The following article is reprinted from The Many Rantings of John with his permission. We have attempted to lure him to joining The Film Experience but we had to share this wonderful stat-fascinating piece! You should also follow him on Letterboxd. (Consider this piece a companion of sorts to Chris's piece on statistically who might still be vulnerable despite love from the precursors)
by John T.
Every year since 2006 at least one nominee for the Oscars was not highlighted by either the HFPA (the Golden Globes) or SAG-AFTRA, and becomes the "shock" of the morning. At this point in the season, predicting the Oscars is something of a slog because so much is "decided" so trying to guess who will be this nominee becomes quite fun.
Here are the people from the past ten years who fit this bill:
2021: Penelope Cruz, Jesse Plemons, JK Simmons, Judi Dench, & Jessie Buckley
2020: Paul Raci & LaKeith Stanfield
2019: Florence Pugh
2018: Marina de Tavira & Yalitza Aparicio
2017: Lesley Manville
2016: Michael Shannon
2015: Charlotte Rampling, Tom Hardy, & Mark Ruffalo
2014: Bradley Cooper, Marion Cotillard, & Laura Dern
2013: Jonah Hill
2012: Quvenzhane Wallis, Emmanuelle Riva, & Jacki Weaver
Usually the types of nominees that get in under this designation fall into one of two categories...
First, and most often, it's people who sneak in because their film is either already being watched for Best Picture or another acting race. Last year the former fit people like Jesse Plemons & Judi Dench, and the latter fit nominees like JK Simmons & Jessie Buckley. In fact, in the past ten years only two of the nominees (Penelope Cruz & Charlotte Rampling) got in on their own-if you're calling this you're thinking of actors, likely relatively well-known (i.e. former nominees or noted character actors) who are in major films that for some reason haven't gotten much love yet this year.
Rampling & Cruz fit into this conversation in a different way. Sometimes, an actor can sneak in solely based on their big name. These performances tend to favor former nominees or winners (like Cruz), or people considered to be acting titans giving the performance of their lifetimes (like Rampling). The gut instinct each year is to lean into this one because it's sexier, but it's much harder to pull off.
I will say, before we begin, that I'm honestly a little bit leery about this trend this year. The Best Actress field is wide-open, but the Globes pretty much got them all save for Danielle Deadwyler, who was cited by SAG. Arguably Best Actor is the category with the biggest opportunity to surprise, but while that fifth slot is wide open, there's a few Globe/SAG-blessed names (specifically Hugh Jackman, Jeremy Pope, & Diego Calva) who could get the nomination if Oscar is feeling less creative as much of the other contenders are not in genres that Oscar goes for, or are in films that aren't otherwise on his radar. All that being said, the odds are with me that there will be at least one new name, but I am much more curious than most years over whom it might be.
Honorable Mention: There's a few honorable mentions that I'd like to throw out before we get to the main list. Jennifer Lawrence & Brian Tyree Henry have solid reviews in Causeway, and Lawrence is obviously famous enough to get in on her own, but it's a tough sit and Apple doesn't seem that interested in promoting it this year. Daniel Craig's work in Glass Onion will be seen by a lot of people, but I wonder if it might be too silly for him, even though it's starting to become a bit eyebrow-raising that the most successful Bond since Sean Connery has never gotten an Oscar nomination. Gabriel LaBelle is likely too young to make Best Actor (he'd be the youngest person to be nominated since Mickey Rooney in 1939), but he's leading a Best Picture frontrunner (The Fabelmans) so you can't dismiss him entirely. Nina Hoss (Tar) & Woody Harrelson (Triangle of Sadness) have subdued roles in Best Picture contenders, while Tobey Maguire goes over-the-top but very late in Babylon. None of these names would surprise me, but I feel like they'd need more movement to make the cut at this point.
10. ANDREA RISEBOROUGH (To Leslie)
For Her: I initially had Lawrence here given the potential "comeback" narrative of her getting a nomination, but I switched to Riseborough for a film that you likely hadn't heard of 72 hours ago. Riseborough has had a groundswell of Academy members singing her praises in a way I've never seen before. It's common for a high-profile Academy member to personally vouch for a less-famous performer (Julia Roberts did this to help get Javier Bardem nominated for Biutiful), but Riseborough has had a groundswell of support from everyone from Gwyneth Paltrow to Kate Winslet to Sarah Paulson. Whether or not it works, it's impressive & has too many likely voters supporting her to totally ignore it.
