Members of the WTOP morning team and WTOP
listeners have made their predictions for the
Oscars coming up on Sunday, Feb. 24. How do your picks match up?
The WTOP Panel Bruce Alan - Morning Anchor
Mike Moss - Morning Anchor
Mike "Jake" Jakaitis - @ the Editor's
Desk
Jamie Forzato - @ the Editor's Desk
The WTOP Panel
Jason Fraley - WTOP Film Critic
The WTOP Listeners - Share your picks and win
$500 worth of movie tickets
Best Supporting Actress Jason Fraley's Take:
Who Will Win: Anne Hathaway ("Les
Miserables")
Who Should Win: Amy Adams ("The Master")
Possible Spoiler: Sally Field
("Lincoln")
Snubbed from Consideration: Nicole
Kidman ("The
Paperboy"), Maggie Smith ("Best Exotic
Marigold
Hotel")
While I respect both actresses, Jackie Weaver
was one of
the weaker parts of "Silver Linings Playbook,"
and Sally
Field was given too much exposition in
"Lincoln." Helen
Hunt was ballsy for baring all as a sex
therapist in "The
Sessions," but she's already won for "As Good
as it Gets"
(1997). This year, the battle will come down to
two
talented young actresses. Amy Adams literally
hypnotized
us in "The Master," and after three previous
nominations
for "Junebug" (2005), "Doubt" (2008) and "The
Fighter"
(2010), this should be her turn. Instead, the
Academy will
give it to former Oscar host Anne Hathaway for
her heaving
prostitute rendition of "I Dreamed a Dream" in
"Les
Miserables."
Best Supporting Actor Jason Fraley's Take:
Who Will Win: Tommy Lee Jones
("Lincoln")
Who Should Win: Philip Seymour Hoffman
("The
Master")
Possible Spoiler: Alan Arkin ("Argo")
Snubbed from Consideration: Javier
Barden
("Skyfall")
The Supporting Actor category is
unfolding
like a clash
of the Titans, as all five are returning Oscar
winners.
Philip Seymour Hoffman won Best Actor for
"Capote"
(2005) and now brilliantly brainwashes Joaquin
Phoenix
in "The Master." Robert DeNiro has won twice
for "The
Godfather Part II" (1974) and "Raging Bull"
(1980), and
is now a superstitious football father in
"Silver
Linings Playbook." Alan Arkin won for "Little
Miss
Sunshine" (2006) and delivered the hilarious
punchline
of "Argo." And Christoph Waltz is following his
Oscar
win for "Inglourious Basterds" (2009) with
another
Tarantino racial revenge flick in "Django
Unchained."
Still, I think this year's statue will go to
Tommy Lee
Jones, who's waited long enough since his win
for "The
Fugitive" (1993) exactly 20 years ago. His
abolitionist
Thaddeus Stevens was one of the best parts of
"Lincoln," embodying the political philosophy
of "the
ends justifies the means" and given the film's
final
twist.
Best Actress Jason Fraley's Take:
Who Will Win: Jennifer Lawrence
("Silver Linings
Playbook")
Who Should Win: Emmanuelle Riva
("Amour")
Possible Spoiler: Jessica Chastain
("Zero Dark
Thirty") or Quvenzhane Wallis ("Beasts
of the
Southern Wild")
Snubbed from Consideration: Marion
Cotillard ("Rust
&
Bone")
Marion Cotillard was snubbed as a double
amputee in
the French film "Rust and Bone," but I think
the best
performance of the year came in another foreign
film,
85-year-old Emmanuelle Riva as a half-
paralyzed stroke victim in "Amour" (2012). Two
other
nominees survived natural disasters in Naomi
Watts
("The Impossible") and 9-year-old Quvenzhane
Wallis
("Beasts of the Southern Wild"), but I doubt
the
Academy will have the guts to give it to a kid
this
year. Jessica Chastain is a safer bet as
Kathryn Bigelow's
on-screen proxy in "Zero Dark Thirty," riding a
Golden Globe win and previous Oscar nominations
for
"The Tree of Life" (2010) and "The Help"
(2011).
However, if the awards are given out like they
used
to be -- honoring multiple performances in a
single
year -- 2012 was the year of Jennifer Lawrence,
wowing popcorn teens in "The Hunger Games" and
off-
beat critics in "Silver Linings Playbook." The
Academy likes awarding Best Actress to crowd
pleasers, so expect this year's football flick to do for Lawrence what "The Blind Side" did for Sandra Bullock.
Best Actor Jason Fraley's Take
Who Will Win: Daniel Day-Lewis
("Lincoln")
Who Should Win: Daniel Day-Lewis
("Lincoln")
Possible Spoiler: Joaquin Phoenix ("The
Master")
Snubbed from Consideration: John Hawkes
("The Sessions")
Bradley Cooper showed he's growing as an actor
in "Silver Linings Playbook," but shouldn't
have been nominated over John Hawkes, who was
utterly believable as a virgin in an iron lung
in "The Sessions." Denzel Washington was
powerful as an alcoholic pilot in "Flight," but
the two-time winner ("Glory," "Training Day")
won't repeat. Hugh Jackman showed off his pipes
in "Les Miserables," but his Golden Globe win
came against weak competition in the
Comedy/Musical category. And Joaquin Phoenix's
brilliantly brainwashed performance in "The
Master" made it seem like this might be his
year after losing as Commodus in "Gladiator"
(2000) and Johnny Cash in "Walk the Line"
(2005). But when audiences watched Daniel Day-
Lewis literally become Abraham Lincoln on
screen, the Best Actor race was over. Last
year, I got burned by picking against Meryl
Streep ("The Iron Lady") because I thought they
might not give her a THIRD Oscar. Day-Lewis
faces the same question, and I'm not getting
burned again. Expect him to become the first
actor ever to win Best Actor three times.
Best Picture Jason Fraley's Take
What Will Win: "Argo"
What Should Win: "Lincoln"
Possible Spoiler: "Amour"
Snubbed from Consideration: "The Master," "Moonrise Kingdom,"
"The Dark Knight Rises," "The Sessions," "The Perks of Being a
Wallflower," "Rust & Bone"
A few months ago, I would have said "Lincoln," which leads with
12 nominations. But after winning the top prize at both the
Golden Globes and the SAG Awards, I have a feeling "Argo" will
ride the Oscar title wave, making this year more of an underdog
"Rocky" (1976) year than a serious "Schindler's List" (1993)
year. "Amour" won the year's top art prize, the Palme d'Or at
Cannes, but The Academy tends to relegate foreign films to the
Best Foreign Language category and forget about them for Best
Picture, except for last year's "The Artist" , which
avoided subtitles with its silent gimmick.(2011)
2011