December 27, 2016

89th Academy Awards - Nominee Predictions #2

We've had some major developments the last few weeks in the realm of Oscar-guessing, so I thought it was a decent enough time to update my predictions. Basically every major critics circle has announced their nominees and/or winners, the Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild nominations have been announced, and most of the notable Academy shortlists of eligibility have been released, all with some relatively surprising results. So, no use introducing this much further; I'm just gonna get into it.

To make things easier for myself, I'll only be highlighting categories in which I've made major changes in my predictions compared to last time in this post, as a good chunk of my guesses for each category have remained mostly unchanged. I'll provide a full list of all my predictions at the bottom of the post for comparison. My next Oscars post will be my final predictions before the nominees are announced, and will be posted a few days before then (the nominations will be announced on Tuesday, January 24th). Once again, nominees are listed in order of plausibility, and the Best Live Action Short Film, Best Animated Short Film, and Best Documentary Short Subject categories have been omitted for this list, but will be included in my final predictions. All right, let's start for real.


Best Foreign Language Film

My predictions (and most people's predictions) for this category got absolutely obliterated a few weeks ago when the Academy released their 9-film shortlist, eliminating major players Elle (the frontrunner to win), Julieta, and Neruda, from France, Spain, and Chile, respectively. That leaves this year's frontrunner as Toni Erdmann from Germany, which was significantly less controversial and even generally better received than Elle. My guesses to round out the nominees are Land of Mine (Denmark is always a decent choice, as it is the sixth most nominated country in this category), Asghar Farhadi's lukewarmly received Iranian drama The Salesman (he previously won in 2011 for A Separation), Switzerland's whimsical animated tale My Life as a Zucchini (benefiting from added exposure from being on the animated film shortlist as well), and Russia's Paradise to round out the fifth spot, though I'll be completely honest and say I have no idea how that slot will pan out. Consider Toni Erdmann and The Salesman relative locks, though.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Toni Erdmann (Germany)
2. The Salesman (Iran)
3. Land of Mine (Denmark)
4. My Life as a Zucchini (Switzerland)
5. Paradise (Russia)

The Only Contenders Left:
6. It's Only the End of the World (Canada)
7. A Man Called Ove (Sweden)
8. Tanna (Australia)
9. The King's Choice (Norway)


Best Makeup and Hairstyling

Another category that the Academy totally blew up predictions-wise with their shortlist. What is it with the Academy and handling this category so strangely? Once again, the agreed-upon frontrunners to win in this category have been omitted from their shortlist, this time being Jackie and Silence. This list is even more exclusive and strange than the one for foreign film, featuring only seven choices. The Academy has now created a world where Deadpool may actually get an Oscar nomination, just for one category where there is a great case to be made against it. Nathaniel Rogers of The Film Experience put it succinctly when he said that Deadpool will most likely be like Shrek in terms of awards season, in that it's irreverent and hip now, but the prizes for it will seem embarrassing in not too much time. As someone who has thought the hype for Deadpool was over-zealous from day one, I happen to agree with this. To be fair, though, it would not at all be the worst movie nominated in this category (the likes of Norbit and The Wolfman have also shown up here in the past decade).

So, with our original frontrunners gone, Florence Foster Jenkins seems to be the most obvious choice for winner and thus the most obvious choice as nominee, and I'm having Deadpool and Star Trek Beyond round out the last two slots, though Suicide Squad is a potential spoiler (as bad as that film was, its makeup work is among the most notable of this list of low-sense choices).

Predicted Nominees:
1. Florence Foster Jenkins
2. Star Trek Beyond
3. Deadpool

Potential Spoiler:
4. Suicide Squad

Other Choices:
5. The Dressmaker
6. Hail, Caesar!
7. A Man Called Ove


Best Original Score

This category has always been strange, Birdman and The Revenant being notable exclusions from Oscar's shortlist in recent years. The most major omission here is once again a frontrunner to win, Johann Johannson for Arrival, allegedly due to too many of the pieces being unoriginal. This all but solidifies La La Land as the movie to beat in this category in my opinion, and also gives some other films a fighting chance that I'd previously underwritten. I'm under the impression that The Jungle Book will actually get more attention in technicals than I've been estimating (you'll notice I now have it in the top five for production design, for instance), so I expect it to show up here, the Globe love for Moonlight convinces me it'll be included, and Mica Levi's score for Jackie should make up for the "ominous stringy score" gap left by the exclusion of Arrival. I still haven't bought the consensus that Lion will be a hit with Academy voters outside of Patel and Kidman for some reason, but I admit it's a possibility here.

Predicted Nominees:
1. La La Land (Justin Hurwitz)
2. Moonlight (Nicholas Britell)
3. Florence Foster Jenkins (Alexandre Desplat)
4. The Jungle Book (John Debney)
5. Jackie (Mica Levi)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (Michael Giacchino)
7. The BFG (John Williams)
8. Lion (Dustin O'Halloran and Hauschka)
9. Finding Dory (Thomas Newman)
10. Hacksaw Ridge (Rupert Gregson-Williams)


Best Adapted Screenplay

We gained one definite and one possible nominee in this category after the Academy ruled that Moonlight and Loving will be included in the adapted categories rather than original. Back in the summer, I assumed Moonlight would be considered adapted, being based on an unproduced stage play, even though it doesn't make a whole lot of sense considering the final film product is completely indiscernible from its source material, which itself never technically "existed". I don't think Loving will get in here, as I've just heard very little buzz for it outside of Ruth Negga, so Moonlight is really the only significant addition to this list, and currently my guess for winner as well. 

Predicted Nominees:
1. Moonlight (Barry Jenkins and Tarrell Alvin McCraney)
2. Arrival (Eric Heisserer)
3. Silence (Martin Scorsese and Jay Cocks)
4. Fences (August Wilson's ghost)
5. Hidden Figures (Allison Schroeder and Theodore Melfi)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Nocturnal Animals (Tom Ford)
7. Loving (Jeff Nichols)
8. Hacksaw Ridge (Andrew Knight and Robert Schenkkan)
9. Lion (Luke Davies)
10. Sully (Todd Komarnicki)

Best Supporting Actor

Next we have this historically ever-elusive category, further shaken up by the Screen Actors Guild Award nominations. I personally feel that this year's nominees will match the SAG nominees fairly closely. I was originally wary of the idea of Dev Patel and Hugh Grant getting nominations, but it seems Florence Foster Jenkins is getting a fair amount of late-term goodwill (which does bump it up in the costume and production design categories, though I still doubt it makes the top five there), and I guess this whole Lion being a Best Picture threat thing is happening even though everybody seems to agree that it's a fairly by-the-numbers crowd-pleaser. Oh well. I'll probably be wrong about these because this category rarely makes sense.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Mahershala Ali (Moonlight)
2. Jeff Bridges (Hell or High Water)
3. Lucas Hedges (Manchester by the Sea)
4. Hugh Grant (Florence Foster Jenkins)
5. Dev Patel (Lion)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Michael Shannon (Nocturnal Animals)
7. Liam Neeson (Silence)
8. Issei Ogata (Silence)
9. Ben Foster (Hell or High Water)
10. Stephen McKinley Henderson (Fences)


Best Picture

Not really any changes here, mostly just in the ordering of what I think will be nominated. The same locks are still in place here, but moving down on the radar are Sully, Silence, and Live by Night, and rising are Fences, 20th Century Women, and Hidden Figures. Sully has missed out on just about every major award so far, Live by Night opened to mediocre reviews in a crowded December, and while Silence is still definitely a threat just by virtue of being directed by Martin Scorsese, it's only been getting scattershot precursor attention, and won't even get a wide release until a week before nominees are due out, so it's not clear to what extent it'll get attention. I'm still guessing it will go the route of the likes of American Sniper and True Grit where the late release actually aids it in getting last-minute attention despite light precursor heat.

Locks:
1. La La Land
2. Manchester by the Sea
3. Moonlight

Other Predicted Nominees:
4. Arrival
5. Hell or High Water
6. Fences
7. Jackie
8. Hidden Figures
9. Hacksaw Ridge

Possible Nominees:
10. Silence
11. 20th Century Women
12. Lion


That's all for extended coverage of the categories. Below you'll find a list of just my top 5 predictions, without any potential spoilers listed. Unlike above, this list is ordered in alphabetical  order rather than in order of possibility of nomination. Stay tuned in January after the PGA nominees announcement for an in-depth look into the Best Picture race specifically, as well as for some last-minute reviews of remaining 2016 movies.


