Here you go:
Best Picture: On the day the Oscar nominations were announced, I made some quick  guesses and toyed with the possibility that “True Grit” might sneak in.  I've changed my mind and now agree with the conventional wisdom that  “The King's Speech” will be the year's best picture winner. Still, “True  Grit” or “The Social Network” could pull off an upset.
Actor in a leading role: Colin Firth for “The King's Speech.” Jeff Bridges is unlikely to win a second year in a row, and although James Franco  did a heroic job under his (shall we say) constraints in “127 Hours,”  Hollywood loves British history and often gives extra points to U.K.  nominees.
Actress in a leading role: In the way that such matters are decided by currents wafting in the air, Natalie Portman  has emerged as the consensus choice. She is very good in “Black Swan.”  That's beside the point. Everyone is good in this category. But she gets  to “act” the most, which to the academy, often means “act out in  emotional displays.” She was required to do that by the logic of the  role, which had Oscar written all over it.
Actor in a supporting role: Geoffrey Rush. Because it could be a “King's Speech” year. Christian Bale  seems to have a good chance, but when a movie gets anointed, its aura  shines on its other nominees, as if voters are thinking, “Well, if I  voted for ‘The King's Speech,' doesn't that mean I keep voting for it?”
Actress in a supporting role: That tendency won't carry over to this category, however, because while Helena Bonham Carter  as the king's wife was splendid, as she almost always is, the role  wasn't showy. The academy has a way in this category of anointing a  plucky young newcomer, and the winner will be Hailee Steinfeld, who in  fact played the lead in “True Grit,” no matter what the academy thinks. Melissa Leo and Amy Adams will split support for “The Fighter.”
Directing:  Well, here I'm more or less forced to choose Tom Hooper of “The King's  Speech” because he won the Directors Guild Award, and you know the  mantra: The DGA winner wins the best director Oscar 90 percent of the  time. Contrarian speculation would be risky.
Writing (original screenplay):  Again, “The King's Speech,” by David Seidler. When a film becomes the  chosen one, its glories trickle down, and I expect this to be a royal  year. If I'm wrong, I'm very wrong. (The best screenplay, in terms of  sheer writing, was Mike Leigh's “Another Year,” which could easily be adapted more or less whole for the stage.)
Writing (adapted screenplay):  Here “The Social Network” will win its one major Oscar, although  deserving more. “Adaptation” often means “loosely inspired by,” and  Aaron Sorkin's brilliant dialogue and construction were wholly original  (as were apparently many of his facts). You have to ask yourself what,  precisely, the nominated “Toy Story 3” was adapting, apart from the  continuing plight of the toys.
Foreign language film: Here  we have an interesting situation, because the voters in this category  have to see all the nominees. That leads to victories by dark horses,  like the wonderful Japanese corpse-preparation movie “Departures” a few  years ago. This year, I've seen three of the five, but friends who have  seen the Quebec film “Incendies” at festivals say it's great. If they're  right, it's “Incendies.”
Animated feature film: “Toy Story 3,” don't you suppose?
Documentary feature:  What should win: “Restrepo,” a year in the life of an outpost in  Afghanistan. What will win: “Inside Job,” about how Wall Street is run  by crooks getting rich on our money.
Cinematography: Roger Deakins has been nominated nine times. This is the year he will win, for the magnificent look and feel of “True Grit.”
Film editing:  “The Social Network” was all but brought to life through the skills of  Angus Wall and Kirk Baxter, who took a complex group of interlocking  plots, events and times, assembled them at breakneck speed and made the  sucker play.
Art direction: Sometimes the art direction of a film just reaches out and rubs you by the chinny-chin-chin. Tim Burton  is famous for the look of his films, and the work by Robert Stromberg  and Karen O'Hara was magical in his “Alice in Wonderland.”
Costume design: Any good “Alice” starts with the costumes. Colleen Atwood dressed “Wonderland.”
Makeup:  Academy voters do not, I suspect, spend a lot of time thinking about  this category, and often simply vote for the most makeup. That would  indicate Rick Baker and Dave Elsey for “The Wolfman.” But I have an  instinct not many of them saw it, and here I predict Adrien Morot, for  the way he aged Paul Giamatti in “Barney's Version.” Warning: Baker has a good track record.
Music (original score):  The most effective score in foreground terms was by Trent Reznor and  Atticus Ross for “The Social Network.” But I believe a “King's Speech”  year will also sweep up this Oscar, for Alexandre Desplat.
Music (original song):  I would vote for “Coming Home,” from “Country Strong.” But in recent  years this category has tended to be dominated by animation, and Randy  Newman will take home the Oscar for “We Belong Together,” the heartfelt  dirge of forgotten playthings in Disney/Pixar's “Toy Story 3.”
Visual effects:  Continuing to apply my theory that in the “lesser” categories the  winners tend to be the most visible in the most-seen films, I think this  is where the sensational film “Inception” wins. It rolled up an entire  city.
Sound editing: “Inception,” for its skill in  negotiating dreamscapes and levels of reality. Not nominated was “The  Social Network,” which juggled all those rapid-fire conversations.
Sound mixing:  Also known as “Sound Design,” this is the category that creates the  space that our ears sense around characters. I expect the winner to be  “The Social Network,” which created intricate conversations in  challenging locations like a Silicon Valley club.
Documentary short subject:  “Killing in the Name,” a documentary about a Muslim who visits and  questions the sources of the terrorist ideology that compelled a suicide  bomber to kill 27 people at his wedding.
Short film (animated):  Teddy Newton's “Day and Night” played before “Toy Story,” was original  and inventive in the battle suggested by its title, and will win.
Short film (live action): I haven't seen these, but I've looked at their trailers and on that basis I expect “Na Wewe” to win.                                              
-Joey's Two Cents: He and I don't agree on a number of the categories, but he's always an interesting prognosticator to follow...thoughts?
He usually hits one of his long shots, so keep an eye on those...
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