Jake Gyllenhaal in Okja, our nominee in the category of most delightfully over-the-top acting | Barry Wetcher/Netflix
Jake Gyllenhaal in Okja, our nominee in the category of most delightfully over-the-top acting | Barry Wetcher/Netflix

Maybe it’s time to add some fresh categories to the Oscar race. Because as exciting as best actor and director are, they tend to reward a small sliver of movies. If you were to hand out an award for, say, the best motion capture performance or most inspired use of food products, things might get a little more interesting.

Here’s a look at a wish list of new awards, plus 2017’s imaginary front-runners.

BEST OPENING-CREDIT SEQUENCE
Baby Driver
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
Split
Wormwood
Front-runner: Split’s fragmented title sequence cleverly hints at the villain’s multiple personalities, and Baby Driver has an impeccably choreographed coffee run set to Harlem Shuffle; Wormwood — the Netflix docu-series that also got a theatrical release as a movie — has a dreamy depiction of a man falling in slow motion from a hotel window. But nothing can compete with the title credits of the second Guardians of the Galaxy. Not only does it boast the jolly, toe-tapping strains of Electric Light Orchestra’s Mr. Blue Sky, but it comically zeroes in on an adorable dancing Baby Groot while a kinetic battle between the rest of the gang and a huge monster is relegated to the background.

BEST MOTION-CAPTURE PERFORMANCE
Andy Serkis, War for the Planet of the Apes
Dan Stevens, Beauty and the Beast
Taika Waititi, Thor: Ragnarok
Terry Notary, Kong: Skull Island
Front-runner: It’s frustrating that actors known for motion capture never seem to get the awards they deserve, simply because their performance is covered up with a patina of technology. If life were fair, Andy Serkis would be up for a best actor Oscar for his soulful performance as Caesar in War for the Planet of the Apes. His work was so moving, he made the audience root against the humans and hope that primates would inherit the Earth.

The categories in which Oscar awards are given every year have become a tad trite. Here’s a look at a new set of categories that might make things more exciting

BEST COMEDY
Girls Trip
The Big Sick
Logan Lucky
The Incredible Jessica James
Front-runner: Comedies don’t get nearly the awards love they should. Even with a designated comedy and musical category at the Golden Globes, the contenders tend to be dramas with comedic elements (plus any musical that happened to come out that year). This year, the most uproarious — not to mention best-selling — comedy was Girls Trip, an outrageous romp full of sight gags and repeatable one-liners with a star-making turn from Tiffany Haddish. It was also (yet another) reminder to studios that a movie led by a black female cast can have big returns.

MOST UBIQUITOUS ACTOR
Michael Stuhlbarg
Laura Dern
Caleb Landry Jones
Alison Brie
Front-runner: This category isn’t just for the actor who ended up in the most movies. In that case, Nicolas Cage or Eric Roberts would lead the pack. This is about the actors who were in the most movies — and television, what with The Last Jedi star Laura Dern’s stellar turns in Big Little Lies and Twin Peaks — worth seeing, while also doing standout work. Brie also bridged big and small screens, starring in GLOW and Bojack Horseman, in addition to The Post and The Disaster Artist. But the clear leader, Michael Stuhlbarg, played very different characters in three best picture nominees — Call Me by Your Name, The Shape of Water and The Post — just barely edging out Caleb Landry Jones, who starred in two (Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri and Get Out), plus one that should have been a contender (The Florida Project).

Domhnall Gleeson as Gen. Huzx in Star Wars: The Last Jedi | David James, Lucasfilm
Domhnall Gleeson as Gen. Huzx in Star Wars: The Last Jedi | David James, Lucasfilm

BEST FIGHT SCENE
Jason Statham saves the baby in Fate of the Furious
Rey and Kylo Ren team up in The Last Jedi
Stairwell fisticuffs in Atomic Blonde
Casino fighting in Blade Runner: 2049
Front-runner: How can you pick just one? The fight scene between two replicant hunters in Blade Runner features a hologram Elvis, and Charlize Theron kicks major butt in Atomic Blonde. Meanwhile, the fight in The Last Jedi starts with an extremely satisfying Snoke bisection. But only one of these fight scenes features a man taking out enemies while toting around — and cooing at — a baby, so Fate of the Furious it is.

