Oscar predictions for the 85th annual Academy Awards

academyFROM KTLA, Los Angeles 

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Back in September, it was going to be “Silver Linings Playbook.”

Then it was “Argo.”

Then “Les Miserables.” “Zero Dark Thirty” picked up some steam. “Lincoln” got raves.



Then back to “Les Miz.” Over to “Lincoln.” And, finally, the buzz settled on “Argo.”

This year’s Oscar race has been anything but predictable.

As festival chatter has given way to box office tallies, critics’ honors and guild awards, the perceived leaders for best picture have changed almost as often as the country’s top-ranked college basketball team. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences further muddied matters when it failed to nominate the directors of four best picture nominees — “Argo,” “Zero Dark Thirty,” “Les Miserables” and “Django Unchained” — for best director.

Bad for the conventional wisdom. Good for competition.

“I love all the suspense this year,” said Oscar watcher Tom O’Neil, who runs the GoldDerby.com awards blog. “There are a lot of precedents being set.”

For example, he observes, usually the film with the most nominations is the front-runner for best picture. This year, the most-nominated film is Steven Spielberg’s “Lincoln,” which earned 12 nods. But the movie that’s shown the most staying power at the various awards ceremonies since then — including the Golden Globes, SAG Awards and the Producers Guild — has been Ben Affleck’s “Argo,” making the latter film the front-runner for the big prize Sunday night. “Argo” is up for seven Oscars.

Moreover, Affleck’s picture has dominated despite being snubbed by the academy in several categories, most notably best director. (In fact, among the Big Six categories of picture, director, actor, actress, supporting actor and supporting actress, “Argo” has just two nominations, three fewer than “Lincoln,” despite a top-notch cast.) In the entire history of the Oscars, just three films have won best picture without a directing nomination. The most recent was 1989′s “Driving Miss Daisy,” which won the top prize despite director Bruce Beresford getting shut out.

Unlike Beresford, however, Affleck received the support of his peers at the Directors Guild of America, which awarded him its top prize a few weeks ago; Beresford didn’t even make the DGA cut in 1989.

Is the rank-and-file trying to send the academy a message?

O’Neil believes they are.

Years ago, he points out, a situation like Affleck’s Oscar snub would have been noted and then forgotten in the face of a much-nominated film such as “Lincoln.” Today, with social media and blogs constantly debating the Oscars’ merit, the argument isn’t over until PricewaterhouseCoopers finishes tallying the votes.

“That’s evidence of how different the Oscars are today,” he said.

In addition, the DGA award is about the many over the few: The DGA is voted on by more than 14,000 members of the directors’ guild — a group that includes assistants, TV specialists and other forms of helmers — while the Oscar nominees for best director were selected by the roughly 370 members of the academy’s directors’ branch, a more homogenous group, said O’Neil.

Clayton Davis, who oversees AwardsCircuit.com, has another theory: that “Argo” is everybody’s alternative. Given the way the Oscars are tallied, with voters ranking their picks from favorite to least favorite, a film with a lot of twos and threes will do better than a film that some people love and others loathe.

“You’ll find your haters for ‘Lincoln,’ you’ll find your haters for ‘Zero Dark Thirty,’ you’ll find your haters for ‘Les Miz.’ But everybody, for the most part, at least says ‘Argo’ was good,” he said. “So in a preferential balloting system ‘Argo’s’ not likely to have a lot of No. 9 votes. And in a preferential balloting system, two, three and four can easily make up the winner.”

Lifetime achievements and new faces

This year, at least, almost all the best picture nominees have a rooting interest. As opposed to recent years, when many nominees struggled to crack even $50 million domestically, this time all but three of the nine best picture films — “Beasts of the Southern Wild,” “Amour” and “Zero Dark Thirty” — have topped $100 million at the North American box office. Some have established financial benchmarks: “Django Unchained” is Quentin Tarantino’s highest-grossing film ever, and “Silver Linings Playbook” is tops among David O. Russell’s films.

And though the Oscars are Hollywood-centric, the global market is always in studios’ thoughts. In that respect, “Life of Pi” has been a juggernaut, making almost $600 million worldwide since its release.

“Life of Pi,” in fact, may sneak into the winner’s circle if the “Argo” bandwagon slows. One academy voter interviewed by CNN said “Pi,” directed by Ang Lee, was his favorite film among the nominees; “Argo” didn’t make his top three. (Neither did “Lincoln,” for that matter.) Davis adds that anybody voting for Spielberg will likely vote for “Lincoln,” and because “Lincoln’s” momentum has halted he suspects Spielberg will lose best director to Lee or Russell. Lee, whose film was a special-effects marvel, may have the many members of the technical branches behind him.
Ang Lee’s film “Life of Pi,” based on the best-selling book, could sneak into the winner’s circle.
“If Spielberg wins director, he’s going to have three director wins, but only one of his films (‘Schindler’s List’) will have won best picture in his career,” he said. “That would be a little crazy. So I think Russell and Ang Lee are coming up strong.”

O’Neil agrees. “Life of Pi” also has the second-most Oscar nominations this year, it received 11, and “its back story is extraordinary,” since Yann Martel’s best-selling 2001 novel was long considered unfilmable, he said.

Best picture isn’t the only category without a shoo-in. In fact, with the exception of best actor, which has been Daniel Day-Lewis’ race to lose since the “Lincoln” trailers first hit the Web, the other contests are still anybody’s guess.

