Glenn here. If there's one thing we know about the Academy's make up and hairstyling branch it's that we know nothing about what they will or will not like. Evidence of that is quite clear in this year's preliminary shortlist of seven contenders, of which three will be selected as the nominees. As we are all aware, the make up and hairstyling category remains the only one with three nominees each year - give or take a slow year in the world of animation - despite every film having it in some capacity and despite being one of the few categories that doesn't have a predetermined sway towards prestige.
This year's field of seven is as wholly unexpected as we have come to expect from both the branch and from this year in general. The list of films in contention for a nomination who will get to present their works to the branch, include Tom Hardy, Tom Hardy, and Tom Hardy. [More...]
Say what you will about other branches being too enslaved to best picture contenders, because lord knows the make up artists and hairstylists don't give a damn about that!
We could conceivably have a set of nominees of Tom Hardy films as Legend, Mad Max: Fury Road and The Revenant are all accounted for. And who could blame being blinded by his beauty, no matter how roughed up he looks? Likewise, we could get a collection of movies in which big, famous actors like Johnny Depp, Will Smith and Sir Ian McKellen are transformed. Is there room for the admittedly impressive old-age make up of both Mr. Holmes and The 100-Year-Old Man? We will certainly never know what lead them to give a slot on the shortlist to that Swedish film over the transformation of Eddie Redmayne in The Danish Girl, or what they saw in Legend (were they playing extra-close attention to Hardy's teeth?) as opposed to the glossy wig work of Carol or Cinderella, but they did and let's just be thankful this branch is rarely boring (and never have been).
When it comes to predictions, it feels honestly like shooting fish in a barrel. I can see logical arguments for all of them, except maybe Legend, which managed to make twin Hardys distinguishably individual but only really has some neat '60s bouffants to warrant its inclusion at the expense of other films. Industry attention, plus having make up work that became a popular Halloween costume could help Mad Max: Fury Road, as could the shaggy beards and bear wounds of The Revevant. And despite Johnny Depp looking like an inhuman lizard creature, this branch did nominate Hitchcock, which is food for thought. And lastly, while I haven't seen The 100-Year-Old Man, the mere fact that Love Larson and Eva Von Bahr's work appeared here makes me suspect it will be nominated. In fact, I'm the most confident of that of all. Make up artists certainly love it, and it works not only in the realm of old-age make up, but also making up actors to look like famous people in history like Ronald Reagan and Joseph Stalin. Don't dismiss it simply because it's got a silly name.
What do we think of the shortlist? Are we all secretly rooting for The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared just because it'd be funny to hear Jennifer Lopez or Amy Schumer up on stage reading it out to millions of viewers?