Sunday 24 March 2024

Alternate Best Actor 1945: Roger Livesey in I Know Where I'm Going

Roger Livesey did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Torquil MacNeil aka Kiloran in I Know Where I'm Going. 

I Know Where I'm Going follows an ambitious young woman Joan (Wendy Hiller) going on a trip to Scotland to see her rich fiance, though naturally comes across a handsome local.
 
Unbearded Roger Livesey plays that local, I feel that is an essential distinction to make, who we come across, and while this sort of tale is now extremely commonplace, less so at this time, also such follow ups were not written and directed by Powell and Pressburger. The great Roger Livesey I wouldn't say has his most challenging role here as this film is part travelogue, part romance, with a bit of light comedy but more than anything largely a light tone despite one fairly intense sequence late in the film. This isn't an example of the film pushing Livesey to the limit of any ilk, rather early in the film we see him as just a charming chap in Scotland visiting before needing to return to the service and running into  Joan who is the one driving the narrative up until this point. Livesey is an actor with a tremendous presence, one where his voice alone does a great deal of natural heavy lifting, as the man just commands space, however that isn't the focal point here. Here he's just going to be part of the space early on as Livesey plays Torquil with a casual manner and just general affability as he greets the young woman while showing her around a bit as she travels towards her fiance and he enjoys his leave from the war effort. Something that I do think is aided by the lack of beard on Livesey that makes him look much younger and just in general have a more boyish quality to this man who clearly has some love for this environment of his homeland. The whole focus here is just to be charming largely, which Livesey is in a fairly easy going way that he doesn't make much of it, he just very much is part of scenes with an innate ease as someone that it is hard not to find a little endearing. He's good in that he doesn't play the pestering alternative or anything of the ilk, rather Livesey very much presents Torquil as entirely innocent around Joan, even as it becomes obvious that the two share more than a little bit of chemistry with one another.

Hiller and Livesey in some ways aren't pushing their obvious raw intensity both have as a performers, this is much lighter fare for both of them, however neither uses that as some kind of excuse to simplify anything about this material. They both give distinct life to their characters, and in this instance creating a very naturalistic chemistry between the two. As what develops between them actually is very subdued on the whole, where we have the moments of growing connection but it isn't as sort of broad as was the more normal ilk as if say this was a Cary Grant romantic comedy where he needed to best old Ralph Bellamy, which in this instance Bellamy would neither be seen nor heard. Rather much of it is in the margins of their performance as they interact and at times don't interact as they go about their trip in the Scottish isles. Livesey's wonderful by not exactly playing his hand obviously at any point as this presumption that the man is trying for something rather you see in each moment this kind of jus generous smile and more than a glance towards Joan, balanced with moments of this certain earned judgment in his eyes as she seems to favor wealth over other qualities of life, at least in her titular expression. Livesey' s performance is just one that cultivates the connection and attraction with Hiller, with the ease that grows and the sense of quiet complications in the silences, and they completely earn the sense of the connection between the two. Which is particularly essential here as there is far less of a driven obvious focus about this, leaving to the performers to earn the romantic journey, which they do. 

Although much of this performance isn't dramatic, other than Livesey just having an innate dramatic quality to his work because of the power of his presence. The one minor detail of this seeming is his fear of going to the old ruins of his family that is said to be cursed but even this seems almost slightly flippant for a while at least. The power of Livesey though is called upon as Joan, mainly because she wants to get away from the obvious attraction to Torquil and to her financial safety of her planned marriage and bribes a poor local man to take her through a dangerous storm. Livesey's great in the moment of Torquil disgust with this choice at first bringing this natural sense of a combination of genuine disappointment that speaks to someone who he had hoped for mixed in with this real sense of care he clearly has for the local people. It is only when Torquil is told she's really running from him to avoid romance is when he decides instead to take upon captaining the boat himself. And Livesey is great throughout this sequence in bringing this visceral intensity that he's been holding back and bringing such a power in his sense of determination that creates the danger of the situation but with the confidence of a man who will make sure they all make it. He's captivating every second of this sequence, particularly in the moments of instructing Joan on how to save the boat, and we see them fully working together, albeit seemingly ironically as it is to get her to marry another man. Although this journey only makes them grow closer, which is still unsaid till their goodbyes which has a formality still but you sense the chemistry in the warmth beneath every word, until Joan wishes for a goodbye kiss. Livesey's reaction to this is absolutely pitch perfect, as you get such a great sense of surprise and immediate joy with the sudden turn from Joan, though she seemingly still leaves, and Torquil finally goes to the allegedly cursed ruins. A sequence that is where you see what great directors and great actors can do. As it is a man looking around ruins, which would be less if it were not filmed so beautifully, with such an atmospheric sense of place, and just Livesey being absolutely brilliant in showing the man soaking all the history in, particularly as he sees the actual curse, which essential is that of long lasting love. Livesey's reaction to seeing Joan come back to him, supported by an instrumental group, couldn't be more perfect in saying all that needs to be said as the romantic highlight of fully embracing his "cursed" fate. 

