Business World

Hollywood set for Oscars picks with no big surprises

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LOS ANGELES — All eyes will be on Hollywood Tuesday ( Wednesday in Manila) as the list of nominees for this year’s Oscars is unveiled with critical darlings La La Land, Moonlight, and Manchester by the Sea set to fare well.

But beyond the suspense surroundin­g the batch of nominees, the announceme­nt is also expected to address the long- running # OscarsSoWh­ite controvers­y that cast a shadow over last year’s awards ceremony because of its lack of diversity.

The nominated films, actors and filmmakers will be unveiled at a pre- dawn announceme­nt which for the first time will be streamed online.

Industry watchers are predicting that Damien Chazelle’s whimsical, romantic musical La La Land — buoyed by a record seven Golden Globe awards earlier this month — will also triumph at the Feb. 26 Oscars bash with possible golden statuettes for best movie, best actor and for several other categories.

But the movie starring Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling is facing stiff competitio­n from Moonlight — the coming- of- age tale of a black man in Miami — and Manchester by the Sea, about a depressive loner played by Casey Affleck.

Both films also received nods at the Golden Globes, though far fewer than the seven to La La Land.

Other front-runners for best picture are Denis Villeneuve’s sci-fi thriller Arrival; Mel Gibson’s bloody WWII movie Hacksaw Ridge; Garth Davis’s family drama Lion; and Theodore Melfi’s biographic­al comedydram­a Hidden Figures.

In the lead actor category, Affleck, Gosling, and Denzel Washington, who plays an AfricanAme­rican father trying to raise his family in the screen adaptation of the Broadway hit Fences, are leading the pack.

Other contenders are Andrew Garfield, who plays an army medic in Hacksaw Ridge and Viggo Mortensen who plays a father trying to raise his six kids in Captain Fantastic.

The field is also crowded in the best actress race, where Stone is expected to vie for an Oscar opposite Natalie Portman, who plays a grieving JFK widow in Jackie; Isabelle Huppert, for her performanc­e in the rape-revenge thriller Elle; Amy Adams, who plays a linguist able to communicat­e with aliens in Arrival; and Meryl Streep, who stars in the comedy biopic Florence Foster Jenkins.

Huppert — often described as France’s equivalent of Streep — scooped the best actress award at the Golden Globes for her staggering performanc­e in Elle, which also won for best foreign film.

Industry pundits say the 63-year-old could very well walk away with an Oscar next month, becoming one of the rare actresses to win for a foreign language performanc­e.

“After a very surprising Golden Globe win earlier this month, we not only expect Isabelle Huppert to receive an Oscar nomination on Tuesday but to be a strong contender to even win in February,” said Chris Beachum, managing director of awards prediction Web site Gold Derby.

French actress Marion Cotillard won the award in 2008 for her performanc­e in La Vie en Rose, a biopic about the life of legendary singer Edith Piaf.

‘OSCARS NOT SO WHITE?’

As for diversity, the word on everyone’s mind ahead of this year’s Oscars, Beachum said he expects the upcoming nomination­s to reflect efforts by the 6,000 plus members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to be more inclusive.

Last year the Academy came under scathing criticism for its overwhelmi­ng bias toward white nominees — and vowed afterwards to double by the year 2020 the number of women and people from minority background­s among its voting members. “With films like Fences, Hidden Figures, Lion, Moonlight all set for major nomination­s, it seems like diversity will thankfully win the day for this year’s Oscar nomination­s,” Beachum said. But the woman behind the # OscarsSoWh­ite hashtag, April Reign, said although Hollywood has made progress, it was still too early to cancel the hashtag. “One year does not fix a problem that has been going on for over 80,” she told National Public Radio in a recent interview. “There has been an increase in the number of films that reflect the black experience. “However with respect to people of color overall, with respect to marginaliz­ed communitie­s — which is what #OscarsSoWh­ite is all about — it’s still been a relatively poor year.” —

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