Best Picture
Nominees
- âThe Artistâ
- âThe Descendantsâ
- âExtremely Loud & Incredibly Closeâ
- âThe Helpâ
- âHugoâ
- âMidnight in Parisâ
- âMoneyballâ
- âTree of Lifeâ
- âWar Horseâ
Vegas odds favor: “The Artist”
Category summary
If thereâs a motif to this yearâs Best Picture nominees, itâs movies set in the past. Of the nine nominees, only two â âThe Descendantsâ and âMidnight in Parisâ â are set in the present (and âMidnight in Parisâ evokes time travel). âThe Descendants,â which was filmed on location in Hawaii, is an exploration of the condition of the modern family; itâs rooted in everyday drama. Each of the rest is tethered to some event in (or, at least, aesthetic of) the past.
World War I is our starting point: âWar Horseâ is set at the outbreak and over by the time the 1920s begin. That decade brings âThe Artist,â which not only locates itself in dying years of the silent movie era but is actually about that Hollywood transition as well. âHugoâ is set in Paris, pre-World War II, and presents quite an interesting juxtaposition when its portrayal of childhood is compared to the 1950s life in âTree of Lifeâ (which, speaking of the past, famously flashes back to the beginning of the universe). A look into race relations lets âThe Helpâ take care of the â60s, and then thereâs a little jump forward to âExtremely Loud & Incredibly Closeâ â set in the aftermath of 9/11 â and âMoneyball,â which chronicles the 2002 Oakland Aâs. â L.W.
Best Leading Actor
Nominees
- DemiĂĄn Bichir in âA Better Lifeâ
- George Clooney in âThe Descendantsâ
- Jean Dujardin in âThe Artistâ
- Gary Oldman in âTinker Tailor Soldier Spyâ
- Brad Pitt in âMoneyballâ
Vegas odds favor: Jean Dujardin in âThe Artistâ
Category summary
Although many may know Gary Oldman only as Sirius Black in the âHarry Potterâ series or as James Gordon in âBatman Beginsâ and âThe Dark Knight,â the British actor enjoyed a whirlwind career in the â90s, playing such roles as Sid Vicious in âSid and Nancy,â Lee Harvey Oswald in âJFKâ and Ivan Korshunov in âAir Force One.â The actor has appeared in more than 40 movies but is just receiving his first Academy Award nod with a nomination for Best Leading Actor for the role of George Smiley in âTinker Tailor Soldier Spy.â
And does he deserve it. Although audience members may not agree on what actually happened in the hazy novel-based spy thriller, they did agree that Oldmanâs performance was one for the books, with The New York Times hailing the actorâs role of Smiley as âplayed with delicacy and understated power.â Oldman was nominated for 17 different best actor awards for the role, but he was only awarded by two organizations thus far. With the Academy Awards as the final pending nomination, Oldman is likely ready to have saved the best in his 30-year career for last. â A.D.
Best Leading Actress
Nominees
- Glenn Close in âAlbert Nobbsâ
- Viola Davis in âThe Helpâ
- Rooney Mara in âThe Girl with the Dragon Tattooâ
- Meryl Streep in âThe Iron Ladyâ
- Michelle Williams in âMy Week with Marilynâ
Vegas odds favor: Viola Davis in âThe Helpâ
Category summary
Based on the number of âViola should have wonâ tweets after the Golden Globes, fans of the actress from âThe Helpâ will rejoice should she take home the Oscar. If the Academy caves to popular sentiment and declares Davis the Best Leading Actress, her Academy Award nominations-to-wins ratio will be 2:1. But should Davis win this year, Meryl Streepâs Academy Award nominations-to-wins ratio will be 17:2.
Although Streep has been resoundingly declared the best living actress and has received a record number of both Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations, she has not taken home the Oscar since 1982. After awarding her Best Actress for âSophieâs Choice,â it seems the Academy felt that nominations were reward enough: Streep was nominated for a whopping 13 awards after that year and didnât win a single one. This year sheâs nominated for playing Margaret Thatcher in âThe Iron Lady,â and although her portrayal is uncanny, the unpopularity of her subject and too-sweeping nature of the screenplay may damn her to yet another polite consolation smile. Particulars aside, itâs high time the Academy put its money where its mouth is and give the poor woman the award she deserves. â A.D.