64 comments:

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Ratings and thoughts on the cast.

Robert MacFarlane said...

Could Keaton ever go up for Beetlejuice?

Calvin Law said...

Glad you loved the film and his performance, and Hiller too.

Tony Kim said...

Louis: In terms of physical media you own, which ones do you think have the best special features? Do you own more DVDs, or Blu-Rays? Any favourite making-of docs?

GM said...

Thoughts on how Deborah Kerr and James Mason, the original choices for the leading roles here, would have fared?

Anonymous said...

Luke, your top 5 predictions for 45 Lead and Supporting Actor.

Luke Higham said...

1. Milland
2. Cregar
3. Brasseur
4. Barrault
5. Flynn

1. Dunn
2. Karloff
3. Herrand (Upgraded)
4. Redgrave (Dead Of Night)
5. Sanders (The Picture Of Dorian Gray)

Anonymous said...

Luke, your top 5 predictions for 45 Lead and Supporting Actress.

Luke Higham said...

Anonymous: I'll get back to you on that tomorrow.

Louis Morgan said...

Luke:

Hiller - 5(I mean always a big fan of Hiller and this is no different. Her performance has a much more defined arc where we open her very much with this very specific drive about her. Hiller I think has a particular ease in portraying this in a way because she has such a strong presence and dynamic ability to begin with. Hiller I think suggests effectively the potential better qualities of her Joan while also illustrating that titular drive of the character, where there is this innate fierce manner to her. Her performance has that strength and what she is able to illustrate is the kind of will that drives her to a better place or not, and Hiller creates that proper sense of the character leaving the right ambiguity to which way it will take her. Again like Livesey much of her transition and sense of the romance is just through subtle moments of performance, which Hiller excels in particularly her quiet reactions towards many of the locals where she delivers the words of indifference yet quietly conveys within her performance a sense of change that is possible. So Hiller I think succeeds in creating a captivating sense of her conflict and as much as she does have the blithe moments of seeming rudeness, Hiller is able to convey her potential better nature in moments of hesitation that are just beautifully realized. As is again the whole climax where Livesey's determination is key, against that is Hiller where you suddenly see that lack of the same kind of determination. Her desire to first leave where Hiller shows for the first time Joan forces that out of her, then the boat ride where she's wonderful by showing Joan can give into an imperfect sort of manic manner that she subverts her expected presence beautifully. Only better is again her fully romantic moments with Livesey where Hiller combines the two sides to show a better nature as her directness in the romance is of that same determination, but now mixed with a full on joy of life that is just pitch perfect.)

Brown - 4(If I were to have an actual criticism of the film is I would've loved to have had more of her character, as Brown brings such a strong striking presence that contrasts so well against Hiller, because she projects somehow who is completely in charge of her self-determination despite seeming, according to Joan, a less notable status. Brown brings this innate blunt wisdom in her performance and every moment in which she's called upon to come into to the film, she makes her impact efficiently and powerfully through her performance.)

GM:

I mean Kerr and Mason are both great performers so I'm sure they would've been great as well, but I'm glad we got Hiller and Livesey since they are far more atypical as a pair.

Robert:

It's not impossible, his current ranking/rating is based on watching the film a LONG time ago.

Tony:

I own more DVD's because that was the dominant format when I was buying more physical media. The LOTR extended editions are some of the special features out of any film, in the quality of the presentation, the editing and the detail of it all. Shaun of the Dead has one of my favorite random features in the plot holes: animations that are a lot of fun.

Robert MacFarlane said...

Louis: He's actually my 1988 win (though partially it's because I think Kline is co-lead with Curtis and Cleese).

Matt Mustin said...

