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Sneak Peek at BREAKING BAD's Final Hoorah

While I’m sure no one is quite delighted to hear that their favorite AMC drama will only have a final run of eight episodes, we can all breathe that Breaking Bad didn’t outstay it’s welcome and eventually jump the shark. In only eight episodes, expect utter chaos to ensue and at least one coffin to be filled.

SPOILERS FOLLOW

Last time we saw Walter White, Jesse, Hank and the gang was at a cordial familial dinner at the White house, not to be confused with the White House. All was well and cheery. Walt had seemingly retired a rich man and his long estranged wife Skyler seemed to finally be a little cheery (or at least she wasn’t attempting to kill herself in front of her guests). But all these skippy-doo smiles come to an abrupt halt when Hank takes an inopportune bowel movement and discovers a decisive clue that WW is indeed the notorious methamphetamine kingpin, Heisenberg.

All that we know of what is to come thus far is that in the not too distant future, Walt will sit down by his lonesome in a little diner out of town for some bacon and a side of firearms in the parking lot to celebrate his 52nd birthday.

END SPOILERS

In this first look at the second installment of season 5, we don’t get any new footage but a chance to catch up with Brian Cranston, Aaron Paul, Bob Odenkirk and Dean Norris as they ensure us that this is a season that we don’t want to wait for re-runs of.

Check it out here:

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First Poster for HARRY….THE HANGOVER: PART 3

 

The Hangover franchise may have banked quite a bit of cash for The Hangover: Part 2, $254.4 million following an epic $85.9 million opening weekend, but it didn’t leave a good taste in audience’s mouths and most have taken to slamming it for being an unimaginative do-over of the original. Well director Todd Phillips took this criticism to heart and has promised that the third and final installment, The Hangover: Part 3, won’t follow the blacked-out night followed by a hungover trail of clues formula. Instead, he’s suggested that it will involve the wolf pack breaking Alan out of a mental institution. Whether that’s how the chips will fall when the movie is finally released, we’ll see but the first marketing poster definitely suggests that they’re going a new route and are taking new inspiration.

 

This poster is clearly a tip of the hat to the poster art from Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 and I’m totally on-board the imitation bus. It worked tremendously with the marketing for The Muppets who spoofed Twilight, Paranormal Activity, Green Lantern and The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. If the entirety of the Hangover media blitz follows suit and goes the mockery route, we could be in store for some good stuff.

Anyone unfamiliar with Zack Galifinikas‘ music video for Kayne West‘s ‘Cant Tell Me Nothing’ or his faux-cable-access talk show Between Two Ferns will be sure that the comedian actor isn’t unfamiliar with the art of mockery and should check them out here:

Zack Galifinikas’ version of Kayne West’s ‘Cant Tell Me Nothing’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N2bCc0EGP6U

Zack Galifinikas interviewing Steve Carrell on Between Two Ferns

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Harrison Ford Joins ANCHORMAN 2

 

With all the hubbub surrounding casting news for Star Wars 7, a bit of unexpected casting news is sure to incite even more excitement from the mob of interneters- Harrison Ford has hopped onto the cast of Anchorman 2. Ford, who is now 70, will fill the alligator-skin-shoes of a “legendary newscaster” against original cast members Will Ferrell, Paul Rudd, Steve Carell, David Koechner and Christina Applegate and will join franchise newcomers Kristen Wiig, James Marsden and John C Reilly.
 

While this news may not have broken today, I was hesitant to believe anything churning in the old rumor mill until I had more definitive proof. That proof is now here in the form of the first set picture.

 

While Ford is hardly known for his roles in full-blown comedies, he certainly has a knack for growly grumpsters and I’m hoping he gets a chance to riff along with the best of them. Anchorman 2 has a truly standup cast, employing the cream of the crop of comedy actors and if it can stand up to the weighty promise of the first installment, we will all be in store for another endlessly quotable, comedy classic. Thankfully, statistics are on our side as we know that adding new talent to an aging classic 60% of the time, it works every time.

