Oscar Eye: Predicting The Social Network As The Best Picture Frontrunner

A year ago I was happy as anyone to scoff openly at the idea that David Fincher and Aaron Sorkin would waste their time on something as insignificant as a Facebook movie. This is proof, of course, that you probably ought to stop listening to me right now, because here we are a year later looking at their film The Social Network as nothing short of a masterpiece. I avoided that dreaded "M-word" in my review, but truly, it's hard to imagine a more assured, well-crafted and truly meaningful film will come out this year, or maybe for several years to come.

I'm not alone in my raves-- The Social Network boasts a perfect 100% Rotten Tomatoes score as I write this-- and there's no way the Academy won't take notice. Even after so many stellar films debuted at Toronto a few weeks ago, The Social Network is the only film any critic wants to talk about, and plenty of us are bullish enough to think audiences will feel the same way. On its merits alone The Social Network could well be the movie of the year, but if the box office reflects it too, we could have ourselves an undisputed Oscar frontrunner before the leaves on the trees start changing.

Of course, there's still The King's Speech, which everyone still loves and which I still have not seen, and the new teaser trailer for the Coen Brothers' True Grit is formidable, though there's no telling how that translates to Oscar. But with so much publicity around The Social Network and such a delicious real-life hook, I expect it to dominate conversations for weeks to come. Movies that hit this early with such force can fall victim to frontrunner syndrome in the Oscar race and fall apart later on (see Up in the Air for a recent case), but I think The Social Network has what it takes to keep it up.

Before we get on to the charts, a brief rundown of what I've seen this week and their possible Oscar fortunes:

  • The Social Network: Nominations for Picture, Director, Best Actor (Jesse Eisenberg), Best Original Score, Best Adapted Screenplay and at least one Best Supporting Actor (either Andrew Garfield or Justin Timberlake) seem guaranteed. Further success will determine possible wins (though Aaron Sorkin seems like a slam dunk screenplay winner) and more nominations, such Best Cinematography, Editing, or even Visual Effects for the amazing feat of turning Armie Hammer into two Winklevoss twins.


  • Inside Job: The hot-button topic of the financial crash and Wall Street hooligans makes it a significant Best Documentary contender, but it's also extremely political and unfriendly to the kind of rich people who, well, also vote for Oscars. Then again, Michael Moore won an Oscar once. Charles Ferguson's film also has stiff competition from Alex Gibney (Client 9), Davis Guggenheim (Waiting for Superman) and buzzy docs like Exit Through the Gift Shop and Catfish, so even a nomination may not be guaranteed.


  • Made in Dagenham: An uplifting and entirely predictable true-life story about women striking for equal pay at a British auto plant in the late 1960s, the movie itself is merely OK, but boasts as many excellent female performances as The Social Network boasts great male ones. Sally Hawkins, shunned mercilessly for Happy Go Lucky two years ago, seems a shoo-in Best Actress nominee for her unlikely Norma Rae-type character, but for the supporting actresses, there's almost too much good to choose from: Miranda Richardson, Rosamund Pike and Geraldine James could all make decent cases for a nomination. There's also Bob Hoskins, an anchor in the film and a possible Best Supporting Actor contender, especially in a weak field. The movie may struggle for viewers, but a strong campaign for Hawkins could keep it in viewers' eyes long enough to gain some traction.


Now, for the charts, with individual categories further explained and changes noted. There's not much changing right now-- I knew last week that The Social Network was a major contender, and nothing much has dropped out of the running-- and again, it's all early stages. Everything can and will change. In the next week I'll be seeing Julie Taymor's The Tempest, Doug Liman's Fair Game and Mike Leigh's Another Year, and will bring back some perspective accordingly.

oscar winner prediction

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BEST PICTURE

The Social Network has been bumped up to Mortal Lock, because it really is that good, and snubbing it would be ignoring one of the year's most significant films (a blunder the 10-wide category is deliberately trying to avoid). Everything else pretty much stays the same, including Made in Dagenham, which I still think is a long shot for Best Picture despite some pretty Academy friendly subject matter. We'll see how it plays as the months go on.

oscar winner prediction

The Social Network

Toy Story 3

oscar winner prediction

127 Hours

Another Year

Black Swan

The Fighter

Inception

The Kids Are All Right

The King's Speech

True Grit

oscar winner prediction

Fair Game

Love and Other Drugs

Made in Dagenham

Never Let Me Go

Rabbit Hole

Secretariat

Shutter Island

Somewhere

The Tourist

The Way Back

Winter's Bone

oscar winner prediction

Blue Valentine

Biutiful

Brighton Rock

Conviction

Country Strong

The Debt

For Colored Girls

Get Low

The Ghost Writer

Greenberg

Hereafter

How Do You Know?

