No, ‘Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows’ Won’t be Nominated for Best Picture, but What Will?

The answer you’re probably all expecting based on films that have already been released is Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life. However, as much as people will tell you they think this film is brilliant, I think Fox Searchlight’s decision to release it in May was a bit of a misfire. The film has managed to earn just north of $10 million domestically after seven-and-a-half weeks in theaters, which would right now make it one of the top ten lowest grossing films to ever be nominated for Best Picture alongside the likes of The Dresser ($5.3 million), Winter’s Bone ($6.5 million), Tender Mercies ($8.4 million), A Serious Man ($9.2 million) and Hope and Glory ($10 million).

Malick’s films, however, aren’t films for the masses so box-office won’t tell the entire story. The Tree of Life is likely to be the most experimental film in this year’s crop, and I just don’t see it landing too high on voters’ lists, especially when other big name directors begin unleashing their latest features. Malick, though, is no stranger to Oscar, The Thin Red Line was among the list of films to lose to Shakespeare in Love for Best Picture in 1999, a year Malick was also nominated for Best Director and Screenplay.

After saying all that, I still won’t count this film out. Fox Searchlight is fantastic when it comes to leveraging their films for Best Picture and I am sure they have something special planned when it comes to wooing Academy voters and making sure they understand or, at the very least, are discussing this film once it comes time to vote. It’s a film I won’t count out, but it sits firmly on the bubble at the moment.

The film highest on my list of potential Best Picture nominees from 2011’s first six months is Woody Allen‘s Midnight in Paris, which just became the writer-director’s highest grossing domestic release of his career. The film it topped, Hannah and Her Sisters, is one of only two Allen films to have ever been nominated for Best Picture. The other was Annie Hall, which won the Best Picture Oscar in 1978. As of right now I’d say there’s a strong chance Midnight in Paris becomes number three.

And that brings us up to date.

Here we sit, and as I see it we have one major contender and one bubble contender. No big surprise, we’re knee deep in the second half of summer movie season with Captain America: The First Avenger breathing down our necks and Cowboys and Aliens a week later. However, with the Toronto International Film Festival less than two months away and the Oscar heat that usually begins at Telluride and Venice just around the corner, we need to be prepared for what is to come.

As far as I see it, here is my current list of likely Best Picture contenders soon to arrive over the course of the next five months. These three groups are listed in alphabetical order and are merely predicting nominees, not a likely winner.

Brad’s Top Contenders
Title Director Release Date Studio
A Dangerous Method David Cronenberg (A History of Violence) TBA 2011 Sony Classics
The Descendants Alexander Payne (Sideways) 11/23 Fox Searchlight
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close Stephen Daldry (The Reader) TBA 2011 Paramount / WB
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo David Fincher (The Social Network) 12/21 Columbia
The Ides of March George Clooney (Good Night, and Good Luck.) 10/7 Columbia
J. Edgar Clint Eastwood (Million Dollar Baby) TBA 2011 Warner Bros.
Midnight in Paris Woody Allen (Annie Hall) In Theaters Sony Classics
War Horse Steven Spielberg (Saving Private Ryan) 12/28 Disney / Dreamworks
Second Tier
Title Director Release Date Studio
50/50 Jonathan Levine (The Wackness) 9/30 Summit
The Artist Michel Hazanavicius 11/23 Weinstein
Carnage Roman Polanski (The Pianist) 11/18 Sony Classics
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy Tomas Alfredson (Let the Right One In) 11/18 Focus
The Tree of Life Terrence Malick (The Thin Red Line) In Theaters Fox Searchlight
We Bought a Zoo Cameron Crowe (Almost Famous) 12/23 Fox
Young Adult Jason Reitman (Up in the Air) TBA 2011 Paramount
Third Tier
Title Director Release Date Studio
The Help Tate Taylor 8/10 Dreamworks
Moneyball Bennett Miller (Capote) 9/23 Columbia

Obviously, only two of these films have been in theaters and some of them don’t even have trailers yet. Some I am basing on early buzz I have read in brief snippets. Some I am basing on the impression I got after glimpsing the trailer. For example, The Help is a film I wouldn’t even have in the Third Tier if it wasn’t for some solid buzz that has come out of early screenings. Moneyball I would have much higher had I not been as unimpressed as I was with what I saw of its first trailer. These early predictions aren’t very scientific, but I make do with what I have at each moment and this is the field as I see it at this point.

Films will certainly come into frame and others will bounce out of this list as the months move along. Steven Soderbergh’s Contagion could prove to be more than just a late year thriller; The Iron Lady and Albert Nobbs could prove to be more than just a hotly contested acting face off between Meryl Streep and Glenn Close and films like On the Road, The Wettest County, Rampart and Coriolanus could become big festival hits. Nothing is set in stone at this point, though I think I saw some goblins chipping away a headstone that read “No, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Won’t be Nominated for Best Picture”. That, I am fairly certain on.


You can stay up-to-date on all of my Oscar coverage in my “The Contenders” section which includes the current Awards Schedule, Predictions (coming soon), For Your Consideration titles and the Oscar Overture. It’s still very early, but it’s never too early to start examining the field.

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