|
THE PREDICTIONS:
Best Picture
Likely Nominees:
Chicago
Gangs of New York
The Hours
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
My Big Fat Greek Wedding
Long Shots:
Adaptation
Far From Heaven
The Pianist
Road to Perdition
Best Director
Likely Nominees:
Stephen Daldry, The Hours
Todd Haynes, Far From Heaven
Peter Jackson, The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
Rob Marshall, Chicago
Martin Scorsese, Gangs of New York
Long Shots:
Alexandar Payne, About Schmidt
Roman Polanski, The Pianist
Joel Zwick, My Big Fat Greek Wedding
Best Actor
Likely Nominees:
Adrien Brody, The Pianist
Nicholas Cage, Adaptation
Daniel Day-Lewis, Gangs of New York
Richard Gere, Chicago
Jack Nicholson, About Schmidt
Long Shots:
Michael Caine, The Quiet American
Campbell Scott, Roger Dodger
Robin Williams, One Hour Photo
Best Actress
Likely Nominees:
Salma Hayek, Frida
Nicole Kidman, The Hours
Diane Lane, Unfaithful
Julianne Moore, Far From Heaven
Renee Zellweger, Chicago
Long Shots:
Jennifer Aniston, The Good Girl
Maggie Gyllenhaal, Secretary
Meryl Streep, The Hours
Best Supporting Actor
Likely Nominees:
Chris Cooper, Adaptation
Ed Harris, The Hours
Paul Newman, Road to Perdition
Dennis Quaid, Far From Heaven
John C. Reilly, Chicago
Long Shots:
Dennis Haysbert, Far From Heaven
Alfred Molina, Frida
Andy Serkis, The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
Noah Taylor, Max
Best Supporting Actress:
Likely Nominees:
Karhy Bates, About Schmidt
Patricia Clarkson, Far From Heaven
Toni Collette, About a Boy
Meryl Streep, Adaptation
Catherine Zeta-Jones, Chicago
Long Shots:
Edie Falco, Sunshine State
Viola Davis, Antwone Fisher
Samantha Morton, Minority Report
Best Adapted Screenplay
Likely Nominees:
About Schmidt
Adaptation
Chicago
The Hours
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
Long Shots:
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind
Minority Report
The Pianist
Best Original Screenplay
Likely Nominees:
13 Conversations About One Thing
Antwone Fisher
Far From Heaven
Gangs of New York
Talk to Her
Long Shots:
All or Nothing
Igby Goes Down
My Big Fat Greek Wedding
Best Original Score
Likely Nominees:
Far From Heaven
Gangs of New York
The Hours
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
Minority Report
Long Shots:
Adaptation
8 Women
The Pianist
Signs
|
Written by DAVID KEYES
February 7, 2003
The headaches are coming, people. Just imagine it: months and months
of speculation, discussion, argument and excitement over the year's
finest achievements in filmmaking are all about to be flushed down the
toilet as we inch ever so closer to Sunday, March 23, the day when Hollywood
stands still, brilliance is left without reward, and highly-promoted
underachievers walk up to podiums to accept awards that have about as
much lasting impression on viewers as a Rob Schneider flick. And if
that isn't enough to suggest oncoming migraines, just imagine this:
award winners opening up folded sheets of paper to dish out some long-winded
and sappy acceptance speeches, only to have their words sidelined by
a gung-ho orchestra trying hard to keep the ceremony under a four-hour
running time when they know darn well it is nearly an impossible feat.
Yes, the headaches are indeed coming.
It would be easy this year for all of us if we forgot that the Academy
Awards are going to happen this year. In fact, it might even save us
a lot of aspirin if we were to forget that they even existed in the
first place. Why so much hostility on my part towards a ceremony that
I so religiously cover on an annual basis, though? Allow me to offer
my reasoning via three simple words: "A Beautiful Mind."
Face reality: when we last ventured into the world of the "elite"
movie voters, stakes were higher than they had been in years. The two
best films of 2001"The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship
of the Ring" and "Gosford Park"were among the Best
Picture nominees. The latter was an obscure sneaker, but the former
was a very successful choice that embodied the groundbreaking and flawless
sense of craftsmanship we expect to be honored at a ceremony as prestigious
as this (and the 13 awards it was nominated for greatly foreshadowed
that notion). But when it all came down to specific honors, what did
the ever-so-bewildering Academy do? Why, they went with tradition of
course! By bestowing their top honors onto the weakest of the five major
nominees, a decent but flawed and schmaltzy biopic that deteriorated
greatly after repeat viewings, thousands of members of a film society
slapped the very face of modern film art itself. It remains in the mind
as a painful reminder to just how silly and irrelevant all awards shows
are in the grand scheme of things.
