Arts & Entertainment

Oscar Predictions 2019: A Breakdown Of All 24 Academy Awards

Will Glenn Close finally win an Oscar? Will "Roma" set new records? Patch has your expert predictions for the The 91st Academy Awards.

(Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

The 91st Academy Awards will take place Sunday to honor the best films of the year and answer our most burning questions: Will Alfonso Cuaron's black-and-white film "Roma" make history as the first foreign-language film to win Best Picture? Or will "Green Book" prevail instead to win the Academy's most coveted award? Will Glenn Close and Amy Adams finally win their first Oscars? We can hardly wait to find out.

In the meantime, we decided to compile a breakdown of our own predictions. So, read on and make sure to cast your ballots if you haven't done so yet.

Without further ado, here are Patch's Oscar winner predictions in all 24 categories:

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2019 Oscar Winner Predictions


Best Picture

Courtesy of Netflix
Courtesy of Netflix

Winner: โ€œRomaโ€

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Given that each film won top prizes at major guild awards (Directors Guild Awards (DGA), Critics Choice Awards, Golden Globes, Producers Guild Awards, PGA) and British Academy Film Awards (BAFTA)), โ€œRomaโ€ and โ€œGreen Bookโ€ are both heavily favored to win the most coveted prize. But since the Academy has grown more diverse and international over the past three years, the foreign-language drama โ€œRomaโ€ has an edge over โ€œGreen Book.โ€


Best Director

Courtesy of Netflix
Courtesy of Netflix

Winner: Alfonso Cuaron, โ€œRomaโ€

Both directors Alfonso Cuaron and Spike Lee have campaigned arduously for their respective work: โ€œRomaโ€ and โ€œBlakKklansman.โ€ But Alfonso Cuaronโ€™s love letter to his childhood days in Mexico, in honor of the women who raised him, has made more traction at major guild awards. This award is Cuaronโ€™s to lose.


Best Actor

Courtesy of 20th Century Fox
Courtesy of 20th Century Fox

Winner: Rami Malek, โ€œBohemian Rhapsodyโ€

At first, it looked as though this award was โ€œVICEโ€ star Christian Bale to lose after having won both the Golden Globes and Critics Choice Award. But the tide turned when Rami Malek, who is a first-time Oscar nominee, won the Screen Actors Guild awardโ€” which is a great Best Actor indicator.


Best Actress

Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics
Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics

Winner: Glenn Close, โ€œThe Wifeโ€

Itโ€™s a long time coming for the multi-talented Glenn Close to win an Academy Award. As it stands, the performer is the most Oscar-nominated living actor who is yet to receive an Oscar. This year, her seventh-time nomination is ripe for a charming win.


Best Supporting Actor

Courtesy of Universal Pictures
Courtesy of Universal Pictures

Winner: Mahershala Ali, โ€œGreen Bookโ€

Some might say that itโ€™s too soon for Mahershala Ali to win his second Oscar since it has only been three years since he won for his โ€œMoonlightโ€ performance. But, clearly, his respective wins at Golden Globes, BAFTA and Criticsโ€™ Choice Award all indicate that he is the presumptive winner.


Best Supporting Actress

Courtesy of Annapurna Pictures
Courtesy of Annapurna Pictures

Winner: Amy Adams, โ€œViceโ€

This category is a tight race. Regina King won both the Golden Globes and the Critics Choice Award for her role in โ€œIf Beale Street Could Talk,โ€ but she was snubbed for a SAG nomination. She's up against the six-time Oscar nominated โ€œViceโ€ star Amy Adams. We think Adams is due to win. Plus, the Academy loves a strong character transformation, which she renders gracefully in her role as the steely Lynne Cheney.


Best Adapted Screenplay

Courtesy of Focus Features
Courtesy of Focus Features

Winner: โ€œBlackKklansmanโ€

While WGA (Writers Guild of America) bestowed the honor to โ€œCan You Ever Forgive Me?,โ€ it feels right for Spike Lee, along with his โ€œBlakKklansman co-writers Charlie Wachtel, David Rabinowitz and Kevin Willmott, to score a win.


Best Original Screenplay

Courtesy of Fox Searchlight Pictures
Courtesy of Fox Searchlight Pictures

Winner: โ€œThe Favouriteโ€

Both Golden Globe winner โ€œGreen Bookโ€ and BAFTA winner โ€œThe Favouriteโ€ are the presumptive front-runners. But given that the script and dialogue of the latter is wittier and more impressive, writers Deborah Davis and Tony McNamara are poised to win.


Best Animated Feature

Courtesy of Sony Pictures Animation
Courtesy of Sony Pictures Animation

Winner: โ€œSpider-Man: Into the Spider-Verseโ€

Spidey is clearly the assumed winner after having nabbed numerous precursor awards, including the Annies, Critics' Choice, Golden Globe, BAFTA, PGA, ACE, MPSE and VES. Plus, it has a blast of solid entertainment throughout.


