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Oscar Index: Anne Hathaway Is A Sure Bet For Sunday, But Jennifer Lawrence Shouldn’t Get Cocky

The Oscar season enters its last weekend, but one suspects it is far from over. Even if Academy members ultimately hewed to tradition and voted Lincoln and Steven Spielberg  Best Picture and Director, respectively — as is the customary coronation for films with the most Oscar nominations — this outlier season will be studied and debated. For at least days to come. The Final Countdown To The 2013 Academy Awards The final week of voting saw pundits and bloggers get in their final shots, filibuster like Jefferson Smith for their lost causes (“the only causes worth fighting for”), issue their final predictions or revise earlier forecasts. Roger Ebert backtracked slightly from his self-described “cocky” “Outguess Ebert” boast that he had guessed every (contest category) correctly. “Every year it is the same,” Ebert wrote. “I came out of the gate filled with certainty, and as the deadline draws near I begin to falter.” Several enterprising writers persuaded some Academy members from various branches to share—anonymously—their Oscar ballots, and the results might give pause to anyone convinced that any of the major categories (except perhaps Best Actor and Best Supporting Actress) are locks. The Oscar Index views and duly notes these ruminations objectively. The reported (conjectured?) groundswells make for compelling Oscars storylines, last-minute cliffhanging drama and even, perhaps, better ratings for the telecast. The Index admits to a conservative risk tolerance here, but on Monday morning will probably say it knew De Niro would win Best Supporting Actor all along. Let’s look at how the Gold Linings playbook plays out on Oscars eve. Academy Award For Best Picture In Oscar season, as in war, the first casualty is truth. Three of the Best Picture nominees, frontrunners at various stages of Oscar season, took Battleship -like hits for remaking history. Critics of  Zero Dark Thirty , said it was pro-torture — oh, for the days of the Orwellian Bush era and “enhanced interrogation techniques” — and heightened its role in the killing of Osama Bin Laden. Lincoln slandered the state of Connecticut by depicting its representatives as voting against the 13 th Amendment. And to read The New York Times ’ Maureen Dowd and Salon ’s Andrew O’Hehir  this week, about the only things Argo   got absolutely right was that there is a country named Iran and a CIA operative named Tony Mendez. I’m bracing myself for the eleventh-hour revelation that Quvenzhane Wallis is actually a 32-year-old psychopathic Russian dwarf pretending to be a child. Which opens the door for Silver Linings Playbook . Reconsiders Ebert: “( Argo ) was also my choice of the year’s best movie. Now, more and more, from many different quarters, I hear affection for Silver Linings Playbook . People tell me, I have a brother-in-law exactly like that. I sense a groundswell.” But just as those Iranian guards discovered as they chased the hostage-carrying plane down the runway (yes, I know; didn’t happen) there should be no stopping Argo ’s awards season take-off, lifted by wins from such major Oscar precursors as the PGA, DGA, SAG, BAFTA and, most recently, WGA (you know; the guild supposedly more terrifying than the Ayatollah). For awards bloggers, this Best Picture race has been all kinds of personal. Lincoln champion Sasha Stone at Awards Daily concedes the race to Argo , but will have none of it, diss-missing director Ben Affleck as “a movie star director…(who) finally made a movie people liked” and bemoaning the injustice suffered by “a film that good, that well intentioned.” Hollywood Elsewhere’s Jeffrey Wells, too, picks Argo to win, but not before raging against the machine for the film he believes should win: “ Zero Dark Thirty , Zero Dark Thirty , Zero Dark Thirty , and I don’t care…going down with the ship.” The more journalistic pundits at Gold Derby and Gurus o’ Gold mostly favor Argo to win, but Anne Thompson sees echoes of last year’s race between The King’s Speech and The Social Network : “On the one hand, there’s recognition of what the older Academy goes for: quality, heart, period seriousness. On the other is a more youthful, ardent and in its way, au courant popular favorite. This year, both contenders are resonant and timely, but one seems more establishment while the other is the hip up-and-comer.” And the Academy, she notes, is more establishment than the guild members who honored Argo . As for the Academy members who shared their ballots with the media, they’re all over the map. Of the five ballots shared with Entertainment Weekly , Argo was the pick of the Executive and the Actor. The Director went with Silver Linings Playbook , the Actress,  Life of Pi, and the Writer,  Beasts of the Southern Wild . A Director sharing his ballot with The Hollywood Reporter went with Zero Dark Thirty. Apropos of nothing, the Oscar Index remembers vividly being in thrall to Argo . When it was over, I leaned over to Mrs. Index and said, perhaps facetiously, “Best Picture.”  