with just as much skill are...

    Judi Dench - Notes On A Scandal
    Cate Blanchett - The Good German
    Sienna Miller - Factory Girl
    Maggie Gyllenhaal - Sherrybaby
    Renee Zelwegger - Miss Potter

    Tuesday, September 26, 2006

    Let It Begin...

    I suppose I should jump back into the race of predicting, huh? The festivals have begun, Toronto has past, and a few individuals have seemingly locked their nominations already. Over the next few days I will update category by category, so let's start the madness...

    BEST ACTOR:

    Not necessarily as strong of a category as it has been in the past, but still showing a lot of promise. The players are old, new, and unexpected, showing that Oscar is never afraid to reward up-and-comers, comebacks, and regulars.

    1. Forest Whitaker - The Last King Of Scotland.

    After his touring of the festivals and early online reviews, it appears that nothing can stop Whitaker's turn as Ugandan dictator Idi Amin from being honored at the Kodak, possibly at the podium. It doesn't hurt that he is a Hollywood presence that has yet to be recognized by the Academy. We know how AMPAS loves to recognize respected under-the-radar character actors (cough Philip Seymour Hoffman cough). The film is being praised as the most important movie of the year, and will hold a lot of power come awards night.

    2. Peter O'Toole - Venus

    Ah, the comeback, how we love thee. Snubbed more times than Maria Bello and Paul Giamatti combined, O'Toole, one of the best actors to grace the silver screen, has never won an Oscar, but it seems he is at least on his way to another nomination. Nominations are something O'Toole is used to, but it would be nice to win after seven nominations and an Honorary Oscar. The performance is the only one to really contend with Whitaker right now.

    3. Will Smith - The Pursuit of Happyness

    Will Smith is loved, that much is obvious with the success of Hitch. But Will Smith acting with all his skill is astonishing. Smith renders a level of passion and heart to these roles that audiences live for. Just look at his previous Oscar nominated turn in Ali. His appearance in even the most mediocre of movies (I, Robot) brings audiences to the theatre in waves. The role looks baity, and heart-warming, and the fact that it might be the feel good movie of the year doesn't hurt. Looking forward to seeing this one.

    4. Ryan Gosling - Half Nelson

    Ryan Gosling exploded onto the scene with his critically acclaimed role in "The Believer" and kept "The Notebook" from being a tired and boring film. He has a charisma that makes him one of the most promising young actors today, and his performance in Half Nelson is no exception. Critics have been praising his work as the drug-addicted school teacher as being a performance of a lifetime. Perhaps Gosling is this year's Ledger: young, but powerful.

    5. Matt Damon - The Good Shepherd

    Ironically, I was debating between Damon in The Good Shepherd and Clooney in The Good German, but I don't think Clooney will get another year of nominations given his overexposure last year. Damon has had a mediocre post-win career, but has come back to the good graces of critics with The Bourne supremacy and The Departed. He seems to have great projects falling in line, and is due for an another acting nomination. The Good Shepherd is baity as all hell: government plots, the CIA, the "supporting wife character," Oscar pedigree cast (Baldwin, Pesci, De Niro, Jolie), and seems to have a good amount of buzz behind it. Damon needs to shine to pull this nomination off, but I think he can.

    What out for these as well:

    Jude Law - Breaking and Entering
    Richard Gere - The Hoax
    Leonardo Dicaprio - The Departed
    Brad Pitt - Babel (Not sure about category yet)
    George Clooney - The Good German
    Patrick Wilson - Little Children
    Robin Williams - Man Of The Year
    Christian Bale - The Prestige (Please God!)
    Nic Cage - WTC
    Derek Luke - Catch A Fire
    Ken Watanabe - Letters From Iwo Jima

    Next Up: Actress

    Monday, May 15, 2006

    United 93 - A Balancing Act...A Good One Too

    When trailers for Paul Greengrass's 9/11-pic "United 93" hit theaters around the nation, many were outraged that Hollywood had stooped low enough to exploit national tragedy for a summer action flicks and a quick buck. Few suspected the reality of the situation: that U-93 would receive the universal rave reviews it did, and would be considered the first film of 2006 to actually make a run for the podium.

    Greengrass balances a fine line between tragedy exploitation and melodramatic fluff to create an honest and riveting account of the events of September 11th, 2001. The film not only centers on United flight 93, the only flight to not reach its target, but also the air-traffic control of the FAA, NORAD, and other airport control towers.

    Greengrass spends the first hour of the film creating a tangible element of suspense. We know what is going to happen, so the events leading up to the takeover of the four planes are that much more effective. As subtle as the door of flight 93 locking shut, and as obvious as an air-traffic analyst discovery that multiple planes, rather than just one, have been hijacked, each shot opens old wounds and sends chills of recognition down more than a few spines.

    With incredible integration of actual news footage, as the events unfold, the audience is left reliving the entire day, which can be a good and a bad thing. While some may not be completely ready for such a real depiction of such a devastating day, others may use the film as a subtle reminder of our nation's fallibility. Whether you see it now or later, I urge everyone to see it at one point. It is by far the most important movie of the year, despite the political nature of other 2006 movies (cough "V for Vendetta" cough).

    "United 93" is the stuff of great humanity: fear, anger, confusion, bravery, honesty, love, and inspiration. The film can never be enjoyed because of its close attachment to such a morose day, but it should certainly be admired, revered, and honored.

    The film will not earn any acting nominations except a possible SAG Ensemble Cast award. The films standout performances are not easily singled out because all are equally brilliant. The short phone conversations the passengers to family members deserve Oscar recognition by themselves, but not even the Academy would recognize such small performances.

