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Best actor, actress races tighten ahead of Oscars
Jill Serjeant
LOS ANGELES—For weeks, Britons Daniel Day-Lewis and Julie Christie have
looked like sure bets to win the coveted best actor and actress Academy
Awards, but in the days ahead of Sunday’s gala ceremony, momentum has
shifted. Hollywood enjoys surprises on the movie industry’s most
prestigious night, and pundits think popular actor George Clooney and
little-known French actress Marion Cotillard would be wise to start
practicing their acceptance speeches.
“There is no such thing as a shoo-in at the Oscars. Hollywood is a town
of bull-headed, contrary-minded people,” said Tom O’Neil, columnist for
www.TheEnvelope.com. Day-Lewis, 50, an actor known for lengthy
preparation, is well-liked by Academy voters. He won an Oscar playing a
man who overcomes cerebral palsy in 1989’s “My Left Foot,” and has been
nominated two other times for “In the Name of the Father” and “Gangs of
New York.”
This awards season, he has earned numerous honours playing a sadistic,
early 20th century oil prospector in dark drama “There Will Be Blood” —
only his fourth film in a decade. Yet, Oscar watchers say, his work is
as sharp as ever. “Day-Lewis hasn’t really lost anything. Even if you
don’t like the movie, it’s a big performance and he dominates the film,”
said Pete Hammond, movie critic for Maxim magazine.
But opinions are split over the film’s overall appeal, and Oscar voters
prefer inspiring characters over villains. “Clooney’s never been
nominated for lead actor and in ‘Michael Clayton’ he’s a hero who sheds
his evil ways, so the question is, how Clooney-crazy is Hollywood?” said
O’Neil.
Moreover, Clooney’s “Michael Clayton,” a thriller about unmasking
corporate misdeeds, is well-liked with seven nods including best
picture, director and supporting actress and actor. Johnny Depp
(“Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber of Fleet Street”), Tommy Lee Jones
(“Into the Valley of Elah”) and Viggo Mortenson (“Eastern Promises”) are
also best actor nominees.
MORE DRAMA THAN EXPECTED
Julie Christie, 66, who has managed to be both revered and reclusive,
has won universal acclaim for her portrayal of a woman with Alzheimer’s
disease in “Away From Her.” The role earned her the Golden Globe award
for best dramatic actress. “It’s a good film that deals with a relevant
social problem in a realistic way, and people are always saying there
are no good roles for women of a certain age,” said Emanuel Levy, author
of “All About Oscar.”
The actress earned her fourth Academy Award nomination and looked set to
take home her second Oscar statuette 42 years after her win for the
Swinging Sixties London movie “Darling.” That was before Cotillard took
the British BAFTA award on Christie’s home turf on February 10 for
playing singer Edith Piaf in the French-language movie “La Vie En Rose.”
She also won the Golden Globe for best actress in a musical or comedy.
“It is difficult to win when your movie is in a foreign language and it
is not widely seen. But when people do see it, they are just blown away
by her performance,” said Hammond. Oscar voters also favour youth. In
the last 15 years, only two women over 50 — including last year’s winner
Helen Mirren — have won in the acting category. Cotillard is 32.
Cotillard would be the second best-actress winner for a foreign language
film. The first was Sophia Loren. Newcomer Ellen Page who plays a
sarcastic pregnant teen in the comedy “Juno” could prove a wild card,
with Laura Linney (“The Savages”) and Cate Blanchett (“Elizabeth: The
Golden Age”) rounding out the nominees. |