9. TOM HANKS (A Man Called Otto)
Against Him: While he's much more famous than Riseborough, Hanks would still be the only major nomination contender for A Man Called Otto. I wonder if it might've broken just a little too late to catch the buzz that's happening from an increasingly curious public. I heard a lot of people saying "I'm going to see it" this weekend, rather than having already seen it because it has been doing a slower rollout. I wonder if a swifter rollout would've been the best play for Hanks, an actor who is definitely an Oscar favorite but who has repeatedly been passed over (Apollo 13, Captain Phillips, Bridge of Spies) just as often as he's made it.
8. EDWARD NORTON (Glass Onion)
For Him: Norton gets a major, showy roll in a film that I think is an outside threat for Best Picture, and is certainly a movie most Academy members have seen (given it was a pop culture hit all over Christmas break). Norton is a three-time nominee who has never won an Oscar, and if people are putting Glass Onion on their ballots (and I would assume they are given the response), it's not a stretch to assume they'd go with an actor they've liked in the past.
Against Him: Just how strong is Glass Onion? The miss at SAG Ensemble, as well as their snub of Janelle Monae, has me wondering if people are taking this film seriously enough to be considered a true Oscar contender, or if this is just popcorn fare that will have to settle for a writing nomination just like its predecessor.
7. JEAN SMART (Babylon)
For Her: Smart is pretty much the textbook definition of a Jesse Plemons-style nomination. A woman that has a key role in a film that is in play for Best Picture, and she's in the middle of a career peak. Her roles in Hacks and Mare of Easttown got her mountains of nominations for television, and she steals scenes in this movie. She also has a killer monologue late in the movie that sums up Hollywood in one gigantic, moving nutshell...it's the sort of thing that, if they like Babylon, they could easily cite, particularly given how wide open the Supporting Actress field feels right now.
5 & 6. Claire Foy & Jessie Buckley (Women Talking)
For Them: I'm combining these two for obvious reasons. The big reason why they both could contend as they are giving performances very much up Oscar's alley. Both actresses are in Oscar's sweet spot right now (Buckley was just nominated last year, Foy has been making a name for herself as a serious thespian by launching The Crown, a show that screams "older Academy members love me"), and both have the sorts of impassioned, difficult roles that Oscar loves. The SAG nomination for Best Cast means that Women Talking still has a clear path to a Best Picture nomination, and in an actors' film, it feels weird they wouldn't cite, well, the actors.
Against Them: But if they like them, why aren't they getting votes? Particularly with SAG, how did it make it for Best Cast but didn't get Foy or Buckley into the race? I suspect what's happening is that voters are only picking one of them in a packed Supporting Actress field, and they're drowning out their support -each actress has a showy role, and it's hard to tell even between the two of them which is better -how do you decide that while trying to decide between 10-12 other names? It's possible they are too even to get one of them in, and Women Talking isn't a big enough deal to get them both cited.
4. Tom Hanks (Elvis)
3. Judd Hirsch (The Fabelmans)
2. Paul Mescal (Aftersun)
For Him: Mescal is an up-and-coming actor that I think is sure to be nominated for an Oscar at some point. His work in Aftersun, coming on the heels of his revolutionary performance in Normal People, has critics crying "best performance of the year" and it's a weak field. I've made this analogy a few times this year, but in many ways the competition looks a lot like 2006, when there were four nominees set-in-stone but the fifth slot felt like it'd be a total free-for-all with atypical performances like Daniel Craig in Casino Royale and Sacha Baron Cohen in Borat threatening to upend Oscar's sensibilities. In the end, they went for Ryan Gosling for a small movie that looked a lot more reputable, and was an endorsement of an actor they'd nominate again in the coming years.
1. Tom Cruise (Top Gun: Maverick)
For Him: That leaves us with Tom Cruise. Cruise is in a surefire Best Picture nominee, he's a former nominee (and three-time loser), and everyone in the world knows his name. This is also clearly something that means a lot to Cruise, who hasn't really been in the Oscar conversation since at least 2008, if not 1999. I'm personally surprised he couldn't get a nomination from the Globes, but he did make it for the Critics Choice Awards, and if this film is looking like it could be a Best Picture winner (and that DGA nomination sure is a sign that it's in the running), it's hard to imagine they'd skip Cruise (even if he's a producer and will get an Oscar speech regardless).
Against Him: This is completely against-type for the Oscars. I know we're looking at a year where Angela Bassett might win for a comic book movie (I will predict her, but part of me thinks she'll be the shock snub of Oscar morning next week), but Tom Cruise for playing Maverick? For an Oscar nomination? They have nominated action movie performances before, but it's rare, and more often, even when those films get nominated for Best Picture (like, say, Mad Max: Fury Road) it's more of a tech victory than an acting one. This would stand out as a unique nomination if it happened.