A year later, little change is foreseen as we gallop towards the first
phase of the Oscar hoopla, with apparent masterworks generally being
ignored while somewhat less material is given the big studio push. It
doesn't help matters, furthermore, that Miramaxthe most infamous
of the big movie studios around awards seasonis thrusting a very
undeserving film like "Chicago" for major awards consideration,
either. And since it has already acquired the all-important Broadcast
Critics and Golden Globe awardsnot to mention five nods at the
Screen Actor's Guildwhose to say that it simply won't walk off
with the top prize in March?
Though my patience is wearing thin with the Academy of Motion Picture
Asses and Suck-Ups (oops, did I say that out loud?), I still feel an
obligation to covering the ceremony. Why that is, I dunno. But in any
case, here is what you can expect to be read aloud at the press conference
this coming Tuesday morning...
BEST PICTURE
Chicago
Gangs of New York
The Hours
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
My Big Fat Greek Wedding
The Lowdown: This year's best of the possible award contenders"The
Two Towers"will be more of a dark horse nominee this year
than "The Fellowship of the Ring," the first film in the "Rings"
trilogy, was last year. Why? Three strikes against it this time: 1)
it is a fantasy film; 2) it is a middle chapter; and 3) it hasn't one
very many press or industry awards (although the Online Film Critics
Society, a union of Internet critics which I am proud to be a member
of, rightfully gave it top honors earlier in January). The nomination
itself will be its only significant reward, because the Academy will
be more concentrated on the Miramax products"Chicago"
and "Gangs of New York"and "The Hours," which
have all been front-runners since last December anyway. When it comes
to the fifth selection, it's anyone's guess right now, but my money
is on "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" because of its unforgettable
success (both critically and commercially). Plus, it also got a Producer's
Guild nod last month, which doesn't hurt maters when it comes to an
award on this level of popularity. Possible sneakers: "Road to
Perdition," "Far From Heaven," "The Pianist"
and "Adaptation" (the latter two of which would more than
deserve the recognition).
BEST DIRECTOR
Stephen Daldry, The Hours
Todd Haynes, Far From Heaven
Peter Jackson, The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
Rob Marshall, Chicago
Martin Scorsese, Gangs of New York
The Lowdown: In order to fulfill the annual pattern of one of
the five Best Picture nominees not being recognized in the directing
category, the Academy will forget about Joel Zwick, the man behind "My
Big Fat Greek Wedding." In his place will be Todd Haynes, who made
the critic darling "Far From Heaven." Potential other appearances
could come from Steven Spielberg or Alexander Payne, but it's not as
likely; Spielberg's drawback is that he had two big movies out in 2002,
while Payne's is that "About Schmidt" lost significant amounts
of steam after its mid-December opening. To be sure, Roman Polanski
could be a dark horse also, but will the Academy really want to remember
a man who won't be there to accept the award anyway? It doesn't help
matters that his "The Pianist" has been greatly overlooked,
either.
BEST ACTOR
Adrien Brody, The Pianist
Nicholas Cage, Adaptation
Daniel Day-Lewis, Gangs of New York
Richard Gere, Chicago
Jack Nicholson, About Schmidt
The Lowdown: Nicholson, Cage and Lewis are shoe-ins in a category
that will be hard to narrow down to only five selections, but I think
the amazingly-talented Brody, who gave the best performance on film
last year, has been acknowledged enough to make it into the final list
too (note his recent SAG nod). For some baffling reason, alas, the voters
will also want to nominate Richard Gere for his incredibly annoying
work in "Chicago," even though the slot should be reserved
for Robin Williams' performance in "One Hour Photo." If Gere
manages to pull through, what's next? Eminem?!
