This crazy, mixed-up Oscar season comes to a close with Sunday nightâs ceremony, which will forgo a host and, after plenty of controversy, still present all 24 categories on the air. But which movie is poised to win the biggest race of them all and take the Oscar for best picture?
Alfonso CuarĂłnâs black-and-white art film âRomaâ is a critical favorite that took the top trophy from the Directors Guild of America, but a foreign-language film has never won best picture, let alone one distributed by the insurgent streaming service Netflix. Many Oscar voters love the racial-issues dramedy âGreen Book,â which was given top honors by the oft-predictive Producers Guild of America, but the film couldnât even nab a best-director nomination.
So though weâve got two ostensible front-runners, this is still anybodyâs game: After all, âA Star Is Bornâ once looked unbeatable, too, and now itâs limping to the finish line with a scant few trophies under its belt.
â Picture
â âRomaâ
âA Star Is Bornâ
âBlacKkKlansmanâ
âBlack Pantherâ
âBohemian Rhapsodyâ
âThe Favouriteâ
âGreen Bookâ
âViceâ
Of the other contenders, a win for Spike Leeâs âBlacKkKlansmanâ or the Marvel phenomenon âBlack Pantherâ would be historic. Royal comedy âThe Favouriteâ rode across-the-board support to 10 nominations. The two music-driven dramas, âBohemian Rhapsodyâ and âA Star Is Born,â claim passionate fans and equally engaged detractors. And a vote for the Dick Cheney indictment âViceâ would at least send a political message.
With all that in mind, I still think the industry prizes given to âRomaâ add up to a best-picture win that will prove to be a game-changing moment for Netflix. If a streamer can taken the top Oscar, then all bets are off.
â Actress
â Glenn CloseâThe Wifeâ
Yalitza Aparicio âRomaâ
Olivia Colman âThe Favouriteâ
Lady Gaga âA Star Is Bornâ
Melissa McCarthy âCan You Ever Forgive Meâ
A seven-time Oscar nominee, Glenn Close is poised to pick up her first statuette for her finely crafted work as a secretive spouse in âThe Wife.â Itâs been ages since Close had a showcase role like this, and the 71-year-old actress galvanized voters further after a moving, personal Golden Globe acceptance speech in January. Her primary competition is first-time nominee Olivia Colman, who just won Baftaâs top prize for playing the queen in âThe Favouriteâ and is fronting one of the nightâs most nominated films.
â Actor
â Rami MalekâBohemian Rhapsodyâ
Christian Bale âViceâ
Bradley Cooper âA Star Is Bornâ
Willem Dafoe âAt Eternityâs Gateâ
Viggo Mortensen âGreen Bookâ
Oscar voters are suckers for a transformation, and this category offers two ostentatious examples in Rami Malek, who played the Queen frontman Freddie Mercury with real swagger in âBohemian Rhapsody,â and Christian Bale, who was unrecognizable as Dick Cheney in âVice.â Malek has been one of this seasonâs most willing and able campaigners, and his film is a box-office sensation, so the 37-year-old actor is poised to become one of the youngest recipients of this award in recent memory.
â Supporting Actress
â Regina KingâIf Beale Street Could Talkâ
Amy Adams âViceâ
Emma Stone âThe Favouriteâ
Marina de Tavira âRomaâ
Rachel Weisz âThe Favouriteâ
This category promises to be one of the nightâs most suspenseful races. The âIf Beale Street Could Talkâ star Regina King won the Golden Globe and Critics Choice Award, but she wasnât even nominated by the Screen Actors Guild or Bafta. The latter group gave its prize to Rachel Weisz, who hails from a best-picture nominee but may split votes with âThe Favouriteâ co-star Emma Stone. And then thereâs âViceâ nominee Amy Adams, whose Oscar win is long overdue. My guess is King will prevail: At the recent Oscar nomineesâ luncheon, she and Mahershala Ali were the two most applauded contenders.