Full Predictions List


Best Picture
- Arrival
- Fences
- Hacksaw Ridge
- Hell or High Water
- Hidden Figures
- Jackie
- La La Land
- Manchester by the Sea
- Moonlight
- Silence

Best Director
- Damien Chazelle (La La Land)
- Barry Jenkins (Moonlight)
- Kenneth Lonergan (Manchester by the Sea)
- Martin Scorsese (Silence)
- Denis Villeneuve (Arrival)

Best Actor
- Casey Affleck (Manchester by the Sea)
- Andrew Garfield (Hacksaw Ridge)
- Ryan Gosling (La La Land)
- Viggo Mortensen (Captain Fantastic)
- Denzel Washington (Fences)

Best Actress
- Amy Adams (Arrival)
- Annette Bening (20th Century Women)
- Natalie Portman (Jackie)
- Emma Stone (La La Land)
- Meryl Streep (Florence Foster Jenkins)

Best Supporting Actor
- Mahershala Ali (Moonlight)
- Jeff Bridges (Hell or High Water)
- Hugh Grant (Florence Foster Jenkins)
- Lucas Hedges (Manchester by the Sea)
- Dev Patel (Lion)

Best Supporting Actress
- Viola Davis (Fences)
- Naomie Harris (Moonlight)
- Nicole Kidman (Lion)
- Octavia Spencer (Hidden Figures)
- Michelle Williams (Manchester by the Sea)

Best Original Screenplay
- 20th Century Women (Mike Mills)
- Hell or High Water (Taylor Sheridan)
- La La Land (Damien Chazelle)
- The Lobster (Yorgos Lanthimos and Eftyhmis Filippou)
- Manchester by the Sea (Kenneth Lonergan)

Best Adapted Screenplay
- Arrival (Eric Heisserer)
- Fences (August Wilson)
- Hidden Figures (Allison Schroeder and Theodore Melfi)
- Moonlight (Barry Jenkins and Tarrell Alvin McCraney)
- Silence (Martin Scorsese and Jay Cocks)

Best Original Score
- Florence Foster Jenkins (Alexandre Desplat)
- Jackie (Mica Levi)
- The Jungle Book (John Debney)
- La La Land (Justin Hurwitz)
- Moonlight (Nicholas Britell)

Best Original Song
- "Can't Stop the Feeling" (Trolls)
- "City of Stars" (La La Land)
- "Drive It Like You Stole It" (Sing Street)
- "How Far I'll Go" (Moana)
- "Runnin'" (Hidden Figures)

Best Cinematography
- Arrival (Bradford Young)
- Hacksaw Ridge (Simon Duggan)
- La La Land (Linus Sandgren)
- Moonlight (James Laxton)
- Silence (Rodrigo Prieto)

Best Film Editing
- Arrival (Joe Walker)
- Hacksaw Ridge (John Gilbert)
- Hell or High Water (Jake Roberts)
- La La Land (Tom Cross)
- Moonlight (Joi McMillon and Nat Sanders)

Best Production Design
- Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Stuart Craig)
- Jackie (Jean Rabasse)
- The Jungle Book (Christopher Glass)
- La La Land (David Wasco)
- Silence (Dante Ferretti)

Best Costume Design
- Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Colleen Atwood)
- Florence Foster Jenkins (Consolata Boyle)
- Jackie (Madeline Fontaine)
- La La Land (Mary Zophres)
- Silence (Sandy Powell)

Best Visual Effects
- Arrival
- Captain America: Civil War
- Doctor Strange
- The Jungle Book
- Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Best Sound Mixing
- Arrival
- Hacksaw Ridge
- The Jungle Book
- La La Land
- Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Best Sound Editing
- Arrival
- Hacksaw Ridge
- The Jungle Book
- Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
- Sully

Best Makeup and Hairstyling
- Deadpool
- Florence Foster Jenkins
- Star Trek Beyond

Best Animated Feature Film
- Kubo and the Two Strings
- Moana
- The Red Turtle
- Your Name
- Zootopia

Best Documentary Feature
- 13th
- Cameraperson
- I Am Not Your Negro
- O.J.: Made in America
- Weiner

Best Foreign Language Film
- Land of Mine (Denmark)
- My Life as a Zucchini (Swizterland)
- Paradise (Russia)
- The Salesman (Iran)
- Toni Erdmann (Germany)


December 21, 2016

"La La Land" Review

La La Land is a romantic musical comedy-drama film directed and written by Damien Chazelle and starring Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, John Legend, Rosemarie DeWitt, Sonoya Mizuno, Callie Hernandez, Jessica Rothe, Finn Wittrock, and J.K. Simmons. It follows the story of Mia (Stone), a barista and aspiring young actress in modern-day Los Angeles who happens upon multiple chance encounters with Sebastian (Gosling), a burgeoning jazz pianist just recently fired from his monotonous job playing Christmas carols in a pseudo-fancy restaurant. Sebastian has a dream of opening his own jazz club and dedicating it to reviving the dying genre of jazz music, making it the hottest club in L.A. and bringing jazz back to its roots. Mia dreams of performing a one-woman show and then moving to Paris to become a serious actress. The two connect through their respect for the other's artistic ambitions and a romance soon blossoms. What follows is an old-time Hollywood style musical set in the modern day, and my favorite film of the year.

Every so often, a movie, song, book, TV show, or some piece of art comes into your life at just the right time and seems like it was made specifically for you. It takes your current worries, ambitions, and feelings and lays them out threadbare for you in a way that makes you question whether your countenance with it was purely coincidence. I've had my share of these experiences, even a few times in the last couple years, but they're still very rare. This is what La La Land was for me. It feels like Damien Chazelle looked inside my brain and pieced together the exact film that would lift my spirits at this exact time.

Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone have an on-screen chemistry for the ages. Their relationship was the primary selling point of Crazy Stupid Love, and the popularity of the two of them as an on-screen couple has only strengthened since, and La La Land catapults them to Humphrey Bogart/Lauren Bacall status. This is a movie couple stuck out of time, both of them impossibly attractive, multi-talented, and dripping with beguiling charm and a way of interacting with each other on camera that you can't believe they're not together in real life. This is career-best work for both of them, and the cast of supporting players, while rather sparse in screen time, hold their own, most notably John Legend in an interesting turn as a revisionist jazz artist.

This film is exhaustive in its construction as an old-fashioned musical. Most attempts at reviving glitzy, glamorous, old-fashioned musicals of the last few decades have been done with an air of irony or self-reference, whereas La La Land commits fully to giving us an old style in a new setting, though not without its share of finely-tuned postmodernist self-awareness. Justin Hurwitz's score and songs are simply wonderful, and take heavy cues from the best of Jacques Demy and Vincente Minnelli. Some musical purists argue the songs in this film are quite simplistic, but for one thing, something being done almost perfectly shouldn't be downplayed by it not being entirely complex, and for another thing, the simplicity (and familiarity) of the music makes a lot of sense thematically for our characters and story, a point I'll expound upon in a minute.

The musical numbers are memorable, toe-tapping, and visually resplendent. Of particular note is the film's opening number, "Another Day of Sun", taking place on a backed-up Los Angeles freeway as dozens of dancers leave their idle cars and sing and dance on top of the hoods of vehicles in a brilliant, complicated, effortlessly flowing sequence done in one uninterrupted take. As far as technical achievement, this scene is the Revenant bear attack or opening shot of Gravity, but for musicals. In fact, every sequence in the film, musical or otherwise, is dripping with technical mastery. Linus Sandgren's cinematography captures the vibrant, old-fashioned, colorful sets and costumes to underscore the film's generally cheery tone, and the movie never stops dazzling. Moody blue sunsets, orange sun-drenched streets, bright and busy movie sets, sumptuously lit clubs and theaters, and a sequence taking place in a planetarium that quite literally violates the laws of physics. In short, La La Land offers moviegoers some of the most breathtakingly beautiful imagery you'll see all year.

While singing, tap dancing, waltzing, and dress-swaying are in no short supply in La La Land, the movie has a surprising number of exceptionally well-executed scenes of dialogue. Sebastian's explanation of why jazz is so dear to him, his pre-audition pep talk for Mia, their candlelit dinner turned career planning session, and a discussion with John Legend's character about traditionalism vs. revisionism are great dramatic seasoning to this primarily melodic affair. Included as well are some well-meaning jabs at Los Angeles culture and the entertainment industry, giving a tongue-in-cheek ribbing to the wide-eyed optimism of L.A. newcomers and specifically a great gag about a popular car model.

