While many of the big named films are currently reaping in
the benefits of award recognition and indeed many wins, there are always those that
are shamefully overlooked; something the Academy is notorious for doing.
Debatably perhaps this is snobbery, or a money issue?
Perhaps only the films with a bigger advertisement budget have more of a
chance, while the voting members only take into consideration the ‘serious’
films made by previous alumni winners (with the few exceptions of course)?
Either way, when the list of Oscar nominations was read out
at the end of January (by no other than Thor himself Chris Hemsworth), this
year in particular there were many very strange absences from the list.
Here is a list of the top category nominations, the upsets
and the predicted winners of the 86th Academy Awards 2014:
BEST PICTURE:
This year the Best film category was predictably pretty
straight forward, though only 9 out of a possible 10 films were nominated. That
final slot could have so easily been taken by many a great film this year. So
far in the award season, it’s been a three-legged race between 12 Years A
Slave, Gravity and American Hustle. While American Hustle has strong
performances, Gravity has the best visual impact while 12 years A Slave has the
most gripping and emotional story.
NOMINEES:
American Hustle
Captain Phillips
Dallas Buyers Club
Gravity
Her
Nebraska
Philomena
12 Years A Slave
The Wolf Of Wall
Street
PREDICTED WINNER:
12 Years A Slave
Taking a true autobiography and turning it into a deeply
moving and tragic tale depicting a very serious subject, 12 years a Slave has done
immensely well so far, and even picked up Best Picture at The Baftas.
SNUBS:
Inside Llewyn Davis
Ethan and Joel Coen have produced a beautiful melancholy
feature in Inside Llewyn Davis, with some stand out performances, gorgeous
music and sweeping dark cinematography. This is the biggest upset, and a
surprise seeing as the Coen films have been Oscar favourites in the past.
Saving Mr Banks
This charming and delightful story retelling the time Mary
Poppins creator PL Travers succumbed to Walt Disney’s determination to turn her
beloved book into a fantasy musical. Wonderful and funny performances from the
entire cast, but most notably Emma Thompson as the infamous British battle-axe
this picture is perhaps too light for the Academy’s heavy-favourite storylines.
Rush
Ron Howard’s masterpiece about Formula One rivals James Hunt
and Niki Lauda battling it out to the finish line is anything but boring. Fast
and furious to the end, it’s a brilliant and entertaining rush of a ride!
Other notable films
this year:
Labor Day, Blue Is The Warmest Colour, Blue Jasmine, Sunshine on Leith, The Kings Of Summer, A Field in England.
Labor Day, Blue Is The Warmest Colour, Blue Jasmine, Sunshine on Leith, The Kings Of Summer, A Field in England.
BEST ACTOR
All the performances nominated this year are terrific and
deservedly recognised. It’s especially wonderful to see long standing respected
actor Bruce Dern in there for his beautiful performance in Nebraska. However
it’s a very close race this year, any one of them could pick up the award.
NOMINEES:
Christian Bale –
(American Hustle)
Bruce Dern –
(Nebraska)
Leonardo DiCaprio (The
Wolf Of Wall Street)
Chiwetel Ejiofor – (12
Years A Slave)
Matthew McConaughey –
(Dallas Buyers Club)
PREDICTED WINNER:
Matthew McConaughey
As previously said, its a very close race this year with
Ejiofor a firm favourite too, but McConaughey is currently the talk of the town
starring as AID’s-stricken Ron Woodroof. The Academy loves an actor who uses
weight loss for enhance their performance.
SNUBS:
Tom Hanks – (Captain
Phillips)
This is perhaps the biggest upset at the Academy this year,
and it’s with total astonishment that Hanks hasn’t received a nomination for
one of the stand out performances of his career as the titular Captain
Phillips. His final scene alone in the film is heart-breaking beyond measure.
Idris Elba – (Mandela:
Long Walk To Freedom)
Director Justin Chadwick’s first choice to play the role,
and even Mandela himself said he didn’t realise some scenes in the film WEREN’T
him, Elba’s performance is spot on and perfectly executed in this well earned
leading role. The voice is eerily accurate.
Oscar Isaac – (Inside
Llewyn Davis)
Although his character has unlikable tendencies, it’s
because of Isaac’s funny but soulful performance that means we care about what
happens to the character of down and out singer songwriter Llewyn. Though the
film itself has had mixed reactions, his performance is undeniably wonderful.
Robert Redford – (All
Is Lost)
Redford carries this film alone, starring as a resourceful
sailor who battles against Mother Nature when a collision at sea leaves him
stranded in a waterlogged boat. It’s one of Redford’s best performances and the
highlight of his career. The film didn’t garner a wide enough release so not
enough people got the chance to see it.
Other notable performances this year:
Michael Douglas – (Inside the Candelabra), Forest Whitaker (Lee Daniel’s The Butler), Daniel Bruhl (Rush), Tom Hanks (Saving Mr Banks), Joaquin Pheonix (Her).
