Compared to most of the season’s races, Best Actress has remained somewhat open.
It certainly looks like Joaquin Phoenix is about to be snubbed for his work in The Master.
Boasting enough fine performances to at least fill a 10-wide field, supporting actress is this year’s most riches-packed race.
With all due respect to the gentlemen in contention, this year’s likely Supporting Actor crop has shaped up to be a snooze.
The one certainty of this year’s Original Screenplay field is a bit of 2010 déjà vu.
The stage bred many of 2012’s finest film adaptations.
American Animal’s poster, like the film, finds common ground between the high- and lowbrow, the artful and the infantile.
With its Oscar clout and inevitable crowd-pleasing matched by widespread critical ire, the film is easily the year’s most divisive awards contender.
The twisted minds at Lionsgate really outdid themselves with the poaster for What to Expect When You’re Expecting.
Cirque du Soleil: Worlds Away 3D falls low on the stereoscopic totem pole.
Mothers and sons deserve an amiable comedy they can share, but this one proves to be faulty long before the requisite freeway breakdown.
Any major-race hopes that Focus Features may have had for the film were basically dashed this week.
The tone of Jackson’s latest is, appropriately, much more jovial than that of Rings, which unfolds in an era far more stricken with despair.
How to sell a Keira Knightley period romance and still distinguish it from every other Keira Knightley period romance?
Just about everyone in Save the Date makes for lousy company.
The bookish geek and the boyish heartthrob merge in the personage of this 26-year-old Pennsylvania native.
Consider Bigelow a virtual lock, tightening up the Best Director field alongside Steven Spielberg, Ang Lee, Ben Affleck, and, perhaps, Tom Hooper or David O. Russell.
Anyone who’s worked with senior citizens will tell you how vital music is to them, but Quartet fails to capture that vitality.
The posters chicly suggest this won’t be just another tour of Charlie Sheen’s twisted brain.
The film’s strongest bit of buzz has been swirling around the lead performance from Naomi Watts, whose tortured turn as the quintet’s mother hen has made her a Best Actress frontrunner.