太子探花

2018 Oscar Predictions: Is ‘Get Out’ brewing a historic Best Picture upset?

WTOP's Jason Fraley makes 2018 Oscar predictions (Jason Fraley)

WASHINGTON — I honestly can’t remember an Oscar year this wide open for the top prize.

While the acting categories all appear to be virtual locks, the show will be worth watching right down to the bitter end to see which wild upset might happen in the Best Picture race. Not to mention, it will be entertaining to watch how Jimmy Kimmel mocks last year’s envelope gaffe.

Here are my 2018 Academy Award predictions in the six major categories:

Best Actor

The Nominees: Timoth茅e Chalamet (鈥淐all Me by Your Name鈥), Daniel Day-Lewis (鈥淧hantom Thread鈥), Daniel Kaluuya (鈥淕et Out鈥), Gary Oldman (鈥淒arkest Hour鈥), Denzel Washington (鈥淩oman J. Israel, Esq.鈥)

Front Runner: Gary Oldman – “Darkest Hour”

Potential Spoiler: Timoth茅e Chalamet – “Call Me By Your Name”

If there’s one lock, it’s Gary Oldman as Best Actor. Sure, it feels like a “career Oscar” after Sirius Black in “Harry Potter,” Commissioner Gordon in “The Dark Knight” and George Smiley in “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy,” but that would undersell Oldman’s terrific performance as Winston Churchill, transforming himself with prosthetics, body movements and mumbling dialogue. You can make a case for the tear-stained cheeks of Daniel Kaluuya and Timoth茅e Chalamet in “Get Out” and “Call Me By Your Name,” respectively, but no matter your rationale, “You can’t reason with a tiger when your head is in its mouth.”


Best Actress

The Nominees: Sally Hawkins (鈥淭he Shape of Water鈥), Frances McDormand (鈥淭hree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri鈥), Margot Robbie (鈥淚, Tonya鈥), Saoirse Ronan (鈥淟ady Bird鈥), Meryl Streep (鈥淭he Post鈥)

Front Runner: Frances McDormand – “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”

Potential Spoiler: Saoirse Ronan – “Lady Bird”

It would be great to see Saoirse Ronan (“Lady Bird”) or Margot Robbie (“I, Tonya”) win their first Oscar, but Frances McDormand is the clear favorite after wins at the Globes and SAG. Her role as a vigilante prodding the police to solver her daughter’s rape and murder is the perfect pick for the #MeToo movement. Expect the previous “Fargo” champ to win her second Best Actress, joining the elite ranks of Katharine Hepburn,聽Meryl Streep, Ingrid Bergman, Bette Davis, Elizabeth Taylor, Vivien Leigh, Jane Fonda, Sally Field, Jodie Foster and Hilary Swank.


Best Supporting Actor

The Nominees: Willem Dafoe (鈥淭he Florida Project鈥), Woody Harrelson (鈥淭hree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri鈥), Richard Jenkins (鈥淭he Shape of Water鈥), Christopher Plummer (鈥淎ll the Money in the World鈥), Sam Rockwell (鈥淭hree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri鈥)

Front Runner: Sam Rockwell – “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”

Potential Spoiler: Willem Dafoe – “The Florida Project”

After wins at the Globes, SAG and BAFTAs, Sam Rockwell will likely get his due for a stellar career from “Moon” to “The Way, Way Back.” Personally, I’d rather see it go to his co-star Woody Harrelson, whose ailing sheriff was more sympathetic than Rockwell’s deputy grappling with his prejudices. I suppose there’s a scenario where the “Billboards” boys split the vote, allowing Willem Dafoe to win for “The Florida Project,” playing the owner of a run-down motel in the shadows of Disney World, the crowning achievement of a prolific career.