To commemorate Ford’s addition, here are some of the finest Anchorman quotes for you to gnaw on.
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“I would like to extend to you an invitation to the pants party.” — Brick Tamland

“Baxter, is that you? Baxter! Bark twice if you’re in Milwaukee.” — Ron Burgundy

“Milk was a bad choice.” — Ron Burgundy

“Guess what, I do. I know that one day Veronica and I are gonna to get married on top of a mountain, and there’s going to be flutes playing and trombones and flowers and garlands of fresh herbs. And we will dance till the sun rises. And then our children will form a family band. And we will tour the countryside and you won’t be invited.” -Ron Burgundy

“I’m in a glass case of emotion!” — Ron Burgundy

“I love lamp.” — Brick Tamland

“What? You pooped in the refrigerator? And you ate the whole wheel of cheese? How’d you do that? Heck, I’m not even mad; that’s amazing.” — Ron Burgundy

“Well, I could be wrong, but I believe, uh, diversity is an old, old wooden ship that was used during the Civil War era.” – Ron Burgandy

“I love scotch. Scotchy scotch scotch. Here it goes down, down into my belly.”  – Ron Burgandy

“There were horses, and a man on fire, and I killed a guy with a trident.” — Brick Tamland

“It’s called Sex Panther by Odeon. It’s illegal in nine countries… Yep, it’s made with bits of real panther, so you know it’s good.” – Brian Fantana

“I read somewhere their periods attract bears. Bears can smell the menstruation.” — Brick Tamland

“I’m very important. I have many leather-bound books and my apartment smells of rich mahogany.” — Ron Burgundy

And finally…

“Discovered by the Germans in 1904, they named it San Diego, which of course in German means a whale’s vagina.” -Ron Burgandy
No, there’s no way that’s correct.” -Veronica Corningstone
“I’m sorry, I was trying to impress you. I don’t know what it means. I’ll be honest, I don’t think anyone knows what it means anymore. Scholars maintain that the translation was lost hundreds of years ago.” -Ron Burgandy
“Doesn’t it mean Saint Diego?” -Veronica Corningstone 
 “No. No.” -Ron Burgandy
 No, that’s – that’s what it means. Really.” -Veronica Corningstone
“Agree to disagree.” -Ron Burgandy

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New Longer Trailer for IRON MAN 3

 

Check out this next look at Marvel’s newest, Iron Man 3. Just like the original Iron Man launched Phase One of Marvel‘s scheme to build a shared universe that culminated in The Avengers, Iron Man 3 will be the first of Phase Two eventually building towards Avengers 2.
 
Iron Man 3 will be followed by Thor: The Dark World, Captain America: The Winter Soldier and Guardians of the Galaxy. Plans for Phase Three have already been announced with a lineup that includes the already announced Ant-Man, helmed by film auteur Edgar Wright (Shaun of the Dead, Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World) and a much teased about Doctor Strange film.

This newest look at Iron Man 3 reveals Tony Stark’s Iron Legion, his personal army of AI Iron Man suits (sound anything like the antagonist of Iron Man 2?) battling against his arch nemesis The Mandarin, a terrorist intent on discrediting Stark while leaving his legacy in a destructive wake. As always, Stark is inventing newer and better toys to play with so be sure to expect a legion of new marketable suits and gadgets.

Iron Man 3 features the return of Robert Downey Jr as the eponymous Iron Man/Tony Stark, Don Cheadle as James Rhodes/War Machine, Gwyneth Paltrow as Pepper Pots with newcomers Ben Kingsley and Guy Pearce entering the equation on the villainous side. Shane Black of Kiss, Kiss, Bang, Bang fame takes over the mantle from Iron Man reg Jon Favreau.

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GAME OF THRONES Season 3 Looks Crazy Good

 

As a massive fan of everything to do with Game of Thrones, I really can’t anticipate the third season any more than I already do. My historical obsession with GoT started when the first season of the HBO series released and I fell in love with the story and the characters and after attempting to wait for the next season, was seduced into reading the books, which I tore through like a ravaging White Walker.