Like Lincoln , it celebrated America at its best. But it also celebrated Hollywood at its best. It was not a valentine to the movies like The Artist ; it was more of a “We love this country, too,” pat on the back. But with all the potshots that Lincoln  has taken over the last few months, it should be noted that the film truly did make history. After seeing the film, inquisitive Mississippi moviegoer Dr. Ranjan Batra discovered upon further research that the state had yet to technically ratify the 13th Amendment. He got the ball rolling and on Feb. 7, the state’s ratification became official. So Lincoln ’s got that going for it. 2013 Oscar Nominations For Best Director Here’s one of the categories in which we are fending off a little Index remorse. Steven Spielberg edges out Ang Lee , according to pundits Gold Derby and Gurus o’ Gold. With Affleck out of the running, this might be the category in which Academy voters choose to acknowledge Spielberg’s achievement. But The Wrap’s Steve Pond posits: “…as much as voters admire and respect ( Lincoln ), they don’t seem to love it, and as a result I think he is going to lose. The huge Actors Branch could sway things in favor of David O. Russell , whose film has been coming on strong in a typical Harvey Weinstein-engineered surge. But I suspect that the rest of the Academy will lean toward the spectacle of Life of Pi , and give Ang Lee his second Best Director award without a corresponding Best Picture win.” What do those shared Oscar ballots in EW reveal? The Director went with Russell (“the heart of the job remains performances”), but the Actress, Writer and the Executive went with Lee. The Actor voted for Spielberg. Academy Award Nominees For Best Actor Raymond Massey couldn’t do it. Henry Fonda couldn’t do it. Rex Hamilton couldn’t do it (that’s for any Police Squad watchers out there). Daniel Day-Lewis will be the first actor to win the Academy Award for portraying Abraham Lincoln. Oh, and he’s poised to become the first three-time Best Actor Oscar-winner. On this, Oscar-watchers are near unanimous. He was also the pick of four of the five members who shared their ballots with EW. The Actress went with Bradley Cooper . If she’s available and she ever runs into Cooper, it will make a nice icebreaker. Oscar Nominations 2013: The Best Actress Contenders This is another category that seems to be in last-minute flux. Jennifer Lawrence has retained her frontrunner status among pundits, but several are noting the intangibles attached to 85 year-old Emmanuelle Riva, not the least of which is the “too soon” factor. In other words, Lawrence and Chastain will be back and this is Riva’s first, and presumably last, bid for an Academy Award. Then again, three of those five EW ballots went with Naomi Watts in The Impossible . Could enough votes divided among the top three contenders make that possible? 2013 Academy Awards: Best Supporting Actor Nominees Former frontrunner Tommy Lee Jones has endeared himself to no one this Oscar season and stayed off the campaign trail. On the one hand, you’ve got to grudgingly respect that. On the other, he might get the Golden Globe glums again watching Robert De Niro pick up his first Academy Award since Raging Bull .  De Niro can be as taciturn and intimidating as Jones, but he gamely put himself out there this season and revealed an emotional side that swings votes. Now that is acting, dear readers. Twelve vs. nine of Gold Derby’s experts are now on Team De Niro. The Gurus o’ Goldsters also now rank De Niro as the frontrunner, dropping Jones to No. 2.  Two out of three of In Contention’s experts are also in De Niro’s camp. If De Niro does win, he owes it to Katie Couric to acknowledge her in his acceptance speech. But there is one Silver lining — for TLJ: Nate Silver , the breakout prognosticator in the last presidential campaign, predicts Jones (and Spielberg) will win. There has, too, been some late-breaking buzz for Christoph Waltz. That Director who shared his Oscar ballot with the Hollywood Reporter admitted that he did not vote for Jennifer Lawrence because he was offended by her Saturday Night Live monologue (on principle alone, can his privileges be revoked?). I wonder what he thought of Waltz on “SNL” as “Djesus Uncrossed”? Oscar Nominations 2013: Best Supporting Actress Nominees This Oscar has a first name; and it’s Anne. LAST WEEK IN THE 2013 OSCAR INDEX: OSCAR INDEX: Will Academy ‘Amour’ For Emmanuelle Riva Lead To Best Actress Upset? More 2013 Oscar Nominations: Academy Award Nominees Announced – ‘Lincoln’ Leads 2013 Oscar Noms Oscar Nominations 2013 — The Biggest Snubs & Surprises Of The Year 2013 Oscar Predictions By The Numbers: Which Nominees Are Hot (Jennifer Lawrence) & Not Follow Movieline on  Twitter .