BEST PERFORMANCE BY A CHILD
Brooklynn Prince, The Florida Project
Millicent Simmonds, Wonderstruck
Noah Jupe, Suburbicon
Dafne Keen, Logan
Front-runner: The Oscars used to single out young performers with an occasional “juvenile award,” although those fell by the wayside in 1961, after Hayley Mills won for Pollyanna. But we’re happy to pick up the slack: There are many worthy contenders this year, especially deaf actress and newcomer Millicent Simmonds, who conveyed so much depth without a single word in Wonderstruck. But Brooklynn Prince would be hard to beat as the stubborn and sneaky — but also blissfully naive — little girl going on adventures around the run-down Orlando hotel where she lives.

MOST DELIGHTFULLY OVER-THE-TOP ACTING
Jake Gyllenhaal, Okja
Daniel Craig, Logan Lucky
Michelle Pfeiffer, Mother!
Domhnall Gleeson, The Last Jedi
Front-runner: Overacting can be cringe-inducing or somewhat endearing. It’s the difference between John Travolta embarrassing himself in Battlefield Earth vs. Al Pacino chewing the scenery in, well, just about everything. There was some terrible overacting this year (cough, cough, Johnny Depp) but also some inspired examples of overdoing it, the most bonkers being Jake Gyllenhaal channeling a hyperactive velociraptor in Okja. Probably the most entertaining example, however, was Domhnall Gleeson, whose clipped enunciation and persistently supercilious air as Gen. Hux made The Last Jedi that much more fun.

Andy Serkis on the set of War for the Planet of the Apes, and his character in the film |Twentieth Century Fox
Andy Serkis on the set of War for the Planet of the Apes, and his character in the film |Twentieth Century Fox

MOST ‘WONDER’-FUL MOVIE
Wonder Woman
Wonder
Wonderstruck
Wonder Wheel
Front-runner: It was a big year for movies with “wonder” in the title, even if they weren’t all winners (especially Woody Allen’s box-office miss Wonder Wheel). Wonder and Wonderstruck were easily confused, both being family-friendly tear-jerkers, but no one was going to forget one of the best-selling, most satisfying movies of the year: Wonder Woman.

MOST OUTRAGEOUS USE OF FOOD PRODUCTS
The peach in Call Me by Your Name
The grapefruit in Girls Trip
The tea in Get Out
The pie in A Ghost Story
Front-runner: Watching teeny tiny Rooney Mara consume an entire pie in A Ghost Story was certainly riveting, but the perishables in Call Me by Your Name and Girls Trip were much bigger conversation starters, even if the scenes around them were so risque they can’t be described in a family newspaper. But which was most memorable? Good luck wiping away the image of Tiffany Haddish inserting a banana into a mutilated grapefruit, then doing unspeakable things to it.

BEST MOVIE YOU (PROBABLY) DIDN’T SEE
Columbus
Lost City of Z
A Quiet Passion
Band Aid
Front-runner: Lost City of Z is a retro-style adventure tale the likes of which don’t often get made these days. It didn’t do nearly as well at the box office as it did with critics, which is the case for each of these movies, including the Emily Dickinson biopic A Quiet Passion and the funny, bittersweet musical about a miscarriage Band Aid. Perhaps the most egregiously overlooked film of the year, however, is Columbus, a movie about an unlikely friendship unfolding in the architectural mecca of Columbis, Indiana. It’s so gorgeously shot and superbly acted that it really should have gotten Oscar love, not to mention many more eyeballs.

— By arrangement with The Washington Post

Published in Dawn, ICON, March 11th, 2018

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