How confident do we feel in Michael Stuhlbarg someday getting an Oscar nomination? I feel he's obviously one of the best character actors around right now, but I think he maybe gets taken for granted sometimes for being so good at disappearing in his roles. I remember him being fairly close for Call Me By Your Name, I want to hope his time will come.

Louis Morgan said...

Robert:

Well if anyone ever wants to request for a bonus review, I'd simply have to "It's Showtime!".

Matt:

Well if Richard Jenkins can get two Oscar nominations after decades of being a largely unrecognized character actor, I think Stuhlbarg can do it after having been in minor contention for a few films including A Serious Man (where the official lineup that year shall be an eternal shame on the Academy for being completely uninspired).

Robert MacFarlane said...

Do I have any requests left over?

Anonymous said...

Luke: So, your top 5 predictions for 45 Lead and Supporting Actress.

Louis Morgan said...

Robert:

You do.

J96 said...

Hey Louis, how do you rank Ennio Morricone Scores?

J96 said...

Also, how do you rank performances in the films of PTA, Sam Mendes and James Cameron? Top 10?

Louis Morgan said...

J96:

Morricone:

1. Once Upon a Time in the West
2. The Mission
3. The Good, The Bad and The Ugly
4. For A Few Dollars More
5. Once Upon a Time in America
6. A Fistful of Dollars
7. The Untouchables
8. Cinema Paradiso
9. The Thing
10. Duck, You Sucker
11. The Battle of Algiers
12. The Mercenary
13. Days of Heaven
14. The Exorcist II: The Heretic
15. The Big Gundown
16. The Hateful Eight
17. Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion
18. The Bible In The Beginning
19. Malena
20. Casualties of War
21. The Great Silence
22. I As in Icarus
23. The Working Class Goes to Heaven
24. Massacre in Rome
25. In the Line of Fire
26. Mission to Mars
27. Hamlet
28. State of Grace
29. Frantic
30. Bugsy
31. A Pure Formality
32. Ripley's Game
32. La Cage Aux Folles
33. Lolita
34. Bulworth
35. Butterfly

You can find PTA here:

https://actoroscar.blogspot.com/2020/08/alternate-best-supporting-actor-2002_21.html

Mendes:

1. George MacKay - 1917
2. Javier Bardem - Skyfall
3. Paul Newman - Road to Perdition
4. Dean-Charles Chapman - 1917
5. Daniel Craig - Skyfall
6. Tom Hanks - Road To Perdition
7. Jude Law - Road to Perdition
8. Daniel Craig - Road to Perdition
9. Peter Sarsgaard - Jarhead
10. Michael Ward - Empire of Light

Cameron:

1. Sigourney Weaver - Aliens
2. Robert Patrick - Terminator 2
3. Linda Hamilton - Terminator 2
4. Ed Harris - The Abyss
5. Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio - The Abyss
6. Lance Henriksen - Aliens
7. Arnold Schwarzenegger - Terminator 2
8. Michael Biehn - Aliens
9. Paul Reiser - Aliens
10. Bill Paxton - Aliens

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Is Once Upon A Time In The West your favourite film score of all-time because I do recall The Mission being your #1.

Louis Morgan said...

I mean the two sort of trade off for me regardless, and again the best of the best is truly splitting subatomic particles at times.

Luke Higham said...

Anonymous:
1. Johnson
2. Hiller
3. Casares (Les Dames Du Bois De Boulogne)
4. Crawford
5. Tierney

1. Rutherford (Blithe Spirit)
2. Magnani
3. Wyman
4. Lansbury (The Picture Of Dorian Gray)
5. Blyth

Jonathan Williams said...

Louis: What did you think of the trailer for Kinds of Kindness.

Tony Kim said...

Louis: What was your opinion on the "Fab Five" presenter format at this year's and the 81st Oscars? Personally, I liked the idea behind it, but felt clips worked better as representations of the performances' qualities.

Also, what is your preferred format for the acting clips: just one scene, or more of a montage as we saw in the 82nd/95th Oscars?

Marcus said...

Tony: I'll throw my two cents in. My favorite is the acting montage like we got in 2020. The five presenter thing seems a little hypocritical of the same organization that has been trying to axe the broadcast of below-the-line categories, not recognize stunt work, etc. Actors and Best Picture nominees are already the most highlighted and acclaimed at the ceremony, so it's not needed imo to elevate them even further through it.

Louis Morgan said...

Jonathan:

I mean a series of off-beat images, which makes sense...anyway looks much more reality based than Lanthimos often is in overall visual tone which is kind of interesting, but on what it will be exactly, this doesn't really give one much.

