Penticton Herald

And the Oscar goes to...

- By LINDSEY BAHR and JAKE COYLE

The Associated Press OS ANGELES — Ahead of Sunday’s 90th Academy Awards, Associated Press film writers Lindsey Bahr and Jake Coyle share their prediction­s for a ceremony that — at least at the end —should be a nail biter.

BEST PICTURE The Nominees: “Call Me by Your Name,” “Darkest Hour,” “Dunkirk,” “Get Out,” “Lady Bird,” “Phantom Thread,” “The Post,” “The Shape of Water,” “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”

BAHR: Will Win: No controvers­y, timely messages, a dash of fantasy and a love of movies, “The Shape of Water” seems to be the safe, if a little boring, front runner.

Should Win: Aside from “Dunkirk,” which I saw three times in theatres, “Lady Bird” is the movie I want to watch over and over again. It is such an effortless­ly perfect slice of life film that will be around far after this awards season noise comes to an end. The best picture category gets a bad reputation for all the times the award has gone to something that fades from memory a few years down the line. That wouldn’t be an issue with “Lady Bird.”

Should Have Been a Contender: “The Florida Project,” Sean Baker’s loving and heartbreak­ingly honest portrait of the hidden homeless around the happiest place on earth was one of the great cinematic triumphs of the year.

COYLE: Will Win: There are five movies with a legitimate shot to win, which makes this year more difficult than usual to call. I’m going to say Jordan Peele’s cultural sensation “Get Out” wins because it has two crucial things going for it: the all-important SAG ensemble nomination and a good shot at a recently highly predictive screenplay award. That, and it did more to re-energize genre filmmaking than anything in a decade.

Should Win: I’d be thrilled if “Dunkirk,” “Get Out,” “Lady Bird” or “Phantom Thread” took home the top prize, but “Call Me By Your Name” stood apart for me. It’s a movie that feels like it has the windows open, and life just flows through it.

Should Have Been a Contender: “The Florida Project” is a neorealist­ic masterpiec­e of the first order. It’s staggering­ly good.

BEST ACTOR The Nominees: Timothee Chalamet (“Call Me by Your Name”), Daniel Day-Lewis (“Phantom Thread”), Daniel Kaluuya (“Get Out”), Gary Oldman (“Darkest Hour”), Denzel Washington (“Roman J. Israel, Esq.”)

BAHR: Will Win: Gary Oldman has won most of the major awards so far and there’s no reason he wouldn’t continue the streak at the Oscars, much to the chagrin of the internet’s darling, Timothee Chalamet, who will definitely get another shot at this award down the line.

Should Win: There have been so many lame “Oscar-baity” biopics that it almost diminishes his achievemen­t, but honestly, Gary Oldman’s full and complete transforma­tion into Winston Churchill is something they should teach in acting (and makeup) classes forever.

Should Have Been a Contender: Never in a million years would this have been a real Oscars possibilit­y, but Robert Pattinson is so, so good as the bleached blonde Queens crook Connie Nikas who is trying to get his mentally handicappe­d brother out of jail in Josh and Bennie Safdie’s exhilarati­ng indie “Good Time.” COYLE: Will Win: Oldman has this one in the bag. Should Win: I wouldn’t begrudge Oldman, an actor’s actor for decades, his moment in the sun. But I’ll say Day-Lewis, who we all know is simply the best there is. Maybe a surprise Oscar would coax him into rethinking retirement.

Should Have Been a Contender: Adam Sandler was brilliant as the rumbled, divorced son of a famous sculptor in Noah Baumbach’s sibling drama “The Meyerowitz Stories.” But, yes, it’s tough to win an Academy Award the same year you star in “Sandy Wexler.”

BEST ACTRESS The Nominees: Sally Hawkins (“The Shape of Water”), Frances McDormand (“Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”), Margot Robbie (“I, Tonya”), Saoirse Ronan (“Lady Bird”), Meryl Streep (“The Post”)

BAHR: Will Win: It’s funny how uninspired the acting categories can seem when the same people win every award. This is Frances McDormand’s year, plain and simple.

Should Win: This is an extremely tough category, not only because all of the performanc­es are so good, but they’re good in different ways. Still, out of this batch, it was Margot Robbie who stretched herself beyond anything I might have assumed her capable of as the proud, defiant and unapologet­ic Tonya Harding. That shot of Robbie smearing on her stage blush while she tries to smile through the rising tears? It’s a classic.

Should Have Been a Contender: There were quite a few great leading performanc­es by women this year (Brooklynn Prince and Jennifer Lawrence among them), but Vicky Krieps is the one that sticks out as a real gem for her work in “Phantom Thread” as the smitten but never swoony Alma, whose flushed cheeks don’t make her seem weak, only more resolute. COYLE: Will Win: McDormand is a virtual lock. Should Win: “Three Billboards” wouldn’t exist without McDormand, who towers over the film like only she can. And Streep gave one of her most subtle performanc­es in “The Post.” But most deserving is Ronan, who’s perpetuall­y playing a jumble of emotions, most of them contradict­ory, at once.

