The Oscar Grouch

Grumbling about the Awards I love to hate and hate to love.

Wednesday, December 15, 2004

As long as Jamie Foxx is breaking/making records...

Has anyone other than Barbra Streisand been nominated for a Grammy for singing and an Oscar for acting in the same year (Diana Ross just marely missed the cut)?

And has anyone ever been nominated in the same year for a Grammy for singing on a track that wasn't related to the film they were nominated for an Oscar for acting in, or will Foxx be the first?

Now, I know he is going to be the first actor nominated for both an Oscar and a Grammy for Best Rap/Sung Collaboration (take that, Babs!).

Sure Thing

The one prediction I feel most confident making now is that this year’s Academy Award nominees for Best Song will be the absolute worst crop ever. Which is really saying something.

Monday, December 13, 2004

Stream of Consciousness Golden Globe Reactions

Nothing too out there. And really, I'm not sure the Golden Globes matter all that much. There are always films and people ignored by The Globes that make it to The Oscars anyway. That said:

Good news (though not great) for Hotel Rwanda and Don Cheadle.

Not great news for The Phantom of the Opera or Ray, which got no major nominations outside of their Musical/Comedy ghetto (and only one Acting nomination each).

Finding Neverland gets a slight boost for its across the board support (except no Supporting noms).

Closer stops some of the hemorrhaging, though as I predicted back in September (and in June), I don’t see it making the final five at the big show (and if Julia Roberts can’t find support from these people, her Oscar hopes seem dashed).

Kinsey (and especially Liam Neeson) gets a much-needed slight boost, though its lack of directing, writing and supporting actor noms doesn’t bode too well.

Spanglish is dead (I can’t think of any English-language comedic film in recent years being nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars after failing to be nominated for a Golden Globe).

Collateral seems even less likely now than it did yesterday (and as with Roberts, if Tom Cruise can’t get nominated by his fans in the Hollywood Foreign Press, good luck with the Academy).

The Passion of The Christ couldn’t even get a Best Foreign Film nomination, nor could Bad Education, which isn’t good for either of them.

Million Dollar Baby bolsters its position as a pretty sure bet for Best Picture nomination, though its lack of Lead Actor and Screenplay nominations suggests it probably won’t win at The Globes (The Aviator, Closer and Finding Neverland all secured both writing and directing noms).

Eternal Sunshine gets to remind Oscar voters that it came out this year, though it’s likely to be overshadowed by Sideways.

The Aviator seems to secure its position as a lock for lots of nominations (though early front-runners such as Cold Mountain and The Talented Mr. Ripley have done better with The Globes than The Oscars).

And finally, Sideways. Though no sure thing when it was first released back in October, it’s now a lock (though hardly the front-runner) for the Lost in Translation slot at The Academy Awards this year (again, that’s bad news for Eternal Sunshine). The movie it most reminds me of right now (not in content, but in Awards season trajectory) is L.A. Confidential. Like Confidential, Sideways is sweeping every critics’ groups’ awards, though it still seems unlikely to win the top prize at The Academy Awards. So the real question is: Where’s this year’s Titanic? The Aviator seems like the closest comparison, though even with Leo onboard, it seems unlikely to become the phenomenon that Titanic was.

That’s where Fahrenheit 9/11 or The Passion of The Christ still could conceivably rear their ginormous heads.

Last Minute Golden Globe Predictions

With only a few hours left until nominations are announced, I really have no grasp on what and who to predict this year. For the most part, I guess I'm just ripping off Tom O'Neil and Kris at Oscar Watch, who have nearly identical picks. Any deviations I'm making are totally "out on a limb" longshots.

Before I get to "my" predictions, a few things to keep in mind when attempting to play psychic with the Globes.

Of course the number one rule is that they love celebrities, even more than your average awards show, which is why big box-office stars and magazine cover girls/boys tend to do quite well there (however, from time to time, they do pick unknowns in little movies (like Evan Rachel Wood, Ken Watanabe, Peter Sarsgaard, Hope Davis, Maria Bello, Kieran Culkin, Hayden Christensen, John Cameron Mitchell, Javier Bardem, Tilda Swinton, Chloe Sevigny, Samantha Morton, Richard Farnsworth, Stephen Fry, Fernanda Montenegro, Cate Blanchett, Djimon Hounsou, Emily Watson, Brenda Blethyn, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Geoffrey Rush, Colm Meaney, etc....).

In both the Best Picture categories, as well as in the acting categories, they think much more globally than the Academy does (even though their rules forbid foreign-language films from competing for Best Picture). Thus the following list of European and Australian films made the cut with the Globes over the last 13 years, but not with the Academy (and not all of them in the Musical/Comedy ghetto, either - I've bolded the Drama nominees): Bend it Like Beckham, Love, Actually, About a Boy, Nicholas Nickleby, Bridget Jones’s Diary, Billy Elliot, Sunshine, Chicken Run, The End of the Affair, Notting Hill, Still Crazy, The Boxer, Breaking the Waves, The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, Much Ado About Nothing, Strictly Ballroom, Enchanted April, The Commitments.

