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Oscars 2018: The Best Picture contenders in one place

From acclaimed drama Call Me By Your Name to indie sensation Lady Bird

Jacob Stolworthy
Wednesday 01 November 2017 11:18 GMT
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Film festival season kicks off with the one-two punch of Sundance and Cannes as Hollywood's crème de la crème descend to introduce the next batch of films that'll be caught up in awards fever as the 2017-18 season approaches.

If these festivals are the gauge unveiling the future films to be part of this conversation, it's September festivals such as TIFF and Venice that are tasked with assembling just who the major players will be at the Oscars in February.

Take The Beguiled, for instance - Sofia Coppola's 19th-century American Civil War tale starring Nicole Kidman as the head of a girls school who takes in a wounded soldier (Colin Farrell). The adaptation was in contention for Cannes' Best Picture equivalent, the Palme d'Or, with many automatically assuming it to be a nomination shoo-in. However, since the film's release in July, awards chat has dwindled in favour of other emerging films that didn't get shown on the French Riviera.

There are also the films whose calibre of talent naturally put them high as contenders until unprecedented negative festival reactions from hardened journalists throw their chances into question. TIFF's case in point was Suburbicon. Directed by George Clooney, written by the Coen Brothers, starring Matt Damon and Julianne Moore, this patchwork of past Oscar glory sadly received a lukewarm response upon its early Friday morning screening all but eliminating its Oscar chances (I say “sadly” as I'm uncertain whether Suburbicon deserved such ire especially when other films of similar quality - Battle of the Sexes being one - received rave reviews. Still, if Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close can sneak in, Suburbicon can).

My point being the Best Picture contenders are a hell of a lot clearer than they were a few months ago. Below are the films - ranging from Greta Gerwig's directorial debut to the latest from heavyweight Steven Spielberg - that won't be sniffed at as awards season intensifies.

Call Me By Your Name

Call Me By Your Name: Timothée Chalamet and Armie Hammer (Sony Pictures Classics)

In Call Me By Your Name, Luca Guadagnino has delivered a film increasingly looking like the one to beat. The drama, centred on a young man (rising star Timothée Chalamet) and his burgeoning relationship with an academic named Oliver (Armie Hammer) in 1980s Italy, is whipping up a critical frenzy topping many critic's 'end of year' lists with Michael Stuhlbarg a strong Supporting Actor contender.

Call Me By Your Name is out now

Darkest Hour

Darkest Hour: Gary Oldman is unrecognisable as Winston Churchill

New film Darkest Hour sees Joe Wright take on the 'Winston Churchill biopic' challenge with aplomb toeing the line between entertaining and informative with a side order of Oscar-bait. Naturally, people are taking notice thanks to Gary Oldman's truly unrecognisable transformation into the English Prime Minister - making him a Best Actor favourite - but don't count Atonement director Wright's film out as just another one-trick biopic pony.

Darkest Hour is released 12 January 2018

Dunkirk

James D'Arcy and Kenneth Branagh in 'Dunkirk'

Only one of Christopher Nolan's ten films have ever been nominated for Best Picture (Inception) but a nod for World War II film Dunkirk has rather likely following its release in July. That the filmmaker was invited to TIFF for a special 70mm IMAX screening plus Q&A is proof that Warner Bros is backing the summer tentpole as its biggest awards contender - and it's hard to see it being ignored.

Dunkirk is getting re-released in select IMAX cinemas this month

The Florida Project

Willem Dafoe in the "The Florida Project" (Rex Features)

The Florida Project is the year's most unassuming crowdpleaser, a nostalgia-laced tale following the hijinks of a precocious young girl (Brooklynn Prince) and her mother (Bria Vinaite) around a motel in Kissimmee, Florida. Director Sean Baker (Tangerine) continues his cinema takeover with an assured feature bolstered by Willem Dafoe who may well have already sewn up the Supporting Actor trophy for his performance as kindly motel manager Bobby.