    The directing stands a significant chance of nomination. Greengrass chooses his hand-held, shaky camera work to add a sense of tension and reality. From the very first scene, we are not an audience watching a screen, but an audience standing in the room, office, cockpit, or cabin. His choice to use mostly unknown actors augments the feeling that this could have happened to any of us. Though his shaky camera work grows tiresome and dizzying in some scenes, it serves its purpose for the most part.

    Expect possible nominations in some of the tech categories, screenplay, directing, and picture.

    Greengrass' new piece-de-reality is the first major Oscar contender of the year. While early release dates have hindered the Oscar buzz for films and performances in the past, the success of last year's Best Pic "Crash" proves that great films are great films, no matter when they were released.

    GRADE: A

    Monday, January 23, 2006

    PGA, Globes, and BAFTA oh my!

    These past few days have been interesting to say the least. The Globes gave away their awards which were strange, and expected. The Globes are always a bit crazy. Today the PGA released that Brokeback Mountain took its top prize, which only cements its position as a clear frontrunner. PGA did the same with awarding Wallace and Gromit for Animated film. But lets break it down...

    The Globes gave top honors to Brokeback Mountain (duh) and Walk The Line. WTL's award helps it into the fifth BP nomination which it is struggling to secure. It seems that WTL's buzz is fading fast, but the Globe helps to boost it chances. Winning for Best Actress is Reese Witherspoon and Felicity Huffman. Both actresses barely had any competition in their respective categories, which only points out that these two leading ladies are the only ones locked in for a nom. Best Actor was a no brainer as well. Hoffman and Phoenix took home the gold. While both had competition with Ledger and Daniels, the two overcame any challenges they might have had. Jeff Daniels had one chance to upset Phoenix to be a serious contender for the race, but his chances seem very unlikely. Ledger's only chance to set the stage for an upset in March is to win the last MAJOR precursor of the year: the SAG. Though unlikely, it will make things interesting. The Globes decided to mix things up with the Supporting categories instead. Giving the awards to Rachel Weisz and George Clooney, it seems that the HFPA were into giving awards to the contenders many had pegged for second. Clooney's Globe shows that Giamatti is hardly unbeatable and Michelle Williams is hurt seriously with this loss. The SAG could be her savior, but Amy Adams will be hard to beat.

    The BAFTA nominees were announced. They were surprisingly stale with one exception: Brokeback Mountain didn't get all the most nominations, but rather, a British film did (surprise). The Constant Gardener had 10 nominations while BBM only had nine. However, TCG received nominations for BOTH Best Picture and Best British Picture. Had BBM been a British film, the two would probably be tied. In other news, Keira got snubbed again while Thandie Newton got a nomination that she SO deserves, I'm hoping Oscar listens. Rachel Weisz was placed in lead for actress, which doesn't hold too much weight.

    Updates on predictions to the right. I am prediciting some upsets...so bare with me. These are my FINAL predictions. Nominees are announced in just over a week.

    Monday, January 09, 2006

    The Guilds Weigh In...

    Well the SAG, DGA, PGA, and WGA, have all weighed in on what they think are the best films of the year. In each of their respective categories, the guilds locked nominees and mixed up others. Lets dive in...

    Best Picture:
    With nominations from all of the guilds, the year seems to belong entirely to Brokeback Mountain. Earning more Globes and Guild nominations than any other picture, it is the undisputed frontrunner. However, the guilds were very good to two small films that were in the "Honorable Mention" category: Crash and Capote. Each film rocketed forward into the top five, while others stumbled. Munich and King Kong are nearly dead in the Best Picture Best Director race. Spielberg managed to grab the DGA nom, but Kong missed on all accounts. With films like Match Point and The New World also getting dropped, the race is getting good.

    Actor:
    Hoffman, Ledger, Straitharn, and Phoenix all seem to be locked, but who will win the fifth spot. Russel Crowe sneaked into the fifth spot that seems to be the only one up for grabs, ahead of Terrence Howard. Crowe was all but dead in this category, but the fifth spot could be his to lose. Its a coiin flip between the two actors now.

    Actress: Well, three spots are pretty locked down now. Huffman, Witherspoon, and Dench seem to be the only definites. Watts and Allen missed out on the Guild nominations while Ziyi Zhang is surprisingly receiving noms for both the Globes and the SAG. Charleze Theron seems to be consistent for her slightly less than Monster performance. Again, the last two spots could go to any of those four women. Don't forget if Bello is placed in the leadign category like the Globes did, same for Laura Linney.

    Supporting Actor:
    Hmmmm...another fifth spot quandry. Gyllenhaal, Clooney, Giamatti, Dillon, all seem to have locked their first career Oscar nominations, but who will take the fifth spot. Most people seem to believe that fifth spot will go to one of the other Crash men: Terrence Howard or Don Chaedle who received an out of nowhere nom for the SAG. Many other might throw in a career nom for Frank Langella or possibly the beautiful and haunting cameo William Hurt delivered in A history of Violence

    Supporting Actress:
    What to do what to do? What many considered the weakest category of the year has suddenly become the most confusing. There are many possibilties here, but no real front runner. Michelle Williams, Rachel Weisz, and possibly Maria Bello might have their locks in, but other actresses are hot on their trail. Gong Li, Frances McDormand, Amy Adams, and Catherine Keener are all threatening. Laura Linney could pull a surprise nom out of the blue as well. This is getting good.

    The Guilds certainly helped define the race, but also mudled it up a bit. Updated predictions are reflected on the right.

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