La La Land is ultimately a film about ambition and nostalgia, and more specifically about a concept that has always intrigued and moved me - the phenomenon of art connecting with someone on a visceral, emotional level, and that person then being so driven by that connection to try to recreate that connection with others. Sebastian and Mia aren't concerned with wealth, but with sharing what they've always loved. The film expands further from there, factoring in our loved ones' influence on our art and our lives. Sebastian and Mia don't try to recreate their feelings through art alongside each other; their dedication and craft are supplemented by their knowing each other. Don't mistake this for cloying sentimentality or faux-optimistic sap, though - the film has a quiet air of melancholy underneath it, and does not leave heartstrings unpulled, but I want to leave you with what I've said so far so you can see the movie, get where I'm coming from, and ponder for yourself.

I really cannot sing this movie's praises enough. La La Land is filled with clever homages, brilliant musical numbers, and dazzling visuals, communicating its themes in the language of both film and music. It's vibrant, bright, energetic, bittersweet, charming, passionate, magical, nostalgic, romantic, sweet, and impeccably crafted in basically every way. I'd recommend this film to anyone with a soul, but for cinephiles, musical junkies, and those with a flicker of romanticism in their hearts especially, this film will likely sweep you off your feet as it did mine. The levity and peace it gave me regarding my own relationship, my own ambitions, and my own perception of life, love, and art in general is difficult to understate. Its dreamlike composition and irresistible heart is rare, spellbinding, and brilliant. It's an optimistic, but never foolishly so, celebration of love and art - and beyond that, an argument that the two are inextricably linked. In the words of Sebastian, "It's conflict, and it's compromise, and it's very, very exciting."

La La Land revives the musical genre for the 21st century, and, following Whiplash, places Damien Chazelle among the best filmmakers working today. It's a perfect holiday film, and an unmitigated, non-sarcastic delight to a degree incredibly uncommon in modern cinema. I love this movie. Please, please see it.

Grade: A+

December 20, 2016

"Rogue One: A Star Wars Story" Review

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story is an action-adventure fantasy film directed by Gareth Edwards and starring Felicity Jones, Diego Luna, Mads Mikkelsen, Ben Mendelsohn, Donnie Yen, Riz Ahmed, Jiang Wen, Alan Tudyk, and Forest Whitaker. A spinoff from the main Star Wars saga, the film takes place directly before Episode IV: A New Hope, and does not include the adventures of the Skywalker family, but instead follows a group of rebels responsible for the recovery of the blueprints that help the Rebel Alliance defeat the Death Star. The movie centers on Jyn Erso (Jones), a renegade rebel since childhood, who is thrust into the affair due to her father's previous allegiance to the Empire. The film is the first in a series of anthology films to complement the main "episodes" in the Star Wars universe, telling stories of supplement to the original trilogy of new characters set in the world of Star Wars and building on its lore, and creating endless amounts of new characters and setpieces to turn into Lego sets and action figures to sell to children and man-children like me. The result is the most depressing addition to the Star Wars universe thus far that is essentially a team of stock characters on a suicide mission to do something that we already know the outcome of. I mean that in a loving way; I'm not bashing on this film.

I will say that I think I have a generally less glowing attitude toward this film than most people I've talked to. I actually saw this film at the Thursday night pre-showing (exams and laziness have prevented me from writing), and I don't regret doing it, and will probably see it again. It's a super entertaining action film, and is filled with some of the best Star Wars moments a nerd could hope for. But it may be wise to temper your expectations, especially if you happened to really love The Force Awakens.

Rogue One isn't really a Star Wars movie in a lot of ways, and that's not necessarily a bad thing. It takes place in the Star Wars universe, of course, and the detail in the production design, creature design, costumes, and environments is stunning, lived-in, and reminiscent of the original trilogy. In terms of look and feel, however, this does not completely fit within the Star Wars main pantheon. Rogue One is shot like a war film, in a way that's almost naturalistic - or as naturalistic as you can get in a fantastical space adventure. The action is typically involving, well-shot, and full of plenty of badass moments. Fanservice and wink-wink references to the original trilogy are in relatively short order, something detractors of The Force Awakens should appreciate. There are a few nods and cameos peppered around the film, some more agreeable than others, but they are for the most part rather integral to the story and satisfying rather than cloying and lazy.

The primary problem with Rogue One is that if you eliminated its main character, the movie wouldn't get worse. Felicity Jones does agreeably well performing as Jyn Erso, and she's certainly a cool, confident character, but she's not terribly interesting beyond being a fairly generic rebel girl (she says "hope" a lot). Most of the characters suffer from this. It's not that they don't have a backstory or personality traits, but they feel more like archetypes than fleshed-out human beings (or robots). That said, these archetypes are entertaining to watch and all have their share of eye-popping action sequences. Donnie Yen is particularly badass as obligatory Zen master man, and you've already heard of Alan Tudyk's snarky droid K-2SO stealing the show, who is arguably a better character than BB-8, though significantly less cute.

The introductions and development of our characters is awkwardly paced and sparse. The villain and his connection to Jyn's father is sort of compelling, and the film is certainly an interesting take on its premise, and really gives the plot of A New Hope some more emotional weight. And despite the first two acts being rather unsatisfying and plodding (Forest Whitaker's character could honestly have been eliminated completely), somehow the third act earns all its big moments. And big those moments certainly are.

The third act of the film has some of the best stuff you'll see in a Star Wars film, and I mean that sincerely. The final storm-the-beach war sequence lasts about 40 minutes and it's spectacular. It's like the sinking sequence in Titanic - somehow all the setup and character development up to that point was completely unconvincing and contrived, and yet for some reason we're all super invested in this catastrophe our archetypal characters have fallen into. Rogue One has some of the best directed action scenes in the series, with Greg Fraiser's amazing cinematography that deftly captures the towering scale of the Empire vs. the rebels facing insurmountable odds. The ending to the film is big, bold, ballsy, and brilliant. It almost makes all the weak points of the film completely forgivable. Darth Vader is not in the movie much at all, but his time on screen is not wasted, and the finale of this film is quite simply one of the best movie endings of the year. Seriously, the last 20 minutes of this movie completely save it.

I know I'm giving this movie a fairly low score for my taste, but I still recommend Rogue One for any Star Wars fan and anyone looking for a really effective, gorgeous action film. Once the movie has been seen a bit more, I'd like to write up a separate post concerning the use of a certain computer-generated effect (by the way, the CGI in this film is simply breathtaking - I thought they were using models half the time but it's just unbelievably state-of-the-art effects work). There are two instances of visual effects use that have proven controversial on an ethical level, so once that's less of a spoiler for people, I'd like to talk about it. You'll know what I'm talking about when you see it.

Regardless, Rogue One is underdeveloped and doesn't quite live up to its potential, but is visually rapturous, a respectably risky move for the franchise, and its heart-pounding third act alone is worth the price of admission. It's a great holiday action film, and I look forward to seeing it again. Can't wait for Episode VIII.

Grade: B

December 15, 2016

"Moana" Review

Moana is an computer-animated musical fantasy adventure film from Walt Disney Pictures Animation directed by Ron Clements and John Musker. Newcomer Auli'i Cravahlo voices Moana, the daughter of the chief of an ancient Pacific Island village, who is called by the spirits of her voyager ancestors to go out into the sea and retrieve an artifact from the demigod Maui (Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson) in order to bring life back to the surrounding islands of the Pacific Ocean. 

What follows is a musical adventure from Disney that almost feels stuck out of time. Disney has been doing a very interesting thing with its films recently where they at once self-aware and self-referential, while also being unabashedly old-fashioned. It's a weird way that Disney creatively gets away with sticking to its winning formula while giving off the impression of awareness and progress. There's something to be said for how perhaps shallow this mentality is, and there's no mistake in asserting that the ends to Disney's means are undeniably centered on profit, but if the formula they're getting away with returning to is as good as the one Disney invented so long ago, I'm willing to give them the pass. Disney has sprinkled these full-scale returns to its popular roots (either in spirit or in the way of straight-up remakes/reboots) with surface-level changes and retoolings of the formula - the impressive use of CGI in The Jungle Book, the character-driven fistfight in lieu of a giant sky beam destroying a city for the finale of Captain America: Civil War, the use of mysticism rather than science and gadgets in Doctor Strange, and the surprisingly multi-layered exploration of racism and xenophobia in Zootopia. Now these "surface-level" changes vary in efficacy and execution, but some of these changes actually enrich the old-fashioned roots of their stories. Moana is an example of this.

