Showing posts with label MOONRISE KINGDOM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MOONRISE KINGDOM. Show all posts

Monday, March 18, 2013

19th Annual Chlotrudis Awards

The Chlotrudis Awards are presented annually by the Chlotrudis Society for Independent Film, a Boston-area non-profit organization that teaches audiences to view films actively through discussion, formal and informal education, discourse, film festivals, special screenings and collaboration.


MOVIE: The Perks of Being a Wallflower
DIRECTOR: Wes Anderson, Moonrise Kingdom
ACTOR: John Hawkes, The Sessions
ACTRESS: Olivia Coleman, Tyrannosaur
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Ezra Miller, The Perks of Being a Wallflower 
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Amy Adams, The Master
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: (tie) Moonrise Kingdom- Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola; Take This Waltz- Sarah Polley
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: The Perks of Being a Wallflower- Stephen Chbosky
DOCUMENTARY: How to Survive a Plague
ENSEMBLE CAST: Moonrise Kingdom
PRODUCTION DESIGN: Beasts of the Southern Wild- Alex DiGerlando
CINEMATOGRAPHY: The Master- Mihai Malaimare, Jr.
BURIED TREASURE: A Simple Life 

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

My Favorite Cinematic Moments of 2012

A musing, aside if you, of my favorite moments while in the solitude of the cinema of 2012.  This is not a list of my favorite films, I've already done that, but my favorite collection of scenes, sequences, or moments that I found the most heavenly in the past of year of the cinema.  In no particular order...except the one final one:

Opening Title Sequence, LIFE OF PI
Ang Lee's Life of Pi was a visual wonder, and if you strip away the awkward (not matter how truthfully adapted) framing structure, it may well have been a cinematic masterpiece.  Never mind, perhaps the brightest sequence of the whole ungodly massively produced project came at the very begin.  A beguiling, playful and wonderfully spirited vignettes of the animals in the zoo that would become shipwrecked some time soon.  No matter how banal it may appear on the onset, it was warm, inviting and beautifully filmed to the Michael Danna's lustrous score.  You start here and remove the older guy talking to the bland English dude and Life of Pi would be nearly a perfect picture.

"Heroes," THE PERKS OF BEING A WALLFLOWER
While I still submit that the hipster teens in Stephen Chbosky's coming of tale are made somewhat false because of their lack of knowledge in all things Bowie, the moment(s) where are three heroes joyride to the famous tune is a touchingly bewitching moment.  Purely a for a movies screenshot-- but then again that can be true of real teenage moments too-- a point of which that the film highlights beautifully.  A rousing sincere sequence that showcases the posture of adolescence.  At first Emma Watson, as the pixie cum muse stands in the back of the truck, arms extending, an image of youthful idyllic expression.  When Chbosky repeats the sequence with star wallflower Logan Lerman doing the same thing, it's an entirely different thing, and the silly joy and bubble of a pop song, it's nearly irresistible.

Self-Administered Abortion, PROMETHEUS
It may hold true that Ridley Scott's widely hyped return/not return to the Alien franchise befuddled and never exactly took flight, but there's one sequence that not only wondrously and horrifyingly paid beautiful homage to blockbuster establishment of his career, but also cemented Prometheus as a horror/sci-fi puzzlement that wasn't short on thrills.  The intense and gross emergency self-administered alien abortion that Noomi Rapace must hastily perform was the icky and tingly edge of your seat sequence that jolted Prometheus and one of the few sequences in recent horror memory where you can't but not look away.  Masterfully and terrifyingly staged, filmed and a rare feat of a performance at its most physically visceral, it's surely something not easily forgotten.

Ruby's Breakdown, RUBY SPARKS
Actress Zoe Kazan both wrote and starred in the twirly indie Ruby Sparks, a film more interesting than particular successful, where a shaggy and none particularly likable writer (played by Paul Dano) finds his latest character becomes a full fledged person, of which he can control with his writing.  Kazan may have written the whole bloody thing in a manner just to showcase her talent and range, of which comes out in a manic, but memorable final act bit of craftiness when the douchebag writer proves his authority in a sequence where Kazan must act swiftly, quickly and unnervingly to the speed of his type.  Ruby Sparks doesn't quite work, but the breakdown is a masterful acting audition tape that should hopefully given Kazan, the actress, the creme of the roles in the near future.

The First Wave, THE IMPOSSIBLE
The first part of The Impossible, before it devolves into a standard issue survival film, is a bravura, matter-of-fact depiction of real world terror.  In documenting the tragic tsunami that hit Southeast Asia, director Jay Bayona uses real water and real world effects to capture that scene, and it's frightening as hell, riveting cinema and reveals a grandeur and gravitas that can only come from the cinema.  Intensely staged-- in fact, nearly so as a thriller, that first wave appears nearly out of nowhere (a statement many have validated) and in its pure cinema visual feat sadly almost undoes the film because there's nothing that could top it.