BEST ACTRESS
Salma Hayek, Frida
Nicole Kidman, The Hours
Diane Lane, Unfaithful
Julianne Moore, Far From Heaven
Renee Zellweger, Chicago
The Lowdown: As far as I'm concerned, only Kidman and Moore are
really deserving of their expected nominations in this category. The
other three, unfortunately, are anchored choices as well, which only
undermines the purpose of the award. Hayek is okay in "Frida,"
although not award-worthy, while Lane and Zellweger are likable actresses
who are trapped in thankless roles in overrated films. Possible upsets
could come from Jennifer Aniston of "The Good Girl" and Meryl
Streep of "The Hours," but neither have had any substantial
exposure (although Streep will be recognized as a Supporting Actress
for "Adaptation"). And if the Academy knows what's good for
them, they'll forget all about Maggie Gyllenhaal in "Secretary"
as well.
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Chris Cooper, Adaptation
Ed Harris, The Hours
Paul Newman, Road to Perdition
Dennis Quaid, Far From Heaven
John C. Reilly, Chicago
The Lowdown: The catastrophe continues! Brilliant performances
from Chris Cooper and Paul Newman will be accompanied by a couple of
mediocre ones in this category, the most notable among them being Dennis
Quaid's stiff turn as a closet homosexual in "Far From Heaven."
Noah Taylor, meanwhile, stands little chance of recognition in "Max"
because of the politics of his performance (would the Academy seriously
run the risk of bad press by nominating a man who is playing Hitler?),
and Andy Serkis, who provided the lush foundation for Gollum in "The
Two Towers," will be ignored because the Academy still isn't sure
on how to acknowledge the digital approach.
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Karhy Bates, About Schmidt
Patricia Clarkson, Far From Heaven
Toni Collette, About a Boy
Meryl Streep, Adaptation
Catherine Zeta-Jones, Chicago
The Lowdown: It's a pretty broad race with this one, but in typical
fashion, the voters will stick with obvious choices instead of opting
to nominate obscure ones (most of which deserve recognition over the
biggies). Bates, Streep and Collette are anchored, and Zeta-Jones and
Clarkson, although not nearly as promoted as they should be, look to
have near-locks on the last two slots as well. Possible sneakers could
be Samantha Morton for "Minority Report" and Edie Falco for
"Sunshine State," but they don't have the momentum behind
them that they should. This category will probably prove to be the least
surprising.
MUSINGS/OTHER PREDICTIONS:
Best Foreign Language Film: Lots of juicy material is available
to the voters this year, and if they play their cards right, this could
be the strongest year for the Foreign film. "Brotherhood of the
Wolf," the best of them all, wasn't submitted for consideration,
but "8 Women," the other film from France, should make a deserved
appearance. Others will include "City of God," "Monsoon
Wedding," "Talk to Her" and "Y Tu Mama Tambien."
Best Makeup: An article from Reuters last Tuesday revealed that
5 of the 7 finalists for this category were disqualified for various
reasons (the most pathetic, of which, was their excuse that "The
Two Towers" didn't deserve a nomination for the same character
makeup that won the award last year). The only two potential nominees
that remain? "Frida" and "The Time Machine." One
of three scenarios, then, is possible: 1) they nominate both contenders,
2) they simply give the award to one of the selections without a nomination
process, or 3) they forget the award this year entirely. Considering
that one of the finalists was a very unsuccessful feature from earlier
last spring, the first choice doesn't seem like much of an option right
now.
Best Original Song: Traditional sappy tunes ranging from U2
and Paul Simon will dominate this ever-so-screwy category, but if the
Academy really wants to up the ante, they'll nominate Madonna's "Die
Another Day," the latest theme song from a Bond film, which revolutionizes
the sound of the franchise in a brave and memorable way. Other possible
dark horses are Eminem's "Lose Yourself" and Johnny Rzeznik's
"I'm Still Here," both of which lost attention when the movies
they were attached to floundered at the box office.
Best Original Screenplay: "Far From Heaven," "Gangs
of New York" and "Talk to Her" are all locks. The last
two slots could be split by more obscure selections such as "Igby
Goes Down" and "Signs," but my money's on '13 Conversations
About One Thing" and "Antwone Fisher," instead, simply
because of the undeniable strength they have received in being cited
for writing.
Best Adapted Screenplay: "Adaptation" will find its
ultimate success as a nominee (and winner) in this category. Other nominations
will include (inevitably) "The Two Towers" and "Chicago."
What of the last two slots? "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind"
is getting some attention, as are "The Hours" and "About
Schmidt." But will voters really ignore the brilliant scripting
of "Minority Report?" Only time will tell.
� David Keyes, CINEMA 2000. To keep
the content of these pages at near-perfect quality, please e-mail the
author here if the above review
contains any spelling or grammar mistakes. |