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    The Week

    2012 Oscars: What to watch for

    Will anything unexpected happen during Sunday's Academy Awards telecast? Well, let's hope so...

    When it comes to Sunday's Oscar telecast, the only direction to go is up. After last year's debacle hosted by James Franco and Anne Hathaway — often described as the "worst Oscars ever" — Academy Awards producers are taking no chances. First step: Re-hire consummate Oscar host Billy Crystal. What else can viewers expect? Here's what commentators are predicting:

    1. The Artist will win big
    Duh, says Steve Pond at The Wrap. "Is there any doubt?" No other film has enjoyed such awards-season recognition, meaning the little-film-that-could "gets its happy ending and barely breaks a sweat in the process." But just how many trophies will the silent-film juggernaut claim? At least two, possibly four, says David Edelstein at New York, considering that it panders directly to the "over-50, white, middlebrow demographic" into which, as was recently revealed, most Oscar voters fall. It's a lock for Best Picture and Director, and nearly a lock for Best Actor and Best Original Score. Oscar guru Dave Karger at Entertainment Weekly also predicts wins in Best Editing and Best Costume Design, bringing its expected tally to six. What a shame, says Todd McCarthy at The Hollywood Reporter. The Descendants beats it in every department: "Directing, writing, acting, narrative conviction, surprise, and depth."

    SEE MORE: Oscar night: How are the winners picked?

    2. You will laugh — or else
    After last year's draggy groan-fest, Oscar producer Don Mischer tells Entertainment Weekly that "we need to go for comedy." Especially, he adds, during the dreary midsection of the telecast dominated by technical awards like Sound Mixing and Editing. The plan: Stack the ranks of presenters with funny folks, like the cast of Bridesmaids, Ben Stiller, Will Ferrell, Tina Fey, Zach Galifianakis, Chris Rock, and the Muppets. Such "un-Oscar-eque" additions could help drum up ratings, says Brooks Barnes at The New York Times, but it also means "fewer [true] stars for the folks at home to ogle."

    3. Sacha Baron Cohen may (or may not) be there
    British actor Sacha Baron Cohen, known for turning characters like his bumbling Kazakh journalist Borat into performance art, caused a stir earlier this week when word leaked that he planned to attend Sunday's ceremony in character as politically incorrect dictator Adm. Gen. Shabazz Aladeen from his new movie The Dictator. On Wednesday, Deadline reported that the Academy would only honor Cohen's tickets if he arrived as himself. Two days later, he called into the Today show (in character as Aladeen) protesting: "They have until midday on Sunday to give me my tickets back. If they do not, they will see and face unforeseen and unimaginable consequences." The latest twist: Oscar producer Brian Grazer has revealed that the comedian is not only confirmed to attend the ceremony, but "he's part of the show… as himself."

    SEE MORE: 7 curious facts about the 2012 Oscar nominees

    4. Billy Crystal may prove more divisive than you'd think
    Since Billy Crystal has hosted eight times before and perfected a certain schtick, "the only suspense at this point is whether [he] will open with a musical number or be comically edited into moments from this year's nominated movies," says Kristi Turnquist at The Oregonian. Indeed, the decision to rehire the trite Crystal "as an act of salvation" reveals just how doomed the Oscars have become, says Drew Magary at Deadspin. Give him more credit than that, says The Village Voice's Michael Musto. He's a "feel-good, dependable" Oscar host whose "brand of gentle mocking is timeless." Crystal himself is promising smooth sailing, revealing that he has no plans to follow Ricky Gervais' antagonistic Golden Globes lead: "Is it a roast or is it an awards show?"

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    6 comments

    • Cicero  •  Norfolk, Virginia  •  2 mths ago
      Why I don't watch the Oscars 1978: Star Wars loses to Annie Hall. Watch Star Wars, watch Annie Hall. Which stands up to the test of time? Hall is dated, boring and bland. Star Wars still rocks. Other Oscar Losers: Apocolypse Now(to Kramer vs. Kramer-Bleech), Raiders of the Lost Ark, ET, Saving Private Ryan, Lord of the Rings I and II. None of the other Star Wars films nor the Indiana Jones films were even nominated. Nor were the first 3 Potter films(ok the other ones stank). Add to that Titanic's sweep, despite being a utterly overated, overacted, overdirected (and anti-Irish BTW) piece of flotsam with the most annoying theme song EVER.
      • Rudi 2 mths ago
        Cicero: Thanks for the opportunity to reply. I would not have complained about or objected to Shakespeare and don't see the relevance of your remark to mine. "Virginity being blown down, man is quicklier blown up again." Funny line. There's nothing wrong with being popular and erudite at the same time, which Shakespeare was and is. The People's Choice Awards would ignore him now just as they did the very good 1996 adaptation of "Romeo and Juliet" with Claire Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio directed by Baz Luhrman. As regards Wagner, I'm not an opera buff so can't comment, although I did enjoy Richard Tucker's singing.

        As regards Best Pictures that should have won (always a matter of opinion), I would cite Bonnie and Clyde, The Graduate, The Lion in Winter, Brokeback Mountain, Taxi Driver, Sunset Boulevard, Some Like It Hot, and some others. My reflection upon your choices: Let us know when you outgrow your comic book stage.

        Again IMO, the most egregious oversight was in giving Grace Kelly the Best Actress Oscar for "The Country Girl" over Judy Garland's classic, one-for-the-ages performance in "A Star Is Born". I also think Doris Day was robbed of a nomination for "Love Me or Leave Me" but at least James Cagney made the cut that year. Otherwise, the Oscars are as much a spectator sport as the Super Bowl and people take the whole thing too seriously.
    • Butch Lee  •  2 mths ago
      2012 Oscars: what to watch for. Sorry, but I won't be watching at all. It's goofy and unnecessary.
    • Joshua  •  Portland, Oregon  •  2 mths ago
      The best picture of the year was a Russian film called Target. The Oscars are fun, and The Artist was a really neat flick, but I don't think anyone actually believes that these awards honor the films that will be taught in film schools twenty years from now.
      • Cicero 2 mths ago
        Star Wars will still be a hit in 20 years, and it LOST in 1978
    • Jon Soto  •  Encino, California  •  2 mths ago
      What suprises could the Oscars, the most rigged awards show in history, have to offer. After Snow White, it was like never again should a popular movie win. Obscure movies no one even remembers now have always won. The Oscars are dated.
      • Rudi 2 mths ago
        "Obscure movies no one even remembers..." Like:
        Gone with the Wind
        West Side Story
        The Best Years of Our Lives
        The Godfather Parts I and II
        On the Waterfront
        Midnight Cowboy
        Ordinary People
        The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
        Lawrence of Arabia
        From Here to Eternity
        The Bridge on the River Kwai
        etc etc etc

        Either you have a very short memory, Jon, or you know nothing about either the movies or the Oscars. Keep in mind that "Snow White" was made in 1937 and won a special award for Disney. By your logic, Hollywood has been wasting its time and resources for 74 years...and so have audiences.
    • Rudi  •  2 mths ago
      The problem is not the Oscars. The problem is the proliferation of awards shows that drags down the whole concept of honoring specific work. I blame it all on the People's Choice Awards, which only honors Americans' bad taste.
      • Cicero 2 mths ago
        Rudi, I wonder if you are one of of those people who, in the 1500s would have been complaining about the bad taste of the English people in supporting the irreligious, bawdy, upstart Shakespeare (your tongue and my tail indeed!) or in the 1800s would have been complaining that Wagner had the temerity to write his Operas in German instead of Italian. Lol.
    • whiteblacksingles.com  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  2 mths ago
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