Guide to the Precursers

Indiewire’s Peter Knegt does a good job laying out the award precursors coming soon to an Oscar blog near you. Actually, you could probably say it will becoming from all sides, from every angle and outlet and social networking tool near you. I’m scared of Oscars 2009 where Twitter and Facebook are involved. There might turn out to be such a thing as too much information. “Did you hear what I’m saying to you? We don’t got no information.

Peter mentions the following:

The Gothams November 30:

Last Year’s Big Winner: “Frozen River,” taking best feature and a breakthrough acting honor for Melissa Leo.

Mentions the Spirit Awards, which we’ll skip for now (though it’s important that Indiewire not skip them) and move on to the NBR (which I still consider the biggest precursor in the early phase):

December 3rd: National Board of Review

Last Year’s Big Winners: “Slumdog Millionaire” took its first major best picture award of the season here, as well as honors for adapted screenplay and breakthrough actor Dev Patel. Other major winners included Clint Eastwood (best actor for “Gran Torino”), Anne Hathaway (best actress for “Rachel Getting Married”), Josh Brolin (best supporting actor for “Milk”) and Penelope Cruz (best supporting actress for “Vicky Cristina Barcelona”). Their top ten list consisted of four of the five eventual best picture Oscar nominees, leaving off “The Reader.”

The NBR is much better at helping a film get into the Oscar race than it is in calling out a winner, unless it’s a winner that is going to win everything anyway, like Slumdog or No Country for Old Men. But its calling out Letters from Iwo Jima the year before was an important moment in the 2007 Oscar race because at that time Letters hadn’t yet really come forward as a major contender; most were focused on Flags on Our Fathers, which didn’t do as well. The NBR winners chart after the cut, as well as more precursor stuff.

National Board of Review Winner Chart:

2008 Slumdog Millionaire Slumdog Millionaire (8/10)
2007 No Country for Old Men No Country for Old Men (4/5)
2006 Letters from Iwo Jima The Departed (4/5)
2005 Good Night, and Good Luck Crash (5/5)
2004 Finding Neverland Million Dollar Baby (5/5)
2003 Mystic River Return of the King (4/5)
2002 The Hours Chicago (4/5)
2001 Moulin Rouge A Beautiful Mind (2/5)
2000 Quills Gladiator (2/5)
1999 American Beauty American Beauty (2/5)
1998 Gods and Monsters Shakespeare in Love (4/5)
1997 L.A. Confidential Titanic (5/5)
1996 Shine The English Patient (5/5)
1995 Sense and Sensibility Braveheart (3/5)
1994 Pulp Fiction and Forrest Gump Forrest Gump (5/5)
1993 Schindler’s
List
Schindler’s
List (4/5)
1992 Howards End Unforgiven (5/5)
1991 Silence of the Lambs Silence of the Lambs (2/5)
1990 Dances With Wolves Dances With Wolves (3/5)
1989 Driving Miss Daisy Driving Miss Daisy (5/5)
1988 Mississippi Burning Rain Man (2/5)
1987 Empire of the Sun The Last Emperor (4/5)
1986 A Room with a View Platoon (5/5)
1985 The Color Purple Out of Africa (5/5)
1984 A Passage to India Amadeus (4/5)
1983 Betrayal Terms
of Endearment (5/5)
1982 Gandhi Gandhi (5/5)
1981 Chariots of Fire Chariots of Fire (5/5)
1980 Ordinary People Ordinary People (5/5)
1979 Manhattan Kramer
Vs. Kramer (3/5)
1978 Days of Heaven The Deer Hunter (3/5)
1977 The Turning Point Annie Hall(4/5)
1976 All the President’s Men Rocky (3/5)
1975 Nashville/Barry Lyndon One Flew Over/Cukoo’s
Nest (4/5)
1974 The Conversation Godfather II (3/5)
1973 The Sting The Sting (1/5)
1972 Cabaret The Godfather (4/5)
1971 MacBeth The French Connection (3/5)
1970 Patton Patton (3/5)
1969 They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? Midnight Cowboy (2/5)
1968 The Shoes of the Fisherman Oliver(4/5)
1967 Far from the Madding Crowd In Heat of the Night (2/5)
1966 A Man for All Seasons A Man for all Seasons (4/5)
1965 The Eleanor Roosevelt Story the Sound of Music(5/5)
1964 Becket My Fair Lady (3/5)
1963 Tom Jones Tom Jones (3/3)
1962 The Longest Day Lawrence of Arabia (2/5)
1961 Question 7 West Side Story(4/5)
1960 Sons and Lovers The Apartment(5/5)
1959 The Nun’s Story Ben Hur(4/5)
1958 The Old Man and the Sea Gigi(3/5)
1957 Bridge on the River Kwai Bridge on the River Kwai (2/5)
1956 Around the World in 80 Days Around/World in 80 Days (2/5)
1955 Marty Marty (4/5)
1954 On the Waterfront On the Waterfront (3/5)
1953 Julius Cesar From here to Eternity(5/5)
1952 The Quiet Man Greatest Show on Earth (1/5)
1951 A Place in the Sun An American in Paris (5/5)
1950 Sunset Boulevard All About Eve (2/2)
1949 The Bicycle Thief All the King’s Men (2/5)
1948 Paisan Hamlet (5/5)
1947 Monsieur Verdoux Gentlemen’s Agreement(3/5)
1946 Henry V The Best Years of Our Lives(2/5)
1945 The True Glory The Lost Weekend(1/5)
1944 None But the Lonely Heart Going My Way (2/5)
1943 The Ox-Bow Incident Casablanca
1942 In Which We Serve Mrs. Miniver
1941 Citizen Kane How Green was my Valley
1940 The Grapes of Wrath Rebecca
1939 Confessions of a Nazi Spy Gone with the Wind(for previous year)
1938 The Citadel You Can’t Take it With You
1937 Night Must Fall The Live of Emile Zola
1936 Mr. Deeds Goes to Town The Great Ziegfield
1935 The Informer Mutiny on the Bounty
1934 It Happened One Night It Happened One Night

