The Academy Award nominees are a worthy but scattered bunch this year, and anyone who confidently tells you they know what’s going to happen is not to be trusted. I, by contrast, make a bid for your confidence by openly acknowledging that my guesses are entirely uneducated, and you could probably fare well by betting against them in your office Oscar pool.
Best Picture
Usually, by now the race has come down to two, or perhaps three, likely winners, often a “safe,” relatively middlebrow choice, and one slightly more bold (Titanic vs. L.A. Confidential, Crash vs. Brokeback Mountain, etc.). This year the field is wide open, though the films in question still fall, more or less, into those same broad categories, with Atonement and Michael Clayton as the relatively conventional (if somewhat underwhelming) options, No Country for Old Men and There Will Be Blood representing a darker, artier vision, and Juno somewhere in between.
What will win: No Country for Old Men. Juno is a plausible upset, but my gut
says the early fave will pull it out.
What ought to win:
No Country for Old Men.
What deserved to be
nominated but wasn’t: Zodiac, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.
What didn’t deserve
to be nominated but was: Atonement,
Michael Clayton.
Best Actor
The easiest category of the year. Daniel Day-Lewis’s
selection, for his portrayal of Daniel Plainview in There Will Be Blood, may not be unanimous, but it will be close,
and with good reason. I was very pleased that the Academy rewarded Viggo
Mortensen’s exceptional performance in Eastern Promises with a nomination, but he’s not going to derail the
Who will win: Daniel
Day-Lewis
Who ought to win: Daniel
Day-Lewis
Who deserved to be
nominated but wasn’t: Philip Seymour Hoffman (Before the Devil Knows You're Dead), Josh Brolin (No Country for Old Men).
Who didn’t deserve to
be nominated but was: George Clooney, Tommy Lee Jones.
Best Actress
The apparent two-way race between Julie Christie (Away from Her) and Marion Cotillard (La Vie En Rose) may have opened up into a three-way race with Ellen Page, as Juno has continued its improbable critical run. If Christie had never won an Oscar (she picked one up in 1965 for John Schlesinger’s Darling), she’d be a lock; as it is, she’s still the one to beat. Given that Cotillard is up against a film icon and the young star of arguably the year’s most likable film--both of whom, most crucially, perform in English--it’s awfully hard to see her winning. As for Page: Well, stranger things have happened. I’m thrilled that the consistently terrific Laura Linney was recognized for The Savages, and irritated that Cate Blanchett got a nod for her uneven performance in the unbearable Elizabeth: The Golden Age, but I don’t believe either has any realistic shot.
Who will win: Julie
Christie. She’s a cinematic legend and, at 66, still a breathtaking beauty.
Who ought to win:
Marion Cotillard, whose portrayal of Edith Piaf from her teen years to middle
age was a genuine tour de force.
Who deserved to be
nominated but wasn’t: Amy Adams (Enchanted).
Who didn’t deserve to
be nominated but was: Cate Blanchett
Best Supporting Actor
Another near-no-brainer, with Javier Bardem standing head and shoulders above the competition for No Country for Old Men. Casey Affleck was great in The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (though his was really the leading role), and Philip Seymour Hoffman was fiercely funny in Charlie Wilson's War. Tom Wilkinson was good in Michael Clayton, but he’s been better, and it doesn’t seem likely Hal Holbrook would have been nominated for Into the Wild if he weren’t, you know, Hal Holbrook. He’s probably got the best chance of knocking off Bardem on sentimental grounds, but it’s not really much chance at all.
Who will win: Javier
Bardem
Who ought to win: Javier
Bardem
Who deserved to be
nominated but wasn’t: J.K. Simmons (Juno),
Tommy Lee Jones (No Country for Old Men).
Who didn’t deserve to
be nominated but was: Tom Wilkinson, Hal Holbrook.
