Tuesday, February 23, 2016

My 2016 Oscars Predictions

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The Oscars become boring on two occasions: when there's an obvious front runner (Titanic, LOTR), and when it's been a weak year (this year). When not many great movies are out there, there's no major competition; you just look at the numbers, check which nominees got the most pre-Oscar awards, check who might die before getting their sympathy life-time achievement honor (regardless of whether they performed an award-worthy role that year), and write your predictions. Yes, there may be a few surprises this year like any other, but the following is my 'whatever' list (just look how many technical awards I'm predicting for Mad Max):


Best Picture:

(The Big ShortBridge of SpiesBrooklynMad Max: Fury RoadThe MartianThe RevenantRoomSpotlight)

First everybody went crazy over the 'okay' Spotlight, then they flocked to the interesting The Big Short and finally, they settled on The Revenant. (Interestingly, Entertainment Weekly is still betting on The Big Short to win). Even though Iñárritu's Birdman won the big one last year, his epic wildlife-survival revenge story this year is more Oscar-fodder than any movie on the list.

But my own pick would have been different. Of the eight films, only three were on my top 10 list of the year (more undeniable proof that it was a weak year), and among those three, I would go with the only one I've already watched twice.


Should Win: Mad Max: Fury Road

Will Win: The Revenant


Best Director:

(((9   

(Adam McKay for The Big Short, George Miller for Mad Max: Fury Road, Alejandro G. Iñárritu for The Revenant, Lenny Abrahamson for Room, Tom McCarthy for Spotlight)

I know: how could Iñárritu win Best Director, two years in a row? (It's only happened twice  before: John Ford and Joseph L. Mankiewicz.) In addition to the fact that Best Picture and Best Director usually go hand-in-hand, I think the "OscarsSoWhite" controversy will help Iñárritu's chances as a Mexican director this year (again) ... and hurt George Miller's chances, who truly deserves the award. One look at Mad Max: Fury Road will convince anybody that pulling that movie off is directing hell, and as an 80s trailblazer (both literally and figuratively) who never got recognized, and now resuscitated the action genre, Miller should be taking home the award, no matter how tough the cold weather was for Inarritu filming The Revenant.

(Actually, the numbers are on Iñárritu's side also: he won both the Golden Globe, and the Directors Guild Award. It's hard to beat that.)


Should Win: George Miller for Mad Max: Fury Road

Will Win: Alejandro G. Iñárritu for The Revenant


Best Actor:
(

(Bryan Cranston for Trumbo, Matt Damon for The Martian, Leonardo DiCaprio for The Revenant, Michael Fassbender for Steve Jobs, Eddie Redmayne for The Danish Girl)

You probably already know I have some beef to pick with DiCaprio winning his long-awaited Oscar this year. Leo's norm is to get the crap beaten out of him in movies, likely to obliterate his boyish charm and prove his acting is more than meets the eye. That's fine. But in The Revenant, he took this act overboard by submitting himself to real torture. You can dump someone in ice water, pierce his body with skewers every three minutes, and create a snuff movie by filming his reactions to the pain ... but you wouldn't call that acting. What Leo did in The Revenant wasn't acting. You were watching the real thing.

And I hate to say this, but even though Eddie Redmayne already (IMO undeservedly, compared to Michael Keaton's turn in Birdman) won an Oscar last year, among the five nominees, he is the one who did some real acting this year. In The Danish Girl, he transforms into another person.

But go ahead. Give Leo his Oscar. Maybe from now on he'll leave us alone.


Should Win: Eddie Redmayne for The Danish Girl

Will Win: Leonardo DiCaprio for The Revenant


Best Actress:


(Cate Blanchett for Carol, Brie Larson for Room, Jennifer Lawrence for Joy, Charlotte Rampling for 45 Years, Saoirse Ronan for Brooklyn)

Pretty much a no-brainer. Brie Larson did an incredible job in Room, she's young with great a future and represents Hollywood possibilities from indie roots, and has no competition.