Moana's primary diversions from Disney formula are in its commitment to setting and the strength of its female protagonist. Mulan, Pocahontas, The Princess and the Frog, etc., all take place in foreign cultures and do an average of a fair job representing them in a suitable way, but in terms of sheer presentation, Moana feels very much enveloped in its Pacific Island setting. Bolstered by the virtuosity of the music (I'll get to that later), and despite charges that the Maui character is offensively overweight (even though he's supposed to be huge and buff because he's a demigod but okay cool), I believe Moana presents its mythological inspirations in a charming, affectionate way. I'm white and know nothing so cannot speak to its accuracy in details; I'm simply saying that if Disney did in fact fuck up in their portrayal of Pacific Islander mythology, they fucked up accidentally and with a lot of goodwill and affection.

Indisputable, though, is the strength of the character of Moana - and I don't mean that in the cloying way most people do when they describe the female protagonist of an action/adventure movie as "strong". (Sidebar: Can we do better in describing female characters, and identifying when female characters are well-written? If you're saying they're "strong" because the character development of them is strong, then I understand, but there are plenty of compelling character traits that female characters can and do have other than being "strong". But I digress.) Moana is driven, clever, and competent. It's refreshing to see a "princess" character's primary conflict not be based around a love interest. Moana is getting ready to assume the position of chief of her village, but feels a personal urge to explore the sea. She has her own set of wants and goals to further her own personal development, and Maui has his own goals that help her in her emotional arc. I'm not saying Moana is the pinnacle of character writing, but it was nice to have a Disney adventure film where a male and female character each have their own goals beyond wanting to bone, and Moana is about as three-dimensional as "Chosen One" characters get.

Another much more obvious departure from the Disney Renaissance is the animation. The Disney animated films of the 1990s (and really, before then as well) were filled with bright, memorable, iconic images rendered in two dimensions. Moana takes the torch and brings that visual inspiration into computer imagery and 3D. Tangled and Princess and the Frog are perfectly fine Disney princess movies, but they lack the visual flare that really makes Disney films memorable - not to say that their animation is bad or even only okay, but that their art style is not as inspired as the best Disney has to offer. Moana delivers visual splendor in spades. It is a bright, colorful movie with breathtaking action sequences, water and effects animation, and a vibrant color palette that drenches its setting in beauty. This year is truly one of animated superlatives, as Kubo and the Two Strings may have been the best-looking stop-motion animated film I've ever seen, and Moana might actually be the best-looking computer animated film I've ever seen. It's quite an achievement.

The songs, primarily written by Hamilton star Lin-Manuel Miranda, and the score by Mark Mancina are phenomenal and feel just like old Disney, but, again, with a distinctive "now" taste. "How Far I'll Go" and "I Am Moana" are the two absolute highlight songs for me, but there are many wonderful pieces to choose from. None of them quite reach the earworm status of Frozen's "Let It Go", and for that we should really be thankful, honestly. The story is straightforward, uncompromising, and fairly predictable as Disney films go, but it's packed with so much visual beauty, genuine humor and charm, and emotion (mostly owed to the music) to earn a spot toward the top of modern Disney animated films. Other minor unrelated nitpicks I have include an overuse of a comic relief chicken character in my estimation as well as one David Bowie-inspired song being amusing but sort of out of place.

Overall, Moana is a by-the-numbers Disney movie in story and structure, but is superlative in the quality of its animation, music, and character development. That seems to be the tune Disney's singing at the moment, as all my reviews of nearly all their films this year have included this general sentiment, but I've enjoyed the movies quite a bit and Disney's laughing all the way to the bank, so I can't say many people have room to complain here. I recommend Moana to pretty much anyone of any age to see with their family. It's an imperfect but great animated Disney musical.

Grade: A-

December 8, 2016

89th Academy Awards - First Nominations Predictions

If you know me, you know I really enjoy the Oscars. Don't get me wrong - I'm aware that they're mostly politics and showmanship and are ultimately completely pointless, but that's what makes them fun! Following the 2016 election was interesting on a reality TV show level, and hedging bets on the decisions of politicians and the outcome was fun, but the consequences of an election are way too real. The Oscars allows me to make bets and predictions and over-analyze the film industry with absolutely nothing that matters happening as a result. That, and screw you, I think it's a fun show.

So, every year for the past four or five years now, I've closely followed the precursor award season and predicted the nominees and winners for the Academy Awards, first posting them on this blog last year. I plan to have a more complete documenting of awards season this year than last (but by no means an exhaustive one due mainly to time constraints and honestly, probably lack of audience interest), and considered posting my guesses at the beginning of November once the season was in full swing (which is actually pretty late; most Oscar pundits start their early predictions as early as July). While my picks haven't changed a whole lot since the beginning of November, since then we've had some important steps toward having an actual educated guess on this year's nominees beyond simply knowing general Academy trends. The National Board of Review and the critics circles of New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and Washington, D.C., have all released their awards for the best films of the year this past week, and the Critics Choice Awards nominees have been announced in anticipation of the ceremony this Sunday.

What that means is now we have sufficient idea of not necessarily the exact trajectory of the Oscars, as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and critics are different people with different but somewhat similar tastes, but an idea of the general conversation surrounding this year's films in Hollywood, the Los Angeles Film Critics Awards being the best indicator of that as of now. So, this is my first of a planned three posts enumerating my Oscar nominee predictions, the other two planned to come shortly after Christmas (all wide release US films for 2016 will have been released and reviewed, screeners will have been sent out, the Critics Choice Awards will have been held, and we'll have the nominations for the Golden Globes and Screen Actors Guild Awards) and right before the nominees are announced (Golden Globes will have been held, and most guilds will have announced their nominees).

For right now, the Best Documentary Short Subject, Best Animated Short Film, and Best Live Action Short Film categories are being omitted, as it's fairly impossible to guess their trajectory at this juncture. My guesses for each category will be presented in order of likelihood to be nominated, and each category will be accompanied by a short explanation of my choices wherever necessary. I'll start from the "smaller" categories and work my way up to the big ones. All right, that's enough of an introduction, let's get into it...



Best Foreign Language Film

If you're not sure how this category works, each country chooses one film to represent them in this category, usually resulting in around 80 total submissions. It's a flawed system that ends in a lot of worthy foreign films being passed up, and, much like the Animated Feature and Documentary Feature categories, while definitely good to have, it does usually end in foreign films (or animated films, documentaries, etc.) more often than not never getting Best Picture nominations, although it's happened several times before.

This year's frontrunner seems to be Maren Ade's Toni Erdmann from Germany, which has immense goodwill and has garnered most foreign prizes from critics circles so far. Paul Verhoeven's controversial rape revenge thriller Elle has its star Isabelle Huppert emerging as a possible lock for a Best Actress nod, but the film itself may prove too intimidating for the Academy of mostly old white dudes (though, notably, the Academy made big leaps in diversity of age, genre, and race this past year in its membership). Chile's Neruda gets extra points for being directed by Pablo Larrain, who also directed English-language Best Picture threat Jackie this year, and while Iranian director Asghar Farhadi is widely considered the best of his homeland, The Salesman has not been getting glowing responses stateside, so I feel he's a safe bet but not an absolute shoo-in.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Toni Erdmann (Germany)
2. Elle (France)
3. Neruda (Chile)
4. The Salesman (Iran)
5. Fire at Sea (Italy)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Julieta (Spain)
7. Ma'Rosa (Philippines)
8. The Age of Shadows (South Korea)


Best Documentary Feature

The Academy recently released their shortlist of finalists for this category, and they certainly have their work cut out for them in choosing just five nominees, as this year's documentary field is filled with topical, stirring, and excellently crafted documentaries that all have their share of passionate fan bases. 

The frontrunner is Selma director Ava DuVernay's Netflix exclusive doc 13th about the history of racial prejudice in America specifically within the criminal justice system, with I Am Not Your Negro and the 8-hour theatrical edit of the ESPN miniseries O.J.: Made in America being close second favorites. Beyond that, it's pretty much anyone's game, though I'm giving the bump to Weiner, the amazing doc surrounding Anthony Weiner's New York City mayoral campaign amidst a sexting scandal, as it is a relatively lightweight but still thought-provoking examination of media and politics in a heated election year, as well as unfortunately remaining very timely given the recent separation of Weiner and wife Huma Abedin and the sleazy similarities to be noticed between the film's subject and our pussy-grabbing president-elect. 