Tony:

I hate them, occasionally a serenade works but I find them stiff and awkward. Because it's like having a conversation between two people in a room with hundreds of people and often there's nothing natural within the speeches to kind of make it less odd. I don't love clips either I think they can often be poorly chosen and too out of context. Montages though are amazing for the acting categories and should be the only format. They also are montages that actually make sense for the ceremony, rather than the random montages they like to throw in for whatever reason, which I'm not the biggest fan of. Given how good the montages were for the 2019 performances, I don't know why that didn't become the standard.

Lucas Saavedra said...

Louis: hace you been watching The Regime on HBO? Did You try watching Nathan Fielder's The Rehearsal?

Robert MacFarlane said...

I use my request for Keaton in Beetlejuice, with the caveat that he must be a special review one week before the new one premieres.

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Louis: Could I have your top 10 performances in films directed by Park Chan-wook, and thoughts on these scenes from Oldboy if you haven't given them before:

Rooftop story
Hallway fight
The photo album

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Louis: You can disregard my first question above, found your answer to it in the 2022 Alternate Lead results.

J96 said...

Louis, how do you rank the films and performances therein of the the three amigos Cuarón, Iñárritu and Del Toro?

Mitchell Murray said...

Louis and everyone: Was talking to someone about Christopher Nolan not long ago...got me thinking about scenes in his films I like. So, thoughts on the following sequences?

Falcone's talk with Bruce - Batman Begins
Discussing the fish bowl - The Prestige
Maroni's fall/Harvey interrogating Joker thug - The Dark Knight
Planning the heist - Inception
Do you feel in charge? - The Dark Knight Rises

Matt Mustin said...

Enjoyed the new Ghostbusters quite a bit actually, because it was actually fun and funny and not constantly self-serious like Afterlife. The original stars get much more time to shine this time too, particularly Aykroyd.

Rudd-3.5
Coon-2.5
Wolfhard-2.5
Grace-4
Nanjiani-3
Oswalt-3
O'Connor-2.5
Kim-2
Lind-3.5
Acaster-3
Murray-3
Aykroyd-4
Hudson-3

J96 said...

RIP Louis Gossett Jr.

RatedRStar said...

RIP Louis Gossett Jr.

Luke Higham said...

RIP Louis Gossett Jr.

Razor said...

RIP Louis Gossett Jr.

Maciej said...

RIP Louis Gossett Jr.

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

RIP Louis Gossett Jr.

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

RIP Louis Gossett Jr.

Michael McCarthy said...

RIP Louis Gossett Jr.

Jonathan Williams said...

RIP Louis Gossett Jr.

Louis Morgan said...

Lucas:

No, I didn't watch the Regime, as it sounds like it would be for the performances only, and any time I try to get through a series based on that, I always regret it becomes a horrible slog.

I've seen The Rehearsal.

Robert:

Interesting caveat, but I shall accept.

Tahmeed:

The rooftop story very much is how you see compelling direction as you make exposition into a captivating bit of action by having it this strange kind of threat and attack of two men in very extreme but similar spaces.

Hall-ways fight is just a great sort of showoff direction where Park is very purposefully flexing, but who cares what it is so captivating to watch the whole sequence play out as it does. And you could argue very much extremely influential in terms of how a lot of modern action films try to replicate these sort of set pieces designed to impress, like much of The Raid.

The photo album is genius visual direction, because not only is just compelling in terms of the music use but more so because it completely puts into the mental space of Oh Dae-su as the realization dawns on us just as it dawns on him, and says the horrible truth of it all without saying a word, with the reflection of him being the perfect climax.

J96:

Well starting with Cuaron:

Films:

1. Children of Men
2. Gravity
3. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
4. Y Tu Mama Tambien
5. Roma

Performances:

1. Clive Owen - Children of Men
2. Sandra Bullock - Gravity
3. Michael Caine - Children of Men
4. Yalitza Aparicio - Roma
5. Marina de Tavira - Roma
6. Gael Garcia Bernal - Y Tu Mama Tambien
7. Diego Luna - Y Tu Mama Tambien
8. David Thewlis - Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
9. Chiwetel Ejiofor - Children of Men
10. Peter Mullan - Children of Men

Louis Morgan said...