The First Session, THE SESSIONS
The miraculous thing about The Sessions is that it, while fully enshrined in a near innocence and staged nearly innocuously, is that is one of the most sexually free American films to grace the screen in a long while.  The first session between polio victim Mark O'Brien, who yearns to not die a virgin and the sex surrogate, played by Helen Hunt, is a beautifully written and incredibly acted sequence that makes aware the strange condition of the pairing, but plays wonderfully as a naturally expression of ones first sexual experience-- awkward, warm, engaging and inviting.  Filled with a playful banter, especially when Hunt speaks of the difference between her services and that of a prostitute (while comically disrobing) gives way to something far warmer, deeper and affecting.

Tiffany's Monologue, SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK
Near the end of the David O. Russell's Silver Linings Playbook, the ensemble assembles for a chaotic, seeming free-for-all in mania, only to be eternally shut up when the tartly messed-up Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence) speaks the truth.  An expected monologue, in which the young actress/ingenue firstly must put Robert De Niro in his place is a grand display of showmanship and a strength to O'Russell's gift at ensemble performances.  It first plays as a nearly righteous, "go girl!" moment but Lawrence sells it straightly and with absolute assured drive that it's difficult not to get swept up in the fervor.  I strongly suggest the strength of this scene alone is the reason why Lawrence is collecting prizes left and right, and while my eyes may recoil at that a bit, it's hard not to deny why.  It's in this scene where, and Katniss be damned, that Lawrence becomes a movie star.

Dinner Scene, DJANGO UNCHAINED
Quentin Tarantino has long been a champion, and an adept one at that, at the long talking scene.  The sequence where everyone is dining at Candyland and everyone is in the ensemble is inviting is a chiller, a doozy of the written word and masterfully stroke of a film that's undoing comes from its lack of focus.  In short, this is Django Unchained's money shot, and the greatest stroke is that all the characters, each on display and acting on their own part, is on a completely different wavelength.  That conflict and tension is a beaut to watch, and something that seems sadly missing the before and after of this messy film.

Letter Writing, MOONRISE KINGDOM
A perfect marriage of filmmaker and sequence was formed and beautifully executed when the youthful lovers concoct their runaway plans in Wes Anderson's majestic and personal homage to youthful lust.  The sequence, a series of jump cuts that overlap one another but make a wondrous cohesiveness, seems like something ripely belonging to Anderson's sensibility.  On a dime whimsical, then melancholy, then hopeful, then silly-- a perfect marriage and perhaps the most novel sequence in the auteurs career.

And well, this one might feel kind of obvious, but it's the best....

I Dreamed a Dream, LES MISERABLES
A perfect marriage of character and performer, and one in which both become deeper, and that nearly incandescent way, richer and eternally altered.  The tragic heroine Fantine was always the emotional bulls-eye in Les Miserables, as was the show-stopping song Ï Dreamed a Dream," and yet even as the song has become nearly irrelevant due to YouTube and reality television, Anne Hathaway seizes the opportunity and gives the song seemingly new meaning with her deeply felt, nuanced, live-sung expression.  This utterly transcendent sequence, one in which all the vitriol that has spewed on the interwebs of Tom Hooper's ultra close-up filming must be granted worked to a thrilling degree, can be compared to Jennifer Hudson's Dreamgirls number, but I think a fairer critique should view this as the best musical number filmed for the cinema since the glory days of Liza Minnelli's extolling the virtues of Cabaret.



Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Top Ten of 2012

The constant fixation has completed, for the time being.  Here are my picks for the ten best motion pictures of 2012:

10) SEVEN PSYCHOPATHS
Martin McDonagh's razor sharp gangster absurdest comedy brings out the very best in the famed playwright-- rapid fire dialogue, acute characterizations and a mocking self absorption all funneled into a witty and acidic crime-laced world filled with that kind of violent brio that would make a young Quentin Tarantino proud to steal from for ages.  A tongue in check meta Adaptation. crossed with Pulp Fiction, McDonagh's buildhas s nicely from his first feature, 2008's In Bruges, telling the story of a struggling Los Angeles screenwriter (Colin Farrell) who becomes engaged in crooked folk and the most oddball assortment of characters in any feature from 2012 after the misbegotten theft of an idiosyncratic gangster's beloved Shih Tzu.  What could have easily been thrown away as a creative writing assignment is the virtue and the strange zesty soulfulness of the cast.  Woody Harrelson, Sam Rockwell, Colin Farrell, and Christopher Walken, all at their most unhinged, make Seven Psychopaths a joyful generous comedy of manners, each divisive and succinct, playing off one another, unpredictably and impenetrably, creating a delightfully warped dadaism to McDonagh's self aware violent hymn.

