In this first part of Oscar Picks for the upcoming 86th
Academy Awards, this Blogger will make selections in the acting categories.
Best Actress
For the second year in a row, director David O’Russell has
directed actors to nominations in all four acting categories. His AMERICAN
HUSTLE is an acting powerhouse, which makes Amy Adams a visible favorite. Adams
however has plenty of company; Cate Blanchett, Sandra Bullock, Judi Dench, and
Meryl Streep are all veterans of the screen with plenty of Oscar experience.
Bullock has the disadvantage of a light script to work with, although her role
required a lot of physical work. It feels like Dench and Streep’s nominations
were obligatory, which leaves Adams vs. Blanchett. Both actresses had accents
to work with, but Blanchett’s character constantly teetered upon a nervous
breakdown which was unsettling for the viewer to see, and she clearly had to
dig deeper.
Winner: Cate
Blanchett
Best Supporting
Actress
Simply put, Jennifer’s Lawrence’s performance in AMERICAN
HUSTLE stands tall above her competition in this category. Lawrence had to work
with an accent, play a half-insane character, and had to find a way to stand
out in a film populated with veteran acting heavyweights; she had the most work
to do out of everyone in this category. And looking at the big picture,
AMERICAN HUSTLE, despite its many nominations, is unlikely to win in any other
acting category. A movie powered by so much good acting has to win at least one, and this is the most likely.
Winner: Jennifer
Lawrence
Best Supporting
Actor
What exactly is acting? It’s difficult to define, but
perhaps the best work is done when a person plays a character which is their
total opposite in real life. This is where Jared Leto’s performance as a transgendered
woman in DALLAS BUYERS CLUB steps in. Leto not only had to be a man playing a
woman, but he had to play a character with a terminal disease with a constant
hopelessness. There was an aura of sadness around the character which is hard
to forget, and he had the most layered character of the year to inhabit.
Winner: Jared
Leto
Best Actor
If Oscar history has proven one thing, it’s that the Academy
loves actors who drastically change their bodies for their art. That puts
Christian Bale of AMERICAN HUSTLE and Matthew McConaughey of DALLAS BUYERS CLUB
in the front seat of this category. Bale removed his Bruce Wayne muscles and
perfect hair for a blob of a beer-gutted belly and a balding head hidden by the
worst combover in history, while McConaughey dropped the pounds to turn himself
into a diseased waif. Bale hid his accent well and McConaughey hit the southern
twang just right. Bale had the more interesting character, while McConaughey’s
was the one we felt the most sorry for and he had to work harder to sell his
plight. Aside from the physical transformation, McConaughey seemed to vanish
inside his role a little bit more, and his scene inside of a car when he has an
emotional breakdown is clearly the acting highlight of the year. McConaughey by
a nose.
Winner: Matthew McConaughey
*
In Part 2, it’s all about the movies. The Oscars will be
awarded March 2nd.
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