Mitchell:

Falcone talk is a great scene, and really I imagine why Wilkinson was cast (as I definitely don't peg him as Falcone just in name), but it is his time to shine as a twisted but important philosopher to Bruce to represent that there is so much than Bruce knows out of his constricted perspective, with Wilkinson's delivery of "you always fear but you don't understand" with a genuine wisdom to it, even if he also brandishes his evil with "your father begged", making himself the villain but also showing the real nature of corruption as far beyond just a lone gunman like Joe Chill.

The Fish Bowl scene is interesting because you see Borden and Angier bordering on friends for just a moment as they both admire the performance though in very different ways. Jackman shows Angier is charmed by it, the performance of it, where you see with Borden the great magician on the technical level intensely admiring the commitment of it. And a scene that you don't know is giving it all aways as Borden sees his path of a trick built on lifelong commitment, compared to Angier's face as a man who just doesn't get it.

Maroni's fall is always an interesting scene that gets forgotten about because honestly it is probably Bale Batman's most brutal act, though I do love the setup, with a great moment from Eric Roberts without question in his nonchalant yet oddly respectful manner towards Batman. And I love then on the ground how matter of fact he still with the perfect line of Maroni of "have you met the guy" as even he conveys to Batman, in a more casual way, that he's failing to understand just who the Joker is. The Joker thug scene is a memorable debut from David Dastmalchian, who has gone on to become a "that guy" and kind of almost an alternative Joker in his manner, though effective in foreshadowing Dent's possible descent, or not, but the use of the coin with the threat where we see seemingly where he could got and where he won't go in the moment but will eventually.

A scene that I think has what I wish the film was a little more focused as the whole, which is the sense of fun with the heist particularly the banter between Hardy and Gordon-Levitt, which eases the exposition, though I think the obviousness of the exposition goes beyond slick and not as slick, and jumps back and forth, really depending on how much they use Hardy honestly because he's completely having fun with it. And I guess in a way the scene is my feelings towards the film overall, in that I like it, but there's indicators of elements that would make me love it that aren't exploited more.

Ah the Dark Knight Rises, memorable scenes within a film that is more than a lot messy, but such a memorable scene is that with the classic lesser villain killed by greater villain, but done well with that line and the whole way of Mendelsohn's immediate terror as Bane begins to strong arm him.

Louis Morgan said...

RIP Louis Gossett Jr.

8000S said...

Louis: You know, I often wonder about the percentage of film critics and audiences who saw Peeping Tom when it was released in 1960, and believed that all of its copies should be burned.

Think it was over 90%?

Anonymous said...

Louis: Besides DiCaprio in KOTFM, which performances do you think drag down films that could have been masterpieces otherwise.

Louis Morgan said...

8000's:

Yeah that film's reactions makes the boneheaded reactions to Night of the Hunter and Vertigo look tame by comparison, but truly words after Marty McFly's guitar solo were never truer.

Anonymous:

Foxcatcher
Barry Lyndon (though I cared less about disliking O'Neal in my most recent re-watch)
On Her Majesty's Secret Service
Scanners
Shutter Island
Kingdom of Heaven
The Untouchables
Pigs and Battleships

Note: They wouldn't be all masterpieces but it is the lead performance that holds the film back the most from greater heights.

8000S said...

Louis: Your thoughts on these scenes from Looney Tunes.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17ocaZb-bGg

A said...

Would anyone have Louis’ thoughts on Toshiro Mifune as an actor?

Tony Kim said...

A: He considers Mifune his favourite actor of all time, though I don't know where you would find more detailed thoughts beyond that.

A said...

Tony: Thanks!

Mitchell Murray said...

One other thing about that "Dark Knight Rises" scene...

The movie famously used camera angles and set/costume choices to make the average height Tom Hardy (5'9") closer to Bale (6') and the imposing Bane (>6'8"). Hardy's scene with Mendelsohn is where I'd say that's most convincing, since the shots are mostly close ups, and the two actors are similar in height.

Mitchell Murray said...

Also, another music related quiery for those interested...thoughts on these tracks?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jtfZudaRfJ0&ab_channel=BrandonYates-Topic

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QbTLhc7zIq4&ab_channel=BrandonYates-Topic

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzohNwQ4rgs&ab_channel=BrandonYates-Topic

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

Louis: Assuming they would have kept on getting good parts after 2000, what would be your present film roles for Eric Stoltz, Griffin Dunne and Val Kilmer?

Marcus said...

Louis: For the 2020s so far, how would you rank each acting category in terms of quality of winners.