Here is how Peter thinks it might shakedown:

While pinpointing their specific choices are a challenge, one can assume “Invictus” (they historically love them some Clint Eastwood), “An Education,” “Up In The Air” and “Precious” will all be in the mix this time around, at least with a top 10 mention if not a major award. “Dreamgirls” failed to make their top ten in 2006, so it will be somewhat interesting to see how “Nine” plays out here. For the hell of it, I’ll suggest this for the major categories: “Precious” takes best picture and supporting actress for Mo’Nique; “Invictus” takes best director and actor for Clint Eastwood and Morgan Freeman; Meryl Streep wins best actress for both “Julie & Julia” and “It’s Complicated,” while Stanley Tucci takes a joint best supporting actor honor for “Julie & Julia” and “The Lovely Bones.”

I think they’ll go for something more palatable than Precious, however — I’m wondering if they might not choose The Messenger in a freak upset. If not that film, An Education or Up in the Air seem like they are headed for an NBoR win.

Peter then moves on:

December 13th* & 14th: Los Angeles Film Critics Awards and New York Film Critics Awards

Last Year’s Big Winners: In LA, while Oscar snubees “WALL-E” and the ultra deserving Sally Hawkins took top honors for best picture and actress, eventually Oscar winners Danny Boyle, Sean Penn, Heath Ledger and Penelope Cruz all won here as well. In New York, “Milk” and “Happy-Go-Lucky” swept the awards, with the former taking picture, actor and supporting actor, and the latter taking director and actress. Sweeper Penelope Cruz was also in the mix for “Vicky Cristina Barcelona.”

The LA Film Critics can sometimes make a huge difference. Their choosing There Will Be Blood the No Country year seem to really announce that film’s presence with authority – on the other hand, it might have been headed that way anyway. The LAFCA and the NYFCC are funny these days; they didn’t used to disagree just to disagree but one gets the feeling that they like to be contrary — or perhaps that is a lame way of saying it. They don’t like to go along with the herd is perhaps a better way of saying it. Choosing Wall-E over Slumdog, for instance.

Anyway, here’s my predictions, for what it’s worth: Both groups honor Kathryn Bigelow as best director and Christoph Waltz and Mo’Nique in the supporting categories. In LA, “The Hurt Locker” takes best picture, while “A Serious Man” wins in New York. Morgan Freeman and Carey Mulligan win LA lead acting honors, while Colin Firth and Tilda Swinton (for “Julia,” in a bit of a surprise… though “Antichrist”‘s Charlotte Gainsbourg might be another one to look for if they go the anti-Oscar precursor route) win in New York.

I think Peter is spot on here — except for the tiny fact that no one likes to be a foregone conclusion – writing these predictions could slightly alter their outcome. I definitely agree that The Hurt Locker is up for major awards in the critics run of the race – and I think it will start winning stuff starting here, with the LAFCA and the NYFCC. The main reason for this, I think, is that they go two ways. They either pluck a surprise out of the race that people have not yet seen, or else they honor a film that really could use the push and is being ignored for whatever reason. Also, I think the strong voices in the LAFCA really loved and supported The Hurt Locker.

The rest of Peter’s predictions, for the BFCA and the Globes, we”ll have to save until it’s time to cover them — but Peter knows his stuff so he’s well worth popping over there for a read.

Here is an LA Film Critics chart for your reading pleasure, winner to winner (red means won Best Pic, blue means nommed for Best Pic):

2008 Wall-E Slumdog Millionaire
2007 There Will Be Blood No Country for Old Men
2006 Letters from Iwo Jima The Departed
2005 Brokeback Mountain Crash
2004 Sideways Million Dollar Baby
2003 American Splendour Return of the King
2002 About Schmidt Chicago
2001 In the Bedroom A Beautiful Mind
2000 Crouching Tiger Gladiator
1999 The Insider American Beauty
1998 Saving Private Ryan Shakespeare in Love
1997 L.A. Confidential Titanic
1996 Secrets & Lies The English Patient
1995 Leaving Las Vegas Braveheart
1994 Pulp Fiction Forrest Gump
1993 Schindler’s List Schindler’s List
1992 Unforgiven Unforgiven
1991 Bugsy Silence of the Lambs
1990 Goodfellas Dances With Wolves
1989 Do the Right Thing Driving Miss Daisy
1988 Little Dorrit Rain Man
1987 Hope and Glory The Last Emperor
1986 Hannah and Her Sisters Platoon
1985 Brazil Out of Africa
1984 Amadeus Amadeus
1983 Terms of Endearment Terms of Endearment
1982 E.T. Gandhi
1981 Atlantic City Chariots of Fire
1980 Raging Bull Ordinary People
1979 Kramer Vs. Kramer Kramer Vs. Kramer
1978 Coming Home The Deer Hunter
1977 Star Wars Annie Hall
1976 Network Rocky
1975 Dog Day Afternoon One Flew Over/Cukoo’s Nest
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