Outside of those choices, it could go basically anywhere. I'm giving Cameraperson the edge for the fifth spot due to its subject being a female cinematographer, which is a bit of a rarity. With that in mind, general questions about cybersecurity post-Snowden could work in the favor of Alex Gibney's Zero DaysTower, a doc about a school shooting, focuses on a political topic important to many Academy voters, but I wouldn't exactly designate it as "timely", unless a school shooting happens between now and January, which sadly is not out of the question. I'm leaving out Fire at Sea, which is also eligible in this category, as I think it'll be nominated for foreign film due to its timeliness regarding the European migrant crisis instead of here, as the Academy generally prefers American docs.

Predicted Nominees:
1. 13th (Ava DuVernay)
2. I Am Not Your Negro (Raoul Peck)
3. O.J.: Made in America (Ezra Edelman)
4. Weiner (Josh Kreigman and Elyse Steinberg)
5. Cameraperson (Kirsten Johnson)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Zero Days (Alex Gibney)
7. Tower (Keith Maitland)
8. The Eagle Huntress (Otto Bell)
9. Into the Inferno (Werner Herzog)


Best Animated Feature Film

In my estimation, we have three frontrunners to win Best Animated Feature, all of which are pretty much guaranteed nominations, which is actually really good. Most years there's usually a clear winner, an underdog, and a foreign movie that probably should win but won't. The Red Turtle's consistently great reception throughout its many festival runs (it doesn't get a normal US release until mid-January) has earned it a seat at the cool kids' table, which really only leaves the fifth slot open. I'm going with Sing for now as it's a late release that has garnered a surprising amount of positive attention and will likely be a box office success. While a major critical and commercial success, Finding Dory has been curiously left out of the conversation as of late, with Laika's Kubo and the Two Strings actually picking up the most wins from critics circles so far.

As for most likely winner, I have Moana as the frontrunner for a couple reasons. First, the general rule of this category is that the voters generally pick whichever film they like the animation style of the most, which usually defaults to the most competently composed computer-animated film of that year (with the exception of The Lego Movie, which is still a disgrace of a snub). In this case, Moana may have the edge, although Kubo and the Two Strings's eligibility in the Best Visual Effects category could mean otherwise (more on that in a second). The other things pushing Moana to the front is its Thanksgiving release (Zootopia and Kubo were both released in months atypical of winners in this category), classical Disney style (Moana reeks of Disney Renaissance, which they love), and will most likely get nominations for its amazing music. Zootopia has a brilliant and very timely script in its favor, yes, but perhaps the Academy would find it more conducive to inclusiveness to reward a story about ancient Oceanic mythology rather than another talking animal movie. Granted, if Moana were to win it would go to its two white directors, but what can you do?

Predicted Nominees:
1. Moana 
2. Zootopia
3. Kubo and the Two Strings
4. The Red Turtle
5. Sing

Potential Spoilers:
6. Finding Dory
7. Miss Hokusai
8. Your Name
9. The Secret Life of Pets
10. The Little Prince

Longer Shots:
11. Sausage Party
12. My Life as a Zucchini
13. Trolls
14. The Angry Birds Movie
15. Kung Fu Panda 3


Best Makeup and Hairstyling

This category infamously only has three nomination slots rather than five (which is particularly stupid when you consider that literally every movie has hair and makeup work), so predicting it is always tight. We don't have a shortlist yet, but the choices seem fairly simple to me. The Star Trek films have always had a decent showing in this category, only winning a handful of times but picking up a safe number of nominations. Star Trek Beyond was by no means a success or something the Academy cares about, but this category's nominations always feel like the voters go "yeah, that sounds like something that would be nominated for this", so it fits. Silence's sweaty hairy men and Jackie's note-perfect period detail of the Kennedy family should round out the nominations, with the latter being my frontrunner for the win. The other two slots, honestly, I believe are up for grabs.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Jackie
2. Silence
3. Star Trek Beyond

Potential Spoilers:
4. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
5. Hacksaw Ridge
6. Suicide Squad
7. Deadpool


Best Sound Editing

This category is basically synonymous with "sound design", so the general rule has always been that the loudest film wins. War movies are perhaps over-represented here, and after the NBR sung its praises last week, it looks like Hacksaw Ridge has triggered the Gibsonaissance, so I have it as the frontrunner here. Old-fashioned workman disaster dramas Patriots Day and Sully have been mostly positively received and will likely strike a chord with the older set within the Academy who will want to honor it somewhere, Arrival's technical merits are too numerous to count, and Star Wars has been nominated in this category several times, as the New Hollywood-born franchise is one of few blockbusters the Academy takes seriously to any degree.

There are numerous potential spoilers here, as these categories really do come down to "which sci-fi or war film did they like most?", so beyond Rogue One and Hacksaw Ridge, I'd say the remaining three slots are up for grabs.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Hacksaw Ridge
2. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
3. Arrival
4. Sully
5. Patriots Day

Potential Spoilers:
6. The Jungle Book
7. Deepwater Horizon
8. Live by Night
9. Passengers
10. Captain America: Civil War
11. Moana
12. La La Land


Best Sound Mixing

All conventional Oscar wisdom points to La La Land winning this category. Expectedly, musicals are quite often successful in this category due to the complications of mixing vocals with music and diegetic sound effects, and this film has gotten unanimous praise since its premiere at Venice. Rogue One is also a very safe bet here, being another category Star Wars typically shows up in, and Hacksaw Ridge's war movie edge will help it in this sound category as well as the last. I picked Sully for consistency and Silence for shits and giggles mostly, so the last two slots are a craps shoot to some extent.

Predicted Nominees:
1. La La Land
2. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
3. Hacksaw Ridge
4. Sully
5. Silence

Potential Spoilers
6. The Jungle Book
7. Deepwater Horizon
8. Patriots Day
9. Moana
10. Arrival


Best Visual Effects

The Jungle Book has been considered an early frontrunner to win this category since its release all the way back in April, with many critics calling it the Avatar of computer-generated animals. Comic book movies only sometimes make tracks in this category, but Doctor Strange has been particularly singled out for its Escher-style mind-bending effects work, so I'm betting it makes a showing here. Arrival will satisfy their need to reward "thinking man's sci-fi" in this category a la last year's Ex Machina, and Rogue One is basically a shoo-in to be nominated, as seven of the eight prior live-action Star Wars films have been nominated in this category. 

I have Civil War in the fifth slot for lack of a better idea of where the Academy's head is at. It's fairly standard fare as far as comic book movie effects go, though it is a pseudo-Avengers-level commercial hit and ensemble action piece that may draw their attention. Fantastic Beasts has a shot, though the Harry Potter universe is more often nominated for its sets and costumes than its VFX. Other possibilities that made it onto the shortlist are Sully, whose effects are minimal and by no means state-of-the-art but wouldn't be entirely undeserved, The BFG, which suffered mixed reviews but was praised for its motion-capture tech, and Passengers, which looks relatively impressive visually but also doesn't look that good. The weirdo inclusion on the list is Kubo and the Two Strings, eligible via a loophole in the wording of the VFX category rules that allows stop-motion animation to be counted as both an animated film and a live action film in many cases. It's an outside shot, but it's not unprecedented (The Nightmare Before Christmas was nominated in this category), and Kubo has gained unanimous praise for its impressive effects animation. Stranger things have happened.