Jennifer Lawrence (“Silver Linings Playbook”) was long considered the front-runner for best actress. She fits several of the academy’s biases — she’s young and rising, she’s box office gold (both “Playbook” and “The Hunger Games” were box office successes) and she’s a critical darling. Past examples of her type include Gwyneth Paltrow, Julia Roberts and Reese Witherspoon.

But there’s also a tendency for the academy to offer “lifetime achievement awards,” giving Oscars to veteran performers who have been overlooked in the past. (See Jessica Tandy and Geraldine Page.) If that’s the way things are going, and O’Neil is seeing movement in that direction, expect 85-year-old Emmanuelle Riva to take home the golden statue.

“There’s been a real surge among academy members. She suddenly has the cool factor,” O’Neil said.

After wins for Lawrence and Jessica Chastain (“Zero Dark Thirty”) at the various industry get-togethers, Riva suddenly burst from the pack with a win at the BAFTAs, the British Oscars. Her exposure wasn’t hurt when the Hollywood Reporter put together a 2,000-word profile on the famed French actress, perhaps best known in the United States for Alain Resnais’ inscrutable 1959 classic “Hiroshima, Mon Amour” and the “Blue” chapter of Krzysztof Kieslowski’s “Three Colors” trilogy.

On the other side of the age spectrum is “Beasts of the Southern Wild’s” Quvenzhane Wallis, who was just 6 when she filmed the little indie. (She’s 9 now and still the youngest best actress nominee ever.) Though some commentators have raised questions about whether a 6-year-old can actually act — or is, essentially, just being herself — there’s no question the academy loves honoring youngsters: usually with just a nomination, but sometimes more. Just ask Tatum O’Neal and Anna Paquin.

A first for James Bond?

Similarly, though Anne Hathaway (“Les Miserables”) has been close to a lock for best supporting actress, there’s an outside chance that Sally Field (“Lincoln”) could take the prize. It’s her first nomination since she won best actress for 1984′s “Places in the Heart,” which prompted her famous “You like me! Right now, you like me!” speech.
At 85, French actress Emmanuelle Riva is the oldest person ever nominated for best actress.
But the race hardest to predict is probably best supporting actor. All five nominees have won before; all five have arguments in their favor.

The sentimental favorite is probably Robert De Niro, who’s made more heartfelt guest appearances on behalf of “Silver Linings Playbook” than he has for any number of his other recent films. Besides, as “Playbook’s” studio head (and always shrewd Oscar campaigner) Harvey Weinstein told CNN, “Bob De Niro hasn’t won an Oscar in 32 years.” (Yes, it’s true: “Raging Bull” was De Niro’s last win.)

But don’t count out Alan Arkin (“Argo”), Tommy Lee Jones (“Lincoln”), Christoph Waltz (“Django Unchained”) or even Philip Seymour Hoffman (“The Master”). Arkin is “Argo’s” only acting nomination; the film’s bandwagon could carry him to victory. And Jones, Hoffman and Waltz have all won trophies during this awards season.

Davis’ money is on Waltz. The actor won both a BAFTA and Golden Globe for his performance as a 19th-century bounty hunter, and he’s seen as more appreciative than Jones or Hoffman, neither of whom gave speeches when they won their honors, said Davis.

Other awards, the ones that pay off in everybody’s Oscar pool, are also up for grabs. Will best film editing go to “Argo,” the taut minimalism of “Zero Dark Thirty” or the careful rhythms of “Life of Pi”? Will animated feature honor the Pixar masters behind “Brave” or the off-center, long-gestating Tim Burton project “Frankenweenie?” Will Adele’s James Bond theme “Skyfall” win best song, or will it go to this year’s host, Seth MacFarlane, for his “Everybody Needs a Best Friend”?

Don’t rule out MacFarlane; his co-writer is Walter Murphy, who once turned Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony into a No. 1 pop hit. On the other hand, no James Bond theme — not “Goldfinger,” not “Live and Let Die,” not “Nobody Does It Better,” not even anything by Matt Munro, A-ha or Madonna — has ever won an Oscar, so 007 is overdue.

The uncertainty will make for some surprise winners, both in the Dolby Theatre (formerly the Kodak) and in wagering living rooms across America.

“I’ve spoken to several academy members, and they’re all over the place, too,” said Davis.

It’s no wonder that the nominees have been modest and circumspect about their chances, nobody more so than Affleck. Though he’s a producer of “Argo,” which means he’ll get to accept a best picture trophy if the film wins, he’s attracted far more attention for being ignored for best director than he ever would have for being nominated.

“I just feel so incredibly honored to be nominated as a producer for this movie, to be here at the big party,” he told reporters at the Oscar luncheon in early February. “I don’t get into worrying too much about who got what and who didn’t get what. I mean, I’ve had many, many, many, many, many, many years watching from home.”

But despite some observers already instructing Affleck to prepare yet another list of thank-yous, don’t assume “Argo” the movie will reign as triumphant as its risk-taking characters, said Davis. Sure, it’s good. But best picture? That’s something else entirely.

“I’m hearing a little bit, that when ‘Argo’ started winning everything, some people started scratching their heads,” he said. “‘Really? That’s what I’m supposed to be picking?’”

The 85th Academy Awards are scheduled for Sunday on ABC. The show will air from the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.