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Oscar Index: Anne Hathaway Is A Sure Bet For Sunday, But Jennifer Lawrence Shouldn’t Get Cocky

Dwayne Johnson Has ‘A Heart Of A Lion’ In ‘Snitch’… But Still Kicks Ass

Actor chats with MTV News about taking on a fact-based role and continuing ‘Fast and Furious.’ By Kevin P. Sullivan, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Dwayne Johnson Photo: MTV News

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Dwayne Johnson Has ‘A Heart Of A Lion’ In ‘Snitch’… But Still Kicks Ass

Hail Maya! Jessica Chastain Will Win The Best Actress Oscar According To NYC Taxi Rider Survey

According to the Academy Award pundits and even the Nate Silver-style numbers crunchers, Jennifer Lawrence will win the Best Actress Oscar on Sunday, but don’t start engraving her name just yet. Along with the recent surge — at least in publicity — for Emmanuelle Riva , another group of in-the-know moviegoers is predicting that Zero Dark Thirty star Jessica Chastain will bring home the little gold man: New York City taxi riders. If you’ve never ridden in a NYC cab, the taxis here are equipped with passenger-compartment video monitors that attempt to amuse riders with local news casts, a taxi-edition of the TV game show Jeopardy that is geared for idiots, and over the last few weeks, an Oscar survey  that covers the Best Film, Director, Actor, Actress and Animated Film categories. In addition to casting their votes for Chastain, New Yorkers also aren’t buying into the Argo surge. They’re predicting a Lincoln   sweep with the film, its director, Steven Spielberg and star, Daniel Day-Lewis , bringing home statuettes.   Brave is also predicted to bring home the Best Animated Feature Oscar. Sunday will tell whether New Yorkers were ahead of the curve, but, I suspect that their choice of Chastain for Best Actress has a lot to do with wishful thinking. Her “I’m-the-motherfucker-that-found-this-place” attitude and doggedness in Zero Dark Thirty is very New York. That’s how we take care of business in this town. By the way, I’ve asked the TLC to provide me with an idea of how many riders took the survey.  I’ll update when I get them. [ NYC Taxi & Limousine Commission ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter .  Follow Movieline on Twitter . 

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Hail Maya! Jessica Chastain Will Win The Best Actress Oscar According To NYC Taxi Rider Survey

Tom Cruise Lawsuit: Publisher Demands to Know Suri’s Mental and Emotional State

Tom Cruise’s $50 million lawsuit against a tabloid is getting uglier by the day, as the media group who owns Life & Style is fighting back hard against him. Cruise sued Bauer Media Group in October after L&S ran a story suggesting he “abandoned” daughter Suri Cruise after his split from Katie Holmes. Now, both sides are gearing up for a court battle, and the celebrity gossip publisher is demanding a LONG list of information from the movie star. Specifically, Bauer Media wants to legally establish “the extent to which Tom Cruise was in contact with Suri following his separation and divorce.” Moreover, it wants to know what role Tom’s membership in the Church of Scientology played in decisions re: communicating and visiting with Suri. Bauer’s attorney Alonzo Wickers also demands to know what Suri’s mental and emotional state was after her parents’ separation and divorce. He also wants to examine the actor’s history of filing lawsuits. Cruise’s lawyer insists that “Tom doesn’t go around suing people. He’s not a litigious guy,” but in this case, the L&S claim was libelous and damaging. He wants Life & Style to reveal its “anonymous” sources. Cruise’s camp also wants to know Bauer’s policies regarding obtaining information from sources, paying those contacts and verifying their credibility. The actor’s attorney also vowed to explore the publisher’s alleged history of “bigotry and hatred toward minority religious groups and their members.” The increasingly complex case could actually go to trial if motions to dismiss are denied and settlement isn’t reached before that. Stay tuned.

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Tom Cruise Lawsuit: Publisher Demands to Know Suri’s Mental and Emotional State

Alyson Hannigan Granted Restraining Order Against Online Stalker

Alyson Hannigan has been granted a restraining order against a mentally unhinged individual who has been threatening her life over the Internet. TMZ confirms that the American Pie / How I Met Your Mother star alleges John Hobbs has been dangerously harassing her over Facebook, MySpace and the actress’ official website. In her court documents, Hannigan refers to Hobbs as “mentally unstable” and says he  “was recently discharged from a mental hospital.” In a frightening example of what Hobbs has posted, Hannigan cites the following message: “Lets see How can I get myself in troble today [sic]. If I go with what I’ve been acussed of Most of my Life, I suppose I should start with being a rapist, so any nice girls out there want to get raped [sic]?” A judge will decide on March 6 whether or not to make the restraining order – which Hannigan also got for her husband and children – permanent. Scary stuff, huh? Life was never this difficult at band camp.