Let Me In

Nowhere Boy

The Tempest

The Town

Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps

oscar winner prediction

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BEST DIRECTOR

Fincher remains a mortal lock, and if The King's Speech really is his biggest competition, he could be the favorite to win no matter how the film does-- Hooper is too new a director to curry enough favor for that one, Boyle and the Coens have won too recently to do it again, Aronofsky's movie is too weird, and Nolan hasn't quite genuflected enough to "highbrow" Academy taste this time. I'd love to see him win for The Social Network, but again, the road ahead is long.

oscar winner prediction

David Fincher, The Social Network

oscar winner prediction

Darren Aronofsky, Black Swan

Danny Boyle, 127 Hours

Joel and Ethan Coen, True Grit

Tom Hooper, The King's Speech

Mike Leigh, Another Year

Christopher Nolan, Inception

David O. Russell, The Fighter

oscar winner prediction

Lisa Cholodenko, The Kids Are All Right

Sofia Coppola, Somewhere

Clint Eastwood, Hereafter

Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, The Tourist

Mark Romanek, Never Let Me Go

Peter Weir, The Way Back

oscar winner prediction

Ben Affleck, The Town

Alejandro Gonzalez Innaritu, Biuitiful

John Cameron Mitchell, Rabbit Hole

Tyler Perry, For Colored Girls

Roman Polanski, The Ghost Writer

Matt Reeves, Let Me In

Martin Scorsese, Shutter Island

Oliver Stone, Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps

Edward Zwick, Love and Other Drugs

oscar winner prediction

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BEST ACTOR

I want to bump Eisenberg up to Mortal Lock here, but there are too many other actors who are either more established (Bridges, Duvall, even Gosling) or doing showier work (Franco) who could bump him out of the running, and The Social Network is more of an ensemble anyway. As with everything, though, the movie's continued success could make it a much bigger possibility.

oscar winner prediction

Colin Firth, The King's Speech

James Franco, 127 Hours

oscar winner prediction

Javier Bardem, Biutiful

Jeff Bridges, True Grit

Robert Duvall, Get Low

Jesse Eisenberg, The Social Network

Ryan Gosling, Blue Valentine

Mark Wahlberg, The Fighter

oscar winner prediction

George Clooney, The American

Johnny Depp, The Tourist

Stephen Dorff, Somewhere

Aaron Eckhart, Rabbit Hole

Aaron Johnson, Nowhere Boy

Ewan McGregor, Beginners

Sean Penn, Fair Game

oscar winner prediction

Jim Broadbent, Another Year

Leonardo DiCaprio, Inception

Jake Gyllenhaal, Love and Other Drugs

Kevin Spacey, Casino Jack

Ben Stiller, Greenberg

oscar winner prediction

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BEST ACTRESS

Depriving Portman of a Mortal Lock spot feels wrong now, though nothing has changed, so I've bumped her up. Sally Hawkins is very, very close to that spot too, but the movie being so small and distinctly British, she could easily get swept under the rug, which would be a huge shame but not unprecedented (see, again, her Happy-Go-Lucky snub). I'm seeing Another Year next week and can't wait to see how Manville fits into this picture-- she's the only one of the Likely Contenders I haven't actually seen.

oscar winner prediction

Annette Bening, The Kids Are All Right

Natalie Portman, Black Swan

oscar winner prediction

Sally Hawkins, Made in Dagenham

Nicole Kidman, Rabbit Hole

Jennifer Lawrence, Winter's Bone

Lesley Manville, Another Year

Julianne Moore, The Kids Are All Right

oscar winner prediction

Anne Hathaway, Love and Other Drugs

Diane Lane, Secretariat

Hilary Swank, Conviction

Michelle Williams, Blue Valentine

Reese Witherspoon, How Do You Know?

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Helen Mirren, The Tempest

Carey Mulligan, Never Let Me Go

Gwyneth Paltrow, Country Strong

Tilda Swinton, I Am Love

Naomi Watts, Fair Game

Rachel Weisz, The Whistleblower

oscar winner prediction

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BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

The Social Network feels so strong right now that Sony could make Oscar claims for either Andrew Garfield and Justin Timberlake, and both could conceivably get in. Hell, they might get cocky and start campaigning for Armie Hammer too. The five Likely Contenders feel like a pretty solid nominations lineup to me, actually, but with The Fighter sight unseen, there's no telling. I also added Dagenham's Hoskins and bumped up Jeremy Renner, since after The Town's surprise box office success he could be a true dark horse threat.

oscar winner prediction

NONE

oscar winner prediction

Christian Bale, The Fighter

Andrew Garfield, The Social Network

Mark Ruffalo, The Kids Are All Right

Geoffrey Rush, The King's Speech

Justin Timberlake, The Social Network

oscar winner prediction

Ed Harris, The Way Back

John Hawkes, Winter's Bone

Bob Hoskins, Made in Dagenham

Jeremy Renner, The Town

Sam Rockwell, Conviction

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Josh Brolin, True Grit

Vincent Cassel, Black Swan

Matt Damon, True Grit

Michael Douglas, Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps

Colin Farrell, The Way Back

Armie Hammer, The Social Network

Dustin Hoffman, Barney's Version

John Malkovich, Secretariat

Christopher Plummer, Beginners

oscar winner prediction

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BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

I added Rosamund Pike for Dagenham, though Richardson's role is showier and a likelier contender, and took out Knightley for Never Let Me Go, since everyone seems to have forgotten that movie already. Otherwise things are unchanged, and as fuzzy as ever to boot.

oscar winner prediction

NONE

oscar winner prediction

Helena Bonham-Carter, The King's Speech

Barbara Hershey, Black Swan

Miranda Richardson, Made in Dagenham

Kristin Scott Thomas, Nowhere Boy

Dianne Wiest, Rabbit Hole

oscar winner prediction

Amy Adams, The Fighter

Anne-Marie Duff, Nowhere Boy

Melissa Leo, The Fighter

Rosamund Pike, Made in Dagenham

Hailee Steinfeld, True Grit

Jacki Weaver, Animal Kingdom

oscar winner prediction

Marion Cotillard, Inception

Elle Fanning, Somewhere

Rosamund Pike, Barney's Version

Saoirse Ronan, The Way Back

Sissy Spacek, Get Low

Mia Wasikowska, The Kids Are All Right

Katey Rich

Staff Writer at CinemaBlend