 

Having read all of the massively sized novels, the third book, A Storm of Swords, was my absolute favorite. HBO has made an executive decision that I can stand behind to split George R.R. Martin‘s third tome into two seasons. Since this literary installment is chock full of excitement, it’s certainly a good call that will enable the show runners to really flesh out the character and plot developments instead of charging through them.

The latest trailer features a first look at Mance Rayder, the king of beyond the wall, Beric Dondarrion and his flaming sword and Daenerys’ and new eunuch-laden army, The Unsullied, as well as series’ favorites Tyrion Lannister, Robb Stark, Brann Stark, Kaitlin Stark, John Snow, King Joffrey, Arya Stark, Jorah Mormont, Jaime Lanister, Brienne of Tarth  and, naturally, dragons.

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wBtkdje5OfY
Coming on the heels of this latest trailer is a bit of info churning around the rumor mill that season four of Game of Thrones has already received a green light. Charles Dance who plays Tywin Lannister, when talking to Den of Geek, had the following to say:

“We’re about to start season four aren’t we? This year. We get scripts pretty early on, much earlier on than in similar series, usually you get perhaps one episode and you just have to trust that what’s going to come in subsequent episodes is going to be as good as the one you’ve got, but in this I think there are six scripts already written, and we will probably be able to see them with more than adequate time to prepare before we start shooting.”

 In my opinion, the sooner this is green lit the better, even if production gets shut down after season 4, which I’m still hoping beyond hope never actually happens, we need to at least see the entirety of a Storm of Swordsthrough. 

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Zany Trailer for CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2

 

Check out the first trailer for the follow-up to the farcical animated feast with Cloudy with A Chance of Meatballs 2. The first iteration featured a host of SNL alums lending their vocal talent and comedic timing to create a film that managed to be both full of heart with legitimately funny humor. The talented voice cast includes Bill Hader, Anna Faris, James Caan, Andy Samberg, Neil Patrick Harris, Benjamin Bratt, Terry Crews, Will Forte and Kristen Schaal.

While Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs followed the story of Flint, an inventor whose star rises when he concocts a machine that transforms water into food until he loses control of that machine and puts the entire city at risk of destruction by disproportionally large food items, the follow-up involves sentient food animals such as tacodiles, shrimpanzees, apple pie-thons and double bacon cheespiders.

I’m hoping that the clearly stacked voice cast will be able to bring the humor to the table once more with a backdrop against radiant visuals and a tactful story for a worthwhile sequel. Look for it September 27.

Have a look at the trailer yourself right here:

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Inaugural Portland Comic Con Delivers the Geeky Goods

 
 
 
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Geekery and gadgetry reared its proud head this weekend at the First Annual Portland Wizard World Comic Con in the shuffle of one of America’s most idiosyncratic cities- Portland, Oregon. Between cult celebrity superstars and droves of salivating fans anxiously awaiting their opportunity to just catch a glimpse of their favorite personalities and characters, Comic Con Portland was a madhouse (mind you, a palatable madhouse) of toys and panels, comics and artistry, games and autographs and lines, lines, lines.

 While never quite reaching the level of fanboy cosplay that defines the heightened fervor outpouring from San Francisco’s Comic Con, many fans still dressed to the nines in homemade outfits. From Iron Man to a young Jack Frost, Velma to Slave Leia, superheroes, pop-fi icons and comic book characters young and old alike came to life and roamed the premises looking for that vintage comic issue or newfangled art installation from the droves of vendors and artists stuffing the Portland Convention Center from Feb 22-24.