Predicted Nominees:
1. The Jungle Book
2. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
3. Doctor Strange
4. Arrival
5. Captain America: Civil War

Potential Spoilers:
6. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
7. Sully
8. Passengers
9. The BFG

Would Be Kinda Weird:
10. Kubo and the Two Strings
11. Deadpool
12. Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice
13. X-Men: Apocalypse
14. Alice Through the Looking Glass


Best Costume Design

Do you like period pieces and frilly dresses? You should start predicting the Best Costume Design Oscar, because that's pretty much all the happens here. Jenny Beavan's win for Mad Max last year was a total fluke. Of all the period pieces vying for this prize, Jackie is the one with which most Academy voters will most closely identify, mostly because I'm sure a lot of them were alive during the event it shows. And while they may not have vested interest in 17th century Jesuits or wizards, Powell and Atwood are very frequently represented in this category. La La Land's predicted technical sweep and my hunch that the Academy will have a mild hard-on for Florence Foster Jenkins (but not too much - Stephen Frears hasn't impressed them immensely in the last several years despite directing a Best Picture nominee) are what helps round out my predictions. Outside of La La Land, Jackie, and Fantastic Beasts, though, any of the top few potential spoilers are distinct possibilities, either because of the reception to the film, the subject matter being up Oscar's alley, or recognition of the name of the designer. We'll have a clearer idea in due time.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Jackie (Madeline Fontaine)
2. La La Land (Mary Zophres)
3. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Colleen Atwood)
4. Silence (Sandy Powell)
5. Florence Foster Jenkins (Consolata Boyle)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Allied (Joanna Johnston)
7. Live by Night (Jacqueline West)
8. Rules Don't Apply (Albert Wolsky)
9. Fences (Sharen Davis)
10. Hail, Caesar! (Mary Zophres)
11. Love & Friendship (Eimer Ni Mhaoldomhnaigh)


Best Production Design

This category is a matter of wondering whether the Academy will prioritize work by designers and filmmakers they are familiar with and love or work by more burgeoning artists who have, despite their lack of name recognition, done excellent work with subject matter that is right up the Academy's alley. The frontrunner to me at this moment is an effective tie between La La Land and Jackie. The former benefits from being an old-school Hollywood musical with heaps of praise and endless visual style; the latter benefits from having sets and props from a time period well-known by the Academy and similarly pulled off with incredible skill.

Beyond that, it's mostly a question of just how much of a lock their typical locks are. Fantastic Beasts is a likely nominee, as production designer Stuart Craig is a longtime Oscar favorite, particularly when working with the wizard world. Silence has longtime Scorsese contributor Dante Ferretti in charge of its art direction, and they will no doubt feel pressured to reward him. The fifth slot is a bit more of a toss-up, but I'm giving the edge to Live by Night, Ben Affleck's gangster drama that was recently given a Christmas Day limited release to compete for the Oscars. It's gotten good early word, particularly for its visuals, and there is great Oscar-friendly talent assembled on both sides of the camera, but I think the studio may have jumped the gun on trying to shoehorn it into an already very crowded December release slate. They'll definitely see it, but will they remember it? I'm giving it an edge in at least one category now because it's still too early to say it'll be ignored but also too early to completely rule it out.

The Jungle Book has a decent shot, even though the bulk of its sets were created in-computer, which doesn't disqualify it, as it shouldn't. Jeanine Oppewall is an Oscar favorite doing the art direction for a Warren Beatty film (Rules Don't Apply), but reaction to the film has been incredibly lukewarm and it hasn't been the callback for the director that it was meant to be. However, sometimes that doesn't matter if Oscar likes the man enough, and Beatty is something of a legend. Beyond that are period pieces and the occasional well-crafted sci-fi flick thrown in for kicks. The final slot or two could go essentially anywhere at this point, but the first three are effective locks.

Predicted Nominees:
1. La La Land (David Wasco)
2. Jackie (Jean Rabasse)
3. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Stuart Craig)
4. Silence (Dante Ferretti)
5. Live by Night (Jess Gonchor)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Rules Don't Apply (Jeanine Oppewall)
7. Fences (David Gropman)
8. The Jungle Book (Christopher Glass)
9. Allied (Gary Freeman)
10. Arrival (Patrice Vermette)
11. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (Doug Chiang and Neil Lamont)
12. Love & Friendship (Anna Rackard)
13. Hail, Caesar! (Jess Gonchor)


Best Film Editing

The closest things to locks that I can see in this category are La La Land and Moonlight. Weirdly, this category is not often reserved for purely technical achievements as it once was (The Matrix and Terminator 2 won in this category, but films like them today probably wouldn't). Best Picture winners rarely do not have editing nominations, and these two films are two of the biggest films in that conversation. La La Land definitely has the upper hand, being a more obvious technical achievement, a musical, generally faster paced, and edited by someone who previously won working for this director, but Moonlight is melodic in its construction and its editing is damn near perfect. Any category in which Moonlight is nominated should definitely consider it as a threat to win due to the immense amount of goodwill surrounding it, but for now I'm saying the most likely nomination goes to La La Land.

Beyond that, Walker and Schoonmaker are both past Oscar nominees with known and celebrated work, so they're relatively safe bets. Right now, hype seems to be in Hacksaw Ridge's favor as the sort of middling technical achievement of the major movies in the conversation, but there are plenty of other Best Picture threats that may wow them. The nominations for the ACE Eddie Awards next month will make things clearer, but for now this is all we got.

Predicted Nominees:
1. La La Land (Tom Cross)
2. Moonlight (Joi McMillon and Nat Sanders)
3. Silence (Thelma Schoonmaker)
4. Arrival (Joe Walker)
5. Hacksaw Ridge (John Gilbert)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Sully (Blu Murray)
7. Manchester by the Sea (Jennifer Lame)
8. Hidden Figures (Peter Teschner)
9. Jackie (Sebastian Sepulveda)
10. Fences (Hughes Winborne)

Outside Shots:
11. The Jungle Book (Mark Livolsi)
12. Hell or High Water (Jake Roberts)
13. Live by Night (William Goldenberg)
14. Deepwater Horizon (Gabriel Fleming and Colby Parker, Jr.)


Best Cinematography

Very similar top five lineup as with Film Editing here. Once again, La La Land and Moonlight are the two definite locks, with Silence being just under a lock (I mean, it looks beautiful in the trailers, but will they like the movie?). Linus Sandgren is new to the game, but La La Land is stunningly shot. James Laxton is a similar nobody in regards to Oscar, but one of Moonlight's many points of unanimous praise has been its breathtakingly intimate camerawork. Rodrigo Prieto has only been nominated once for Brokeback Mountain, but he thrives in outdoor settings, which Silence will make great use of. 

Outside of that, things get a little messy between exceptionally well-shot pseudo-underdog efforts and recognized names, though not quite as open a field as with editing. I'm giving the edge to Arrival and Nocturnal Animals, oddly enough both Amy Adams vehicles - the former because of DP Bradford Young's previous work on projects they liked (most notably Selma) and their love for how Denis Villeneuve shoots his movies, and the latter because they usually enjoy Seamus McGarvey's work. Plus, the previous Ford/McGarvey outing, A Single Man, didn't give McGarvey the nomination, seen by many as a snub, so they may feel the need to compensate in the form of rewarding a starkly beautiful film.

Live by Night poses a real threat to the top five; the Academy will nominate Robert Richardson-shot films even if the camerawork isn't that great and they don't even like the movie that much. A few other technical powerhouses might sneak their way in, but outside of a handful of potential upsets, this category is somewhat cut-and-dry.

Predicted Nominees:
1. La La Land (Linus Sandgren)
2. Moonlight (James Laxton)
3. Silence (Rodrigo Prieto)
4. Arrival (Bradford Young)
5. Nocturnal Animals (Seamus McGarvey)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Live by Night (Robert Richardson)
7. The Jungle Book (Bill Pope)
8. Jackie (Stephane Fontaine)
9. Hail, Caesar! (Roger Deakins)
10. Lion (Greg Fraser)

Outside Shots:
11. Hacksaw Ridge (Simon Duggan)
12. The BFG (Janusz Kaminski)
13. Sully (Tom Stern)
14. The Light Between Oceans (Adam Arkapaw)
15. A Monster Calls (Oscar Faura)


Best Original Song

La La Land was considered the unbeatable winner in this category until Disney's Moana was released. While I'm still confident that two songs will be nominated for La La Land (the maximum under Academy rules), there are some good songs that might pose a threat. I'm giving La La Land a slight edge to win, though a big part of me believes that Moana will emerge the victor here, as it truly is a Disney movie stuck out of time, and has its music coming from the spectacular Lin-Manuel Miranda (who would be an EGOT should he win for this film, and the second person in a row to become an EGOT by winning for writing a Disney song). Hidden Figures should prove rousing as a late entry, and this is an easy category to suddenly be included in without warning, and we have a large selection of documentaries and animated films with great songs that could get in. The Academy is infamous for almost never following conventional wisdom with this category, so expect upsets pretty much regardless of what I predict.

