Predicting Best Picture at the 2025 Academy Awards

December 15th, 2024

In addition to the Golden Globe nominations, we also saw a slew of critics’ associations from various metropolitan areas announced their awards this week. The first of the professional guilds also announced their nominations this week, in the American Cinema Editors (ACE) and Costume Designers Guild (CDG).

The most notable change is that of Emilia Pérez leaping into second place. It led the Golden Globe nominations at ten (although this is helped out by it being a musical and thus the score and two songs were nominated). Importantly, the model looks at characteristics in tandem with one another. Being in contention at TIFF was not enough on its own to help Emilia Pérez out on its own; although it has developed a reputation for showing Oscar-winning films, many in contention are not. However, pair this with various other nominations for best-of-the-year it received this week, and the model now realizes it is a true Oscar contender that was also shown at TIFF.

I still agree with the trade publications arguing this season is “unpredictable,” but we’ll continue to have a better idea as the season progresses.

December 8th, 2024

In the last week, we saw a number of critics’ organizations start to release their best-of-the-year lists and awards. The most predictive of Best Picture is winning Best Film from the New York Film Critics Circle—and this is precisely why The Brutalist is now the frontrunner. Although some other films—like Anora—had some success with winning some of these organizations’ awards, winning can actually be a negative indicator of Best Picture success. The model learns from previous patterns, and previous patters show that winning the top honor from certain critics’ groups (such as Boston, Los Angeles, or Seattle) tend to show what well-esteemed films the Academy will not reward.

It is still a pretty uncertain race, with Vanity Fair recapping this week by calling the season “gloriously messy”, but the one award that mattered the most by far this week was NYFCC, leading to more confidence in The Brutalist. We will see if others agree, especially as we go beyond critics and start seeing what professional guilds—many of whom may also vote for the Oscars themselves—say in the coming weeks.

December 1st, 2024

With polling the election in my rearview, I am pivoting to: awards season! I am running back my Best Picture model that I began working on last year. I will update this page with a new entry every Sunday through the morning of the Oscars to display and discuss how the race has developed.

Although I added a few more variables, the details of the model are more or less the same (see the original post for details). The only additional technical details to note this year are:

  • When I discuss if an aspect of the movie is helping or hurting its chances, I am relying on SHAP values.

  • The model is only trained on Best Picture nominees, which we do not know yet. To start the model, I examined six reputable publications to get a pool of 20 potential nominees. Until the nominations are announced on January 17th, the model is assuming all 20 have been nominated. That means we’ll see some big changes in the model after that given a smaller field.

The only award information we have currently are the Gotham Awards nominees, which are for independent films only. The rest of the information we could call, in political terms, a “fundamentals-only” model. The predictions right now are based on festivals, aggregated review scores, runtime, genre, studio, MPAA rating, information about the director, etc.

Why is Wicked in the lead right now? It fits a few characteristics that help a film:

  • It falls in the sweet spot of runtime at 160 minutes. Broadly speaking: a runtime of under 100 minutes hurts a film’s chances; between 100 and 150 minutes doesn’t impact the chances much; and a runtime of 150 minutes or longer helps a film.

  • The director has never directed any movies that have been nominated for Best Picture before.

  • It has the genres of musical and romance.

  • It’s distributed by a major studio.

The Brutalist has many of the same things going for it, except it is hurt by not being listed under the genre of romance. It benefits from a major studio distributing it with a wide release after the New Year—Oscar bait time.

My personal favorite, Anora, is unique in these top three because it was in competition at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), which helps the film. Notably, winning at Cannes does not help it at all, which makes sense: Only The Lost Weekend (1945), Marty (1955), and Parasite (2019) have won the top prizes at both Cannes and the Academy Awards. 

Funnily enough, a Metacritic score of 91 for Anora hurts its chances of winning. Why? The aforementioned SHAP values show that a score from about 60-73 helps a movie a little bit. In the 74-92 range, it actually hurts the film’s chances slightly. As it approaches 100, however, its chances of winning are boosted. This would appear to give movie snobs the ammunition to say that the Academy usually makes the wrong choice—unless a film is receiving all-time good reviews (e.g., Moonlight, 12 Years a Slave, Parasite, The Hurt Locker).

One last film to mention, second-to-last, is September 5. As of the November 14 update of The Hollywood Reporter’s Feinberg Forecast, he believes it is the favorite. Why the massive difference between my model and his forecast (which is based on “screening films, consulting with voters, analyzing campaigns and studying the results of past seasons”)? Runtime. The database I’m getting runtimes from says it is only 91 minutes. The shortest film to have won the Best Picture is Marty (1955) at 90 minutes. Rounding out movies less than 100 minutes are Annie Hall (1977, 93 minutes) and Driving Miss Daisy (1989, 99 minutes). Two of these are romance, which September 5 is not and which hurts its chances. September 5 is categorized under history, which coupled with the short runtime also hurts its chances. I haven’t seen it (I am just a data scientist in the Midwest, I haven’t been able to), but it would appear to be a longshot, despite Feinberg’s rating. Nonetheless, it looks good (Past Lives and First Cow have made me a John Magaro fan, who is second-billed in the film).

In the next few weeks, we’ll have critics associations releasing their awards, some important nominations, and more information about A Complete Unknown when its review embargo lifts. I’ll see you back here next week for an update to the race.