Best Supporting Actress

The Nominees: Mary J. Blige (鈥淢udbound鈥), Allison Janney (鈥淚, Tonya鈥), Lesley Manville (鈥淧hantom Thread鈥), Laurie Metcalf (鈥淟ady Bird鈥), Octavia Spencer (鈥淭he Shape of Water鈥)

Front Runner: Allison Janney – “I, Tonya”

Potential Spoiler: Laurie Metcalf – “Lady Bird”

Allison Janney knocked our socks off as the chain-smoking helicopter parent of Tonya Harding in “I, Tonya,” delivering the film’s most hilarious fourth-wall break: “Where the f*** is my storyline?” As a result, she’s run the table this award season at the Globes, SAG and BAFTAs. Still,聽I’m rooting for Laurie Metcalf as the multi-faceted mother in “Lady Bird,” partly because it was a more difficult role to play, and partly because I don’t want “Lady Bird” to get shut out.


Best Director

The Nominees: Christopher Nolan (鈥淒unkirk鈥), Jordan Peele (鈥淕et Out鈥), Greta Gerwig (鈥淟ady Bird鈥), Paul Thomas Anderson (鈥淧hantom Thread鈥), Guillermo del Toro (鈥淭he Shape of Water鈥)

Front Runner: Guillermo del Toro – “The Shape of Water”

Potential Spoiler: Christopher Nolan – “Dunkirk”

After such masterpieces as “Memento” (2000), “The Dark Knight” (2008) and “Inception” (2010), Christopher Nolan deserves to finally win Best Director for “Dunkirk,” which was the year’s most kinetic moviegoing experience. However, it’s not going to happen, as Guillermo del Toro has this one in the bag after Best Director wins at both the Golden Globes and DGA Awards.

The Academy desperately wants to make up for snubbing him for “Pan’s Labyrinth” (2006), and on top of that, “The Shape of Water” is the type of visual feast that wins Best Director Oscars like Ang Lee for “Life of Pi” (2012), Alfonso Cuar贸n for “Gravity” (2013), Alejandro G. I帽谩rritu聽for “The Revenant” (2015) or Damien Chazelle for “La La Land” (2016). None of those films won Best Picture, due to the recent trend of Best Director splits, which brings us to…


Best Picture

The Nominees: 鈥淐all Me by Your Name,鈥 鈥滵arkest Hour,鈥 鈥滵unkirk,鈥 鈥滸et Out,鈥 鈥滾ady Bird,鈥 鈥漃hantom Thread,鈥 鈥漈he Post,鈥 鈥漈he Shape of Water,鈥 鈥漈hree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri鈥

Front Runner: “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”

Potential Spoiler: “Get Out”

The smart money is on either “Three Billboards,” which won the top prize at the Globes, SAG and BAFTAs, or “The Shape of Water,” which won the top prize at the PGA, DGA and BFCA. The latter also leads the way with 13 total Oscar nominations. However,聽both movies are just polarizing enough — some find “Three Billboards” insensitive and “Shape of Water” bizarre — that they could suffer on the preferential ballots,聽where voters rank their favorites from 1-9.

This could give a boost to films with plenty of second-place votes, meaning “Get Out” could see a late underdog surge. It also won Best Original Screenplay at the WGA, which predicted “Spotlight” and聽“Moonlight” as Oscar Best Pictures.聽So, just like “Moonlight” last year, I predict another Oscar surprise with the first horror flick to win since “The Silence of the Lambs.”

If I’m wrong, you can stir your tea and banish me to the Sunken Place. Whether it wins or not, I guarantee “Get Out” is the one we’ll still be talking about decades from now. Not only did it introduce mainstream audiences to the joy of symbolic mise-en-scene聽on repeat viewings, it captured the cultural zeitgeist in a streaming era by reminding us to “get out” to the theater.

Happy Oscars!

-Jason

Follow Jason’s live Tweets starting at 8 p.m. Sunday as the Oscars air on ABC.

Jason Fraley

Hailed by The Washington Post for 鈥渉is savantlike ability to name every Best Picture winner in history," Jason Fraley began at WTOP as Morning Drive Writer in 2008, film critic in 2011 and Entertainment Editor in 2014, providing daily arts coverage on-air and online.

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