Predicted Nominees:
1. "Audition (The Fools Who Dream)" (La La Land)
2. "How Far I'll Go" (Moana)
3. "City of Stars" (La La Land)
4. "I See Victory" (Hidden Figures)
5. "Can't Stop the Feeling" (Trolls)

Potential Spoilers:
6. "I'm Still Here" (Miss Sharon Jones)
7. "A Letter to the Free" (13th)
8. "Drive It Like You Stole It" (Sing Street)
9. "We Know the Way" (Moana)
10. "The Rules Don't Apply" (Rules Don't Apply)
11. "Back to Life" (Queen of Katwe)
12. "Angel by the Wings" (The Eagle Huntress)
13. "Try Everything" (Zootopia)
14. "Faith" (Sing)

Outside Shots:
15. "The Great Beyond" (Sausage Party)
16. "I'm So Humble" or "Equal Rights" (Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping)
17. "Moonshine" (Live by Night)
18. "The Empty Chair" (Jim: The James Foley Story)
19. "Take Me Down" (Deepwater Horizon)


Best Original Score

For obvious reasons, La La Land is considered the frontrunner for this category, and might be the only true lock, but I'm still treading lightly with this category, because there are honestly dozens of possibilities. I've heard decent cases made for basically every film listed below sneaking a nomination in for this category. Arrival seems like a fairly safe bet to me, though, given that they really like Johann Johannson's work (he's been nominated each of the last two years) and the score for Arrival is truly phenomenal. Star Wars usually makes a good showing in this category, and Michael Giacchino is an underrated but still loved composer in Oscar's eyes (he wrote and won an Oscar for the beautiful music in Up), so Rogue One seems also fairly safe. I'm somehow alone in this, but I consider Moana a very decent shot for a nomination, but admitting the fact that I'm the odd one out thinking that, the last two slots are the most particularly unpredictable, though it's truthfully more like four.

I suspect Florence Foster Jenkins will get just barely booted out of the bigger categories by other worthy choices, but I think it could manage here, as it has a composer they like and Frears's movies typically do well here. Returning favorites John Williams and Thomas Newman, both with nominations in the double digits, unfortunately were paired this year with mediocre films that haven't sustained much traction, but their respective efforts could find a way. Moonlight, Jackie, and The Jungle Book have all been noted for their great scores, so they are possibilities as well. Like with the song category, there's not much to completely rule out at this juncture.

Predicted Nominees:
1. La La Land (Justin Hurwitz)
2. Arrival (Johann Johannson)
3. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (Michael Giacchino)
4. Moana (Mark Mancina)
5. Florence Foster Jenkins (Alexandre Desplat)

Possible Spoilers:
6. Jackie (Mica Levi)
7. The Jungle Book (John Debney)
8. Moonlight (Nicholas Britell)
9. The BFG (John Williams)
10. Finding Dory (Thomas Newman)
11. Lion (Dustin O'Halloran and Hauschka)
12. The Light Between Oceans (Alexandre Desplat)
13. Hacksaw Ridge (Rupert Gregson-Williams)

Outside Shots:
14. Patriots Day (Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross)
15. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (James Newton Howard)
16. Hail, Caesar! (Carter Burwell)
17. Zootopia (Michael Giacchino)
18. Denial (Howard Shore)


Best Adapted Screenplay

Arrival and Silence are the closest things to locks in this category in my mind. Arrival's heady themes will rest much of the attention on the script (aside from Adams's performance), and Scorsese has a writing credit on Silence along with former nominee Jay Cocks. Scorsese scripts are often nominated, and this passion project adaptation of a beloved novel should do well. Outside of that, this category suffers from most of its more obvious possible choices not being exceptionally great movies. I'm giving Hacksaw Ridge and Hidden Figures the nod because - spoilers - I have them as Best Picture nominees, with which a screenplay nomination usually runs in tandem. The fifth slot is nebulous to me. 

Many pundits have the Denzel Washington-helmed Fences as a frontrunner for this category, but its eligibility is questionable to me because its writer, August Wilson, wrote the script over 10 years ago and is now dead. He also didn't write most of the version that has been released, with Tony Kushner doing much of the posthumous rewrites. I have other reservations about Fences being a major player for reasons I'll get into later. It definitely has a shot, so I've given it the fifth slot, but Nocturnal Animals, Sully, and Elle definitely stand to contest that.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Arrival (Eric Heisserer)
2. Silence (Martin Scorsese and Jay Cocks)
3. Hacksaw Ridge (Andrew Knight and Robert Schenkkan)
4. Hidden Figures (Allison Schroeder and Theodore Melfi)
5. Fences (August Wilson's ghost)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Sully (Todd Komarnicki)
7. Nocturnal Animals (Tom Ford)
8. Elle (David Birke)
9. Love & Friendship (Whit Stillman)
10. Lion (Luke Davies)
11. Certain Women (Kelly Reichardt)
12. Live by Night (Ben Affleck)


Best Original Screenplay

In my mind, we have three locks in this category - Manchester by the Sea, Moonlight, and The Lobster. The latter was an outside choice for a longtime, but its unexpected win for Best Screenplay with the Los Angeles Film Critics Association shows that there is still goodwill to be had for this oddball dark romantic comedy in Hollywood even seven months after its limited release. It wouldn't be a completely bonkers nominee either - the Academy enjoys its share of well-crafted sardonic fantastical comedies about the human condition (see also: Her, Adaptation, etc.), and Yorgos Lanthimos was previously nominated in the Foreign Language Film category for his film Dogtooth. Moonlight and Manchester are pretty undeniable nominees though, and the latter will be taking home the win by the looks of things right now.

I have Chazelle nominated here for La La Land, though I'm weary of everyone's confidence that it will be nominated here. It's a major frontrunner to win Best Picture, and while it's not unprecedented, it's highly infrequent that a movie win Best Picture without a screenplay nomination (it hasn't happened in almost 20 years). That said, it's a musical, and those typically don't land in this category, and unlike the Adapted category, there are plenty of incredibly worthy stories vying for a prize here that the Academy would enjoy. While I'm edging out my guesses with Hell or High Water, which has become something of a sleeper hit after being nominated for Best Film by the NBR, the last two slots, in my opinion, are fairly open season. Once the WGA announces their nominees, we'll have a much clearer picture.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Manchester by the Sea (Kenneth Lonergan)
2. Moonlight (Barry Jenkins and Tarrell Alvin McCraney)
3. The Lobster (Yorgos Lanthimos and Efthymis Filippou)
4. La La Land (Damien Chazelle)
5. Hell or High Water (Taylor Sheridan)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Jackie (Noah Oppenheim)
7. 20th Century Women (Mike Mills)
8. Loving (Jeff Nichols)
9. Zootopia (Byron Howard, Jared Bush, Rich Moore, Josie Trinidad, Jim Reardon, Phil Johnston, Jennifer Lee)
10. Captain Fantastic (Matt Ross)
11. Toni Erdmann (Maren Ade)
12. Hail, Caesar! (Joel and Ethan Coen)
13. Everybody Wants Some!! (Richard Linklater)

Outside Shots:
14. Eye in the Sky (Guy Hibbert)
15. I, Daniel Blake (Paul Laverty)
16. Paterson (Jim Jarmusch)
17. American Honey (Andrea Arnold)
18. Cafe Society (Woody Allen)


Best Supporting Actress

We're in the big leagues, folks. The top three slots of this category are pretty safely locked up - Michelle Williams has one movie-stealing scene at the end of Manchester by the Sea that has been making waves with critics (she's also a three-time Oscar nominee already), Naomie Harris is one of about a dozen note-perfect performances as a drug addicted mother in Moonlight, and Paramount is following in the footsteps of The Danish Girl and Carol last year committing category fraud by campaigning clearly leading ladies as supporting characters (although it's a little more understandable this year, as Best Actress is incredibly tough) with Viola Davis playing opposite Denzel in the 1950s-set racial drama Fences.

The two most likely to me from there are Nicole Kidman for Lion, an indie drama about an Indian orphan that is on everyone's Oscar guess list despite lukewarm reviews and absolutely no representation with critics circles so far, with her performance being the only thing it seems anyone is willing to consistently praise this film for, and Janelle Monae for Hidden Figures. All of this is hinging on my hunch that Hidden Figures will be a commercial hit and enough of a crowd-pleaser to be a Best Picture threat. If Moonlight proves too outre, it would be a decent avenue for staving off #OscarsSoWhite criticisms for a third year in a row. That, and Monae is a talented performer that's having a successful year, and she's the sassiest of the women by the look of the trailers.

