The Manila Times

Oscars night is nearly here, and ‘1917’ leads the charge

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HOLLYWOOD: Hollywood’s award season reaches its extravagan­t finale at the Oscars on Sunday (Monday in Manila), with war epic “1917” tipped to dispatch a brigade of winners to the stage at the movie industry’s biggest night.

Impeccably dressed A- listers and upstart documentar­y filmmakers will brush shoulders on the red carpet at Los Angeles’ Dolby Theatre, as months of campaignin­g for 24 gold statuettes boil down to a single night.

Sam Mendes’s “1917” launched a late assault on this year’s Academy Awards — it was first shown to voters barely two months ago — but experts predict it could outflank all rivals.

The World War I odyssey about two soldiers crossing no- man’s- land — filmed to appear like one continuous shot — has conquered nearly all in its path in the award shows building up to Sunday.

It is the favorite for multiple Oscars from best director to cinematogr­aphy, and the frontrunne­r for best picture, the night’s top prize.

“It falls into traditiona­l Hollywood — it’s what the Oscars like,” Variety awards editor Tim Gray told Agence France Pressé.

“It’s big, it’s epic, but it’s hardly a formula film. It really is a knockout... it’s just filmmaking at its best.”

The unique ballot system for best picture — which involves voters ranking films — makes it somewhat tough to predict, and could create an opening for an unlikely candidate.

Despite the best efforts of star filmmakers Martin Scorsese (“The Irishman”) and Quentin Tarantino (“Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood”), Mendes’ main rival appears to be Bong Joon-ho.

The charismati­c South Korean director has become Hollywood’s darling in recent weeks, drawing unrivalled crowds at campaign events for his black comedy “Parasite.”

The film about a poor family infiltrati­ng a wealthy household looks to be a shoo- in for best internatio­nal feature — but also could triumph in some of the top categories.

‘ No scenario’

The Oscars in the acting categories — usually a subject of agonizing deliberati­on for industry pundits — appear settled, with the same four stars sweeping up rave reviews and awards all season.

Joaquin Phoenix and Renee Zellweger are believed to be far ahead of the competitio­n for best actor and best actress.

Phoenix underwent a striking transforma­tion to portray the title comic book supervilla­in in “Joker” — as did Zellweger to play legendary Hollywood diva Judy Garland in “Judy.”

Tinseltown favorites Brad Pitt and Laura Dern have their fingertips on the supporting acting prizes, for their work as a laid-back stuntman (“Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood”) and a cutthroat divorce lawyer (“Marriage Story”).

“I see no scenario where any one of them loses,” Deadline awards columnist Pete Hammond told AFP.

“People will say ‘ there’s always an Oscars surprise’... but I think those four are going to win it,” agreed Gray.

More fiercely contested will be the awards for best screenplay, editing and visual effects, with movies from Nazi satire “Jojo Rabbit” to period drama “Little Women” and even superhero epic “Avengers: Endgame” all in the mix.

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