Oscar Snubs and Surprises: Breaking Down the 2012 Oscar Nominations

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The Huffington Post   First Posted: 01/24/2012 10:40 am Updated: 02/22/2012 8:39 am

So, how about those Oscar nominations? Crazy, right?! Despite what seemed like the most predictable year in the 84-year history of the Academy Awards, Tuesday morning's noms provided many legitimate shocks. (Albert Brooks, out!) Ahead, the 21 biggest snubs and surprises from the 84th annual Oscar nominations.

PHOTOS:

  • SNUBBED: "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2" for Best Picture

    "Lord of the Rings," this was not. Despite being well-reviewed, beloved and a bonafide box-office hit, "Harry Potter" was relegated to the blockbuster ghetto of below-the-line nods. The final Potter installment earned just three nominations, including Best Visual Effects. Accio, disappointing!

  • SNUBBED: Albert Brooks for Best Supporting Actor

    <a href="http://blog.moviefone.com/2011/12/14/sag-award-nomination-snubs-surprises-2012/" target="_hplink">Maybe the Screen Actors Guild nominations should have been taken a little more seriously</a>. Though many believed Albert Brooks was the only other viable contender to <em>win</em> Best Supporting Actor besides Christopher Plummer (the favorite for "Beginners"), he was left standing at the altar on Tuesday morning with no nomination. Blasphemy! Whether that's because Film District didn't have any money to spend on a "Drive" campaign is certainly up for debate, but the Brooks snub is one of the most curious in recent memory.

  • SNUBBED: David Fincher for Best Director

    "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" did very well during the Oscar nominations, scoring nods for Best Actress (Rooney Mara), Best Cinematography and Best Editing. What it didn't grab? A Best Director nomination for David Fincher, in spite of Fincher's nomination from the Directors Guild of America. In the end, Fincher was probably squeezed out by Terrence Malick, a surprise entry into this category for "The Tree of Life." Sorry, Finch! Maybe if you were more of a recluse.

  • SURPRISE: "Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close" for Best Picture

    Where did this come from? Oh, right: Stephen Daldry and Scott Rudin, two Oscar titans, adapting a movie about 9/11. With a mere 48 percent Fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, "Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close" is not only the worst reviewed movie among the 2011 Best Picture nominees, but also the worst reviewed movie <em>in recent history</em> to earn a coveted BP nod. <a href="https://twitter.com/#!/AwardsDaily/status/161840475538595840" target="_hplink">Only "The Blide Side" and "The Reader" were more poorly reviewed</a>. Congrats?

  • SNUBBED: Steven Spielberg for Best Director

    Not that Steven Spielberg had any right to expect a Best Director nomination on Tuesday morning -- after all, he was similarly left out by the Directors Guild of America in the same category -- but with "War Horse" earning Best Picture nod, it was somewhat surprising to see the two-time Best Director winner left home. Insult to injury: "The Adventures of Tintin," which won Best Animated Feature at the Golden Globes and the Producers Guild of America award ceremonies, was left off the Best Animated Feature list at the Oscars. Hopefully, the Academy will favor Spielberg next year, with the release of "Lincoln."

  • SNUBBED: Ryan Gosling for Best Actor

    It's unfortunate to top off the Year of Gosling (i.e., 2011), the Academy Awards decided against nominating The Gos himself. Arguably the best actor of his generation (and a nominee once before for "Half Nelson"), Gosling turned in two strong Oscar-worthy performances in 2011: "Drive" and "The Ides of March." Unfortunately, "Ides" never caught steam as an Oscar contender, and "Drive" was apparently not the Academy's cup of tea. It's not all bad for Gosling, however: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DSVDcw6iW8" target="_hplink">dude's a real hero</a>, after all.

  • SNUBBED: "Bridesmaids" for Best Picture

    With nine nominees for Best Picture, it seems a little far-fetched to think "Bridesmaids" didn't make the cut. Alas! The people's choice for Best Picture did earn nominations for Melissa McCarthy and Best Original Screenplay, so it's not like it was totally shut down. Still would have liked to see Kristen Wiig get some love as Best Actress, though. PHOTO: Universal

  • SNUBBED: Michael Fassbender for Best Actor

    Can you even believe this one? Michael Fassbender, who gives one of the best performances of any year in the indie sex-addiction drama "Shame," was left off the list for Best Actor. In his place, either upstart Demian Bichir or veteran Gary Oldman, two well-respected journeymen who saw their Oscar profile rise during the last two months, while Fassbender's festival heat faded. Here's guessing he was the sixth nominee for Best Actor, which is -- wait for it -- a real shame. (GROAN, but come on.)

  • SNUBBED: Leonardo DiCaprio for Best Actor

    One of the only pleasures of sitting through the laborious "J. Edgar"? The idea that you were at least seeing one of the five nominees for Best Actor ply his craft. About that: Leonardo DiCaprio was left off the final list for leading male, despite -- or perhaps because of -- the pounds of make-up and jowls he displayed as former FBI director J. Edgar Hoover in Clint Eastwood's misfire. Acting! Sometimes it doesn't work.

