By Bob Tourtellotte
LOS ANGELES — It is Oscar week in Hollywood,
and after three months in the dark winter of a bitter labor
strike, the movie industry finally has something to celebrate –
itself.
This Sunday, the world’s top film awards get
under way with a full array of stars such as George Clooney and
Cate Blanchett parading up the red carpet outside the Kodak
Theatre where Academy Award nominees hope to be named best actor
or actress.
Some 5,800 voting members of the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will anoint one film as their
favorite among nominees that include crime drama "No Country for
Old Men" and teen pregnancy comedy "Juno."
With a fresh crew of writers, Oscar host Jon
Stewart hopes to keep audiences laughing through the three-hour
live telecast.
"Here we are. After a long winter, comes the
spring and now the summer," said Oscar producer Gil Cates. "It’s
been a terrible three months."
Some 10,500 members of the Writers Guild of
America walked off the job on November 5, throwing into disarray
the awards season that runs from December through the February
24 Oscars.
Gala dinners and ceremonies honoring films
and their makers were canceled or changed drastically. January’s
glitzy Golden Globe Awards turned into a news conference watched
by about a quarter of the typical audience of 20 million
viewers.
But the strike ended one week ago, and Oscar
organizers are promising a traditional ceremony for a global TV
audience with big stars, dazzling fashion and, hopefully,
memorable winners.
Oscar watchers expect some drama in key
races, despite the fact many categories have clear
front-runners. Academy Award voters, the experts said, enjoy
defying the oddsmakers.
"Sometimes the Hollywood honchos vote with
their heart just to remind us they have one," said Tom O’Neil,
veteran Oscar watcher with awards Web site, TheEnvelope.com.
"No Country" heads into Sunday leading the
race for best film because it earned top honors from the guilds
of producers, directors, actors and writers – four key
indicators of Academy Award success.
But the pundits sense taut legal thriller
"Michael Clayton" is surging due to the popularity of its star
Clooney, and note the emergence of "Juno," which is the only
nominated film to surpass the pivotal $100 million mark at U.S.
box offices.
The other two nominees are oil drama "There
Will Be Blood," a meditation on the corrupting power of money,
and romance "Atonement," another drama with a dark ending.
Briton Daniel Day-Lewis playing a
hard-charging oil man in "Blood" has earned front-runner status
in the best actor race by virtue of several critics’ and other
awards this season, but the experts said Clooney is giving him a
run for his money.
Among best actress nominees another Briton,
Julie Christie, has been the darling of award season as an
Alzheimer’s sufferer in "Away From Her." But don’t count out
French actress Marion Cotillard as singer Edith Piaf in "La Vie
En Rose" or Ellen Page as the defiantly pregnant teen in "Juno."
In other races, Spain’s Javier Bardem is
tipped to win supporting actor playing a killer in "No Country."
Tilda Swinton leads supporting actresses in her role as a
manipulative corporate lawyer in "Clayton."
Finally, brothers Joel and Ethan Coen look to be the team to
beat in the race for best director with "No Country." And
regardless of who wins or loses, Academy Award organizers are
happy about one thing: this year, the Oscar goes on. –
Reuters