â Supporting Actor
âMahershala Ali âGreen Bookâ
Adam Driver âBlacKkKlansmanâ
Sam Elliott âA Star Is Bornâ
Richard E. Grant âCan You Ever Forgive Me?â
Sam Rockwell âViceâ
Can Mahershala Ali become the second black actor after Denzel Washington to win more than one Oscar for acting? All signs point to yes, as Ali has swept the precursors this season for his work as the gifted pianist Don Shirley in âGreen Book.â Only two things are working against him: Ali won this same category two years ago for âMoonlight,â and voters may not be in such a hurry to reward him again so soon, while âCan You Ever Forgive Me?â star Richard E. Grant has charmed his fair share of admirers on the awards circuit and could prove to be a dark-horse winner.
â Director
â Alfonso CuarĂłnâRomaâ
Yorgos Lanthimos âThe Favouriteâ
Spike Lee âBlacKkKlansmanâ
Adam McKay âViceâ
Pawel Pawlikowski âCold Warâ
Though Barry Jenkins (âMoonlightâ) and Steve McQueen (â12 Years a Slaveâ) have seen their films win best picture, neither man won the best director Oscar. This presents a clear path for Spike Lee to become the first black filmmaker to triumph in this category, except that he is up against Alfonso CuarĂłn, who has taken every major directing prize this season. While the academy has more of an imperative to reward Lee, who has famously never won a competitive Oscar, CuarĂłn will be tough to topple.
â Documentary
â âRBGâ
âFree Soloâ
âHale County This Morning, This Eveningâ
âMinding the Gapâ
âOf Fathers and Sonsâ
Last yearâs biggest documentary, âWonât You Be My Neighbor?,â was also one of Oscarâs biggest snubs. In its wake, two other breakout hits are best positioned to win this Oscar: the Ruth Bader Ginsburg documentary âRBG,â which also scored a nomination for original song, and the breathtaking rock-climber story âFree Solo.â The latter is more of a cinematic feat, but checking the box for âRBGâ lets voters throw their weight behind the indefatigable Supreme Court justice herself.
â Original Screenplay
â âThe Favouriteâ
âFirst Reformedâ
âGreen Bookâ
âRomaâ
âViceâ
âGreen Bookâ won the Golden Globe, âThe Favouriteâ scored with Bafta, and the Writers Guild gave their top prize in this category to Bo Burnhamâs âEighth Grade,â a film the Oscars didnât even nominate. The race will likely come down to âGreen Bookâ and âThe Favourite,â and the latterâs malicious wit gives it the edge. Still, if âGreen Bookâ pulls off a win here early in the night, that could presage an eventual best-picture victory.
â Adapted Screenplay
â âBlacKkKlansmanâ
âA Star Is Bornâ
âThe Ballad of Buster Scruggsâ
âCan You Ever Forgive Me?â
âIf Beale Street Could Talkâ
The screenplay Oscar often goes to an auteur the academy is not quite hip enough to reward in the directing category, like Jordan Peele, Spike Jonze or Sofia Coppola. I wonder, then, if the adapted-screenplay race might be the safest place for voters to reward Spike Lee, one of four credited writers of âBlacKkKlansman.â Still, donât count out Writers Guild winner âCan You Ever Forgive Me?,â which has its passionate fans and is, in its own larcenous way, about the very act of adaptation itself.
â Animated Feature
â âSpider-Man: Into the Spider-Verseâ
âIncredibles 2â
âIsle of Dogsâ
âMiraiâ
âRalph Breaks the Internetâ
Pixarâs superhero sequel âIncredibles 2â is the highest-grossing animated film of all time, and its director, Brad Bird, has won this category twice, including for the first âIncredibles.â Thatâs formidable competition, and yet the contender with all the momentum is âSpider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse,â which came late in the year but has picked up all the big animation prizes. Even if âBlack Pantherâ doesnât take home best picture, expect at least one Marvel superhero to triumph on Oscar night.
â Foreign Language
â âRomaâMexico
âCapernaumâ Lebanon
âCold Warâ Poland
âNever Look Awayâ Germany
âShopliftersâ Japan
This is one of the strongest foreign-film lineups in recent memory, and in any other year, all of these movies would have the profile of a winner, including the Palme dâOr winner âShoplifters,â Lebanonâs moving âCapernaum,â and âCold Warâ and âNever Look Away,â which both scored cinematography nominations as well. (âCold Warâ even cracked the race for best director.) Still, in a year when âRomaâ could make history as the first foreign-language film to win best picture, it would seem outrageous for the movie to miss this prize on its path to victory.
