Sony; Disney; The Weinstein Company
Ready or not, the 85th Annual Academy Awards are almost here.
So why not be ready? We’re here to help.
These are
the 20 films that you absolutely, positively must see before host
seth macfarlane takes the Dolby Theatre stage on Feb. 24:
LINCOLN
It’s as good as it is relevant.
Daniel Day-Lewis is great.
James Spader is
an unexpected gem (even if he wasn’t nominated). Plus, with a
field-best 12 overall nods, it’s going to win—everything, or just about.
LES MISÉRABLES
Anne Hathaway is as powerful as you’ve heard.
Russell Crowe is better than you’ve read. The musical is as emotional as those
sobbing Long Island parents have led you to believe. And now it works as a debate-starter, too: Director
Tom Hooper, robbed or not?
SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK
If you want to concoct a scenario where
Lincoln does
not win Best Picture, then you start with this comedy-drama that picked up eight nominations, including nods for
Bradley Cooper and
Jennifer Lawrence.
THE MASTER
Its Best Picture momentum lost months ago, the
Paul Thomas Anderson film only got three nominations, but it got a loud three: Best Actor for
Joaquin Phoenix; Best Supporting Actor for
Philip Seymour Hoffman and Best Supporting Actress for
Amy Adams.
“PAPERMAN”
The kids will want to see
Wreck-It Ralph to see
Wreck-It Ralph. The Oscar buffs who take the kids will want to see
Wreck-It Ralphto see the accompanying animated short that could win the Oscar.
ANNA KARENINA
Your assignment is to watch, and then answer the following questions:
(1) Where did things go wrong for a film once considered one of the
ones to beat? (2) Should you bet the office-pool tiebreaker on it
salvaging wins in Costume Design, Cinematography, Original Score and
Production Design?
DJANGO UNCHAINED
Impressively, it was nominated for Best Picture, Original Screenplay (
Quentin Tarantino) and Best Supporting Actor (
Christoph Waltz) and two other awards. Perhaps unbelievably, it
wasn’t nominated for Best Director or Best Dastardly
Leonardo DiCaprio Performance.
ZERO DARK THIRTY
The Hurt Locker was a lighthearted romp compared to
Kathryn Bigelow‘s
latest. But the Best Picture contender is the debate-starter of this
Oscar season, and cannot be ignored—even if the snubbed Bigelow was.
FLIGHT
This movie isn’t just the
Denzel Washingtonshow; it also picked up a key nod for Original Screenplay.
THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY
The
Peter Jackson epic may loom large in the
technical categories, where it’s nominated for Makeup and Hairstyling,
Production Design and Visual Effects.
THE IMPOSSIBLE
Reese Witherspoon loves, loves,
lovesNaomi Watts.
And if Witherspoon is as successful a lobbyist as she is a movie star,
then it’s Watts who may be your next Best Actress winner.
BRAVE
Can Pixar take the Animated Feature Oscar—again? The oddsmakers think so. The question for you to decide: Does it deserve to?
SKYFALL
Netting only two fewer nominations than
Argo, for a total of five, the latest James Bond was the only action film to make a significant showing.
LOOPER
The time-travel flick, which rated a screenplay nod from the Writers
Guild, was shut out entirely by the Academy. Deserved? Or dissed?
HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE
The best reason to catch this Documentary Feature nominee, about how
activists pushed and prodded the federal government to develop
AIDS-treatment drugs, is that it’s an amazing, if tragic document of the
1980s and early 1990s. The best reason to
not miss it is that it’s already available on Netflix streaming.
THE SESSIONS
You’ll buy a ticket for the nudity
Helen Hunt‘s Best Supporting Actress turn; you’ll stay for the after-debate on whether
John Hawkes got jobbed out of a Best Actor nomination.
LIFE OF PI
With 11 nominations, including ones for Best Picture and Best Director (
Ang Lee), the 3-D epic is second only to
Lincoln, and could well dominate the technical categories.
ARGO
Why the outrage over
Ben Affleck‘s exclusion from
Best Director? Time to find out. As an added bonus, you’ll be checking
one of the top overall nominees, up for seven awards, including Best
Picture.
AMOUR
A two-fer: It’s a Best Picture nominee, it’s a Foreign Language Film
nominee. Up for five total awards, including Best Director and Original
Screenplay (both for
Michael Haneke), it’s also a potential history-maker: At 85,
Emmanuelle Riva is the oldest Best Actress hopeful ever.
RUST AND BONE
Marion Cotillard didn’t pull out a Best Actress nomination—discuss.
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