Another
year, another outrage over the year’s Oscar nominations. 2015’s primary
column-filling controversy has centred on the predominance of Caucasian males
in the major award categories – a reflection of industry status quo, maybe, but
taken by some as a particular affront in the year Ava DuVernay’s much-admired
Martin Luther King biopic Selma hoped to build on the representational progress
of last year’s triumphant 12 Years a Slave. Not for the first time, Hollywood
finds itself accused of whitewashing.
These
objections are not unfounded, but likely to fall on (in some cases, literally)
deaf ears. Academy voters are 94% white and 76% male, with an average age of
63: to moan about the Best Picture shortlist is like asking the most ornery of
grandfathers to pick his ten best films, and then questioning why his
selections are so stuffy. Change may well be required, though possibly in the
form of a rebranding, rather than any quota system: to the squealing Teen
Choice awards, the Oscars might, in future, be regarded as a Duffer’s Choice
alternative.
Best Picture
American SniperBirdman
Boyhood
The Grand Budapest Hotel
The Imitation Game
Selma
The Theory of Everything
Whiplash
Just
eight rather than the permitted ten titles, which speaks to a dearth of quality
in the year’s major English-language releases. Boyhood remains the odds-on
favourite: logistically audacious (filmed in snatches, lest we forget, over a
dozen years) yet formally conservative, Richard Linklater’s ingratiating indie
hair-ruffler puts the family values of past Academy faves as On Golden Pond
into nice new sneakers before leaving voters with the irresistible takehome
that, here in America, we raise our kids right. At this stage, only American Sniper, a zeitgeist-catching late-year studio release, has the firepower to
take it down.
What should win: Whiplash What will win: Boyhood
Best Actress
Marion
Cotillard (Two Days, One Night)Felicity Jones (The Theory of Everything)
Julianne Moore (Still Alice)
Rosamund Pike (Gone Girl)
Reece Witherspoon (Wild)
A close contest, highlighting strong performances in generally middling films: it’s hard to see voters feeling for the cynical Gone Girl or the splashy Wild – or even, really, for Jones’s measured emoting in the one Best Picture nominee here. The exceptional Cotillard transcends her brand-ambassador status to disappear inside the role of a fragile factory worker – but will the Academy bother to read the subtitles? It’s more likely they’ll reward Moore, for bringing her usual fierce intelligence to bear on the kind of quietly worthwhile indie project she’s been bolstering for 20-odd years.
Who should win: Cotillard Who will win: Moore
Best Actor
Steve
Carell (Foxcatcher)Bradley Cooper (American Sniper)
Benedict Cumberbatch (The Imitation Game)
Michael Keaton (Birdman)
Eddie Redmayne (The Theory of Everything)
You
could almost make up a second five of performers unlucky to miss out: Timothy
Spall, David Oyelowo, Jake Gyllenhaal, Joaquin Phoenix… If the prize was for
Most Improved Actor, then Cooper – nominated three times in three consecutive
years upon doing the world the favour of jettisoning his Hangover smirk – would
be romping home. As it is, it’s currently neck-and-neck between comeback king
(and home favourite) Keaton and the impressively tangled ingenu Redmayne, and
not even Carell’s genuinely transformative work in Foxcatcher can compete.
Who should win: Carell Who will win: Keaton or Redmayne
Best Supporting
Actress
Patricia
Arquette (Boyhood)Laura Dern (Wild)
Keira Knightley (The Imitation Game)
Emma Stone (Birdman)
Meryl Streep (Into the Woods)
Not
the strongest of categories, and if you wanted proof of what US TV offers
actresses that movies presently don’t, you might usefully compare Dern’s
nothingy two-scene bit-part in Wild with her all-encompassing work on the HBO
series Enlightened. Distinguishing herself from a shortlist of coasting Academy
favourites, Arquette has picked up every award going this season – as with Best
Actress, this category may be a case of handing over a distinguished
achievement award for a performer who’d threatened to slip under the radar.
Who should win: Arquette Who will win: Arquette
Best Supporting Actor
Robert
Duvall (The Judge)Ethan Hawke (Boyhood)
Edward Norton (Birdman)
Mark Ruffalo (Foxcatcher)
J.K. Simmons (Whiplash)
By
contrast, Supporting Actor makes for as competitive a line-up as any, which is
why it’s been somewhat surprising that Simmons’ tremendous, screen-seizing work
as the tyrannical drum instructor in Whiplash has so dominated the pre-Oscar
chatter. Hawke’s contribution to Boyhood is every bit as committed and valuable
as his co-star Arquette’s, while Ruffalo’s usual thoughtful grounding of
character helps to give Foxcatcher the punch it finally has – there’s even a
case that his onscreen brother-in-arms Channing Tatum (speaking of Most
Improved…) was unlucky to miss out here.
Who should win: Simmons Who will win: Simmons
Best Director
Wes
Anderson (The Grand Budapest Hotel)Alejandro González Iñárritu (Birdman)
Richard Linklater (Boyhood)
Bennett Miller (Foxcatcher)
Morten Tyldum (The Imitation Game)
There’s
no greater illustration of the Downton effect – that curious malady whereby
Americans go a tad doolally around genteel British period drama – than Tyldum’s
nomination for his TV-level handling of the Alan Turing story. (Consider,
instead, Damien Chazelle’s tautly precise marshalling of image and sound in
Whiplash: now there’s direction.)
Right now, this category depends on how the Academy’s feeling: spoil Boyhood
further, or split the top prizes, as it did last year, by rewarding Iñárritu’s
showy backstage Steadicamming?
Who should win: Miller or Linklater Who will win: Linklater
Best Foreign Language
Film
IdaLeviathan
Tangerines
Timbuktu
Wild Tales
UK
readers will have to wait for the majority of these – the Argentinian contender
Wild Tales opens here in March, Mali’s Timbuktu in May, the Estonian entry
Tangerines as yet unknown – but the head-to-head battle suggested by Ida and
Leviathan indicates a high quality threshold. Ida’s deserved Best
Cinematography nod – and brisk running time, a boon for voters struggling to
negotiate a backlog of awards-season screeners – possibly gives it the edge
over the heftier Leviathan, currently mired in some controversy over its
standing as Russia’s (surprisingly critical) official submission.
What should win: Leviathan What will win: Ida
The 87th
Academy Awards ceremony will be held tomorrow.
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