â Film Editing
â âBohemian Rhapsodyâ
âBlacKkKlansmanâ
âThe Favouriteâ
âGreen Bookâ
âViceâ
Action films have dominated this category for the last few years, but none were nominated this time. Of these five contenders, âViceâ is the most aggressively edited by its very nature, because director Adam McKay employs so much high-concept crosscutting. Many of my fellow pundits expect it to win, but I suspect âBohemian Rhapsodyâ will pull out a shock victory, since many in the industry credit the editor John Ottman with salvaging the footage from a difficult shoot from which the original director Bryan Singer was fired.
â Cinematography
â âRomaâ
âCold Warâ
âThe Favouriteâ
âNever Look Awayâ
âA Star Is Bornâ
Initially, the academy had planned to give out this Oscar during a commercial break, and I suspect thatâs because the front-runner is CuarĂłn, who is likely to dominate the telecast with multiple acceptance speeches. Now that the academy has bent to the industry backlash and reinstated this category in the regular part of the broadcast, you can expect CuarĂłn to make Oscar history as the first director to win the cinematography award for shooting his own film.
â Production Design
â âThe Favouriteâ
âBlack Pantherâ
âFirst Manâ
âMary Poppins Returnsâ
âRomaâ
Cinematography and production design ought to work in concert, and the eccentric lensing favored by âThe Favouriteâ director Yorgos Lanthimos and his director of photography, Robbie Ryan, provide a great showcase for the filmâs sets, which take up much more of the fish-eye frame than they might on a conventionally shot movie. Voters also tend to prefer lavish period films here, which gives âThe Favouriteâ the edge over the futuristic âBlack Panther.â
â Visual Effects
â âFirst Manâ
âAvengers: Infinity Warâ
âChristopher Robinâ
âReady Player Oneâ
âSolo: A Star Wars Storyâ
The Visual Effects Society gave its main prize to âAvengers: Infinity War,â which juggled dozens of computer-aided heroes and a motion-captured villain, but Oscar has not rewarded a superhero film here since âSpider-Man 2â came out 15 years ago. That favors âFirst Man,â which failed to make the best-picture cut but at least had the heft of a contender, unlike fellow nominees âReady Player One,â âChristopher Robinâ and âSolo: A Star Wars Story.â
â Original Score
â âBlacKkKlansmanâ
âBlack Pantherâ
âIf Beale Street Could Talkâ
âIsle of Dogsâ
âMary Poppins Returnsâ
For my money, none of last yearâs scores were as beautiful as the love-soaked swoon composed by Nicholas Britell for âIf Beale Street Could Talk.â Then again, Jonny Greenwoodâs âPhantom Threadâ score was the clear standout the year before, and it lost to âThe Shape of Water.â This is all to say that though anything could happen in this category, the Oscar will probably go to the film with the most best-picture heat, winnowing the field to âBlack Pantherâ and âBlacKkKlansman.â In a close race, Iâm picking Terence Blanchardâs distinctive compositions for âBlacKkKlansman.â
â Original Song
â âShallowââA Star Is Bornâ
âAll the Starsâ âBlack Pantherâ
âIâll Fightâ âRBGâ
âThe Place Where Lost Things Goâ âMary Poppins Returnsâ
âWhen a Cowboy Trades His Spurs for Wingsâ âThe Ballad of Buster Scruggsâ
I will let out a note as prolonged as Lady Gagaâs melismatic trailer howl if anything but âShallowâ wins this Oscar. It is the centerpiece duet of âA Star Is Born,â the source material for one of last yearâs most iconic movie scenes and an irresistible earworm, so how could it not win? Well, just to play devilâs advocate: If voters wanted to truly put an exclamation point on the award-season underperformance of âA Star Is Born,â they could deprive Bradley Cooperâs former front-runner of the only Oscar it is likely to take. But the academy wouldnât stoop to such a troll move, would it?