The Florida Project is out now

Get Out

Daniel Kaluuya in Jordan Peele's horror smash 'Get Out' (Moviestore/REX/Shutterstock)

One of the year's most bankable films came from comedian Jordan Peele, a horror satire following a black male who uncovers a conspiracy following a visit to his girlfriend's parent's house. While these days, it's not standard practice for horrors to get recognised by the Academy, Get Out's ambition and adeptly-delivered thrills separate it as the best of its kind - a nomination would be a welcome surprise to all.

Get Out is available to own on DVD and Blu-ray now

Lady Bird

Saoirse Ronan on lead duties in Greta Gerwig's 'Lady Bird'

With no less than three TIFF press screenings for each film, journalists - schedules permitting - would have been able to see everything they so desired. Lady Bird was the exception. Notch it down to excited word-of-mouth following its Venice premiere, but Greta Gerwig's directorial debut, which stars Saoirse Ronan and guaranteed Supporting Actress nominee Laurice Metcalf, saw the biggest queues of the festival setting it apart as Oscar season's insect-sized dark horse (and while it won't help its award chances, the film has taken over Toy Story 2 to become Rotten Tomatoes' best-reviewed film of all time).

Lady Bird will be released February 2018

Molly's Game

Jessica Chastain and Idris Elba in 'Molly's Game' (STXfilms) (Courtesy of STXfilms)

Every so often a film inveigles its way into the Best Picture category aided by a powerhouse performance at its heart (Silver Linings Playbook and Dallas Buyers Club spring to mind). Step forward Molly's Game, the directorial debut of Aaron Sorkin starring Jessica Chastain as Olympic skier-turned-underground poker kingpin Molly Bloom. Her memorable performance would later hijack most TIFF conversations injecting the film with unexpected awards gravitas.

Molly's Game is released 26 December

Mudbound

Mudbound is Netflix's first real awards contender

Mudbound provides Netflix with its first true Oscar contender having been sold at Sundance for $12.5 million. The film, directed with admirable command by Dee Rees, is an ensemble story of racial injustice set in post-WWII Mississippi starring the likes of Jason Clarke, Carey Mulligan, Mary J. Blige and Garrett Hedlund. A directing nomination for Rees would see her become the first female black woman to earn the feat.

Mudbound is available to view on Netflix now

Phantom Thread

Daniel Day-Lewis in 'Phantom Thread'

Phantom Thread - the new film from Paul Thomas Anderson - is expected to be the final screen performance of Oscar-winning extraordinaire Daniel Day-Lewis. Set in 1950's London, the film is centred on his protagonist Reynolds Woodcock, a renowned dressmaker whose fastidious life is disrupted by a young, strong-willed woman, Alma, who becomes his muse and lover, played by breakout Vicky Krieps. It promises to be yet another beguiling addition to the filmography of a masterful talent.

Phantom Thread is released 2 February 2018

The Post

(Twentieth Century Fox)

Steven Spielberg's towering drama unites Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep for the dramatisation of real-life events which saw Washington Post journalists racing to expose a massive cover-up of government secrets spanning three decades in 1971. A late Best Picture frontrunner, The Post also boasts a supporting cast to end all supporting casts comprised of a who's who of television talent ranging from Bob Odenkirk to Carrie Coon.

The Post is released on 19 January 2018

The Shape of Water

The Shape of Water: Sally Hawkins and Octavia Spencer in Guillermo del Toro's fantasy

Those who hadn't already taken notice of Guillermo del Toro's majestic fantasy tale sat up immediately upon learning it had just won Venice's Golden Lion - the festival's biggest prize. Those already initiated with the film would have told you The Shape of Water is a wondrous often-gritty delight and the Mexican-American filmmaker's best film since Pan's Labyrinth which has thrown Sally Hawkins to the forefront of the already-exciting Best Actress race.

The Shape of Water is released on 16 February 2018

Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Frances McDormand in 'Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri' (Twentieth Century Fox)

The last time TIFF's main award winner failed to earn a Best Picture nomination was in 2011 all but ensuring this black comedy's place in the category. While Frances McDormand will receive most of the acclaim, her performance as Mildred Hayes - a woman who takes the law into her own hands - a downright showstopper, this is In Bruges director Martin McDonagh's film, his screenplay so razor sharp you may draw blood.

Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri is released on 12 January 2018

The 2018 Oscars take place on Sunday 4 March

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