Among the highlights of the convention was a Stan Lee panel where the Marvel mastermind humbly shambled his way into a fold-out chair onstage to ping witty responses back at the flock of admirers in attendance. He ran the gambit of questions, revealing his fundamental lack of understanding of Superman’s “alter ego” – how could putting on glasses fool anyone?!, – the emergence of the comic book industry, what his favorite cameo appearance in a Marvel movie has been and taking his bets on which of his characters would win if pitted against each other. At the behest of a dedicated fan, Lee even awarded the entirety of the audience honorary “No-Prize Awards,” a misleadingly-named high honor amongst the legions of comic loyalists. His presence was one of quiet mystic and loving appreciation of his fans and was easily the highlight of the weekend.

Cult icon, Bruce Campbell played devil’s advocate to Lee’s humble everyman and paced the stage, slashing fans questions down in an equally hilarious and self-important manner. He talked about his role as producer on the upcoming Evil Dead remake, his multiple Sam Raimi cameos and his girth of, let’s call them, disappointing projects. But no, he wouldn’t tell you which movie he was hurt most on while filming and yes, he thinks strip clubs and Comic Con alike are too expensive. He cut down questions as not worthy of his answer before awaiting fans had even finished spewing them out, handed out dollar bills to an attendee he deemed broke and even allowed a fan to reveal onstage an ankle tattoo of ol’ Bruce’s John Hancock. As to whether this snarky and pompous persona was all a play is your call but the whole act was no less than entertaining and certainly “groovy”.

 Emerging star Ashley Bell was there to promote the follow-up to the horror hit with The Last Exorcism: Part II and her modest and girlish charm was simply radiating from her as she spoke about doing all of her own contortions in the films (a method she learned shockingly enough from ballet) as well as her voluntary work with a foundation that rescues logging elephants in Cambodia, providing them with a safe haven in the form of an open-aired elephant sanctuary, a passion project she is making into a documentary entitled Love and Bananas.

Michael Rooker and Norman Reedus, fan favorite brothers Meryl and Darryl, paired up to answer questions about their personal life and their work on The Walking Dead, spit-balling responses in an intoxicating (and perhaps intoxicated) rabble. Hooting, hollering, flexing and sporting sunglasses at night, Michael Rooker unwrapped the enigma that is Michael Rooker. Between revealing that he sees pretty much eye-to-eye as his character Meryl and how he morphed into the typecast of the “bad guy”, Rooker bared his pearly whites and talked from the heart about how the cast of Walking Dead has really bonded with one another and even though the onscreen adversaries are as deadly as ever, that all floats away during set breaks. Although Norman Reedus joined late, he and Rooker joined forces to become a bowling ball of Q ‘n’ A-ing, showcasing the fierce commodore and chemistry between the onscreen brothers.

Outside of the packed panels, there were some treasures to be mined and I helplessly found myself, after committing to leave my already empty wallet alone, picking up a vintage Han Solo action figure  that had too much nostalgic value for me to pass up and a handful of variant cover Walking Dead comics. The bounty of vintage paraphernalia was as rich and diverse as the stock of original art that wallpapered the partitioned maze. Pressed against the back wall were a trio of delectable automobiles primped and primed for this weekend’s convention, two of which really peaked my interest- both Stuntman Mike’s “death-proof” 1971 Chevy Nova and the 1972 neon yellow Mustang, amply titled “Lil Pussy Wagon” from Tarantino’s genre slasher Death Proof. I got an opportunity to speak with the owner of the vehicles and he informed me that the Nova was one of seven used on set and was one of five stunt cars.

As an inaugural effort and this blogger’s first Comic Con ever, I would say that it was an overwhelming success. Any major convention walks a tight rope of over-saturation and over-stuffing and Portland Wizard World felt organic and homey without being stuffy and riotous. It was just the right feel with just the right people. I’m sure it’s success will only redouble next year when it’s presence is ever more well known so be sure to keep your eye on this one going forward.

Seeing that no Comic Con coverage is complete without a wealth of photos, here are a few culled from the packed throng that was the nerdtastic convention center.

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Oscars 2013 Results

 

 
The long awaited Oscar night is finally over and I’ve come out feeling like quite a champion with 21 of 24 predictions come true. There were a couple sneaky categories and my final predictions for the most part came true.