â Sound Mixing
â âBohemian Rhapsodyâ
âBlack Pantherâ
âFirst Manâ
âRomaâ
âA Star Is Bornâ
This Oscar tends to go to war films and movie musicals, and in the absence of any soldiersâ stories, weâve got two song-laden contenders in âA Star Is Bornâ and âBohemian Rhapsody.â Cooper made the better film, but âBohemian Rhapsodyâ has all the momentum, and it ends with a multisong concert that will clinch this win.
â Sound Editing
â âBohemian Rhapsodyâ
âA Quiet Placeâ
âBlack Pantherâ
âFirst Manâ
âRomaâ
Sound editing is different from sound mixing in that it honors the creations of sounds, rather than how they are woven together in an aural landscape. Few movies had as strong a focus on sound as the horror thriller âA Quiet Place,â while the creaky shuttles in âFirst Manâ drove home just how perilous the mission to the moon really was. Still, I think many Oscar voters wonât quite grok the difference between these sound categories, and theyâll simply pick âBohemian Rhapsodyâ for both.
â Costume Design
â âThe Favouriteâ
âThe Ballad of Buster Scruggsâ
âBlack Pantherâ
âMary Poppins Returnsâ
âMary Queen of Scotsâ
If you gave the vote to all the kids who dressed up on Halloween as Killmonger, TâChalla or the Dora Milaje, âBlack Pantherâ would win in a walk. Alas, this Oscar almost always goes to royal period pieces, so I am predicting âThe Favouriteâ will triumph in a close race. Iâve got nothing against those luscious costumes, I just happen to believe that the long-overdue âBlack Pantherâ designer Ruth E. Carter should win the Academy Award for Angela Bassettâs hat alone. I mean, did you see that?
â Makeup and Hairstyling
â âViceâ
âBorderâ
âMary Queen of Scotsâ
This Oscar almost always goes to the team that worked on a best-picture contender or a performance that is likely to win an Oscar, which eliminates âMary Queen of Scotsâ and the beguilingly offbeat âBorder.â Weâd at least have a more interesting race if âSuspiriaâ had been nominated for its transformation of Tilda Swinton into an elderly man, but given the field as it stands, âViceâ is the clear winner for encasing Christian Bale in Dick Cheneyâs visage.
â Animated Short
â âBaoâ
âAnimal Behaviourâ
âLate Afternoonâ
âOne Small Stepâ
âWeekendsâ
Though they are all animated in strikingly different ways, several of this yearâs short nominees have an undeniably Pixar feel to them, in that they telescope the span of an entire life into a single heart-tugging montage. Of them, the actual Pixar short has the best chance at winning: Domee Shiâs âBao,â which played before âIncredibles 2,â is a clever film about a Chinese-Canadian woman who pours her love for her son into the food she makes, with surprising results.
â Live-Action Short
â âSkinâ
âDetainmentâ
âFauveâ
âMargueriteâ
âMotherâ
Mad respect to anyone who can make it through all five of these shorts, a beautifully shot but brutal lot in which nearly every story is about children in distress. Two nominees I think voters may respond to are âFauve,â a harrowing story about two boys encountering quicksand, and âSkin,â a good-looking but incredibly obvious parable about race that stars Hollywood actors like Danielle Macdonald and Jonathan Tucker. âMargueriteâ is a wistful story about an elderly woman that will win points for harming no children, but I wonder if it may be too slight to win. âSkin,â for all its familiarity, probably has the inside track.
â Documentary Short
â âPeriod. End of Sentence.â
âA Night at the Gardenâ
âBlack Sheepâ
âEnd Gameâ
âLifeboatâ
This is the strongest of this yearâs three short-film crops. Some voters may be drawn to âA Night at the Garden,â a documentary using footage of a 1939 Nazi rally at Madison Square Garden since it recently made headlines when Fox News refused to run an ad for it. Still, the two strongest entries are probably the ones pushed by Netflix: âPeriod. End of Sentence.,â an empowering story of Indian women manufacturing sanitary pads, and âEnd Game,â about an end-of-life care facility. The former, with its welcome moments of lightness and humor, may prove to be Oscarâs pick.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.