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Alyson Hannigan Granted Restraining Order Against Online Stalker

Hugh Jackman Rumors "Bug" Wife; Actor Is Not Gay!

He may play Wolverine, but Hugh Jackman is also a beloved Broadway star who can belt out a show tune with the best of them. As a result, rumors of the actor’s sexuality have run rampant for years – and Jackman admits in the latest Hollywood Reporter that the chatter is finally getting to his wife. “Just recently, it bugs her,” Jackman said of what his wife, Deborra-Lee Furness, reads online. “She goes: ‘It’s big. It’s everywhere!'” But the 44-year old Academy Award nominee makes it very clear in the interview: he only has eyes for the mother of his two children. “When I met Deb, it was 10 times better than my single life,” he gushes. “She was very beautiful. She was unbelievably fun– this energy, this spirit – irrepressible. And she had a confidence in herself. I had a massive crush on her instantly… “… she was thrilling to me. I was always really attracted to that.” Elsewhere in the extensive feature, Jackman says he turned down the lead in Chicago (which eventually went to Richard Gere) and also dropped out of Drive . Why has he never wanted to play James Bond? “I thought it would box me in too much,” he said. “My natural instinct is to keep as many doors open as possible.” But only in his professional life, people.

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Hugh Jackman Rumors "Bug" Wife; Actor Is Not Gay!

Justin Bieber Takes His Siblings On A Fancy Vacation, Is The Best …

Justin Bieber takes his little brother and sister on a fun vacation! Here is the original post: Justin Bieber Takes His Siblings On A Fancy Vacation, Is The Best …

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Justin Bieber Takes His Siblings On A Fancy Vacation, Is The Best …

Nothing Like Us Justin Bieber Cover_by Chris Grant Jr

www.chrisgrantjr.com | 16 year old Actor Singer Chris Grant Jr covers Justin Bieber’s song Nothing Like Us. Chris Grant Jr will be releasing singles from his debut album soon. Join his mailing list to be the first to hear his new songs. http://www.youtube.com/v/CFnnSppvXxo?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Follow this link: Nothing Like Us Justin Bieber Cover_by Chris Grant Jr

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Nothing Like Us Justin Bieber Cover_by Chris Grant Jr

Kim Kardashian: In Brazil, Sooo Proud of Kanye West!

Kim Kardashian was too busy posing like Jesus Christ this weekend to attend to Grammy Awards, as she and baby daddy Kanye West are spending time in Brazil. But the Internet still works there, enabling Kim to Tweet a response to West earning a trio of trophies last night. “Awww just waking up in Brazil, seeing Kanye won 3 Grammy’s last night!!! That makes a total of 21!!!!” Kardashian wrote. “Soooo proud!!!” Kim also found time to film a video of herself in South America, showing off the sights, talking to the camera and saying hello to… Will Smith?!? Watch the actor make a quick cameo now: Kim Kardashian in Brazil

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Kim Kardashian: In Brazil, Sooo Proud of Kanye West!