As for the contest side of things, we have a tie between two people- nate and Stefanie Schneider- who both went 20 for 24. My readership pulled some really good votes as we had a number of 19’s as well. Good work guys. Now for the business side of things, first one of you guys to email me will snag that prize. What is it? Why a sweet DVD of course.

 
 

Of the four Oscar narratives I foresaw, the situation I was touting most and betting with happened to come true with a big split during the night leaving Life of Pi as the big winner after securing four Oscar wins with Argo and Les Miserables receiving three each. Skyfall, Lincoln and Django Unchained all snagged two and everything else received just one.

Although most everything fell into line just as I predicted, I let the Christoph Waltz‘s win slip away from me even though I said he should have wonand had a big question mark as to who actually would win until just two nights prior to the big night. Should have gone with my gut on both that and Lincoln for Production Design and my ballot would have been nearly flawless.

I thought host Seth McFarlane did a great job at opening the show, keeping the thing spinning along and running the gambit on joke fodder throughout the evening. Nothing and no-one was untouchable and I’m sure he’s the best presenter we’ve had for a number of years. Lesson to learn: funny, young and currently “in” works. Out with the old, in with the new.

Finally, it was nice to see the night book-ended by the most sincere and honest pair of acceptance speeches which came from Christoph Waltz and Ben Affleck. Good on ya guys.

The final results are below with the three categories I missed posted in red.

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Best Picture

Argo

Best Actor

Daniel Day-Lewis (Lincoln)

Best Actress

Jennifer Lawrence (Silver Linings Playbook)

Best Supporting Actor

Christoph Waltz (Django Unchained)

Best Supporting Actress

Anne Hathaway (Les Misérables)

Best Director

Ang Lee (Life of Pi)

Best Writing (Adapted Screenplay)

Chris Terrio (Argo)

Best Writing (Original Screenplay)

Quentin Tarantino (Django Unchained)

Best Animated Feature Film

Brave

Best Documentary (Feature)

Searching for Sugar Man

Best Foreign Language Film

Amour

Best Cinematography 

Life of Pi (Claudio Miranda)

Best Film Editing

Argo

Best Music (Original Score)

Mychael Danna (Life of Pi)

Best Music (Original Song)

“Skyfall” from Skyfall

Best Sound Mixing

Les Misérables

Best Sound Editing

Skyfall/Zero Dark Thirty

Best Production Design 

Lincoln

Best Visual Effects

Life of Pi

Best Costumes

Anna Karenina

Best Makeup and Hairstyling

Les Misérables

Best Documentary Short Subject

Inocente

Best Short Film (Animated)

Paperman

Best Short Film (Live Action)

Curfew

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Oscar Predictions 2013

My final ballot has been cast and although there are a number of categories I’m really unsure of, I gotta some risks here. Anything in red are my risk picks. Assume everything is a lock.

If you haven’t yet, be sure to enter the First Annual SmartFilm Oscar Prediction Contest. All you need to do is create a username and cast your predictions!

 

Best Picture
“Argo

Best Director
Ang Lee “Life of Pi”

Best Actor
Daniel Day-Lewis “Lincoln”

Best Actress
Jennifer Lawrence  “Silver Linings Playbook”

Best Supporting Actor
Robert De Niro “Silver Linings Playbook”

Best Supporting Actress
Anne Hathaway “Les Misérables”

Best Animated Film
“Brave” Mark Andrews and Brenda Chapman

Adapted Screenplay
“Argo” Screenplay by Chris Terrio

Original Screenplay
“Django Unchained” Written by Quentin Tarantino

Achievement in Costume Design
“Anna Karenina” Jacqueline Durran

Best Documentary
“Searching for Sugar Man”

Best Documentary Short Subject
“Inocente” Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine

Achievement in Film Editing
“Argo” William Goldenberg

Best Foreign Language Film
“Amour” Austria

Achievement in Cinematography
“Life of Pi” Claudio Miranda

Achievement in Makeup and Hairstyling
“Les Misérables” Lisa Westcott and Julie Dartnell