Best Documentary Feature

Courtesy of Sundance Film Festival
Courtesy of Sundance Film Festival

Winner: โ€œRBGโ€

To many movie fans and critics alike, the clear winner could have been Mr. Rogers documentary film โ€œWonโ€™t You Be My Neighbor?,โ€ but unfortunately it was snubbed for an Oscar nomination. In the end, it became a toss up between Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg documentary โ€œRBGโ€ and the climbing-adventure documentary โ€œFree Solo.โ€ We believe itโ€™s the right time for โ€œRBGโ€ to win with its irresistible, inspiring โ€œITโ€ factor.


Best Foreign Language Film

Courtesy of Netflix
Courtesy of Netflix

Winner: โ€œRomaโ€

If โ€œRomaโ€ is our bet to win Best Picture, it ought to win Best Foreign Language film, as well.


Best Cinematography

Courtesy of Netflix
Courtesy of Netflix

Winner: โ€œRomaโ€

Cuaron's adroitness in filming the master shots of his movie "Roma" is phenomenal. After having won Critics Choice Award and BAFTA award in the same category, โ€œRomaโ€ is highly expected to go home with the award. And Cuaron could make history as the first person ever to win Best Cinematography for a film he also directed.


Best Costume Design

Courtesy of Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
Courtesy of Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

Winner: โ€œBlack Pantherโ€

Have you seen the costumes that the cast wore in โ€œBlack Panther?โ€ They are unique and thought- provoking. The movie might face a stiff competition from the period piece โ€œThe Favourite,โ€ but we still expect "Black Panther" to prevail.


Best Film Editing

Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox
Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox

Winner: โ€œBohemian Rhapsodyโ€

Both โ€œBohemian Rhapsodyโ€ and โ€œThe Favouriteโ€ snagged the top prizes at the American Cinema Editors (ACE) Awards โ€” Best Edited Feature Drama and Best Edited Feature Comedy respectively. But the former has a better chance of winning Oscarsโ€™ Best Film Editing since historically, ACEโ€™s drama winners have marched on to win this category in eleven of the last fifteen years. Furthermore, the live-performance sequences rendered in โ€œBohemian Rhapsodyโ€ are deeply mesmerizing!


Best Makeup and Hairstyling

Courtesy of Annapurna Pictures
Courtesy of Annapurna Pictures

Winner: โ€œViceโ€

Just look at Christian Baleโ€™s transformation into US Vice President Dick Cheney. Dare we say more?


Best Production Design

Courtesy of Fox Seachlight
Courtesy of Fox Seachlight

Winner: โ€œThe Favouriteโ€

The Academy loves period pieces, and this year, โ€œThe Favouriteโ€ is the one to beat in this category. Although, we won't be too surprised if โ€œBlack Pantherโ€ suddenly pulls an upset win.


Best Original Score

Courtesy of Annapurna Pictures
Courtesy of Annapurna Pictures

Winner: โ€œIf Beale Street Could Talkโ€

Nicholas Britellโ€™s melancholic, jazzy score is simply unforgettable and irresistible.


Best Original Song

Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

Winner: โ€œA Star Is Bornโ€

Having won the Grammy, Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooperโ€™s โ€œShallowโ€ is expected to come out on top. Plus, the โ€œA Star Is Bornโ€ duoโ€™s rendition is beautiful, and the song captures the filmโ€™s essence of longing.


Best Sound Editing

Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox
Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox

Winner: โ€œBohemian Rhapsodyโ€

The Freddie Mercury biopic nabbed two top prizes at the Motion Picture Sound Editorsโ€™ Golden Reel Awards. At BAFTA Awards, the film also won Best Sound, so โ€œBohemian Rhapsodyโ€ is going for the gold in Best Sound Editing.


Best Sound Mixing

Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox
Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox

Winner: โ€œBohemian Rhapsodyโ€

โ€œBohemian Rhapsody" it isโ€” probably! Those live-performance sequences in the movie will easily win you over.


Best Visual Effects

Courtesy of Universal Pictures
Courtesy of Universal Pictures

Winner: โ€œFirst Manโ€

Visual Effects Societyโ€™s winner โ€œAvengers: Infinity Warโ€ may have an advantage for the win, but we will support โ€œFirst Man,โ€ which captures the very essence of how Armstrong got to the moon. Its execution has a beating heart and a spunky soul.


โ€œBest Animated Shortโ€

Courtesy of Disney Pixar
Courtesy of Disney Pixar

Winner: โ€œBaoโ€

If you were to do a survey of how many people have seen each of the four nominees, Disney/Pixarโ€™s โ€œBaoโ€ would probably garner more votes than any of its competition. Why? It played as an opening film for โ€œIncredibles 2.โ€ Given its wide popularity and exposure, โ€œBaoโ€ will most likely become the winner.


โ€œBest Documentary Shortโ€

Courtesy of AFI
Courtesy of AFI

Winner: โ€œPeriod. End of Sentence.โ€

The short documentary โ€œPeriod. End of Sentence.โ€ is about the pursuits of excellence and female empowerment. What better way to celebrate success than celebrating it big at the Oscars?


Best Live-Action Short

Courtesy of New Native Pictures
Courtesy of New Native Pictures

Winner: โ€œSkinโ€

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