Oscar Index: Killing ‘Lincoln’ Is All The Rage As Academy Voting Begins

The mailing of the final Oscar ballots this week signals the final stage of what has been the most volatile and tumultuous Oscar race in years. Between the snubs and the snark (that Anne Hathaway spoof has topped 500,000 hits), this year’s races rival for drama Frank Fane’s ruthless pursuit of Best Actor in The Oscar . At this late date, several races are still very much up for grabs. Let’s go to the Gold Linings Playbook to see how the major Oscar categories are shaping up this week. Best Picture Oscar pundits, we have a problem. In this corner, Hollywood Elsewhere’s Jeff Wells,  who, reveling in Lincoln ‘s  dwindling Best Picture prospects, called out “all the Gurus of Gold, and Gold Derby prognosticators who stuck with Lincoln all through December and especially January,” before dismissing the picture (and its 12 nominations) as “a grandfather clock of a movie.” And in the opposing corner we have Awards Daily’s Sasha Stone and Entertainment Weekly’s Thom Geier, Lincoln’ s staunchest defenders, railing against those who would question its Oscar cred. Stone calls Lincoln Spielberg’s “meditative masterpiece,” and, rather than switch to Argo , resolves to “adhere to the stats in the face of confusion,” while Geier, during a podcast with GD’s Tom O’Neil, reasoned: “I find it hard to imagine that when you’re filling out a ballot with 26 categories, the only thing you’re checking off is Argo for Best Picture. It’s possible that it could pick up some technical awards. It might pick up adapted screenplay over Lincoln . It could get editing. But it’s kind of hard for me to imagine an Argo sweep, which is what you tend to get with a Best Picture winner.” (Except in the case of Crash , O’Neil countered). The latest broadside against Lincoln came this week, from of all places, Connecticut. Congressman Joe Courtney, in an open letter to Spielberg that instantly went viral, hit the meticulously mounted film where it hurts: Its historical accuracy. In the film’s climactic roll call, two of three Connecticut’s representatives vote against abolishing slavery. Historical records prove otherwise and Courtney cried foul: “In many movies, including your own E.T . and Gremlins, for example, suspending disbelief is part of the cinematic experience and is critical to enjoying the film. But in a movie based on significant real-life events—particularly a movie about a seminal moment in American history so closely associated with Doris Kearns Goodwin and her book, Team of Rivals —accuracy is paramount. I understand that artistic license will be taken and that some facts may be blurred to make a story more compelling on the big screen, but placing the State of Connecticut on the wrong side of the historic and divisive fight over slavery is a distortion of easily verifiable facts and an inaccuracy that should be acknowledged, and if possible, corrected before Lincoln is released on DVD” And then there’s Argo . Ben Affleck’s triumph last weekend at the Directors Guild Awards sealed the deal on this scrappy film’s frontrunner status. Those not onboard the Argo bandwagon have pointed out that in 80 years only one film– Driving Miss Daisy -won Best Picture without receiving a Best Director nomination. But this week, a new narrative emerged: the spectre of Ron Howard’s Apollo 13 . Like  Argo, Apollo 13 rocketed through the awards season. It won the Producers Guild Award, the Director’s Guild Award (without a corresponding Best Director Oscar nomination), and an ensemble honor from the Screen Actors Guild. And then on Oscar night, it lost to Braveheart . Glenn Whipp, in The Los Angeles Times , offered a reality check to supporters of the other eight Best Picture nominees: “…the Argo opposition’s last-gasp hope — that Oscar voters will look at all this awards-season love and somehow wearily decide that enough is enough — is patently absurd. People in Hollywood, like moviegoers in general, genuinely like this movie. And with a preferential system that rewards films that voters rank near the top of their ballot, passion counts and polarity dooms.” In other words, proclaims Huffington Post’s Michael Hogan on his “For Your Consideration” blog, “Caveats here for the cliches “nobody knows anything” and “it’s not over ’til it’s over,” but: we know something, and it’s that the Best Picture race is over.” 1. Argo 2. Lincoln 3. Silver Linings Playbook 4. Life of Pi 5. Zero Dark Thirty 6. Beasts of the Southern Wild 7. Les Miserables 8. Amour 9. Django Unchained   Best Director So where does that leave the Best Director race? Only six times since 1949 when it was first presented has the DGA Award not anticipated the Best Director Oscar-winner. This year’s Oscar slate does not include Kathryn Bigelow , Tom Hooper, or Ben Affleck . Affleck’s snub would seem to be Steven Spielberg‘s gain. Lincoln, its Connecticut gaffe notwithstanding, has the most Oscar nominations, three of its cast members are up for the major acting honors, and it’s Spielberg. His closest competition, according to pundits, is Life of Pi director Ang Lee . Gold Derby’s Tariq Khan this week counted down five reasons why Lee could pull an upset. Some are subjective (“He really does deserve it,”  “The Academy may enjoy seeing a surprise here”), others more provocative (“He may get the most support from the tech branches”). And what of Michael Haneke , whose Amour , Stone notes, may be pulling a Polanski with a film that, that like The Pianist is catching fire at the last minute? Variety ’s Bob Verini this week summed up the situation succinctly: “The Oscar race is up for grabs for sure.” 1.Steven Spielberg ( Lincoln ) 2. Ang Lee ( Life of Pi ) 3. David O. Russell ( Silver Linings Playbook ) 4. Michael Haneke ( Amour ) 5. Benh Zeitlin ( Beasts of the Southern Wild )

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Oscar Index: Killing ‘Lincoln’ Is All The Rage As Academy Voting Begins