USA TODAY International Edition

Movie madness marches forward

- Brian Truitt

“March Madness” wasn’t coined for this year’s Oscar race, though it certainly seems appropriat­e.

Even taking out the delays, virtual film- festival season, new rules and other varied havoc wreaked by COVID- 19 on the road to the April 25’ s Academy Awards, there’s been plenty of chaos with few actual front- runners. February’s Golden Globes offered some surprise wins – per usual – but the British Academy of Film Television and Arts’ suddenly ultra- diverse pack of nominees ( following a whitewashe­d situation a year ago) made it all a bit more interestin­g.

Who knows if left- field choices even matter in a time where audiences have barely seen any of the strongest contenders, though it’s certainly made trying to predict who’s getting Oscar nomination­s Monday morning considerab­ly dicey. It’s not like insanity was going to stop us from making fearless picks anyway.

Let’s look at the six major Oscar categories and break down the contenders from the pretenders:

Best picture

The best: With Globe and Critics Choice wins, and key Producers Guild and Directors Guild nods, the American road- trip epic “Nomadland” is going to roll right into an easy nomination. Same goes for family story “Minari,” period drama “One Night in Miami,” musical tale “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,” revenge thriller “Promising Young Woman” and courtroom flick “The Trial of the Chicago 7” – each can boast honors from all four guilds ( actors, producers, writers and directors).

The rest: Although the expanded field allows a maximum of 10 best picture nominees, usually, at most nine make it in. Fighting it out for the remaining slots will be “Citizen Kane” origin story “Mank,” innovative deaf- culture drama “Sound of Metal,” 1960s historical piece “Judas and the Black Messiah,”

gripping dementia film “The Father” and war movie “Da 5 Bloods.” However, “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” might upend a favorite and have the last laugh.

Actor

The best: Late “Ma Rainey” star Chadwick Boseman has picked up Globes and Critics Choice hardware: He’s not only a lock for a nomination, Boseman seems destined to win. The rest of the category will likely be fellow SAG nominees Anthony Hopkins (“The Father”), Riz Ahmed (“Sound of Metal”), Gary Oldman (“Mank”) and Steven Yeun (“Minari”).

The rest: The last time Oscars and SAG overlapped for the lead actor was 2010. And the lack of awards “Mank”mentum doesn’t help Oldman. If there’s an opening, it probably won’t go to “Borat” star and Globe winner Sacha Baron Cohen ( who’s a stronger candidate for supporting actor) but instead to either Critics Choice contender Delroy Lindo (“Da 5 Bloods”) or BAFTA and Globe nominee Tahar Rahim ( whose film “The Mauritania­n” is picking up steam late).

Actress

The best: Critics Choice winner Carey Mulligan ( who’s absolutely killer in “Promising Young Woman”) and fel

low SAG nominees Frances McDormand (“Nomadland”) and Viola Davis (“Ma Rainey”) will cruise to nomination­s. Andra Day’s Globe win for “The United States vs. Billie Holiday” should be enough to propel her.

The rest: Vanessa Kirby (“Pieces of a Woman”) has SAG and BAFTA nomination­s, Amy Adams (“Hillbilly Elegy”) and Zendaya (“Malcolm & Marie”) could be contenders – even if their movies aren’t – but look out for Rosamund Pike, whose Globe win for Netflix’s “I Care a Lot” makes her dangerous.

Supporting actor

The best: Some are still sore Daniel Kaluuya didn’t get his first Oscar win for “Get Out.” He’s getting another chance, folks: Playing Fred Hampton in “Black Messiah,” Kaluuya is an extremely safe bet after Globe and Critics Choice victories. Expect him to be joined by fellow SAG nominees Cohen (“Chicago 7”) and Leslie Odom Jr. (“One Night in Miami”).

The rest: Shockingly, it’s at least possible Jared Leto (“The Little Things”) pulls a surprise nod as he did with Globes and SAGs. Critics Choice and BAFTA nominee Paul Raci (“Sound of Metal”) has a better chance, as does Boseman (“Da 5 Bloods”). Boseman would make Oscar history being the first posthumous double nominee.

Supporting actress

The best: In the most Wild West category of this year, “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” star Maria Bakalova so far is in the pole position with Globe and Critics Choice wins. Fellow scene- stealer, and BAFTA and SAG nominee, Yuhjung Youn is riding a wave of love for “Minari” while Olivia Colman – two years removed from a best actress win for “The Favourite” – is great opposite the legendary Hopkins in “The Father.”

The rest: Jodie Foster of “The Mauritania­n” came out of nowhere to win a Globe in her pajamas so she’s a definite threat. Amanda Seyfried was an early favorite for “Mank” but has been losing steam since. Glenn Close (“Hillbilly Elegy”) is enough of an Oscar darling to push past her critically pilloried movie, while fellow SAG nominee Helena Zengel ( who’s 12!) might be on voters’ minds with strong work opposite “News of the World” co- star Tom Hanks. In addition, Ellen Burstyn (“Pieces of a Woman”) is a Hollywood legend who hasn’t had a nod in 20 years and up- and- comer Dominique Fishback (“Black Messiah”) has a BAFTA nod for a movie that’s making the most of a late- season entry.

Director

The best: Most of the time, four out of the five names in the filmmaker Oscar nominees line up with the DGA contingent, which is good news for Emerald Fennell (“Promising Young Woman”), Lee Isaac Chung “( Minari”), David Fincher (“Mank”), Aaron Sorkin (“The Trial of the Chicago 7”) and Chloé Zhao (“Nomadland”). Zhao would be the first woman of color to earn an Oscar nod.

The rest: The bad news for the luminaries above is the last time DGA and Oscar totally overlapped was 2010, and Fincher might be the most vulnerable. If a spot opens up, the strongest candidates are Globe nominee Regina King (“One Night in Miami”) and Florian Zeller (“The Father”) – while Spike Lee (“Da 5 Bloods”) and Paul Greengrass (“News of the World”) loom as dark horses.

 ?? PATTI PERRET ?? Malcolm X ( Kingsley Ben- Adir) photograph­s Jim Brown ( Aldis Hodge), Cassius Clay ( Eli Goree), Sam Cooke ( Leslie Odom Jr.) in “One Night in Miami.
PATTI PERRET Malcolm X ( Kingsley Ben- Adir) photograph­s Jim Brown ( Aldis Hodge), Cassius Clay ( Eli Goree), Sam Cooke ( Leslie Odom Jr.) in “One Night in Miami.

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