Best Director
Nominees
- âThe Artistâ Michel Hazanavicius
- âThe Descendantsâ Alexander Payne
- âHugoâ Martin Scorsese
- âMidnight in Parisâ Woody Allen
- âThe Tree of Lifeâ Terrence Malick
Vegas odds favor: âThe Artistâ Michel Hazanavicius
Category summary
Although Michel Hazanaviciusâ âThe Artistâ likely will be the major winner of the night, at first glance it seems the director just got incredibly lucky with the screenplay. The Parisian writer/director had only three feature films under his belt before taking on âThe Artist,â and they werenât exactly films worth boasting about. Hazanaviciusâ previous claim to fame was the OSS 117 series, two âAustin Powersâ-esque spy films featuring none other than the suave Jean Dujardin as the karate-chopping, bon mot-dropping OSS 117. Both films (âCairo, Nest of Spiesâ and âLost in Rioâ) are, in a word, ridiculous, and a far cry from the âwonder of the ageâ the Los Angeles Times proclaimed âThe Artistâ to be.
So how could Hazanavicius have achieved such success with his latest film? By writing a screenplay without spoken dialogue. Had âThe Artistâ not been a silent film, Hazanavicius could never have used French-speaking Jean Dujardin alongside the incredibly American John Goodman, nor, I daresay, would an American audience have had any desire to sit through a foreign film. But Hazanavicius found success with âThe Artistâ because it had just the amount of French Americans like: thin moustaches, berets and melodrama. â A.D.
Best Writing (Original Screenplay)
Nominees
- âThe Artistâ (Michel Hazanavicius)
- âBridesmaidsâ (Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig)
- âMargin Callâ (J.C. Chandor)
- âMidnight in Parisâ (Woody Allen)
- âA Separationâ (Asghar Farhadi)
Category summary
It seems incredible that a movie that features an extended sequence involving bad Brazilian food, stomach discomfort in an elegant formal-wear store and, ultimately, diarrhea in the center lane of a crowded city street could be nominated for an award honoring the script writing, but here we are. âBridesmaids,â the movie acclaimed as much for its gender boundary-bending antics as the actual comedy it contained, has secured writers Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig a chance at taking home a statuette in the Academy Awardsâ Best Writing (Original Screenplay) category.
Wiig, a veteran of âSaturday Night Live,â has a brief list of writing credentials. In fact, âBridesmaidsâ is the first wide-release movie script to hit theaters for both her and writing partner Mumolo. But theyâre far from the only nominees with a short writing resume: According to IMDB, the writers of âMargin Call,â âThe Artistâ and âA Separationâ are each similarly inexperienced in writing feature-length American movies. Perhaps itâs no wonder, then, that none of those four is considered the awardâs frontrunner: Their inexperience in the field stands in stark contrast to Woody Allen (for âMidnight in Parisâ), who has been cranking out about a script a year since the early â70s and has earned 15 screenplay nominations from the Academy for his work. â L.W.
Writing (Adapted Screenplay)
Nominees:
- âThe Descendantsâ (Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash)
- âHugoâ (John Logan)
- âThe Ides of Marchâ (George Clooney, Grant Heslov and Beau Willimon)
- âMoneyballâ (Steven Zaillian and Aaron Sorkin, story by Stan Chervin)
- âTinker Tailor Soldier Spyâ (Bridget OâConnor and Peter Straughan)
Vegas odds favor: âThe Descendantsâ
Category summary
The writing process for âThe Ides of Marchâ must have seemed like two projects in one. The first, a traditional movie script for a tense thriller set in the well-trod trenches of the battleground state primaries, was credited as an adaptation of the play âFarragut North.â In a 2008 review, a reviewer for The New York Times called the play âpredictable but enjoyable,â and wondered whether the trite dialogue was an intentional nod to the fact that politicians and their campaign supervisors are themselves continuously trying to fit a mold. That question is rendered a little moot by the second facet of Clooney, Heslov and Willimonâs script: sweepingly overt nods to Barack Obamaâs campaign strategies â a populist outsider persona familiar right down to the high contrast poster.
That script is just one of two appearances in the best adapted screenplay nominees for Clooney, but the other comes in the style of a cameo. Clooney is the lead in category frontrunner âThe Descendants,â a performance for which heâs nominated for the best actor statuette. That film, as well as the other four, were each adapted from books, with dark horse pick âMoneyballâ the sole entry from a work of non-fiction (Michael Lewisâ 2003 book of the same name). â L.W.