Original score
“Life of Pi” Mychael Danna

Original song
“Skyfall” from “Skyfall”- Music and Lyric by Adele Adkins and Paul Epworth

Achievement in Production Design
“Anna Karenina” – Production Design: Sarah Greenwood; Set Decoration: Katie Spencer

Achievement in Sound Editing
“Life of Pi” Eugene Gearty and Philip Stockton

Achievement in Sound Mixing
“Les Misérables” Andy Nelson, Mark Paterson and Simon Hayes

Achievement in Visual Effects
“Life of Pi” Bill Westenhofer, Guillaume Rocheron, Erik-Jan De Boer and Donald R. Elliott

Best Animated Short Film
“Paperman” John Kahrs

Best Live Action Short Film
“Curfew” Shawn Christensen

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Oscar 2013: Who Will Win, Who Should Win

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Who deserves to win doesn’t always line up with who does win so take a look at where the Oscars are gonna end up and where they actually should be heading.

(Note: This is not my final ballot, I still need to do some equivocating and fill in my dashes so expect that final submission tomorrow evening.)

Best Picture

Who Will Win: Argo


Argo
has got the proverbial wing beneath it’s said and it’s outright hoarding of all the precursor awards are sure to lead to an Argonian victory speech next Sunday. With the DGAs, PGAs, BAFTAs, Golden Globes, Critic’s Choice, SAGs and WGAs under its belt, it’s hard to imagine a world where Argo does not win Best Picture.

 

Who Should Win: Silver Linings Playbook

 

Although Django Unchained was technically my favorite of the year, I don’t think it should be the picture that gets Quentin Tarantino his first, and likely only, win. No, this year’s winner should be Silver Linings Playbook. Although detractors of the film attack it with labels of ‘levity’ and ‘rom-com’, it really isn’t either of those things to any degree. Silver Linings Playbook managed a miraculously real exploration of romance amid catastrophe with sensitive navigation. It’s a remarkably emotional film and to degrade it with the label of rom-com is akin to calling Argo a mindless actioner.

Best Director

Who Will Win: Ang Lee

This is definitely the trickiest category going this year. The only person with any real momentum here is Affleck and he’s ineligible for the win. While I want to say that Steven Spielberg is the safe bet, here is little to no empirical evidence that suggest that he is indeed the front runner. In fact, outside of a slew of nominations, Spielberg has received little fanfare on the accolades side for his turn behind the camera, critical acclaim notwithstanding. Plus, he’s a safe vote and we’ve yet to see if the Academy will try and be more forward-looking and less passe this time around. Ang Lee seems a likely mantle holder for front runner but that would probably be more of a legacy win than for representing Life of Pi as his finest work. Since Life of Pi is easily the biggest moneymaker worldwide, why not seem relevant and present him the prize. I’m going out on a limb here but I just can’t help but put Lee at number one.

Who Should Win: David O’Russell

 

Returning to my sentiments on Silver Linings Playbook, it was undeniably David O’Russell‘s tender hand that made the film work as effectively as it did. If handled with less sensitivity and deliberate execution, it easily could have fallen victim to the pitfalls of melodrama, a feat which he and his talented cast alone can take credit for. O’Russell has proved of late that he has a noxious ability to direct actors into award-winning roles so it’s about time for him to get his cred.

Best Actor

Who Will Win: Daniel Day Lewis

No-one will deny Daniel Day Lewis‘s craft and his uncanny transformative ability. He managed to continue his victory streak of excellent thesbianism and his portrayal of the 16th President of the United States will be sure to gain him his third, and record setting, win for Best Actor.

