Best cameo? Best hat? Ahead of the Oscars, AP hands out its own awards

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This image released by Netflix shows Michael Fassbender as an assassin in a scene from "The Killer." (Netflix via AP)

The Academy Awards honor many things in movies but not some of the most important. Ahead of Sundayā€™s Oscars, AP Film Writers Lindsey Bahr and Jake Coyle make selections for their own awards ā€” some more offbeat than others.

BEST ACTUALLY SUPPORTING PERFORMANCE: Cory Michael Smith, ā€˜May Decemberā€™

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Sometimes the best truly supporting performances are the ones that will never, ever get the ā€œawards push,ā€ like the brilliant Cory Michael Smith as Georgie Atherton in ā€œMay December.ā€ With his subtly manic energy, sad smile and that awful bleached hair, his is that kind of undeniable presence who steals both scenes heā€™s in and also completely upends everything weā€™ve come to understand so far. But this is how awards season works and something that only our awards strategist friends can justify. ā€” L.B.

BEST HAIRSTYLE: Gwenā€™s upside-down ponytail, ā€˜Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verseā€™

There are, no doubt, more elegantly styled heads of hair among this yearā€™s Oscar nominees. But no 'do could match the gravity-assisted beauty of the ponytail that hangs suspended in the air when Gwen (Hailee Steinfeld) and Miles (Shameik Moore) sit together, clung to the underside of cornice, gazing out at an upturned New York in ā€œSpider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.ā€ For a topsy-turvy, canon-breaking film series, Gwenā€™s upside-down ponytail points the way. ā€” J.C.

BEST DUO ACT: Jeffrey Wright and John Ortiz, ā€˜American Fictionā€™

As great as the whole ensemble is in Cord Jeffersonā€™s incisive drama, the movie is never better than when Wright and Ortiz are matched together. When Wrightā€™s frustrated novelist Monk Ellison meets with his agent Arthur (Ortiz), ā€œAmerican Fictionā€ sparkles with the comic interplay of two character-actor greats. Give these guys a sitcom and Iā€™d watch six seasons. ā€” J.C.

BEST CAMEO: Margot Robbie, ā€˜Asteroid Cityā€™

Wes Andersonā€™s ā€œAsteroid Cityā€ got a raw deal this year with zero nominations (maybe heā€™ll win his first Oscar for his Henry Sugar short ). One performance in a sea of great ones that really made an impact was a true cameo thatā€™s saved for the very end: Margot Robbie as the actor whose scene as Jason Schwartzmanā€™s dead wife was cut for time. She gets only a few minutes, to remind her wouldā€™ve-been co-star of their wouldā€™ve-been lines, dressed in Elizabethan garb a balcony away. It is an emotional gut punch of the best kind, brief and perfect. ā€” L.B.

BEST FACE: Willem Dafoe, ā€˜Poor Thingsā€™

Willem Dafoeā€™s face is already a work of art, but ā€œPoor Thingsā€ turns it into a Munch-esque masterpiece. His scarred Dr. Godwin Baxter, whose deformities come from experiments performed on him, is like a fusion of mad scientist and wounded victim. Heā€™s Frankenstein and Frankensteinā€™s monster, in one. ā€” J.C.

BEST STUNTS: ā€˜Mission: Impossible: Dead Reckoning ā€” Part Oneā€™

It remains wild that the film academy still doesnā€™t recognize stunts, but we can here. ā€œMission: Impossible ā€“ Dead Reckoningā€ isnā€™t the underdog in this category but that doesnā€™t make what they did any less impressive. The obvious ā€œbestā€ is the cliff jump, which most of us know by now that Tom Cruise did himself. But Iā€™m also partial to the Rome car chase in which Cruise and Hayley Atwell try to escape capture in a creaky, vintage Fiat 500 while handcuffed together. ā€” L.B.

BEST USE OF EARTH WIND AND FIREā€™S ā€˜SEPTEMBERā€™: ā€˜Robot Dreamsā€™

ā€œSeptemberā€ has probably been heard in a hundred movies and at a billion weddings, but the best animated feature nominee ā€œRobot Dreamsā€ uses the disco classic to perfection. In a movie that is strikingly grown-up about a relationship between a dog and robot, all of the joy and nostalgia of ā€œSeptemberā€ has never been more moving. It sends you out of the theater humming ā€œThe bell was ringinā€™, oh, oh / Our souls were singinā€™.ā€ ā€” J.C.

MOST STYLISH: ā€˜Priscillaā€™

This is perhaps a silly superlative to give to a movie that was easily one of the strongest adaptations of the year, taking what was essentially a young womanā€™s diary entries and making something evocative and profound without the use of first-person narration. The thoughtful style of Sofia Coppolaā€™s film helps make this point, transporting audiences into this intoxicating and dreamlike wonderland of the most beautiful clothes and glamorous settings with the biggest star of the time, and guiding us along with Pricilla to the realization that it is also a nightmare. ā€” L.B.

