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‘A Star Is Born’ Is a Legit Oscar Contender – And Here’s What Else Is

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“A Star Is Born” is hardly the only film with a clear path to the Academy Awards. And here are 10 more that deserve to be in the race.
Yes, Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga will be in the thick of the Oscar race with “A Star Is Born,” the kind of crowd-pleasing film that should also figure prominently in awards talk for the next five months.
But “A Star Is Born” is hardly the only film with a clear path to the Dolby Theatre. Most of the season’s top contenders were unveiled during the first batch of major fall film festivals: Venice, Telluride and Toronto, and then New York. So this is a good time to sit back and assess where we are at this point in the season, before a final batch of contenders is unveiled around the AFI Fest in November.
We have a few clear frontrunners, though none without question marks hanging over them. We have some upstarts who have come on strong and could be real players. And we have a couple of films from earlier in the year that just might have staying power.
Also Read: Oscars Won’t Present New Best Popular Film Category in 2019
For starters, here are 10 films that’ll be in the race:
“A Star Is Born” WHY Bradley Cooper’s new version of an old story is passionate, moving and has been wowing audiences since it premiered in Venice. Cooper, who makes a more convincing rock star in this version than Kris Kristofferson did in the last one, is a lock for a Best Actor nomination. Lady Gaga is the same for Best Actress — even if it’s amusing that the closer her character gets to becoming a Lady Gaga-type pop star, the more the movie wants us to believe she’s betraying her true self. BUT There’s a long history of Oscar watchers overestimating the awards potential of big musicals — and this is not just a big musical, it’s the third version of a big musical. (And the fourth version if you count the one that wasn’t a musical, or the fifth if you count “What Price Hollywood?,” the 1932 film that was awfully similar to the first “Star Is Born.”)
Also Read: ‘A Star Is Born’ Film Review: Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga Reinvigorate a Classic
“Roma” WHY It won the jury prize in Venice, it finished second in audience voting in Toronto, and it looks and feels like something special: a deeply personal but unexpectedly universal love letter to family and to those who become family. And director Alfonso Cuaron is a known quantity to Oscar voters, winning Best Director in 2013 for “Gravity.” BUT It’s a black-and-white movie, it’s in Spanish and it will certainly be nominated for Best Foreign Language Film. Could voters feel that’s enough reward?
“First Man” WHY Damien Chazelle’s first movie since “La La Land” gets visceral and overpowering when Neil Armstrong climbs into the seat as a test pilot or an astronaut. Telling the story of Armstrong and NASA’s first trip to the moon, the film is a tour de force that makes space travel feel more dangerous than any previous story set above the atmosphere. BUT Trying to make an emotional movie about an unemotional man can be tough — and while the spectacle of “First Man” is unassailable, the man at its center might be a little too hard to embrace.
Also Read: ‘First Man’ Gets Bigger and Bolder in Toronto IMAX Premiere
“Green Book” WHY It beat “A Star Is Born” in audience-award voting in Toronto. (It beat “Roma” and “First Man,” too.) A light-on-its-feet drama that tells the true story of an Italian-American New York bouncer who was hired to chauffeur a black pianist through the segregated South in the early ’60s, it is an undeniable crowd-pleaser that also happens to touch on serious subjects. It also puts stars Viggo Mortensen and Mahershala Ali in the thick of the awards race. BUT “Driving Miss Daisy” was a long time ago. Are voters ready to embrace “Dumb and Dumber” and “There’s Something About Mary” director Peter Farrelly as an Oscar-contending director?
“If Beale Street Could Talk” WHY Two years after winning the Oscar with “Moonlight,” Barry Jenkins has returned with a James Baldwin adaptation that won over critics and audiences in Toronto. At its heart a gentle and beautiful love story in which a young couple struggle to survive in a world of racial injustice, its intimacy (and occasional humor) give it a real punch. BUT “Beale Street” is a delicate mood piece that might be a little too understated for some — except in the character of a racist cop, who is such a leering cartoon villain that he can take you out of the film.
Also Read: ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ Review: Barry Jenkins Delivers Stunning Romance With Aftertaste of Injustice
“The Favourite” WHY A lavish period piece about the palace intrigue in early 18th century England, Yorgos Lanthimos’ film is dark and witty and has a trio of delicious performances from Olivia Colman, Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz. With a clear path to acting and below-the-line nominations, Best Picture could be a real possibility as well. BUT It’s Yorgos Lanthimos, and anything from that Greek provocateur is very weird. (There are still Oscar foreign-language voters who won’t forgive the executive committee for adding “Dogtooth” to the shortlist in 2010.) Lanthimos doesn’t portray human behavior — he takes it to extremes in order to mock it, which means this sumptuous period piece is also pretty vicious and unforgiving.
“Black Panther” WHY Ryan Coogler’s comic book movie is a huge hit and also a cultural landmark, which gives it an awards currency that no previous comic book film took into the Oscar race. BUT It may be a cultural landmark, but it’s also a comic book movie. And comic book movies don’t get nominated for Best Picture.
“BlacKkKlansman” WHY Spike Lee’s blend of comedy, drama and outrage was acclaimed in Cannes and is widely seen as the best film in many years from a director who never quite got his due from the Academy. But AMPAS gave him an Honorary Oscar in 2015, and might be ready to salute a movie that’s set in the ’70s but feels as if it’s about today. BUT It wowed ‘em at the festivals but didn’t do especially well at the box office. Will Lee’s return to form play as well with the voters as it did with the critics?
Also Read: ‘BlacKkKlansman’: Here’s What Happened to the Real NORAD Klansmen in Charge of Protecting Us From Nukes
“Can You Ever Forgive Me?” WHY Melissa McCarthy makes you forget her days as a broad comic actor in her performance as Lee Israel, a real-life celebrity biographer who fell on hard times and turned to forging letters as a way to earn money. And the film itself, aided by a delightful supporting turn from Richard E. Grant, is satisfying enough to make it a contender. BUT It might be seen as an acting vehicle for McCarthy, making her nomination (or nominations for her and Grant) all voters think the movie needs.
“Widows” WHY “12 Years a Slave” director Steve McQueen has made a heist movie as his followup to that Oscar-winning drama — but this is Steve McQueen, so the heist is less important than his tough examination of the societal forces that lead a group of women (led by potential nominee Viola Davis) to attempt a robbery that had been planned by their late husbands. Turning the film into a dark drama about race and corruption gives it a heft that you might not expect from the subject matter. BUT McQueen may have done interesting things with the genre, but it’s still a heist movie, and one that feels less substantial than “12 Years a Slave” (which the Academy loved) or McQueen’s “Shame” and “Hunger” (which they didn’t).
And here are 10 more that deserve to be in the race:
“22 July”
Paul Greengrass’ moving drama about a far-right terrorist’s attack in Norway in 2011 is less about the attack than the aftermath — it couldn’t be timelier in its portrayal of a society trying to determine the value of democracy in the aftermath of tragedy.

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