Who Should Win: Daniel Day Lewis

 

The reason DDL is so strong in this category is all due to the fact that he didn’t just bring a stoic icon to life, he did it in a deeply personal and curiously tender way, presenting a side of Lincoln no-one saw coming. Lewis’ master class in method acting allowed us to hang with the long deceased president for a few hours and he deserves to be presented with his third lil’ gold guy. The strongest contender in this category from where I’m standing is Joaquin Phoenix. Phoenix displayed an equally fine-tuned character on the other side of the human condition and played unhinged and animalistic in his mannerisms and gestures alike. It’s too bad that The Master wasn’t a finer film in which to showcase Phoenix’s acting prowess.

Best Actress

Who Will Win: Jennifer Lawrence

 

This category isn’t a total lock but Jennifer Lawrence definitely is the front runner here. Although she hasn’t snagged all the precursors, which are usually a strong means of prediction, she is certainly still considered to be leading her category by most Oscar pundits. There is still a good chance that Jessica Chastain ends up with the win or a split vote between Lawrence and Chastain opens up an avenue for underdog Emmanuelle Riva to sneak in.

Who Will Win: Jennifer Lawrence

 

Lawrence put on an admirably scatter-shot performance as Tiffany in Silver Linings Playbook, fluctuating between being guarded and psychotic, irrational and acute, sharp and girlish, always with shocking honesty. Her portrait felt real and truly fleshed out and genuine. For some, it would be the performance of their life but I expect Lawrence has more up her sleeve. Tiffany was not the cheap, surface caricature that she might have been, this was a well studied and meaningful performance and although Lawrence is young, she deserves the win here.

Best Support Actress

Who Will Win: Anne Hathaway

Anne Hathaway‘s literally breathtaking rendition of “I Dreamed a Dream” delivered with so much teary-eyed panache that it became the forefront of the Les Miserables marketing campaign. Every trailer was branded with this harrowing tune to the point that anyone who watches television or goes to the movies are sure to be familiar with the majority of it regardless of whether they’ve actually seen the film. Even those who missed it will be sure to recognize a closely shaven Hathway belting out in agony and that public presence alone is enough to run her to the forefront. There’s a reason the marketing blitz started and stopped with Hathaway, she was the uncontested highlight of Les Misand her cry-singing (or is it sing-crying?) will most certainly be winning her her first Oscar

Who Should Win: Anne Hathaway

As much as I’ve had my reservations about the ceaselessly perky Hathaway in the past, her dueling fare from the year has all but won me over. Her bit in Les Miserables was a shining beacon of hope in an otherwise tiresome film and proved her potent dramatic gravitas. On the opposite side of the spectrum, she nicely balanced out that intensity with an unforgettable turn as a sassy, no-BS Catwoman (actually Selina Kyle) in Christopher Nolan‘s final Batman outing, earning her the title of this year’s Best Supporting Actress.

Best Supporting Actor

Who Will Win: ?

 

This year’s best supporting actor field is really anyone’s race, with the possible exception of Alan Arkin. You may as well flip a four sided coin and go with the result because a good argument could be made for any of these contenders. At different points of the year, I’ve had my money on Phillip Seymour Hoffman then Tommy Lee Jones then Robert DeNiro and finally Christoph Waltz. Now I’m scrambling to make a final call as this field is truly a toss up that even the finest of prognosticators will be sure to miss out on.

Who Should Win: Christoph Waltz

Well obviously I’m going with Waltz. I gave his performance in Django Unchaineda glowing reviewing when it came out and I stick wholeheartedly to it. Waltz may have won Best Supporting Actor just a few years back under the Tarantino flag and sporting similar diction and cadence but that doesn’t detract from his truly phenomenal performance here. Although there are notable similarities, the contrast in character really couldn’t be starker. His prior win was for a hypnotic villain who made your belly turn and your face cringe while a win here would be for a hero that you helplessly stood behind and cheered for the whole way along. Is that enough of a difference for the Academy though? We shall see if they can distinguish the different between capitalizing and selflessness, villainy and heroics.

