Okay, I guess the title of "One Category at a Time" is a bit of a misnomer for this post. But I can't pretend to be knowledgeable enough about these categories to give each of them a separate entry. The fact is, there really isn't any consistent logic that can help you predict these categories. There's no telling how the voting membership that shows up to the screenings will lean.
What I've found is that if I try to second-guess how they will vote instead of following my hunches, I almost always get it wrong. Last year, for instance, I tried to justify my guess that Wallace & Grommit: A Matter of Loaf and Death would win by citing all sorts of statistics and history, but my instinct kept telling me there's no way it could beat something as clever and original as Logorama. Should have listened to my gut, as indeed, the latter ended up taking the Oscar.
So from now on I'm just gonna go with my first impressions. They're more reliable than we give them credit for.
Best Animated Short
Not a particularly strong line-up. The Gruffalo has some cute moments but is stretched out far longer than need be. Let's Pollute is a one-note satire whose central gag gets old fast, despite being a mere six minutes long. The Lost Thing is visually imaginative, but is a tad slow and ultimately didn't feel like it was about anything to me. The two better shorts are Day & Night, a humourous and creative Pixar cartoon that anyone who saw Toy Story 3 has already seen, and Madagascar, A Journey Diary, which could (nay, should) win by virtue of its astonishing multidisciplinary animation.
Will win: Madagascar, A Journey Diary
Runner-up: The Lost Thing
Should win: Madagascar, A Journey Diary
Best Documentary Short
There's some very inspired work in this field. Sun Come Up shows how even the smallest and most removed of communities are affected by global problems - in this case, climate change. The Warriors of Quigang, also a very environmentally conscious film, communicates the power that a small community united can yield. Strangers No More would make a good companion piece to this year's Waiting for Superman for its heartstring-tugging examination of troubled students from different nations attending the same school. Poster Girl paints a devastating portrait of the underexposed evils of war, namely the psychological damage it inflicts on those who do the fighting. And Killing in the Name tells a powerful story of one who suffered tragedy at the hands of senseless terrorism, and turned it into motivation to affect change.
Will win: Poster Girl
Runner-up: Strangers No More
Should win: Poster Girl
Best Live-Action Short
Pretty good slate of nominees. I had some problems with the endings of The Confession and The Crush, both of which centre on child characters at first with cuteness, but eventually with dark outcomes. That said, they're both well directed and acted, particularly by the child actors. More to my liking was Wish 143, which found a way to make the depressing subject matter of a terminally ill teenager into a charmingly funny and touching quasi-buddy picture. But the two favourites, to my mind, are the engrossing and nerve-wracking Na Wewe (Hutu rebels try to separate Tustsis from a van of civilians), and the hilarious God of Love (loveable loser granted magic love darts). You couldn't have two more different films duking it out for the win.
Will win: Na Wewe
Runner-up: God of Love
Should win: God of Love