Oscars 2013: The Spielberg Story

D-DAY SPECIAL: THE SPIELBERG STORY Overview of the director's Oscar-nominated films - including Saving Private Ryan

We look back at the 10 films which shape Steven Spielberg's Oscars story so far

Whether Lincoln can pip frontrunner Argo to this year's Best Picture gong is in the hands of the Academy, but its 12 nominations are a notable achievement in director Steven Spielberg's extraordinary career. It's sometimes been easy to dismiss Spielberg as a sentimentalist, an entertainer first and an artist second but his films are pure cinema, and for every work of groundbreaking spectacle he's delivered something equally as thought-provoking.

Oscars 2013: Casting a vote for political films

An Oscar nomination for a political film is like a spoilt ballot paper - redundant. Can 2013 buck the trend?

An intriguing aspect of this year’s battle for Oscar was the early assurance with which pundits placed Lincoln as their favourite for best film. Steven Spielberg's frontrunner merits recognition; what surprises is that no one has noted the significance if it were actually to win. For despite Hollywood’s long history of fine political films, in over 80 years only one has ever won the prize.

Oscars 2013: Daniel Day-Lewis

Britain's exiled leading man prepares for Oscar number three

A week from now he could be the all-time Oscar king. If Daniel Day-Lewis’s performance in Lincoln wins him a third Best Actor award, it will send him clear of a thoroughbred field of nine past double-winners, Jack Nicholson, Spencer Tracy and Dustin Hoffman among them. Those other nine were all American. Uniquely for an Englishman, Day-Lewis isn’t politely respected in Hollywood for his theatrical technique, but matches the screen intensity and exhaustive Method of Brando and De Niro.

Oscars 2013

OSCARS 2013 The Academy Awards are approaching, and theartsdesk is laying on a week's worth of coverage

The Academy Awards are approaching, and theartsdesk is laying on a week's worth of coverage

Film fans will not need reminding that next weekend knees all over Tinseltown start quivering at the prospect of the Academy Awards. To get you in shape for the big night, theartsdesk is running a week's worth of Oscar-related features starting on Monday.

Oscars 2013: Lives of Lincoln and Pi lead the nominees

OSCARS 2013: LIVES OF LINCOLN AND PI LEAD THE NOMINEES Glum list for Brits, better for the rest of Europe (unless Les Mis counts as one of ours)

Glum list for Brits, better for the rest of Europe (unless Les Mis counts as one of ours)

Sure,  Les Miserables got eight nominations, including the expected acting nods for Hugh Jackman and Anne Hathaway, and Daniel Day-Lewis is poised to make history as the first-ever three-time winner of the Best Actor Oscar, this time for a performance in Lincoln that ranks among his very best.

Oscars 2012: Meryl wins election in a landslide for the silent age

OSCARS 2012: A landslide for the silent age at the 84th Academy Awards

Streep's victory brings energy and emotion to a bland 84th Academy Awards

Maybe it was host Billy Crystal at far from peak form. Or a surfeit of cringe-making shtick by too many presenters, including the distaff principals of Bridesmaids. Or the desperation that clung to the multiple on-air tributes to an art form whose very being was celebrated in the evening’s two major winners, Hugo and The Artist.

Oscars 2012: Who Will, Who Should, Who Won't

The Arts Desk's film writers pore over the nominees to make predictions and express outrage

Every year before the Academy Awards speeches are tacitly composed, flowing gowns and priceless necklaces booked and no doubt small blameless animals slaughtered in the Roman style for good luck. Before the gladiators enter the ring, we at theartsdesk continue our novel take on the 2012 Oscars by allotting a category each and asked our film writers to sift through the nominations, tell you who they think will win, who they really would like to win, and who has been most egregiously overlooked by Oscar's overwhelmingly ageing white male judiciary.

Oscars 2012: Meryl and Woody - Gongs and Noms

THEARTSDESK AT 7: MERYL AND WOODY The parallel careers of Oscar royalty assessed

They're Oscar royalty with 40 nominations and seven Academy Awards between them. We assess two remarkable movie careers

They have been racking up the Oscar nominations since 1978, and this year they were back. Woody Allen was nominated twice over for Midnight in Paris, his biggest commercial hit ever, and won for Best Original Screenplay, while Meryl Streep was a surer bet for victory in The Iron Lady than even Mrs Thatcher in the 1983 general election.

Oscars 2012: Nominees are announced – just don’t try to pronounce their names

The runners and riders for the 84th annual Academy Awards

Michael Fassbender (Shame) got blanked (maybe Hollywood was put off by his manhood?), as did We Need to Talk About Kevin’s Tilda Swinton, for my money the year’s best performance by an actress, notwithstanding the marvellous Meryl. Gary Oldman, meanwhile, is in as Best Actor for Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy – his first-ever Oscar nod, incredibly - whereas Leonardo DiCaprio (J. Edgar) is out.