So it's likely there'll be at least one of these going-nowhere nominees this year. In the Drama category, the most likely seems to be Vera Drake (I'm not sure if Finding Neverland, Hotel Rwanda or Closer count as foreign since they have American stars). In the Musical/Comedy category, we can usually count on the good people at Working Title (you may know them from the trailers that proclaim that you may know them from producing Four Weddings and A Funeral, Notting Hill, Bridget Jones's Diary and Love, Actually -- Golden Globe Best Picture nominees all). But this year, neither Wimbledon or Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason seem too likely. And I can't think of any other films that qualify as this year's Four Weddings or Full Monty. Which makes me think that Vera Drake might just squeeze her bottom into one of the five/six/seven Best Picture slots.

That's the other thing about The Golden Globes - They frequently pad their categories with more than five nominations. So to be fair, I'm going to include two back-ups just in case (and because I'm feeling really indecisive at this hour).

My predictions, in descending order of likelihood:

Best Picture - Drama
1. The Aviator
2. Million Dollar Baby
3. Finding Neverland
4. Hotel Rwanda
5. Closer

6. Vera Drake
7. Kinsey

Best Picture - Musical/Comedy
1. The Phantom of the Opera
2. Sideways
3. Ray
4. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
5. The Incredibles

6. Spanglish
7. Beyond the Sea

Best Director
1. Martin Scorsese, The Aviator
2. Clint Eastwood, Million Dollar Baby
3. Mike Nichols, Closer
4. Mel Gibson, The Passion of The Christ
5. Joel Schumacher, The Phantom of the Opera

6. Michael Mann, Collateral
7. Alexander Payne, Sideways

Best Actor - Drama
1. Leonardo DiCaprio, The Aviator
2. Javier Bardem, The Sea Inside
3. Johnny Depp, Finding Neverland
4. Don Cheadle, Hotel Rwanda
5. John Travolta, A Love Song for Bobby Long

6. Liam Neeson, Kinsey
7. Jeff Bridges, The Door in the Floor

8. Kevin Bacon, The Woodsman
9. Tom Cruise, Collateral
10. Clint Eastwood, Million Dollar Baby
11. Jude Law, Closer

Best Actress - Drama
1. Hilary Swank, Million Dollar Baby
2. Imelda Staunton, Vera Drake
3. Julia Roberts, Closer
4. Julie Delpy, Before Sunset
5. Catalina Sandino Moreno, Maria Full of Grace

6. Kim Bassinger, The Door in the Floor
7. Laura Dern, We Don't Live Here Anymore

Best Actress - Musical/Comedy
1. Annette Bening, Being Julia
2. Kate Winslet, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
3. Emmy Rossum, The Phantom of the Opera
4. Paz Vega, Spanglish
5. Tea Leoni, Spanglish

6. Lindsay Lohan, Mean Girls
7. Jennifer Garner, 13 Going on 30

Best Actor - Musical/Comedy
1. Jamie Foxx, Ray
2. Jim Carrey, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
3. Paul Giamatti, Sideways
4. Kevin Spacey, Beyond the Sea
5. Bill Murray, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou

6. Gerard Butler, The Phantom of the Opera
7. Adam Sandler, Spanglish

Best Supporting Actor
1. Clive Owen, Closer
2. Thomas Haden Church, Sideways
3. Morgan Freeman, Million Dollar Baby
4. Peter Sarsgaard, Kinsey
5. Jamie Foxx, Collateral

6. Alan Alda, The Aviator
7. John Lithgow, Kinsey

Best Supporting Actress
1. Natalie Portman, Closer
2. Virginia Madsen, Sideways
3. Laura Linney, Kinsey
4. Cate Blanchett, The Aviator
5. Sophie Okonedo, Hotel Rwanda

6. Barbara Streisand, Meet the Fockers
7. Cloris Leachman, Spanglish

8. Julie Christie, Finding Neverland
9. Meryl Streep, The Manchurian Candidate
10. Kate Winslet, Finding Neverland
11. Regina King, Ray

Best Screenplay
1. Sideways
2. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
3. Kinsey
4. Million Dollar Baby
5. The Aviator

6. Spanglish
7. Hotel Rwanda

When it comes to the Music and Foreign Film categories, I have even less of a clue. The only thing I'll be paying attention to is whether or not Team America scores any noms for Best Song.

Only two hours to go...

Monday, December 06, 2004

Oscar Contest

There's an early bird Oscar prediction contest up here. No prizes, other than a minor ego boost. Bonus points if you enter before December 17. Join under Team The Oscar Grouch (not to be confused with Team America or Team Zissou) and then check out my current predictions - I really went out on a limb with some of these, so I'm sure to be humiliated.

Weblog Commenting and Trackback by HaloScan.com