What’s going to win best picture? We rank the Oscar field

NEW YORK (AP) β€” The inner-Vatican machinations ofΒ β€œConclave” have nothing on this year’sΒ Oscar race.

Just as Edward Berger’s film juggles various candidates for the papacy, the race for best picture at the Academy Awards has seen one favorite replaced by another, and then another.

While some clarity has lately emerged, with a handful of big wins for Sean Baker’s β€œAnora,” it seems likely to be a nail biter until a winner is declared at the March 2 Oscars, when white smoke unfurls from the Sistine Chapel, I mean the Dolby Theatre.

As of now, β€œAnora” is the clear frontrunner thanks toΒ wins with the Producers Guild and the Directors GuildΒ β€” both prizes with a long history of predicting Oscar winners. Where theΒ Screen Actors GuildΒ and theΒ BAFTAsΒ fall will offer the last major clues.

But unlike years like last year, whenΒ β€œOppenheimer” was way ahead wire to wire, no lead in this year’s best picture race seems ironclad. So, with that in mind, here are the best picture nominees, ranked in order of least likely to win to most likely to win. It’s telling that at least half of these films, with three weeks to go, still have a chance.

10. β€œNickel Boys”

If this was a ranking of merit,Β RaMell Ross’ movieΒ would be first. Ross’ film, thrillingly and thoughtfully shot largely in first person, introduced a new filmic grammar to American movies. But β€œNickel Boys” was seemingly on the cusp of getting a nomination, so we should just be glad it’s counted here among the best of the year.

9. β€œDune: Part Two”

Denis Villeneuve’s first Frank Herbert adaptation garnered 10 nominations and won six.Β β€œPart Two” hasn’t been the same awards force. It’s up for five nominations and will probably walk home with one or two Oscars, possibly for visual effects and sound. People like β€œDune: Part Two” but sequels tend to have a harder go of it at the Academy Awards. Blame it on the sandworms.

8. β€œI’m Still Here”

Arguably no film has risen up the Oscar ranks more thanΒ Walter Salles’ portrait of political resistanceΒ under Brazil’s military dictatorship. The film,Β a box-office sensation in its native country, was once one of the many international underdogs vying for a place at the Academy Awards. It won’t win best picture, but it’s a testament to the film’s appeal that it could upset β€œEmilia PΓ©rez” in best international film.

7. β€œThe Substance”

Coralie Fargeat’s body-horror filmΒ has turned out to be much more of an Oscar contender than initially believed β€” certainly by Universal, which financed the film but sold it to Mubi to distribute. It’s up for five awards but its best chance comes in the best actress category whereΒ Demi MooreΒ is the favorite. Mikey Madison (β€œAnora”) and Fernanda Torres (β€œI’m Still Here”) could make that a close call, too, but Moore β€” propelled by her β€œpopcorn actress” narrative and the movie’s biting showbiz satire β€” is the frontrunner.

6. β€œEmilia PΓ©rez”

How far can a former frontrunner fall? Jacques Audiard’s narco-musical leads all films with 13 nominations but the Netflix movie has been in freefall since its star, Karla SofΓ­a GascΓ³n, becameΒ ensnarled by a scandal over old tweets. I’m not completely counting β€œEmilia PΓ©rez” out – you don’t get 13 nominations for nothing. But β€œEmilia PΓ©rez,” a divisive movie to begin with, is now in the business of salvaging its chances in other categories, like best supporting actress, whereΒ Zoe SaldaΓ±aΒ could win.

5. β€œWicked”

Now we’re into the top contenders. Most likely, the winner is coming from one of these next five.Β Jon M. Chu’s Broadway adaptationΒ might have the most moviegoers rooting for it to win, but it’s missing some key ingredients for pulling out best picture. Chu missed on a nomination for best director and the β€œWicked” has mostly been out-musical-ed by β€œEmilia PΓ©rez” on the awards circuit. Still, β€œWicked” has cornered the market on the role of Big Studio Movie contender. However it does, the film academy is going to make sure β€œWicked” is front and center during the ceremony.

4. β€œConclave”

Here we have our Everyone Likes It contender. Berger’s papal thriller, starring Ralph Fiennes as a cardinal tasked with leading a conclave, feels like the most universally respected nominee. In a year where votes are spread across a lot of films, that might be a quality that β€” particularly considering the academy’s preferential ballot β€” leaves β€œConclave” driving the Oscar home in a popemobile. What’s the main knock against this happening, aside from the potential difficulty of renting a popemobile? Berger was passed over on a directing nomination, and β€œConclave” hasn’t yet won a major award. More than any other movie, it needs a victory at the BAFTAs.

3. β€œA Complete Unknown”

James Mangold’sΒ Bob Dylan movieΒ is also widely liked and lacks any precursor win. But admiration for β€œA Complete Unknown” is widespread and it could, just as β€œConclave” might, pull out an upset by rising high on a plethora of ballots. Unlike β€œConclave,” Mangold was nominated for best director, though, and it has the benefit of being led by Hollywood’s biggest young star,Β TimothΓ©e Chalamet. Hollywood likes to, in picking a best picture winner, say something about its future. Chalamet’s star power could be convincing enough. Plus Searchlight Pictures has previously steered quite a few best-picture winners (“Nomadland,” β€œThe Shape of Water”). Mangold’s movie has momentum, which, even if it doesn’t lead to best picture, may propel Chalamet to best actor over Adrien Brody for β€œThe Brutalist.”

2. β€œThe Brutalist”

Until recently,Β Brady Corbet’s postwar epicΒ might have been the top pick. β€œThe Brutalist” has been an award-winner at Venice and theΒ Golden Globes. It’s up for 10 Oscars. It’s roundly been hailed as visionary, hugely ambitious cinema β€” all made, remarkably, with a budget under $10 million. It’s also three and a half hours long. Not every Oscar voter, I assure you, is watching it all the way through. That, though, might not be a bad thing for a movie that falls off in the second half.

1. β€œAnora”

Half a year ago, β€œAnora” was the odds-on pick to win best picture and now, after a topsy-turvy awards season, it is again. A trio of wins β€” at the PGA Awards, the DGA Awards and Critics Choice β€” has reestablished β€œAnora” as the movie to beat.

If it wins at the SAG Awards, too, the race is probably over. Not everything with similar credentials has won before, though; β€œ1917” had the same wins before beingΒ defeated by β€œParasite” five years ago. β€œAnora,” however, alsoΒ won the Palme d’OrΒ at Cannes, like β€œParasite” did, so it should do well among international voters β€” a crucial voting bloc in today’s academy.

It’s also just really good. β€œAnora” comes from a widely respected filmmaker in Baker, a prominent defender of the theatrical release. And his movie, a sly and devastating twist on a β€œPretty Woman”-like fable, is as connected to Hollywood’s celebrated ’70s as it is to its indie filmmaking present.