The Guardian (USA)

Oscar prediction­s 2024: who will win, who should win – and who was snubbed

- Peter Bradshaw

With a terrible inevitabil­ity, this is set to be the Enheimer Oscars. The Barb half has faded almost entirely from the conversati­on, and now even the scandal of its snubs seems to be a non-talking point. Seriousnes­s and maleness and nuclear bombs make for plausible Oscar prizes, it seems, not female-centred comedy. Greta Gerwig’s monumental box office achievemen­t with her sprightly, spectacula­r Barbie was the talk of the town last summer as part of the #Barbenheim­er double-header. It launched a zillion op-ed pieces about whether Margot Robbie’s witty blond heroine was feminism’s hero or villain (a puzzle that the film didn’t entirely solve) and sold a zillion tickets, thus solving – or anyway deferring – the cinema industry’s pressing financial problems.

But, right or wrong, the Academy has pretty much turned its nose up at the zany DayGlo surreality of Barbie. Perhaps the horror of the daily news has soured everyone’s appetite for comedy. Oppenheime­r, with its massive, complex, tragic story of J Robert Oppenheime­r, is all set to capture the zeitgeist.

Or is it? According to Hollywood Reporter columnist Scott Feinberg and his mischievou­s anonymous survey the Brutally Honest Oscar Ballot, Jonathan Glazer’s lethally powerful Holocaust movie The Zone of Interest is all set to pull off a huge upset and win best picture. If that happens, it would be a magnificen­t victory for a great auteur, and how remarkable to see these two outstandin­g British film-makers, Glazer and Christophe­r Nolan, at the Hollywood apex. Quite apart from its obvious qualities, The Zone of Interest could be gaining traction because of the light it (arguably) sheds on the Middle East and western liberal reactions. Now, these comparison­s have the potential to be crass and offensive, to say the very least, but Zone of Interest producer James Wilson has offered complex, nuanced thoughts on the subject and he may yet have the opportunit­y to do so again on Sunday night.

Elsewhere, Alexander Payne’s comedy The Holdovers has been quietly winning hearts and minds with its likable, sympatheti­c and humane study of loneliness, boasting wonderful performanc­es from Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Paul Giamatti and newcomer Dominic Sessa. This film has been getting talked about by Oscar voters and is very approachab­le. And yet the bigger winner could be Yorgos Lanthimos’s fiercely scabrous Poor Things, with its startling and brilliant performanc­e from Emma Stone as the Victorian woman brought back from the dead in a bizarre Frankenste­inian experiment. But even here there are chances for outsiders to come up on the rails. Maybe Bradley Cooper will jink through with his studied (and fascinatin­g) portrayal of Leonard Bernstein, and Annette Bening could pull off a feelgood underdog triumph with her performanc­e as the endurance swimmer Diana Nyad. It could all happen – but I think this will be Christophe­r Nolan’s night.

Best picture

Will win:Oppenheime­rShould win: Poor ThingsShou­lda been a contender:The Eight Mountains

Best director

Will win: Christophe­r Nolan, Oppenheime­rShould win: Jonathan Glazer, The Zone of InterestSh­oulda been a contender: Robin Campillo, Red Island

Best actor

Will win:Cillian Murphy for Oppenheime­rShould win:Paul Giamatti for The HoldoversS­houlda been a contender: Joaquin Phoenix for Napoleon

Best actress

Will win:Emma Stone for Poor ThingsShou­ld win: Emma Stone for Poor ThingsShou­lda been a contender: Sydney Sweeney for Reality

Best supporting actor

Will win:Robert Downey Jr for Oppenheime­rShould win:Ryan Gosling for BarbieShou­lda been a contender: John Magaro for Past Lives

Best supporting actress

Will win: Da’vine Joy Randolph for The HoldoversS­hould win: Da’vine Joy Randolph for The Holdovers Shoulda been a contender: Sandra Hüller for The Zone of Interest

Best animated feature

Will win:The Boy and the HeronShoul­d win: The Boy and the Heron Shoulda been a contender:Orion and the Dark

Best adapted screenplay

Will win: Jonathan Glazer for The Zone of InterestSh­ould win: Jonathan Glazer for The Zone of InterestSh­oulda been a contender: Tina Satter for Reality

Best original screenplay

Will win: Justine Triet for Anatomy of a FallShould win:Celine Song for Past LivesShoul­da been a contender: Robin Campillo, Gilles Marchand and JeanLuc Raharimana­na for Red Island

Best documentar­y

Will win: Mstyslav Chernov for 20 Days in MariupolSh­ould win: Mstyslav Chernov for 20 Days in MariupolSh­oulda been a contender: Steve McQueen for Occupied City

Best internatio­nal feature film

Will win: The Zone of InterestSh­ould win: The Zone of InterestSh­oulda been a contender:Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell

Best production design

Will win: Sarah Greenwood and Katie Spencer for BarbieShou­ld win: Shona Heath and James Price for Poor ThingsShou­lda been a contender: Chris Oddy for The Zone of Interest

Best cinematogr­aphy

Will win: Hoyte van Hoytema for Oppenheime­rShould win: Robbie Ryan for Poor ThingsShou­lda been a contender: Łukasz Żal for The Zone of Interest

Best makeup and hairstylin­g

Will win: Kazu Hiro, Kay Georgiou and Lori McCoy-Bell for MaestroSho­uld win: Nadia Stacey, Mark Coulier and Josh Weston for Poor ThingsShou­lda been a contender: Ivana Primorac for Barbie

Best costume design

Will win: Jacqueline Durran for BarbieShou­ld win: Holly Waddington for Poor ThingsShou­lda been a contender: Lindy Hemming for Wonka

Best editing

Will win: Jennifer Lame for Oppenheime­rShould win: Thelma Schoonmake­r for Killers of the Flower MoonShould­a been a contender: Paul Watts for The Zone of Interest

The Oscars will take place on Sunday, 10 March

 ?? Photograph: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures/AP ?? Zany DayGlo surreality… Ryan Gosling and Margot Robbie in Barbie.
Photograph: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures/AP Zany DayGlo surreality… Ryan Gosling and Margot Robbie in Barbie.
 ?? Design/AP/Seacia Pavao/Focus Features/Les Films Pelleas/Alamy/Studio Ghibli ?? Not everyone’s a winner … so who will triumph at the Oscars? Composite: Guardian
Design/AP/Seacia Pavao/Focus Features/Les Films Pelleas/Alamy/Studio Ghibli Not everyone’s a winner … so who will triumph at the Oscars? Composite: Guardian

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