Neil Patrick Harris is hosting the ceremony on Feb. 22. |
With the Oscar nominations less than two days away, here are some interesting stats/reminders. Look out for my final predictions tomorrow.
1. The nominees for all 24 categories will be announced live for the first time ever by Alfonso Cuarón (above), J.J. Abrams, Chris Pine, and Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs.
2. There will be no previous winner in the Best Actor category for the first time since 2006.
3. Richard Linklater, Alejandro González Iñárritu, and Wes Anderson could be triple nominees, as could composer Alexandre Desplat (for The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation Game, and Unbroken).
4. Writer/director Dan Gilroy could be nominated with his brothers Tony (producer) and John (editor) for Nightcrawler.
5. Whiplash, if nominated for writing, will show up in Best Adapted Screenplay instead of Original.
6. Bradley Cooper and Reese Witherspoon, if eligible, could get one or two nominations, as both produce and star in a film. (Cooper represents American Sniper, while Witherspoon stars in Wild and produces Gone Girl.)
7. Ethan Hawke will likely receive a Best Supporting Actor nod for Boyhood, but he also wrote two tracks eligible for Best Original Song.
8. The guys who directed the Jump Street movies will be nominated for The LEGO Movie.
9. Ralph Fiennes (above) and Robert Duvall could earn their first nominations since the 90s.
10. If The Hobbit is nominated for Best Visual Effects, it will make Peter Jackson's Middle-Earth saga the first franchise to get six consecutive nods in that category.
11. Meryl Streep will likely get her 19th nomination. (This is getting ridiculous.)
12. Due to various screener issues with precursors, Selma may or may not receive several nominations. (It's likely the film will get in just fine, though.)
13. Guillermo del Toro has an outside chance at a Best Animated Feature Film nomination for producing The Book of Life.
14. Don't expect to see films like Mommy or Two Days, One Night (above) show up in Best Foreign Language Film - they didn't make the shortlist.
15. Small films like The Immigrant and Under the Skin (above) ARE eligible, if the Academy decide to surprise us.
I'm compiling my final predictions right now...OMG!!!
ReplyDeleteI keep changing my mind. This is maddening!
DeleteLove this. Very interesting that they're releasing all 24 categories live. Gonna make waiting for those bigger awards that much more painful! And how cool would it be if number 4 happened? The Gilroy's all get invited to the big show.
ReplyDeleteThanks man. Yeah, I can't wait to see how the announcement goes. I'm predicting #4 will happen. ;)
DeleteGreat trivia here Josh, thank you!
ReplyDeleteWow, there will be no previous winner in the Best Actor category for the first time since 2006. That's interesting! I'm still rooting for Keaton!
So agree with #11! 19th nomination??! Seriously, and it's irritating as her performance in Into The Woods was nothing special. I hope Marion gets a nod for one of her two supposedly VERY worthy performances in 2014.
Thanks Ruth! :)
DeleteKeaton all the way! LOL, Streep usually gets in. I'd LOVE to see Marion finally get another nomination!
I hope Boyhood goes all the way, like at the Golden Globes! Even if it isn't Richard Linklater's best film, I'm happy he's winning a few big awards
ReplyDeleteYeah, having seen Boyhood again, I'd now give it an A-. I had a few problems with the second half, but I'm thrilled to see Linklater getting his due. I hope he at least wins Best Director.
DeleteLove this, this is awesome. I have this strange feeling that they'll nominate Chris Pine for Into the Woods in Robert Duvall's place, just because I think that since they're doing all the categories live, they're going to throw some surpise nominee. Plus, he is presenting. Very flawed logic, I know, but I still think it's a possibility.
ReplyDeleteThanks. I doubt Pine will get nominated, but that would be a fun thing to happen. Still, Chris Hemsworth presented last year, and they didn't even nominate Rush. :/
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