Fearless Emmy Predictions, Part Two:  Drama Series

Following my take on the comedy series nominees, the second installment in my annual multi-part series of Emmy Award predictions and preferences focuses on drama series.  It may have been disappointing – even exasperating at times – but no show on television came close to HBO’s mighty Game of Thrones (pictured above) in terms of power, passion, audacity and impact.  Like Syfy’s Battlestar Galactica years before it, Thrones didn’t simply enthrall.  It showed us everything that TV can currently be, entertaining the hell out of its audience in the process.  How can it not  dominate?

Outstanding Drama Series

Prediction: Game of Thrones (HBO) For obvious reasons.  A classic that will be talked about and referred to for decades to come.  

Preference: Game of Thrones (HBO) I had my gripes with the final season, too.  When it wasn’t too long and draggy it was way too short and rushed.  And poor Drogon (above) lost his entire family!  But the fact that I watched the penultimate episode in all its dragon-firey glory in a New York City pub on my smart phone and was still mesmerized throughout means something … to me, anyways. 

The other nominees: Better Call Saul (AMC), Bodyguard (Netflix), Killing Eve (BBC America), Ozark (Netflix), Pose (FX), Succession (HBO), This Is Us (NBC)

Should have been nominated: The Deuce (HBO) I’ll never understand the absence of Emmy love for this ballsy historic drama and its fearless cast.

Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series

Prediction: Bob Odenkirk, Better Call Saul (AMC) Predictions are all over the place in this category, with Odenkirk (above) ending up the critics’ favorite seemingly by default, or in recognition of the fine work he has done in a uniquely layered role on Breaking Bad and this smart (though painfully slow-moving) spin-off.

Preference: Milo Ventimiglia, This Is Us (NBC) He’s been the searing soul of broadcast television’s only powerhouse emotional drama for the last two years.  (His co-star Sterling K. Brown held that distinction, and won the Emmy in this category, for season one.)  Ventimiglia doesn’t simply shine here; he makes all of his co-stars shine even brighter in every scene he shares with every one of them.    

The other nominees: Jason Bateman, Ozark (Netflix); Sterling K. Brown, This Is Us (NBC); Kit Harrington (pictured at top), Game of Thrones (HBO); Billy Porter, Pose (FX)

Should have been nominated: Richard Madden, Bodyguard (Netflix) With apologies to Ventimiglia, Madden might have had my vote, had he been nominated.

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series

Prediction: Sandra Oh or Jodie Comer, Killing Eve (BBC America) I think Oh (above, right) will win, but I think Comer (left) deserves it just as much, and damn it, this is an impossible choice to make.  In a perfect world they would tie.  Or Comer would win, because Oh won last year.

Preference: Laura Linney, Ozark (Netflix) Should Killing Eve’s killer duo spilt the vote, Linney would seem the likely winner.  The understated malevolence of her character, finely-honed via her pitch-perfect performance, often made me nervous, even though I was on this side of the screen.

The other nominees: Emilia Clarke, Game of Thrones (HBO); Viola Davis, How to Get Away with Murder (ABC); Laura Linney, Ozark (Netflix); Mandy Moore, This Is Us (NBC); Robin Wright, House of Cards (Netflix)

Should have been nominated: Maggie Gyllenhaal, The Deuce (HBO); MJ Rodriguez, Pose (FX) Both women delivered brave, bold, raw performances that should have been acknowledged.

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series

Prediction: Peter Dinklage (above), Game of Thrones (HBO) With all those passionate, resonant, quietly profound speeches Tyrion gave throughout the show’s final episodes, how could he not win?

Preference: Peter Dinklage, Game of Thrones (HBO) What’s more, Dinklage delivered every one of those speeches like a true pro.

The other nominees:  Alfie Allen, Game of Thrones (HBO); Jonathan Banks, Better Call Saul (AMC); Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Game of Thrones (HBO); Giancarlo Esposito, Better Call Saul (AMC); Michael Kelly, House of Cards (Netflix); Chris Sullivan, This Is Us (NBC)

Should have been nominated:  Justin Hartley, This Is Us (NBC) Who knew that a hunk from the soap operas Passions and The Young and the Restless and the first actor to portray the Green Arrow on television (in The WB’s Smallville) could so consistently hold his own in broadcast television’s most emotionally satisfying family drama since The Waltons?

Ed Martin

Ed Martin is the chief television and content critic for MediaVillage.  He has written about television and internet programming for several Myers publications since 2000, including The Myers Report, The Myers Programming Report, MediaBizBloggers a… read more