BEST SCENE: The Trinity Test, ā€˜Oppenheimerā€™

I donā€™t love everything about Christopher Nolanā€™s epic but I think the Trinity Test scene is a sequence that will be taught to film students for generations. Itā€™s not just the explosion itself, which was accomplished with old-school moviemaking techniques like forced perspective (doing something small but making it seem big). Itā€™s the rumbling tremors of the moments that follow, when Oppenheimer, after hearing that the bomb has been dropped on Hiroshima, is greeted by a flag-waving gymnasium audience. Oppenheimerā€™s face is horrified, reckoning with what heā€™s wrought. The crowd turns grotesque and ashen. A girl (played by Nolanā€™s daughter) shrieks. Here is the real thunder of ā€œOppenheimer.ā€ ā€” J.C.

BEST DREAM BALLET: 'Barbie'

Last year had so much great dancing, from the sweaty club scenes in ā€œPassages,ā€ to the wedding line dance in ā€œThe Iron Claw,ā€ Jeffā€™s silly moves in ā€œBottoms,ā€ Bella Baxterā€™s broken doll euphoria in ā€œPoor Things,ā€ ā€œM3GANā€™sā€ boogie and, of course, the end of ā€œSaltburn.ā€ But the trophy goes to Greta Gerwigā€™s euphoric ā€œIā€™m Just Kenā€ dream ballet, a sequence she fought to keep in that is also the best in the film. ā€” L.B.

BEST FIGHT: Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Tobias Menzies, ā€˜You Hurt My Feelingsā€™

Sure, you could pick more violent encounters. But is there possibly anything more ferociously rock ā€™em-sock ā€™em than an author overhearing her husband say he doesnā€™t like her latest book? In Nicole Holofcenerā€™s ā€œYou Hurt My Feelings,ā€ itā€™s the opening salvo in a painfully, hysterically acute examination of honesty in relationships. Not, I repeat not, a date movie. ā€” J.C.

BEST USE OF A PREEXISTING SONG: 'Silver Joy' by Damien Jurado, ā€˜The Holdoversā€™

I think the original song category needs an overhaul. For years, movies have helped introduce me to songs that exist that I might have missed, that become immediate favorites because of the emotional association with a movie. Selecting the right existing song is such an art and one last year stood out over all the rest: Damien Juradoā€™s ā€œSilver Joyā€ in ā€œThe Holdovers.ā€ ā€” L.B.

BEST HAT: Michael Fassbenderā€™s bucket hat, ā€˜The Killerā€™

Meticulous movie hitmen have long worn stylish hats. Think of the fedora of the protagonist of ā€œLe SamouraĆÆ.ā€ The assassin of David Fincherā€™s ā€œThe Killer,ā€ though, wears a bucket hat. It's just as much a silhouette, but he looks more like a dopey tourist than a stone-cold killer. Thatā€™s much the point for a movie about murder in increasingly anonymous times. ā€” J.C.

BEST ONE-SCENE PERFORMANCE: Audra McDonald, ā€˜Originā€™

In Ava DuVernayā€™s too-overlooked ā€œOrigin,ā€ much of the filmā€™s sense of humanity comes from the rich presences of the actors who float in and out of the movie. Not just the stellar lead, Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, but a number of performers ā€” including Jon Bernthal, Emily Yancy and Nick Offerman ā€” add to the nuance of ā€œOrigin.ā€ Thatā€™s especially true of Audra McDonald, who turns up for just one scene that may be the most potent of the film. McDonald plays a woman named Miss Hale, and her story of how she got that name is a delicate powerhouse. ā€” J.C.

MOST ROMANTIC: ā€˜The Taste of Thingsā€™

There are not many truly romantic films made for big audiences these days. Sure thereā€™s the odd rom-com here and there, but sweeping, luscious, capital R romances are few and far between and rarely celebrated at awards season (yes, Iā€™m still thinking about Joe Wrightā€™s ā€œCyranoā€ ). This season, that title went to ā€œThe Taste of Things,ā€ which doesnā€™t have an ounce of cynicism, just pure love. ā€” L.B.

BEST NFL PLAYER PERFORMANCE: Marshawn Lynch, ā€˜Bottomsā€™

With exactly zero apologies to ā€œ80 for Bradyā€ (Jets fan here), no former footballer made more of a big-screen impression than Marshawn Lynch, the former elite running back known as ā€œBeast Mode.ā€ In Emma Seligmanā€™s raunchy lesbian teen comedy ā€œBottoms,ā€ Lynch turns up as a high school teacher and is quite funny acting opposite Rachel Sennott and Ayo Edebiri. The role also has poignance. Lynch has said he did it to help make up for how he handled his sister, Marreesha Sapp-Lynch, coming out in high school. ā€” J.C.

BEST DOG NOT NAMED SNOOP: Chaplin, ā€˜Fallen Leavesā€™

Snoop, the all-seeing dog in the best picture nominee ā€œAnatomy of a Fall,ā€ has really hogged the pooch spotlight. Messi, the dog who plays Snoop, has been all over the place, including the film academy luncheon. But itā€™s time his reign of terror came to end. In Aki KaurismƤkiā€™s ā€œFallen Leaves,ā€ my favorite film of 2023, a pair of loners find nourishing points of connection in a cruel and grim world: the movies, karaoke and a dog named Chaplin. The dog, named Alma in real life, is KaurismƤkiā€™s own mutt, and deserves a few bones thrown her way, too. ā€” J.C.

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Follow AP Film Writers Lindsey Bahr and Jake Coyle at: https://twitter.com/ldbahr and http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

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For more coverage of the 2024 Oscars, visit https://apnews.com/hub/academy-awards


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