Should Have Been a Contender: Michelle Williams, the real standout in “All the Money in the World,” deserves a shoutout, as does Lawrence, who carries “mother!” But I don’t understand a world in which Prince isn’t nominated for “The Florida Project.” That she’s seven-years old doesn’t do anything to detract from one of the year’s most memorable performanc­es. (And her fictional mom, Bria Vinaite, is equally good.)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR The Nominees: Willem Dafoe (“The Florida Project”), Woody Harrelson (“Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”), Richard Jenkins (“The Shape of Water”), Christophe­r Plummer (“All the Money in the World”), Sam Rockwell (“Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”)

BAHR: Will Win: Sam Rockwell went big in “Three Billboards” as the racist cop who decides to (maybe) start rethinking (some of) his ways. Love it or hate it, but Rockwell is on a winning streak.

Should Win: It is Willem Dafoe who gives “The Florida Project” its beating heart. He is the one person who even takes notice of the residents of that low-rent motel on the outskirts of Orlando. Dafoe makes every moment he’s in memorable, whether he’s escorting a suspicious character off of the property or just trying to count the rent money.

Should Have Been a Contender: This is a stretch since he’s a true supporting character in a star-studded ensemble (and thus probably would never have been pushed for an actual nomination), but Bob Odenkirk was just phenomenal as Ben Bagdikian, the dogged and heart-achingly believable reporter who actually cracks the case, in “The Post.”

COYLE: Will Win: Rockwell is the favourite but I smell an upset. There’s not much evidence for it. I just think good sense will prevail and Dafoe will win his first Oscar.

Should Win: This category is awash in terrific character actors. Would it not be great to see Jenkins win? Would anyone not cheer seeing Harrelson at the podium? But Dafoe’s low-rent motel father-figure will go down as the iconic performanc­e of the bunch.

Should Have Been a Contender: Dee Rees’ Jim Crow-era “Mudbound” boasts an impressive and starry cast, but the most soulful performanc­e comes from one of its cast members lessrecogn­ized names: Rob Morgan. As Hap Jackson, Morgan plays a weary but strong patriarch of a sharecropp­ing family, living somewhere in between slavery and freedom.

BEST SUPPORING ACTRESS The Nominees: Mary J. Blige (“Mudbound”), Allison Janney (“I, Tonya”), Lesley Manville (“Phantom Thread”), Laurie Metcalf (“Lady Bird”), Octavia Spencer (“The Shape of Water”)

BAHR: Will Win: Allison Janney, who is very excellent as the caustic, complicate­d mother LaVona in “I, Tonya,” and everyone has noticed.

Should Win: Lesley Manville upstaged Daniel Day-Lewis (in a good way) as the steadfast Cyril, who can be sometimes terrifying and often funny and without whom the House of Woodcock (and “Phantom Thread”) would have come crashing to the ground.

Should Have Been a Contender: Aside from Manville, there are few performanc­es that gave me such joy as Michelle Pfeiffer’s wickedly funny intruder in “mother!” Her icy glares alone were enough for a nomination at least. COYLE: Will Win: Janney, a riot in “I, Tonya,” is the favourite. Should Win: Nothing could ever be wrong with the fantastic Janney winning an award. But I’d cast my non-existent vote for Metcalf, in her first film in almost a decade. Her character in “Lady Bird” is one of the finest working mothers I’ve ever seen in movies.

Should Have Been a Contender: Rarely does a performer breakthrou­gh the way Tiffany Haddish did in “Girls Trip.” A more sensible award show would reward Haddish, but the Oscars have the snobbiest attitudes about comedy. (See also the missing nod for Holly Hunter of “The Big Sick.”)

BEST DIRECTOR The Nominees: Christophe­r Nolan (“Dunkirk”), Jordan Peele (“Get Out”), Greta Gerwig (“Lady Bird”), Paul Thomas Anderson (“Phantom Thread”), Guillermo del Toro (“The Shape of Water”)

BAHR: Will Win: Affable, undeniably talented, quick to drop an expletive and “in love with love and movies,” Guillermo del Toro is the likely pick for this year’s best director. Also, “The Shape of Water” could only have been made by him.

Should Win: Although he’s been left on the cutting room floor this awards season, Christophe­r Nolan really should be getting more awards for his achievemen­t with “Dunkirk.” Perhaps it came out too early, or didn’t have that extra performanc­e component to keep its worthiness narrative alive? Maybe the film didn’t work as well in screener format as it did on the big screen. Whatever the reason, Nolan still made a masterpiec­e of suspense like we’ve never seen before.

Should Have Been a Contender: Sean Baker is one of the most uniquely talented and truly visionary directors working today and if “The Florida Project” is any indication —which he shot on location with a tiny budget and mostly non actors —he is only getting better.

COYLE: Will Win: Del Toro seems to have this locked up. With a win, he’ll join his friends and Mexican countrymen Alejandro Inarritu and Alfonso Cuaron. The “Three Amigos” will have won four of the last five best director awards.

Should Win: I really have no idea. The filmmakers in this group are impossible to compare against each other; all of the movies are so singular to the director. Anderson’s impeccable comedy? Gerwig’s richness of lived-in detail? I don’t like choosing but Nolan’s feat in “Dunkirk” is a majestic creation of sight and sound.

Should Have Been a Contender: No, documentar­y filmmakers are never considered for this award, for some reason. Wiseman, 88, took home an honorary Oscar in 2016, but he hasn’t slowed down. “Ex Libris: The New York Public Library” is his latest sprawling portrait of an institutio­n worthy of deep appreciati­on. And these days, any still-working institutio­n deserves our applause.

The 90th Academy Awards will be telecast live on ABC, Sunday, beginning at 5 p.m. (PT).

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