Movies. We love the best of them and care enough about the
art to hate the worst of them. The moving picture gives us stories that inspire
us, characters that move us, and worlds that exist only in dreams. To see a
dream on the big screen in all of its moving glory…that is where the magic of
cinema begins.
It takes many elements to make a movie, and each year since
1929 the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences honors the achievements in
the grand wide world of film. The path to Best Picture is a twisty and windy
one, and in this second and final part of Oscar Picks, Reel Speak takes a look
at the elemental categories leading to the grand prize. Here are Reel Speak’s
picks:
Best Adapted Screenplay
Every movie begins with the written word, and this year’s
nominees for Best Adapted Screenplay all did great work in adapting their
source material for the screen while still forging their own identity as a
film. This year’s clear frontrunner is Adam McKay for THE BIG SHORT. Tackling
the dense layers of the financial world is no easy task, and although THE BIG
SHORT was often like trying to understand drunken ancient pig-Latin, it
presented itself in a way where we could at least understand what was happening
in broad strokes. McKay, who is mostly known as a comedy writer and director,
stepped way outside of his comfort zone in taking on this film, and that alone
is a good reason to give him the gold.
Winner: Adam McKay for THE BIG SHORT
Best Original Screenplay
Tom McCarthy and Josh Singer’s script which would become
SPOTLIGHT is getting a lot of attention, not only because the film was very
high-profile, but because it made the usually mundane world of print journalism
exciting and dramatic to watch. SPOTLIGHT centered on the now infamous Catholic
Church sex scandal in Boston in 2001, but it was less about the cover-up and
more about the reveal, and it made watching reporters dig through files and
basements a thrill. SPOTLIGHT is the favorite, but Pixar’s brilliant INSIDE OUT
could very well be a spoiler.
Winner: Tom McCarthy
and Josh Singer for SPOTLIGHT
Best Editing
If filmmaking begins with the written word, then it ends
with the cutting. For 33 consecutive years, from 1981 to 2013, every Best
Picture winner had also been nominated in this category, with two-thirds of the
Best Picture winners also winning for editing. This year’s nominees are in a
tight race. THE BIG SHORT had a lot of snappy cuts with high energy and some
creative ways to present its information, while thrillers like MAD MAX: FURY
ROAD and STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS always had that all-important feeling of
forward momentum going on at all times. THE REVENANT had some amazing
single-camera one-take shots, but that points more towards the on-set directing
than editing, and SPOTLIGHT was a very straight-forward effort. THE BIG SHORT
had the most creative presentation, but it was very derivative of many films
from the past (coughScorsesecough). The incredible visceral experience of MAD
MAX: FURY ROAD should be the winner here, and one of many technical wins for
George Miller’s cinematic thunder.
WINNER: MAD MAX FURY
ROAD
Best Director
Similar to Best Editing, this category and Best Picture are
closely linked. Of the 87 films that have won Best Picture, 63 have been
awarded for Best Directing. And speaking of history, Alejandro G. Inarritu has
a chance to make some…a win this year for THE REVENANT would make him the first
director to win back-to-back Best Director awards since Joseph L. Mankiewicz
won in 1949 and 1950, and only the third in history. But Inarritu has stiff
competition. George Miller has already picked up many awards for MAD MAX: FURY
ROAD, and Adam McKay is also getting a lot of attention for THE BIG SHORT. This
seems to be a case of THE REVENANT vs. MAD MAX, and both directors are
very-much deserving. It’s not unlike the Academy to split Best Director and
Picture, which means Miller has an excellent shot. But Inarritu has the
all-important Director’s Guild win, which is a strong indicator of which way
the tide is turning. On the screen, both films accomplished some amazing
things, with THE REVENANT doing just a little bit more. Al should win this, but
don’t be surprised to see George thunder up that stage.
WINNER: Alejandro G.
Inarritu for THE REVENANT
Best Picture
This year it’s a four-horse race for Best Picture. Starting
with the off-screen factors, THE BIG SHORT recently had a surprise win at the
Producer’s Guild Awards, which have correctly predicted the Oscars’ Best
Picture eight years in a row. MAD MAX: FURY ROAD has also picked up some
awards, and SPOTLIGHT has important wins from the Screen Actors Guild and the
Writers Guild. THE REVENANT cleaned house at the Golden Globes, and won
Innaritu the all-important Directors Guild Award. Back on the screen, THE BIG
SHORT can be painful to understand, and is full of characters no one would like
to hang out with. MAD MAX: FURY ROAD is a legit contender, but its status as a
genre film (sci-fi/fantasy), means it doesn’t speak to a lot of people. SPOTLIGHT
is the sleeper as it’s unlikely to win any of the flashy and sexy categories
(acting, directing), but has enough nominations in all the vital categories
(editing, screenplay, directing), to sneak out the big win; similar to ARGO in
2012, it’s the quiet guy in the corner at the party who always goes home with
the girl. But SPOTLIGHT is very much straightforward…maybe too much, and that’s why this Blogger leans towards the ambition
and boundary-pushing done by THE REVENANT. A Best Picture, as a good friend of
Reel Speak has said, should move the industry forward, and this is the kind of
film which should inspire younger filmmakers to be different and bold. It's a
film which puts most of lazy mainstream Hollywood to shame, and everything
about it seems ten times more than
everything else; ten-times the idea, the effort, and the on-screen result.
WINNER: THE REVENANT
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Read Reel Speak's picks for the acting categories HERE
The Oscars will be awarded February 28th.
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