Should Win: Brie Larson for Room

Will Win: Brie Larson for Room


Best Supporting Actor:

(Christian Bale for The Big Short,  Tom Hardy for The Revenant, Mark Ruffalo for Spotlight, Mark Rylance for Bridge of Spies, Sylvester Stallone for Creed)

Sympathy vote for Stallone, all the way: he never got an Oscar for neither for writing or acting in 1977's big winner, Rocky, and after four decades of (for better or worse) defining the action genre, he's come full circle, once again making the Rocky Balboa role interesting, at old age. We grew up and grew old with Rocky, John Rambo, and innumerable other characters that Stallone brought to life, and the interesting part is, with all of Stallone's artistic failures throughout the years, Rocky never left the ring.

But if I was to vote based on artistic merit in a current movie, Mark Rylance in Spielberg's Bridge of Spies was a true creep.


Should Win: Mark Rylance for Bridge of Spies

Will Win: Sylvester Stallone for Creed


Best Supporting Actress:

(Jennifer Jason Leigh for The Hateful Eight, Rooney Mara for Carol, Rachel McAdams for Spotlight, Alicia Vikander for The Danish Girl, Kate Winslet for Steve Jobs)

Probably the only excitement-worthy category this year. Will they go old school and reward one-time Oscar winner Winslet, or go for Swedish newcomer Vikander, who seemed to be in every 2015 movie? I'll bet on Winslet, both because she was a dominating force in Steve Jobs (I wasn't sold on Vikander's role in The Danish Girl anyway), and because it's too soon for Vikander to achieve such a status. No worries - at this rate, sooner or later Vikander will get one also.


Should Win: Kate Winslet for Steve Jobs

Will Win: Kate Winslet for Steve Jobs



Best Original Screenplay:

(Bridge of Spies, Ex Machina, Inside OutSpotlight, Straight Outta Compton)

Best Adapted Screenplay:

(The Big ShortBrooklynCarolThe MartianRoom)

The same logic can be applied to both screenplay category predictions: both Spotlight and The Big Short had "unmovieable" subjects that came to life with an engaging screenplay and a great ensemble cast (more so in the case of The Big Short), and both will likely go empty-handed in other categories - so they'll both earn mercy votes.


Should Win: Inside OutRoom

Will Win: SpotlightThe Big Short


Best Documentary Feature Film:

(Amy, Cartel Land, The Look of Silence, What Happened, Miss Simone?, Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Freedom)

During recent years, whenever there's been a documentary about singers (Searching for Sugar Man in 2012, 20 Feet from Stardom in 2013) competing against real life issues (The Gatekeepers, The Act of Killing, respectively) ... the singers have won. It seems the Academy would rather honor "one of their own", rather than create awareness on an important subject. We have the same situation again this year: Amy about Amy Winehouse, up against The Look of Silence, Oppenheimer's masterpiece sequel to his Act of Killing about the Indonesian genocide. The singer will win.


Should Win: The Look of Silence

Will Win: Amy



And for predictions in other categories:


- Best Animated Feature Film: Inside Out


- Best Foreign Language Film: Son of Saul


- Best Editing: Mad Max: Fury Road 



- Best Production Design: Mad Max: Fury Road 



- Best Cinematography: The Revenant



- Best Makeup: Mad Max: Fury Road 



- Best Original Score: Ennio Morricone for The Hateful Eight

(Another effort to make Oscar cool in a slow year: Give Morricone an Oscar, after he won his honorary Oscar a few years ago.)

- Best Original Song: "Til it Happens to You" from The Hunting Ground


- Best Costume Design: Mad Max: Fury Road 


- Best Sound Editing: Mad Max: Fury Road 


- Best Sound Mixing: Mad Max: Fury Road 


- Best Visual Effects: Mad Max: Fury Road 


- Best Animated Short Film: World of Tomorrow


- Best Documentary Short Film: A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness


- Best Live Action Short Film: Shok







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