Best Supporting
Actress
From the beginning, this looked like a tough two-woman race
between Cate Blanchett (I’m Not There)
and Amy Ryan (Gone Baby Gone), and it still looks that way. Blanchett seems to have
entered that charmed Glenn-Close-in-the-’80s state where she gets a
near-automatic nomination just for showing up on the set. (Again:
Who will win: Cate
Blanchett. I don’t know if it’s lingering guilt over giving Gwyneth Paltrow the
Oscar that should have been hers a decade ago, or a Jedi mind trick, or a
Hooveresque cache of blackmail, but she has the Academy’s number.
Who ought to win: Amy
Ryan. If only more people watched “The Wire.”
Who deserved to be
nominated but wasn’t: Jennifer Garner (Juno),
Allison Janney (Juno).
Who didn’t deserve to
be nominated but was: Ruby Dee, Tilda Swinton.
Best Director(s)
Juno’s Jason Reitman was an unexpected nominee here, but I think a good one: Screenwriter Diablo Cody has gotten the lion’s share of the credit, but when so many small things go right in a film, from the pace to the performances, the director merits recognition. Tony Gilroy (Michael Clayton), too, did an exceptional job in his rookie directorial outing, elevating a typical genre film to something (a little bit) more. And it’s all but impossible to imagine the remarkable The Diving Bell and the Butterfly being directed by anyone other than Julian Schnabel. Still, this has the look of a two- (or, rather, three-) man race between the freres Coen (No Country for Old Men) and Paul Thomas Anderson (There Will Be Blood). The Coens have the edge in numbers and, I’m guessing, in votes.
Who will win: Joel
and Ethan Coen
Who ought to win: Joel
and Ethan Coen. (If not for the disastrous finale of There Will Be Blood, I might go the other way on this.)
Who deserved to be
nominated but wasn’t: David Fincher (Zodiac)
Who didn’t deserve to
be nominated but was: A tough one: probably
Best Cinematography
Another strong category this year, with four entrants that would be worthy winners: Robert Elswit (There Will Be Blood), Janusz Kaminski (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly), Roger Deakins (No Country for Old Men), and Roger Deakins again (The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford). (Seamus McGarvey’s work on Atonement was good, but not at the same rarefied level.) Deakins, who’s been nominated five times before without a win, might get the nod for No Country, particularly if the movie has a big night overall. But he might also split his own vote, offering There Will Be Blood another shot at a statuette.
Who will win: Roger
Deakins (for No Country)
Who ought to win:
Robert Elswit. Almost any other year I would go with Deakins, but the infernal
universe Elswit’s camera conjures is too astonishing to ignore.
Who deserved to be
nominated but wasn’t: Roger Deakins again, again (In the Valley of Elah)
Who didn’t deserve to
be nominated but was: Seamus McGarvey
Best Adapted Screenplay
Mostly familiar competitors here: the Coens for No Country, P.T Anderson for There Will Be Blood, Christopher Hampton for Atonement, and Ronald Harwood for The Diving Bell and the Butterfly—plus Sarah Polley for Away from Her. It’s hard to go against the Coens for this one.
Who will win: Joel
and Ethan Coen
Who ought to win: Joel
and Ethan Coen
Who deserved to be
nominated but wasn’t: James Vanderbilt (Zodiac), Andrew
Dominik (The Assassination of Jesse James
by the Coward Robert Ford).
Who didn’t deserve to
be nominated but was: Christopher Hampton, Sarah Polley.
Best Original
Screenplay
Even if Juno toddles home without any other hardware, colorful screenwriter Diablo Cody probably has this one sewn up. Tony Gilroy (Michael Clayton), Tamara Jenkins (The Savages), Nancy Oliver (Lars and the Real Girl), and Brad Bird (Ratatouille) can console themselves that they were overrun by an unlikely, though deserving, phenomenon.
Who will win: Diablo
Cody
Who ought to win: Diablo
Cody
Who deserved to be
nominated but wasn’t: John Carney (Once), Kelly
Masterson (Before the Devil Knows You’re
Dead).
Who didn’t deserve to
be nominated but was: Nancy Oliver, Brad Bird.
By Chris Orr