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‘And the winner is...’ Our prediction­s for what’s inside those Oscar envelopes

▶ Chris Newbould shares his choices for the big winners ahead of the Academy’s most diverse awards line-up to date

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The Oscars has done its best to mitigate the effects of the pandemic on this year’s awards. The delay to next Sunday was intended to maximise the number of films submitted after a year of closed cinemas and increase the chances of a “normal” ceremony. The event’s still-under-review demand for in-person attendance, meanwhile, complete with red carpet, hopes to retain the glamour of the world’s glitziest awards show, in contrast to the pyjamas-on-Zoom acceptance speeches we’ve seen at previous ceremonies this year.

For all these efforts, this year’s awards seem destined to be forever subtitled “the pandemic Oscars” after cinema as we know it ceased to exist. That does not mean there haven’t been some great films released – we just haven’t had to go as far to watch them. With five of this year’s eight Best Picture nominees debuting either exclusivel­y or, alongside a limited cinema release, on streaming platforms, the pandemic could deliver the most coveted Oscar of all for an online platform. Here are our prediction­s for this unusual year’s top prizes.

Best Picture

Netflix and company have struggled to be treated as equals by the Academy Awards, but with cinemas incapacita­ted for the past year and streaming sites riding to the rescue, the Oscars have had little choice but to welcome them with open arms. David Fincher’s Mank could win over the Academy’s Netflix sceptics with its reminiscen­ces of Hollywood’s golden era, but in terms of buzz, Chloe Zhao’s Nomadland looks like the front runner. The film has already picked up the equivalent Golden Globe and Bafta, and the fact it hit a few cinemas alongside its Hulu release could please purist voters. Lee Isaac Chung’s Minari has an outside chance of pulling off a surprise, but two South Korea-linked Best Picture winners in a row may be too many, even for a diversity-hungry Academy Awards. The other nomination­s are making up the numbers.

Prediction: Nomadland.

Best Director

It’s hard to see anyone but Zhao landing the director’s gong, particular­ly if Nomadland rightly takes Best Picture. The positive publicity generated by this year’s surprise two female nominees for Best Director won’t have gone unnoticed by positive-headlinest­arved Academy voters. With three features under her belt to date, Zhao also comes with a degree of directoria­l gravitas that Promising Young Woman’s debutante director Emerald Fennell lacks. There should be no suspicion of tokenism if Zhao does win, either. She made the best film of the past year, and she’ll fully deserve to take her place alongside Kathryn Bigelow to become only the second woman to have picked up this award in the Academy’s 93-year history.

Prediction: Chloe Zhao

Best Actor

After a torrid few years of criticism over its white, male nominees, the Oscars PR team must have done cartwheels when they saw this year’s Best Actor nominees. Not a single white American makes the list, with Chadwick Boseman, Riz Ahmed and Steven Yeun leading the diversity charge. Gary Oldman and Sir Anthony Hopkins are, admittedly, white, but they’re also British. Diversity of sorts? In any other year this would be an incredibly difficult call, with sterling performanc­es all round. But with Boseman’s untimely death from colon cancer last year giving added poignancy to his heart-rending performanc­e in Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, it’s hard to envisage any scenario other than a posthumous award for the star. Prediction: Chadwick Boseman

Best Actress

Another strong field, this time with no extenuatin­g circumstan­ces to make choosing a winner any easier.

Nomadland’s Frances McDormand is probably a slight favourite and could add to her Oscars for Fargo and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. Viola Davis will run her close for the prize, though, and with Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom surprising­ly omitted from the Best Picture list, some voters may feel the urge to make amends here. Andra Day can’t be written off after picking up the Golden Globe for her role in The United States vs Billie Holiday, while Carey Mulligan and Vanessa Kirby seem to be outsiders, albeit deserved ones.

Prediction: Frances McDormand

Best Supporting Actor

To receive two nomination­s in the same category says a lot about the quality of a film (it last happened in 2018, when Sam Rockwell beat co-star Woody Harrelson for his role in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri). On that basis, we are making this a two-horse race between Daniel Kaluuya and LaKeith Stanfield, who are both nominated for their performanc­e in Judas and the Black Messiah. Of the two, Kaluuya probably edges it, and the Golden Globes judges seemingly thought so when they gave him their award last month. Sacha Baron Cohen has an outside chance, having proved he can do much more than comedy with his role in The Trial of the Chicago 7. Prediction: Daniel Kaluuya

Best Supporting Actress

If this award were based on headlines generated, Maria Bakalova would have already collected it for her Rudy Giuliani-baiting turn in Borat: Subsequent Moviefilm. Lewd, part-improvised comedy isn’t usually the kind of thing the Academy rewards, however, so we’ll have to look elsewhere for our winner. Glenn Close, who is nominated for Hillbilly Elegy, is surely due an Oscar – she is the most nominated actress ever to have not picked up an award – but plenty of people noted that when she received her seventh nomination for

The Wife in 2019. Her 2019 conquerer, Olivia Colman, is up against her again this year, so could history repeat itself? Amanda Seyfried could benefit from nostalgia-loving voters wanting to award Mank something, while Minari’s YuhJung Youn seems an outsider among the big names. Prediction: Olivia Colman

Best of the rest

In terms of regional interest, Farah Nabulsi’s The Present seems most likely to bring an award to the Arab world in the Live Action Short category. Kaouther Ben Hania’s The Man Who Sold His Skin is in the mix for Best Internatio­nal Feature, but it’s competing with Best Director-nominated Thomas Vinterberg’s Mads Mikkelsen-starring Another Round, so may face an uphill struggle. Disney’s Soul will add to its Best Animated Feature Globe, and Nine Inch Nails’s Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross will take Best Score for the same film.

 ?? AP; AFP ?? Nominees in the main categories include Daniel Kaluuya, top; Chadwick Boseman, above; and Frances McDormand, left
AP; AFP Nominees in the main categories include Daniel Kaluuya, top; Chadwick Boseman, above; and Frances McDormand, left

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