Cinematography 

Who Will Win: Life of Pi

At this point, I’m essentially relegating all the technicals Life of Pi‘s way because of the overwhelming support for the film both critically and commercially. Basically I expect Pi to play out much like this year’s Inception in the sense that it’ll probably tie for the top number of wins, albeit those coming strictly from tech categories. I certainly wouldn’t want to be on the wrong end of an argument debating the deservedness of the Life of Pi win but it just wasn’t a film that engaged me on a level deeper than the visual plus DP Claudio Mirandareally doesn’t have the filmography beneath his belt to outright deserve a win.

Who Should Win: Roger Deakins

Roger Deakins has been responsible for some of the most breathtaking and lively cinematography this side of Hollywood and his painterly photography of Skyfall was undeniably inspired. His scenery, lighting, camera motion decisions and framing decisions make it the most visually stunning Bond we’ve seen yet. It’s rare that a cinematogrpaher stands out as much as Deakins did here especially within the context of a massive blockbuster. I’m not ready to commit to necessarily calling this his finest work (as he’s competing against himself there with No Country For Old Men, True Grit, Shawshank Redemption, The Big Lebowski and Jarhead) but it certainly stands amongst his finest. Deakins has been nominated ten times and still has never won. It’s about time.

Editing

Who Will Win: Argo

Historically, editing has always been a category that goes hand-in-hand with Best Picture and don’t expect that to change this year as it will more than likely be headed Argo‘s way. While this trend unfortunately takes the fun out of the category, it also leaves it ripe for a shocker like last year’s surprising victory for The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.

Who Should Win: Zero Dark Thirty

Whether you applaud Mark Boal‘s script or the editor here is up to you but there’s no denying the feat that is condensing a nine year historical manhunt into a movie that runs under three hours. This was the chief achievement of Zero Dark Thirty. Though some knocked it for being dull, the sense of hyper realism was propelled by the editors cautious cutting choices. Every choice seems deliberate and substantial, a necessary path to our final understand of the character at the forefront.

Best Animated Feature

Who Will Win: Brave

This year’s Best Animated Feature race is more lively than normal with a host of viable contenders. While the odds are still out, films like Frankenweenie and Paranorman still stand a chance but more than likely will cancel each other out because of their similar subject material (reanimation) and medium (stop-motion). This will most likely propel Brave to the victory and this is really a shame. Pixar was on such a winning streak up until the credits rolled out on Toy Story 3 and since have seemed to go cold. Bravewas very derivative fare that fell into sentimentality and mindless plot points. Brand recognition however goes a long way and the fact that Pixar missed out last year more than likely means that they’ll be taking the win even after phoning it in. Plus, the mother-and-daughter-finally-understanding-each-other resolution is much more in line with Academy sensibility than the genre blenders that fill out the rest of the field.

Who Should Win: Wreck it Ralph 

Wreck it Ralph was a genuinely from-the-heart story laid out on a stunning and inventive visual canvas that managed to excite both nostalgia and wonder. Many people confused it for a Pixar film and with good reason, because it, like what Pixar used to represent, was actually great. Ralph should win to change the narrative and prove that the increasingly worthwhile Dreamworks Animation Studio may just have inherited the mantle from Pixar.

Visual Effects

Who Will Win: Life of Pi

Again, look at the Inception ticket to get a good read here. It took both Sound Editing and Mixing, Cinematography and Visual Effects, the likely route for Life of Pi minus sound mixing which will go to Les Miserables. There’s nothing to knock Ang Lee’s beautifully made Life of Pi for, it’s elegant use of 3D technology and dreamlike landscapes were most definitely the standouts of the film and I won’t be booing when it takes the win, which trust me, it will.

 Who Should Win: The Avengers

Say what you will about the Marvel mashup but there’s no denying the visual mastery taking place on screen in The Avengers. Maybe it’s just the inner geek in me speaking up but the final climax in Avengers was truly a one-of-a-kind spectacle. Sure, it’s eye candy but it was goddamn delicious. The fact that Marvel stipulated that final sequence before they were had a story is no surprise, it’s the breathtaking centerfold to their already massively scoped blockbuster and it delivered more geekgasms than the world could have ever expected.