Tony Kim said...

Mitchell: As you're a metal fan, what do you think of Metallica, Megadeth, Black Sabbath, and Alice Cooper?

Tony Kim said...

Louis: What were your overall thoughts on The Rehearsal? You didn't mention it when I'd asked you about your familiarity with Fielder a while back.

Matt Mustin said...

Tony: Reasonable to assume he hadn't seen it then, yeah?

Mitchell Murray said...

Tony: I mean, those are four pretty known metal bands, and I enjoy music from at least three of them. I'm excluding Megadeth as I'm not overly familiar, but the rest I know rather well. To be specific, I LOVE "Nothing Else Matters" and really like "Enter Sandman" (shout out to that Paul Raci ASL cover I mentioned a while back). "Poison", "Paranoid", "Fuel", "Iron Man" and "For Whom the Bell Tolls" are also good in their own ways.

Louis Morgan said...

8000's:

Although I prefer original Daffy personality wise, a series of good bit, and I personally enjoy how Fudd is always just kind of hanging out letting the situation be decided each time, and the shot consistently causing the beak just to become misplaced is a proper visual gag of course.

Anonymous:

I mean any one good performance in bad films do that like Rickman in Robin Hood and Julia in Street Fighter. There's also great performance that elevate okay, decent, or sometimes good, but in a way where it is such a focal point to its success like Lemmon in Save the Tiger or Olivier in The Entertainer, and of course any one man show films like Hall for Secret Honor. But really any great performance elevates their film to at least some degree.

Ytrewq:

Eric Stoltz:

Ray Ferrier - War of the Worlds (I think a more average guy would've been a better fit for that role...even if it was never going to happen).
Bob Barnes
John DuPont

Tony:

A weird follow-up and really pivot as a show, as the first episode you can clearly see it as setup as a weekly more comedic piece with the setup of doing the rehearsal for others that quickly became a bizarre sort of self-analysis with a lot of Andy Kaufman combined with Charlie Kaufman in terms of where reality and fiction begins and ends and basically Fiedler's own version of Synecdoche New York. And the results I'm not sure what to make of exactly, but captivating as it is in some strange sort of self-resolution of some kind...perhaps or Fiedler was still just playing with us.

Marcus:

1. Lead Actress
2. Supporting Actor
3. Lead Actor
4. Supporting Actress

Although I'd say they're all fairly similar at this point, as no category is truly lagging or exceeding in comparison.

Tony Kim said...

Louis: Thoughts on Nathan for You's Finding Frances?

Matt: It could've been that, or him just simply forgetting to mention it. I was simply noting that it was interesting to see him mentioning the show for the first time.

J96 said...

Louis, how do you rank Inarritu and Del Toro films and performances?

Louis Morgan said...

Tony:

Basically the pilot to the rehearsal, but brilliant in its own measure as Fiedler's most dramatic effort within the reality bending that he plays himself. And part it is a captivating detective story, a moving reflection on regret and the roads not traveled, a fascinating, if also bizarre and funny, character study, that manages to even make its aimless moments seem relevant in creating a most unusual journey with such a simple start.

J96:

Inarritu:

1. Birdman
2. Amores Perros
3. Bardo
4. Babel
5. 21 Grams
6. Biutiful

1. Michael Keaton - Birdman
2. Tom Hardy - The Revenant
3. Emilio Echevarria - Amores Perros
4. Leonardo DiCaprio - The Revenant
5. Adriana Barraza - Babel
6. Daniel Gimenez Cacho - Bardo
7. Edward Norton - Birdman
8. Lindsay Duncan - Birdman
9. Emma Stone - Birdman
10. Naomi Watts - Birdman

Del Toro:

1. Nightmare Alley
2. The Shape of Water
3. Pan's Labyrinth
4. The Devil's Backbone
5. Pinocchio
6. Crimson Peak
7. Hellboy II: The Golden Army
8. Hellboy
9. Pacific Rim

1. Bradley Cooper - Nightmare Alley
2. Sally Hawkins - The Shape of Water
3. David Strathairn - Nightmare Alley
4. Richard Jenkins - The Shape of Water
5. Willem Dafoe - Nightmare Alley
6. Richard Jenkins - Nightmare Alley
7. David Bradley - Pinocchio
8. Rooney Mara - Nightmare Alley
9. Toni Collette - Nightmare Alley
10. Cate Blanchett - Nightmare Alley