  • SURPRISE: Rooney Mara for Best Actress

    Many times, the best performances of the year aren't rewarded by the Academy Awards (cough, Albert Brooks). This time, at least one was: Rooney Mara in "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" gives one of those searing and memorable performances that cause Internet writers to use words like "searing" and "memorable." It really is the best female work of 2011, and while she won't win, the nomination itself is more than enough.

  • SNUBBED: Tilda Swinton for Best Actress

    Everyone's favorite eccentric actress didn't make the cut at the Academy Awards for her performance in "We Need to Talk About Kevin" as a conflicted mother dealing with her awful son. Perhaps it was a matter of getting the indie film seen by enough voter eyeballs that kept Swinton out; or maybe it was the overwhelming Academy love for Glenn Close, who earned her sixth Oscar nomination for the middling "Albert Nobbs."

  • SNUBBED: Tate Taylor for Best Director

    Fun fact: Best Picture-nominated movies, with three Oscar-nominated stars, direct themselves! At least that's the takeaway from the snub of Tate Taylor who missed out on a Best Director nomination for "The Help." Not that Taylor belongs in the same class as Woody Allen, Alexander Payne, Martin Scorsese, Terrence Malick and Michel Hazanavicius, but let's give the guy some credit!

  • SURPRISE: "A Separation" for Best Original Screenplay

    The outstanding reviews for "A Separation" -- plus its Golden Globe win -- assured the Iranian import a slot in the Best Foreign Language Film category. Where it was a surprise nominee, however, was for Best Original Screenplay. Huzzahs to Asghar Farhadi, the writer/director of the foreign language film all your cool friends will see in the next month. PHOTO: Sony Classics

  • SNUBBED: "The Adventures of Tintin" for Best Animated Feature

    The Steven Spielberg-directed animated feature was good enough to win the Best Animated Feature award from the Producers Guild of America last weekend ... but not good enough to earn a Best Animated Feature <em>nomination</em> from the Oscars. Great snakes, indeed. PHOTO: Paramount

  • SNUBBED: "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" for Best Picture

    Late in 2011, snubbed director David Fincher joked that "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" had too much rape to earn an Oscar nomination. Guess he was right. Despite the fact that nine (nine!) movies earned Best Picture nominations on Tuesday morning, "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" was left out. Somewhere, Scott Rudin -- who produced both "Tattoo" and the movie that might have bumped it off, "Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close" -- both frowned and smiled, simultaneously. PHOTO: Sony

  • SNUBBED: "Drive" for Best Picture

    Needed more eyeball stabbing.

  • SNUBBED: Elizabeth Olsen for Best Actress

    Proof that any Oscar buzz you read about this week from the Sundance Film Festival should be laughed off. Elizabeth Olsen, the 2011 It-Girl from Sundance, missed the Best Actress shortlist despite earning plaudits for her work in "Martha Marcy May Marlene."

  • SNUBBED: Sandra Bullock for Best Supporting Actress

    Don't gasp! Sandra Bullock, a winner as Best Actress for "The Blind Side," gives the best performance in "Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close," a movie that clearly resonated with Oscar voters thanks to its shocking Best Picture nomination. Are we to believe that Oscar voters watched "Extremely Loud" and didn't walk away totally floored by Bullock? Apparently.

  • SNUBBED: Shailene Woodley for Best Supporting Actress

    To be fair, Woodley wasn't <em>that</em> great in "The Descendants," but she was on the pundits's lists of choices for basically three months. What happened? Well, the rise of Jessica Chastain for "The Help," plus Melissa McCarthy and Janet McTeer having strong backing as well.

  • SURPRISE: Demian Bichir for Best Actor

    Who? The veteran Mexican actor -- who you might remember as Fidel Castro in "Che" or from "Weeds" -- earned a surprise SAG nomination for Best Actor for "A Better Life" and carried that momentum through to Tuesday morning. A great underdog story and one of only three minority actors nominated by the Academy.

  • SURPRISE: Gary Oldman for Best Actor

    Gary Oldman had never been nominated for an Academy Award. That crime has finally been rectified after his work in "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy." Is anyone upset about this one?

FOLLOW MOVIEFONE

So, how about those Oscar nominations? Crazy, right?! Despite what seemed like the most predictable year in the 84-year history of the Academy Awards, Tuesday morning's noms provided many legitimate s...
So, how about those Oscar nominations? Crazy, right?! Despite what seemed like the most predictable year in the 84-year history of the Academy Awards, Tuesday morning's noms provided many legitimate s...
 
 
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11:28 AM on 02/18/2012
Drive and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo were undoubtedly amongst the best of the year, and they pick Extremely Loud and Incredibly close, Incredible !!!.
Top 5 Oscar Snubs of 2012
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tc71087
07:59 PM on 01/26/2012
If anyone paid attention to the Oscar ceremony a couple of years ago when they spelled out how the voting process works, there would not be so much whining. That being said- Viola Davis for Best Actress!
10:01 PM on 01/26/2012
Oh, I'd love to see her win. Her performance was very poignant! LOVED The Help.
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fredisfred
04:39 PM on 01/26/2012
Oscars = biggest waste of time.

