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Oscar Voters Wrestle With Best Actor Choice
Filed at 9:03 a.m. ET
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - After 15 years in the movie wilderness, Mickey
Rourke could crown his comeback with a coveted best actor Oscar on
Sunday.
But the star of "The Wrestler" will first have to knock out Sean
Penn, seen as Rourke's main rival for Academy Award glory thanks to his
performance as slain San Francisco gay rights activist Harvey
Milk in the movie "Milk."
"It's a real heavyweight bout between the wrestler and the gay rights
slugger. It's been a back-and-forth slugfest," said Tom O'Neil, columnist for
awards website www.TheEnvelope.com.
Frank
Langella, nominated for playing disgraced U.S. President Richard
Nixon in "Frost/Nixon," is seen having an outside chance.
The two other nominees are Brad
Pitt for "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" and Richard Jenkins for the
little-seen movie "The Visitor." Both are considered long shots.
Rourke, 56, and Penn, 48, split the early movie awards with Rourke taking a
Golden Globe and BAFTA and Penn winning the Screen
Actors Guild trophy and a slew of critics prizes.
Movie pundits say Penn may have the edge because he is respected -- if not
loved -- in the industry. He already won one best actor Oscar for playing a
grieving father in the 2003 movie "Mystic River."
"Milk" also has a best picture and best director Oscar nomination, reflecting
widespread support among Academy Award voters for the movie at a time when the
battle over same-sex
marriage is a hot topic in California.
But Rourke is far from down and out.
"This may be a case where Academy voters love the story of a comeback," said
Pete Hammond, movie critic with Hollywood.com. "This movie has been sold as the resurrection of
Mickey Rourke and I think that has taken hold."
Rourke's performance as a washed-up professional athlete trying to make a
comeback closely mirrors his own career. A talented young actor of small 1980s
gems like "Diner" and the steamy blockbuster "9 1/2 Weeks," he later acquired
such a volatile reputation on set that acting jobs dried up.
Yet, in this awards season, Rourke has seemed contrite for his past behavior
and his widely hailed performance has helped him regain some of his former
glory.
OSCAR'S BAD BOY?
Still, Rourke, who took up boxing in the 1990s, has not quite shaken off his
bad boy ways.
His recent award acceptance speeches have been littered with curse words, he
raised eyebrows by thanking his dogs for his Golden Globe, smoked on the BAFTA
red carpet in London and slugged champagne from the bottle backstage.
Whether that has helped or hurt his chances of a first Oscar will not be
clear until the awards are announced on February 22.
"He's got this attitude 'I blew it, I went off and boxed and took my dogs and
sat in the corner,'" Hammond said. "It is disarming. It's different. It's
fun."
Maybe it is too different for Academy voters.
Movie scholar and documentary maker Richard
Schickel said his favorite performance was by Langella in "Frost/Nixon."
Some Oscar watchers have tipped him as a surprise winner because he is an
industry veteran and this may be his last chance at the film industry's top
prize. Others think Penn and Rourke could split the vote among the roughly 6,000
voting members of the Academy, allowing Langella to triumph.
"Frank's is a really towering performance. If there were any justice, it
would take the prize," Schickel said.
"Sean Penn is an authentically great actor. And you could say, let's award
something to the comeback kid Mickey Rourke. But maybe we want a safer, more
respectable choice. If it was me, I'd pick Langella."