BEST ACTRESS
A con-mans muse, a repressed bankrupt wife, a guilt-ridden
mother, an alcoholic matriarch and a medical engineer stuck in space. It’s an
eclectic group of characters that make up the Best Actress category this year,
but it’s also a pretty predictable list at that.
Though it’s been regularly suggested and publicised that one
actress in particular is leading the race bets, the Oscar’s are known for
occasionally throwing a surprise spanner in the works.
Amy Adams – (American
Hustle)
Cate Blanchett – (Blue
Jasmine)
Sandra Bullock –
(Gravity)
Judi Dench –
(Philomena)
Meryl Streep –
(August: Osage County)
PREDICTED WINNER:
Cate Blanchett
Bullock is very closely behind, but she picked up the Best
Actress award a few years back for The Blind Side. Blanchett is no stranger to
nominations, but this would be her first leading actress award if she wins.
There was a lot of controversy when Gwyneth Paltrow took the statue for her
role in Shakespeare In Love over Blanchett’s Elizabeth in 1998. She has however
previously won a Supporting Oscar for her role as Katherine Hepburn in 2004’s
The Aviator. Last week she picked up Best Actress at The Baftas.
SNUBS:
Emma Thompson -
(Saving Mr Banks)
Playing Mary Poppins creator PL Travers, her performance is
spot on and beautifully comedic and tragic at the same time. Bringing energy
and life into ‘as she was known’, a very difficult displeased and snobbish
woman in real life, Thomson shines and makes a character who on the surface is
very unlikable engaging and witty. A career highlight for the ever wonderful
Thompson, and a charming film at that.
Oprah Winfrey - (Lee
Daniel’s The Butler)
Spanning the three decades observed by one servant working
at the Whitehouse, The Butler was not universally well received as expected,
however one of the greatest performances in that film belongs to Winfrey as
Cecil’s suffering alcoholic wife.
Adele Exarchopoulos - (Blue
Is The Warmest Colour)
Seydoux gives starling performances in a very controversial
film, which has itself been left off the Best Foreign Film nominations purely
because it narrowly missed the deadline for the Academy’s strict date cut-off.
A raw, passionate and pure performance from this up-and-coming fresh faced
actress, and one who thoroughly deserves to be on this list.
Other notable performances this year:
Kate Winslet (Labor day), Carey Mulligan (Inside Llewyn Davis), Lea Seydoux (Blue is the Warmest Colour).
Alfonso Cuaron – (Gravity)
Alexanda Payne – (Nebraska)
Steve McQueen – (12 Years A Slave)
Martin Scorsese – (The Wolf Of Wall Street)
PREDICTED WINNER:
Alfonso Cuaron - (Gravity)
It’s a two-way battle this year between McQueen and Cuaron.
Both beautiful feature films with an incredible team behind the scenes. It’s also
notable that both these directors have strong British influences, McQueen being
British himself, while the native Spanish director Cuaron has become an adopted
Brit embracing living and working in UK. Gravity was shot almost entirely
at Shepperton studios.
SNUBS:
Paul Greengrass – (Captain Phillips)
A masterclass in filmmaking and storytelling, and shot out
on location at sea proved a traumatic experience for several of the cast and
crew which goes to show the lengths Greengrass goes to portray a realistic and
true depiction of what happened to Phillips that day. A superb piece of
filmmaking, it’s a disgrace he’s not on this list.
Ron Howard – (Rush)
A fast paced thriller with superb cinematography. Only a
skilled director can take a subject that may not be universally embraced by all
and create a not-to-miss fantastical experience with some edge of your seat
moments and brilliant performances.
Joel and Ethan Coen – (Inside Llewyn Davis)
Perhaps the film was a little too dark and soulful for the
Acaedmy’s taste, but the film is a beautifully shot masterpiece from the Coen
Brothers, stunning music and gorgeous landscapes. It’s really sad they’ve been
snubbed in many of the catagories this year at the Oscars.
Other notable directorial
work:
J.C Chandor (All Is Lost), Ralph Fiennes (The Invisible Woman), Stephen Frears (Philomena), Abdellatif Kechiche (Blue Is The Warmest Colour).
J.C Chandor (All Is Lost), Ralph Fiennes (The Invisible Woman), Stephen Frears (Philomena), Abdellatif Kechiche (Blue Is The Warmest Colour).
Jarod Leito – (Dallas Buyers Club)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS:
Lupita Nyong’O – (12 Years A Slave)
BEST ANIMATION:
Frozen - (Disney)
BEST CINEMATOGRAPGHY:
Gravity – (Emmanuel Lubezki)
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS:
Gravity – (Tim Webber, Chris Lawrence, David Shirk and Neil Corbould)
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM:
The Great Beauty - (Italy)
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY:
12 Years A Slave – (John Ridley)