With the NBA, PGA, NHL, and MMA all occupying our attention, one area outside of betting is overlooked this time of year — The Oscars.
Today, I’m predicting predicting all winners and highlights his favorite values ahead of Sunday’s 96th Academy Awards.
Oppenheimer leads all motion pictures with 13 nominations and has had a dominant awards season that should culminate with another huge hardware night for the behemoth. After a slew of award season wins (Golden Globe, SAG, BAFTA, Critics’ Choice), the value for Oppenheimer in the big categories passed months ago. If you got in early, you’re loving the CLV.
In Oscars betting, the early values are one way to a profit but not the only. In last year’s article, I wrote about Jaime Lee Curtis (+150) for Best Supporting Actress, The Whale (+150) for Best Makeup and Hairstyling, and All Quiet on the Western Front (+175)for Best Score. All won their respective categories and were plus-money in the week leading up to Oscar Sunday.
This year, to both cinephiles and the average filmgoer, the most exciting questions surround Best Actress and both screenplay categories, but, in terms of betting, I like Best Production Design and Best Makeup & Hairstyling to be equivalent sweats to the aforementioned categories. It’s definitely Oscar season.
Without further ado, let’s get to FTN’s best bets for the 96th Academy Awards.
(All odds courtesy of DraftKings Sportsbook.)
2024 Academy Awards Best Bets
Best Production Design: Barbie +140
Early in Barbie, the title character descends from the sky, slowly floating to her dreamhouse, the iconic set-piece of the year. The race between Barbie and Poor Things in Best Production Design and Best Costume Design is shaping up to be a unique battle between two celebrated films, albeit in similarly bizarre ways. Both coming-of-age films make strong cases to take home the award for Best Production Design, but I think it’s Barbie’s optimistic take on the surrealistic universe that edges out Poor Things macabre set-pieces to take the win. The team picked up the same award at the Critics’ Choice Awards, and I think it picks up the Oscar at plus-money. For Barbie, this win will attempt to rectify the film’s snub from Best Makeup and Hairstyling.
Best Makeup & Hairstyling: Poor Things +125
Last year, the odds favored Elvis for Best Makeup & Hairstyling, but I liked The Whale (+150) to win the award as a makeup to Brendan Fraser not winning best actor. While I was correct on The Whale winning Best Makeup & Hairstyling, I missed Brendan Fraser winning best actor in conjunction with this award. I’m not making that mistake this year. Emma Stone’s transformation into Bella Baxter, quite literally a Franken-Barbie-esque character in her own right, is the performance of the year in my opinion, accentuated to perfection through this team. Barbie not being nominated for this category is a huge boost for Poor Things which likely would have garnered votes away. That didn’t happen. As a result, I like Poor Things here and in Best Costume Design, as well as Emma Stone in Best Actress.
Best Sound: The Zone of Interest +150
Oppenheimer is a heavy favorite in this category (-250), but The Zone of Interest, Jonathan Glazer’s haunting film about the family life of Auschwitz’s commandant, exceeded expectations and created new paths for what sound can do for a film. Few prisoners are shown on screen and none in the camp, thus making the unseen sounds all the more menacing. Yes, Oppenheimer could win this category, but I think the Academy goes for the year’s biggest achievement in sound.
Bold text denotes my current Oscar betting values.
Category | Current Favorite (DK Sportsbook) | Odds | Mike Talas’ Pick |
Best Picture | Oppenheimer | -5000 | Oppenheimer |
Best Director | Christopher Nolan | -5000 | Christopher Nolan |
Best Film Editing | Oppenheimer | -800 | Oppenheimer |
Best Live-Action Short | The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar | -700 | The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar |
Best Documentary Short | The ABCs of Book Banning | -200 | No pick |
Best Animated Short | War Is Over! Inspired by the Music of John and Yoko | -140 | Letter to a Pig +110 |
Best Actor | Cillian Murphy (Oppenheimer) | -1200 | Cillian Murphy |
Best Actress | Lily Gladstone (Killers of the Flower Moon) | -250 | Emma Stone +165 |
Best Supporting Actor | Robert Downey Jr. (Oppenheimer) | -3500 | Robert Downey Jr. |
Best Supporting Actress | Da’Vine Joy Randolph (The Holdovers) | -3500 | Da’Vine Joy Randolph |
Best Visual Effects | Godzilla Minus One | -200 | Godzilla Minus One |
Best Production Design | Poor Things | -200 | Barbie +140 |
Best Makeup & Hairstyling | Maestro | -175 | Poor Things +125 |
Best Costume Design | Barbie | -150 | Poor Things +100 |
Best Cinematography | Oppenheimer | -2000 | Oppenheimer |
Best Original Screenplay | Anatomy of a Fall | -250 | Anatomy of a Fall |
Best Adapted Screenplay | American Fiction | -225 | American Fiction |
Best Animated Feature | Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse | -225 | Spiderman: Across the Spider-Verse |
Best Documentary | 20 Days in Mariupol | -2000 | 20 Days in Mariupol |
Best International Feature | The Zone of Interest | -2500 | The Zone of Interest |
Best Original Score | Oppenheimer | -2000 | Oppenheimer |
Best Sound | Oppenheimer | -250 | The Zone of Interest +150 |
Best Original Song | “What Was I Made For?” (Barbie) | -750 | “What Was I Made For?” (Barbie) |