I could care less what the Academy thinks. I don't need anyone telling me what movie or actor is the best.
02:12 PM on 01/26/2012
An Academy Award nomination for shitting in the sink is not funny, I dont care what she did in the rest of the film but think Hollywood has lost its mind. Anerican Beauty was bad enough and now this? Was Midnight in Paris ineligble? I dont follow the films much anymore because they quite frankly have deteriorated to a moronic level to rake in money on embarassing garbage. I have the option of watching the classic, classy filmaking of the past. Enjoy a new movie occasionallty but who is going to the theater and pay big money for "rotten tomatoes". Hollywood is loosing money and I suspect movie theaters will face extinction if they think the public wants to pay money for films that insult our intelligence. "Thats Entertainment ! 2 3 from a I cant believe that was considered art or entertainment. I am just getting too old and am not snart enough to appreciate most of the stuff audiences pay big bucks for these days.
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kvolovesart
03:00 PM on 01/26/2012
i am with you 100%...the Harry Potter films are so good and never get nominated...it is a joke...I watch a lot of old movies these days too :)
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ohslimgoody
Nothing new under the sun.
12:13 PM on 01/26/2012
Does anyone even watch this crap any more?
10:21 PM on 01/25/2012
I have to disagree here. I believe that, not only was Shailene Woodley's performance the highlight of the film "The Descendants", it was one of the higlight performances of the year. Yes, she was snubbed, but her performance ranked far better that "not that great".
09:56 PM on 01/25/2012
Movies are my favorite thing & I've been watching them for almost 55 yrs. I am so tired of Leonardo DiCaprio not getting his just recognition. I love George Clooney just like most do but his Descendants was not a stretch for him (maybe Ides was) but Leonardo was J Edgar Hoover. Plus it was an enlightening movie...putting out theories & facts that I was unaware of such as JE developing the fingerprint system, etc. I also am sick of the movies all clamoring to be released at the year end. I admire Woody...Midnight In Paris came out early & it was good so it got recognition. Some of the movies (Iron Lady) haven't even been released in my town. I will never watch the Academy Awards again. It is a sham! Poo-Poo to the Academy!
08:07 PM on 01/26/2012
Completely agree with you on Leo. I actually haven't seen J. Edgar yet, but I have no doubt it will blow me away. He's very talented; he was phenomenal in
08:17 PM on 01/26/2012
(Posted by accident somehow). Leo was phenomenal in The Aviator, The Departed, Shutter Island, and Blood Diamond. He doesn't get the recognition he deserves; his Oscar is overdue.
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03:33 PM on 01/25/2012
much as i loveeeee Harry Potter, that last movie was a hot mess. it would be an insult to the industry to try to suggest it as "best film" worthy simply because it made a lot of money. i will likely watch that series a hundred more times before i die, because i am that much of a fan of the franchise, but that last film does not deserve a nomination for anything other than technical stuff like effects.
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ZoeyMO
02:05 PM on 01/25/2012
Shailene Woodley WAS snubbed. She was great. It's not easy portraying the emotional life of a wounded teenager and she did it beautifully -- making her believable and sympathetic, while still making you want to smack her.
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12:37 PM on 01/25/2012
Pretty solid list, not all of the snubs was surprisingly snubbed, though.

But Max von Sydow gave the best performance of Extremely Loud, not Sandra Bullock.
11:26 AM on 01/25/2012
The Film Informant had their 2011 TFI Awards, and oddly enough, most of the nominees are the same ones that won for best trailer and best poster... coincidence? I think not... Marketing Wins again...
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Allen Bouchard
I worship His Divine Shadow.
10:10 AM on 01/25/2012
"Stephen Daldry and Scott Rudin, two Oscar titans, adapting a movie about 9/11."

And it stars Tom Hanks, whose mediocre acting is often given a free pass.
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12:37 PM on 01/25/2012
"Tom Hanks...mediocre acting." Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
11:41 PM on 01/24/2012
I think Pulp Fiction was more deserving in '94, although I liked Shawshank to Don't agree with you at all about Green Mile, American Beauty deserved best pic.
http://acaiultraleansite.com
11:27 PM on 01/24/2012
Poor Harry Potter, I loved the books but each movie that came out just seemed to get worse and worse.
socialtalker
this micro-bio is a great idea!
04:44 AM on 01/26/2012
my fave harry potter movie was the second one. i think because the size of the book was perfect for a 2 hour movie, they didnt have to butcher it down so much. you are quite right, they had to cut out sooo much i just didnt get the feeling of the books anymore. i would watch the movie once, dont really want to see them again.
11:25 PM on 01/24/2012
Michael freakin FASSBENDER was one of the BIGGEST SNUBBS in A.A history...I mean are you serious by not nominating him?? SHAME on the Academy. He had probably the best performances of this yr. Although I must say I am excited to see Gary Oldman with a nod as well as Jean Dujardin, but Jesus F. Christ!!!