OSCARS: One opinion on best supporting nominations

Christian Bale and Melissa Leo have a fighting
chance at supporting-actor Oscars

By Rafer Guzman
Newsday

Where’s Justin Timberlake?

In “The Social Network,” he had the small but crucial role of a slick-talking dot-commer who walked away with a slice of the Facebook pie. Critics were impressed, but when Oscar nods were announced, Timberlake’s name was not called. In the meantime, Timberlake will surely be graciously cheering for his colleagues in this year’s best supporting actor category. Here are the contenders:

  • Jeremy Renner, “The Town.” Renner followed up his reckless Army bomb defuser in 2009’s “The Hurt Locker” with a trigger-happy bank robber in this crime drama from Ben Affleck. Renner again drew fine notices, but his rising star hasn’t yet hit the firmament.
  • Mark Ruffalo, “The Kids Are All Right.” Call him the straight man in this comedy-drama about a lesbian couple. Though widely considered a top-notch actor, Ruffalo has a natural, deceptively easy style, which may explain why he had never before gotten an Oscar nomination.
  • John Hawkes, “Winter’s Bone.” John who? Think of him as a male Melissa Leo. After years of hard work in the bit-part trenches, he lands a major role in this gritty indie drama and now, at 51, finds himself in need of an Oscar-night tuxedo. He won’t win, but he’s worth rooting for.
  • Geoffrey Rush, “The King’s Speech.” In any other year, Rush would win for his terrific portrayal of real-life eccentric vocal coach Lionel Logue. The movie will likely win many awards, just not this one.
  • Christian Bale, “The Fighter.” And in this corner, it’s not the movie’s star, Mark Wahlberg, but Bale who seems destined for an Oscar knockout. Bale dropped 30 pounds to play a crack-addicted former boxer, and his performance has made him the heavyweight in this fight.

Best Supporting Actress

The winner seems already decided, but this year’s list of supporting actress Oscar nominees is still full of surprises.

One is Jacki Weaver, an Australian few Americans had heard of until she earned a nod for playing a crime-family matriarch in the thriller “Animal Kingdom.” Another is young Hailee Steinfeld, who plays a little girl gunning for rough justice in “True Grit,” the Coen brothers Western that has done unexpectedly well at the Oscars with 10 nominations, second only to “The King’s Speech” with 12.

There’s also the Melissa Leo question. The front-runner’s unorthodox Oscar campaign, in which she took out her own ads in trade publications, has raised enough eyebrows that a last-minute win for Helena Bonham Carter (“The King’s Speech”) almost seems possible.

Leo remains the front-runner, but the mini-scandal has at least helped spice up this particular race. Here are the ladies in waiting:

  • Amy Adams, “The Fighter.” As a no-nonsense bartender, Adams delivered one of this film’s best performances. But just as Mark Wahlberg paled next to Christian Bale, Adams has been outshone by Leo.
  • Hailee Steinfeld, “True Grit.” The bad news: She won’t win. The good news: She’s now an Oscar-nominated 14-year-old whose first major role came in a Coen brothers film alongside Jeff Bridges, Matt Damon and Josh Brolin.
  • Jacki Weaver, “Animal Kingdom.” This film has earned just over $1 million in ticket sales, according to BoxOfficeMojo, which means few people have even seen it. Luckily for Weaver, academy voters were among them.
  • Helena Bonham Carter, “The King’s Speech.” After a long stretch of cartoony roles in the “Harry Potter” films and partner Tim Burton’s 2010 version of “Alice in Wonderland,” Bonham returned to classical form as the young Queen Mother. The contrarian view says this could be her year.
  • Melissa Leo, “The Fighter.” As the chain-smoking mother of a crack addict, Leo delivered such a spot-on performance that this race seems hers to lose. And could she, given her rogue Oscar campaign? Either way, let’s hope for a close-up when the winner is announced.

Oscar buzz catapults relative unknowns into spotlight

By John Anderson
Newsday

Oscar night is about glitz and dresses and famous people, but every now and then, relative unknowns get a ticket to the Academy Awards sweepstakes. They don’t usually win _ just being nominated, as they say, is honor enough (sob).

But they’re in the mix, which this year includes several performers who may not be well known now but likely will be soon. Here’s a who’s who:

Jacki Weaver

(Nominated for Best Supporting Actress for “Animal Kingdom”) To find the work of this extraordinary Australian actress invading American shores, one has to go back to 1975 and Peter Weir’s “Picnic at Hanging Rock,” which hardly called for the kind of latent evil Weaver brings to the role of Janine “Smurf” Cody, the monstrous matriarch of “Animal Kingdom.”

In first-time director David Michod’s socio-psycho-crime drama, Weaver is a smiling Mama Macbeth who manipulates her criminal brood with faux-mother love, her black hole of a heart and a creepy kiss on the lips for her murderous boys. “Smurf” prompts one to look for comparisons to other roles and performances. “Mommie Dearest” would spring to mind, if Joan Crawford had actually been homicidal. But Weaver’s Janine is apt to become the bad mother by which others are measured.

Born in New South Wales, Weaver has had an erratic career. Before her reappearance in 2007, she’d been inactive for 10 years. She has worked almost exclusively in Australia, largely on television, and the Oscar nomination is just one of many recognitions for her “Animal Kingdom” performance, and a large, and largely unsung, talent.

