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Oscar predictions: Who will take home top prizes?

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Seth MacFarlane will host the Academy Awards on Sunday.

When the Academy Awards executives chose to extend the number of best picture nominations beyond five without doing the same with the best director, they created a situation.

Traditionally, the best director directs the best film. So by pushing the number of nominated films beyond five, the academy created the assumption that the “real” best picture nominations were the ones tied to nominated director.

This year, that assumption went up in flames. Who would have guessed that out of a field of nine, the “orphaned” best picture nominees would be “Django Unchained,” “Les Misérables,” “Zero Dark Thirty” or current front runner “Argo”? Who would have guessed that the sidelined directors would include critical darling Quentin Tarantino, recent winner Kathryn Bigelow and prodigal son Ben Affleck? Or that the directors invited to the party would include newcomer Benh Zeitlin or European veteran Michael Haneke?

Who knows what caused all this chaos in the top two categories. Maybe the Oscar voters weren’t enamored with the films they were expected to nominate, like “Zero Dark Thirty.” Whatever the case, a split between best director and best picture now appears likely. The backlash against the Ben Affleck snub has been embarrassing for the academy. Don’t be surprised if next year the number of best picture nominations reverts back to five.

Even though “Skyfall” didn’t get nominated for best picture (hey, it deserved it more than “Les Misérables”), this Bond fan is looking forward to seeing the phenomenally successful 007 movie pick up a few wins in the technical categories. If Adele doesn’t win for best original song, expect to find a TV set with a foot-sized hole in the screen sitting on my curb the next morning.

Here are my predictions for the winners in the major categories, along with those I believe deserve to win:


BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

This is often the toughest category to call, but never more than this year. Each of the five nominees already has an Oscar. Each of the performances galvanizes its film. I’m seeing it as a narrow three-way race between Philip Seymour Hoffman in “The Master,” Tommy Lee Jones in “Lincoln” and Robert De Niro in “Silver Linings Playbook.” My vote would go to De Niro, whose very human performance as a father who loves his son but struggles to deal with his mental illness is unlike anything he has done in decades. I doubt, though, this one performance means the academy is yet ready to forgive De Niro for all the garbage he has appeared in during the last 15 years. I predict Jones will win for playing a fiery abolitionist congressman, but De Niro and Hoffman will be fast at his heels.

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