Hollywood stars are gathering for this year's Academy Awards ceremony, the US film industry's biggest night of the year.
Black-and-white silent movie The Artist, which has 10 nominations, is bookies' favourite to win best picture.But Martin Scorsese's 3D family film Hugo leads the race with 11.
Nominees including Jessica Chastain and Christopher Plummer have arrived on the red carpet. The ceremony begins at 0130 GMT (1730 Pacific time).
Other early arrivals include best actress nominee Berenice Bejo and actresses Milla Jovovich and Penelope Ann Miller - who also co-stars in The Artist as the wife of Jean Dujardin's lead character.
Comedian Billy Crystal is hosting the 84th Academy Awards for the ninth time, having stepped in after comedian and actor Eddie Murphy pulled out in November.
It is Crystal's first time back hosting since 2004 and Oscar-watchers are predicting plenty of silent film gags and jibes about the recent legal wrangle over the Kodak-branded theatre where the ceremony is held.
Crystal himself is giving nothing away, but tweeted last week: "First rehearsal: They said keep it 'fresh and new'. This from an industry that just brought us Fast & Furious 5 and Harry Potter 7, part 2."
The final round of voting by the Academy's 5,783 members ended on Tuesday. Outside the venue, a section of Hollywood Boulevard has been sealed off and the red carpet is in place.
Industry newspaper The Hollywood Reporter says The Artist's predicted win for best picture follows its victory in the two strongest "Oscar bellwethers", the Producers Guild of America and the Directors Guild of America.
"This French-financed, Hollywood-shot, Harvey Weinstein-distributed love letter to the movies has gone on to seduce Hollywood since being unveiled at Cannes in May.
"It is now poised to become the first silent film in 83 years and the first black-and-white film in 18 years to win the top Oscar."
Close race
A change in the Academy voting rules means that there are nine films in the best picture race this year.
Alongside The Artist and Hugo, those in the running include War Horse, Moneyball, The Tree Of Life, Midnight In Paris, The Help, The Descendants, and Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close.
George Clooney and Brad Pitt are both up for best actor, and Meryl Streep has her 17th Oscar nomination for her portrayal of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in The Iron Lady.
Streep has won two Oscars - best supporting actress for 1979's Kramer vs Kramer and best actress for 1982's Sophie's Choice - but has been overlooked on her last 12 attempts.
Oscar pundits predict a close race between Streep and Viola Davies, for her performance as maid Aibileen Clark in civil rights drama The Help.
In the supporting actress category, The Help's Octavia Spencer is the frontrunner, ahead of fellow cast member Jessica Chastain, and Melissa McCarthy and Britain's Janet McTeer - for Bridesmaids and Albert Nobbs respectively.
Unusually, this year's race for best supporting actor boasts two octogenarians: Christopher Plummer for Beginners and Max von Sydow for Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close.
Both are 82, and if either win they would become the oldest recipient of an acting award. The record is currently held by Jessica Tandy, who won for Driving Miss Daisy, aged 80.
Plummer is widely predicted to take the statuette for his role as an elderly father who comes out as gay after his wife dies.
The others in the category are Nick Nolte, for Warrior; Kenneth Branagh, for My Week with Marilyn; and 28-year-old Jonah Hill, for Moneyball.
Nostalgic choice
Things are less clear-cut in the race for best actor.
Hollywood heart-throbs Clooney and Pitt face a stiff challenge from The Artist's Jean Dujardin, who beat them - and British star Gary Oldman - at the Baftas earlier this month.
It's Oldman's first Oscar nomination, which recognises his quietly powerful performance as mole-catcher George Smiley in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.
The outsider in this category is Mexican actor Demian Bichir for his role as a Los Angeles gardener, struggling to keep his son out of gang culture, in A Better Life.
Earlier this week, an investigation by the Los Angeles Times revealed that the Academy demographic is much less diverse than the movie-going public.
Oscar voters, it said, are nearly 94% Caucasian and 77% male. They have a median age of 62, and under 50s constitute just 14% of the membership. All of which, puts The Artist in pole position.
Mike Goodridge, editor of Screen International, told the BBC: "You're looking at a group that are going to vote for The King's Speech over The Social Network, for The Hurt Locker over Avatar, and this year it's going to go for this portrait of days gone by."
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