John Hawkes

(Nominated for Best Supporting Actor for “Winter’s Bone”) Hawkes is a kind of classic case, the character actor who kicks around in smaller parts until the perfect one kicks him into the big time. His nomination for the menacing crystal-meth addict Teardrop in “Winter’s Bone” is just one of the honors the 51-year-old performer is now getting after a career spent habituating horror movies (“Scary Movie”), studio productions (“The Perfect Storm”), standout indies (“Me and You and Everyone We Know”) and television (he was in “24” and “Lost” was Sol Star in HBO’s “Deadwood”).

Originally from Minnesota, and a musician as well as an actor, Hawkes will be seen in “Martha Marcy May Marlene,” which was well-received at the recent Sundance Film Festival. Hawkes plays a Charles Manson-inspired cult leader, a role for which his rawboned look and actorly intensity seemed a perfect fit.

Jennifer Lawrence

(Nominated for Best Actress for “Winter’s Bone”) After being pitched all manner of unsuitable performers, director Deborah Granik held her ground: The actress she wanted for “Winter’s Bone” and its leading Ozarkian character, Ree Dolly, didn’t have to be an unknown, but she had to be young. She had to be able to play American. And to sound American.

“And then Jennifer walked in,” Granik said, “a complete unknown. And from Kentucky, no less.” Not only that, she could act.

Lawrence was among the breakout success stories of 2010, after only about four years doing mostly television: She played a member of the Pearson family on “The Bill Engvall Show” (2007-09), made several appearances on “Medium” and appeared opposite Charlize Theron in “The Burning Plain.” But “Winter’s Bone” is her big moment and one that, in one regard at least, she’d like to leave behind.

Since her Oscar nomination, Lawrence has appeared only in the most flattering and glamorous photo layouts, ones that accentuate her rather considerable good looks and capacity to play other-than-Ree Dolly roles. Clearly, this is one woman who’s not intending to get pigeonholed.

Hailee Steinfeld

(Nominated for Best Supporting Actress for “True Grit”) Although the 14-year-old Californian should be the freshest face in the bunch, she’s actually been working as long as Jennifer Lawrence has. Although if you missed “Summer Camp,” or the single season of TV’s “Back to You,” you probably missed her.

Steinfeld isn’t even close to being the youngest best supporting actress nominee (Tatum O’Neal was 10 when she won; Anna Paquin was 11). But the young star of “True Grit,” in which she plays the self-possessed Mattie Ross, who hires Jeff Bridges’ Rooster Cogburn to find the man who killed her father, carries more of the film than most child stars are ever called upon to carry.

She might have been nominated for best actress, but in the realities of Oscar World, no kid is going to take it away from Natalie Portman, unless that kid is named Annette Bening. For all the doubt about Oscar strategies, however, there’s little doubt about the talents of Steinfeld, whose ferociously intelligent Mattie makes a pretty valiant stab at stealing the movie from her alcoholic, one-eyed saddle pal.

From obscurity to winner

It’s not uncommon for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize great performances by relatively obscure performers. What’s rare is when those nominees actually get an Oscar. The following are a few winners who defied the odds, as well as some formidable competition. (The years designate that of a film’s release.)

COTILLARD

Marion Cotillard, Best Actress, “La Vie en Rose,” 2007. Anyone who actually saw Cotillard impersonate the late, great Edith Piaf felt justice was served, but since the film was in French, and the competition consisted of Cate Blanchett (“Elizabeth: The Golden Age”), Julie Christie (“Away From Her”), Laura Linney (“The Savages”) and Ellen Page (“Juno”), it was something of a coup d’statuette.

BRODY

Adrien Brody, Best Actor, “The Pianist,” 2002. Brody was easily the least known of the competition that year (Nicolas Cage, Michael Caine, Daniel Day-Lewis and Jack Nicholson), but “The Pianist” was on a roll. Roman Polanski won best director nd many said, had the film better timed, it might have won best picture (which went to “Chicago”).

BENINGI

Roberto Benigni, Best Actor, “Life Is Beautiful,” 1998. He was so delighted he climbed over chairs; Oscar voters might have hid under them. Nevertheless, Benigni pulled off one of the great Oscar upsets by topping Tom Hanks (“Saving Private Ryan”), Ian McKellen (“Gods and Monsters”), Nick Nolte (“Affliction”) and Edward Norton (“American History X”).

FRICKER

Brenda Fricker, Best Supporting Actress, “My Left Foot,” 1989. Moviegoers may have known the work of the formidable Irish actress, but maybe not as well as they knew her competition — Anjelica Huston and Lena Olin (both for “Enemies: A Love Story”), Julia Roberts (“Steel Magnolias”) and Dianne Wiest (“Parenthood”).

NGOR

Haing S. Ngor, Best Supporting Actor, “The Killing Fields,” 1984. Ngor, a Cambodian doctor and author who died in 1996, played his countryman Dith Pran in Roland Joffe’s film and won out over Adolph Caesar (“A Soldier’s Story”), John Malkovich (“Places in the Heart”), Noriyuki “Pat” Morita (“The Karate Kid”) and Ralph Richardson (“Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes”).