The Weinsteins have decided to campaign Cate Blanchett for Best Actress for “I’m Not There,” David Poland is reporting at The Hot Blog. Originally, the plan was to campaign Cate’s remarkable performance for Best Supporting Actress so Cate could go for Best Actress for “Elizabeth: The Golden Age,” which flopped. Blanchett, one of five actors playing six versions of Bob Dylan, won the supporting actress award in Venice and is almost universally considered the prohibitive favorite in Oscar’s Best Supporting Actress category. For Best Actress, she may end up like Michael Caine, who lost a supporting actor nod for “Little Voice” when the Weinsteins attempted to gerrymander him into the Best Actor race. Harvey has promised to kill himself if Blanchett doesn’t get an Oscar nod; insert joke here. Variety is spinning “I’m Not There” as Todd Haynes’ best opening ever, which is technically true with $1 million at 130 locations. But reading carefully, the unimpressive $5,826 per-venue average cited by Variety is way, way below the dazzling $35,213 that Haynes’ last picture, “Far From Heaven,” averaged when it opened at just six venues back in 2002.