Notably, though, the frontrunner among critics circles so far has been Lily Gladstone for Certain Women. I've heard no buzz about this film beyond its great reception, but especially if SAG goes for her, she might be a surprise nominee. The remaining choices are really rather lightweight, so it seems like a six-way race to me.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Viola Davis (Fences)
2. Michelle Williams (Manchester by the Sea)
3. Naomie Harris (Moonlight)
4. Nicole Kidman (Lion)
5. Janelle Monae (Hidden Figures)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Lily Gladstone (Certain Women)
7. Greta Gerwig (20th Century Women)
8. Felicity Jones (A Monster Calls)
9. Molly Shannon (Other People)
10. Lupita Nyong'o (Queen of Katwe)

Outside Shots:
11. Helen Mirren (Eye in the Sky)
12. Margo Martindale (The Hollars)
13. Rachel Weisz (The Light Between Oceans)
14. Teresa Palmer (Hacksaw Ridge)


Best Supporting Actor

As is typical with this category, this year's Best Supporting Actor race is all over the damn place. Mahershala Ali and Lucas Hedges seem to be the only true locks, but Jeff Bridges has a real shot with Hell or High Water (a very unexpected but deserved nod if it is one) after an impressive presence among critics and with the NBR. Liam Neeson is a safe bet for Silence (although the LAFCA gave the runner-up award to a Japanese actor in this film that may not have exposure until the movie is seen by regular audiences), and the Academy may want to reward Michael Shannon after snubbing him for 99 Homes - that is, if he gets another SAG nod this time around.

But outside of our two locks, it's mostly up in the air, and completely dependent on each actor's respective film's performance in other major categories. If the Academy likes Florence Foster Jenkins more than most people are expecting them to, expect Hugh Grant to be a very safe bet.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Mahershala Ali (Moonlight)
2. Lucas Hedges (Manchester by the Sea)
3. Jeff Bridges (Hell or High Water)
4. Liam Neeson (Silence)
5. Michael Shannon (Nocturnal Animals)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Hugh Grant (Florence Foster Jenkins)
7. Ben Foster (Hell or High Water)
8. Stephen Henderson (Fences)
9. Mykelti Williamson (Fences)
10. Trevante Rhodes (Moonlight)
11. Andre Holland (Moonlight)
12. Ralph Fiennes (A Bigger Splash)
13. Dev Patel (Lion)

Outside Shots:
14. John Goodman (10 Cloverfield Lane)
15. Alden Ehrenreich (Hail, Caesar!)
16. Timothy Spall (Denial)
17. Kevin Costner (Hidden Figures)
18. Aaron Eckhart (Sully)
19. Peter Sarsgaard (Jackie)
20. Danny DeVito (The Comedian


Best Actress

Unlike most years, this year's Best Actress race is incredibly competitive.  There's almost twice as many potential nominees than there are nomination slots, and even some of the outside shots are not complete write-offs. The three locks, it seems, are Emma Stone, Natalie Portman, and Annette Bening, and from then on there are almost a dozen reasonable potential matchups for the bottom two slots. The most likely in mind are Isabelle Huppert, who is the biggest winner in critics circles so far, and Amy Adams for Arrival, just based on the goodwill for it. If Florence hits Oscar voters where they live, Streep is a strong potential spoiler, and Negga, Henson, and Chastain are likable performers whose respective films rest on their shoulders.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Emma Stone (La La Land)
2. Natalie Portman (Jackie)
3. Annette Bening (20th Century Women)
4. Isabelle Huppert (Elle)
5. Amy Adams (Arrival)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Ruth Negga (Loving)
7. Meryl Streep (Florence Foster Jenkins)
8. Jessica Chastain (Miss Sloane)
9. Taraji P. Henson (Hidden Figures)
10. Jennifer Lawrence (Passengers)

Outside Shots:
11. Hailee Steinfeld (The Edge of Seventeen)
12. Rachel Weisz (Denial)
13. Marion Cotillard (Allied)
14. Sally Field (Hello, My Name is Doris)
15. Kate Beckinsale (Love & Friendship)
16. Rebecca Hall (Christine)
17. Sasha Lane (American Honey)
18. Susan Sarandon (The Meddler)


Best Actor

A rather lukewarm year for this category (the second such in a row), though that's not to say there are no great performances and are not many to choose from. Like Best Actress, we have three locks in my opinion - Casey Affleck (the favorite to win), Denzel Washington (one of few things said to truly shine about this film), and Tom Hanks (as a matter of career honors and makeup for Captain Phillips snub). I'm guessing Gosling is in because La La Land will be taking home many nominations most likely (and generally speaking, when the Academy really likes you, they start handing you nominations in categories no one even expected - think Tom Hardy for The Revenant last year). My fifth slot has Andrew Garfield for either Hacksaw Ridge or Silence, the former because I think that film's gonna get more nods than expected, or the latter if the Academy really loves it. 

That slot could be filled by a small numbers of legitimate threats, though it's a six-way race at most before getting to some outside shots. 

Predicted Nominees:
1. Casey Affleck (Manchester by the Sea)
2. Denzel Washington (Fences)
3. Tom Hanks (Sully)
4. Ryan Gosling (La La Land)
5. Andrew Garfield (Hacksaw Ridge or Silence)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Joel Edgerton (Loving)
7. Viggo Mortensen (Captain Fantastic)
8. Michael Keaton (The Founder)
9. Adam Driver (Paterson)
10. Matthew McConaughey (Gold)

Outside Shots:
11. Jake Gyllenhaal (Nocturnal Animals)
12. Ben Affleck (Live by Night)
13. Mark Wahlberg (Patriots Day)
14. Colin Farrell (The Lobster)
15. Robert DeNiro (The Comedian)


Best Director

In my estimation, we only have two true locks for nominations here - Barry Jenkins for Moonlight and Damien Chazelle for La La Land, the two frontrunners to win Best Picture at this point. Scorsese is a frequent favorite who gets nominated even for his less tight work, so a nod for him for Silence is likely, especially if it's as great as he's built it up to be. While Manchester is mostly an actors' piece, the film does have well-directed scenes in spades, and it's incredibly well-liked (its Best Picture win with the NBR is not nothing), so Lonergan could snatch a nomination. I personally think Denis Villenuve should and will get a nod for his work on Arrival, but there's a good case to be made as to why that's not happening.

Washington is an outside shot for Fences for a few reasons. For one, he's already nominated in the acting category. Second, the actors are the main points of praise for that film. Third, I don't think Fences has churned up enough genuine buzz outside of its performances and will be hitting theaters rather late, so I don't find it a particular Best Picture threat, and thus don't expect it to show up here. Mel Gibson and Pablo Larrain are the only true threats beyond that, most of the rest of the possibilities being outside shots.

Predicted Nominees:
1. Damien Chazelle (La La Land)
2. Barry Jenkins (Moonlight)
3. Martin Scorsese (Silence)
4. Kenneth Lonergan (Manchester by the Sea)
5. Denis Villeneuve (Arrival)

Potential Spoilers:
6. Mel Gibson (Hacksaw Ridge)
7. Denzel Washington (Fences)
8. Pablo Larrain (Jackie)

Outside Shots:
9. Jeff Nichols (Loving)
10. David Mackenzie (Hell or High Water)
11. Garth Davis (Lion)
12. Clint Eastwood (Sully)
13. Ben Affleck (Live by Night)
14. Tom Ford (Nocturnal Animals)


Best Picture

For those unaware, Best Picture can have between 5 and 10 nominations. It usually lands around eight, but I'm going nine in my guesses for now.

Our three definite locks are La La Land, Moonlight, and Manchester by the Sea, who have split Best Picture votes across precursor awards thus far, with La La Land having a slight edge. Silence, Arrival, and Jackie are all pretty safe bets in my opinion, but Sully, Hell or High Water, and Hacksaw Ridge all have good potential to gain traction as well. Hidden Figures would cap off a possible 10-film roster, with a few fairly lightweight films having a small chance to spoil that spot. Also, it's probably nothing, but the nomination of Patriots Day for Best Picture by NBR makes me think it might be a movie to keep an eye on for a possible late-period upset.

Locks:
1. La La Land
2. Moonlight
3. Manchester by the Sea

Other Possible Nominations:
4. Silence
5. Arrival
6. Jackie
7. Sully
8. Hacksaw Ridge
9. Hell or High Water

Possible Tenth Nominations:
10. Hidden Figures
11. 20th Century Women
12. Live by Night

Outside Shots:
13. Patriots Day
14. Zootopia
15. The Lobster
16. The Founder
17. Elle
18. Toni Erdmann
19. Florence Foster Jenkins
20. A Monster Calls
21. Hail, Caesar!
22. The Jungle Book
23. Allied

There you have it, folks - my first set of predictions for the 2017 Oscar nominations, described in way too much depth. Stay tuned for my following updates to this list, as well as for reviews of the following films:

- Moana
- La La Land
- Rogue One: A Star Wars Story