9) THE MASTER
The arc of writer/director Paul Thomas Anderson's cinematic career is one of the most savory in recent memory.  Brash and electric when first thrust upon the scene as one of America's most exciting to watch, first he seemed to be mirroring Robert Altman's approach with the grand ensemble films like Boogie Nights and Magnolia.  A shift seemed to occur after his last film, There Will Be Blood, and most certainly in his polarizing, galvanic, unsettling and gargantuan staging of The Master.  At first roused upon as that movie that speaks (or mocks, or what have you) the early formation of the Church of Scientology.  Anderson's ambition, as with There Will Be Blood, was far greater than a reductive tagline or concept.  Instead, The Master, speaks of a culture, a lost America in search of salvation, or a cause, or something tangible.  The filmmaker has never quite been so reserved before, nor as chillingly oblique, but even while the film may keep itself forever at a heady distance from its audience, there's a wonderment and poetry to be utterly savored.  As teacher and student, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Joaquin Phoenix bring out the very best in each other, and as the film charts their relationship-- the film changes, morphs and alternates between a grand performance achievement, something akin to the likes of what it may have felt like to witness Marlon Brando for the first time-- and a deeper and chillier mediation of life and religion.

8) ZERO DARK THIRTY
Director Kathryn Bigelow and writer Marc Boal are back for more fun in the Middle East, following their Oscar-winning small wonder that could in 2009's The Hurt Locker, and return with a loftier bit of war of terror business in their staging of the capture and execution of Osama bin Laden, again exacting a thrillingly sharp view of the danger seekers who put their lives at sake for the safety of others.  Sprawling, nervy and ambitious, Zero Dark Thirty is a chillingly masterful stroke of journalism with a savvy and sharply adept (non) character study of Maya, a top level CIA agent who holds a huge part in the eventual outcome.  Playing with a tough-minded grace by Jessica Chastain, she maintains the thorny disparate narratives, in and out players, and the dead-end clues with pluck and intelligence.  And while the masterful execution of Zero Dark Thirty is immense and wonderfully wrought, the tenacity and stoicism of Maya bring the film an emotional rawness and tenderness, far more interesting than the films alleged views on torture or the debatable liberties taken with may have actually occurred.

7) WRECK-IT-RALPH
There may have been little to look forward to on the onset to this animated feature about an alienated video game villain who wants to be a hero, but the joyous and inventive Wreck-It-Ralph, perhaps by playing to ones lesser-than expectations, is one of the most generously playful and moving films I saw in a movie theater in all of 2012.  Witty, surprising and magnificently executed, simultaneously playing on the feverish novelty and nostalgia of arcade games, while creating something thrillingly alive at the same time.  Even with the patented be-true-to-oneself message that tries to ever cloy at it's sides, director Rich Moore, his animators, and ideally cast vocal stars gently subvert any triteness with warped bits of silliness, an inspired, carefully layered screenplay that splices video game arcania with even niftier displays of the heart, and jubilant, free-associative meditation of redemption.  A video game villain in a group therapy session filled with villains of yore exclaiming the virtues of being bad may be most favorite scene of any feature this past year.

6) LOOPER
Rian Johnson's ultra slick science fiction odyssey was the niftiest bit of slight of hand in 2012-- an ambitious and unassuming morality play that uses the sometimes stale device of time travel in a marvelously wrought and inventive way.  Joseph Gordon Levitt and Bruce Willis are both wonderful, playing younger and older Joe, a once steely reserved professional whose life was changed by a particularly defining incident that ties the marvelously contrasted whole together.  Filled with endless creativity, imagination and style, Johnson-- the man behind the indie genre busters Brick and The Brothers Bloom-- rises to graces (hopefully the grandest) of heftier Hollywood properties with a deft eye for scope, graceful notes for storytelling, and an incisive voice and bridges all those qualities into the most unique and original genre film of last year.

5) LINCOLN
The surprising things about Steven Spielberg's epic biography feature of our 16th president is that firstly, it's not really a biography feature.  Missing is a great man treatise of the episodic passages of Abraham Lincoln's life.  Instead we focus on one chapter-- his journey to get the 13th Amendment passed, and thus ending slavery.  The second surprising part is how, and I mean this as a wondrous compliment, unlike a Spielberg film his Lincoln really is.  Scripted, poetically and bountifully by Tony Kushner, Lincoln is a stirring, wonderfully entertaining master play of politics, with a sprawling ensemble that points to the most decidedly performance driven feature of all of Spielberg's career, as well as his most visually subdued-- brilliant but held back, letting the actors and their words capture the show.  In that regard, the film still needed its Lincoln, and Daniel Day-Lewis, capturing the idea of this man in enough inventive little details to ruminate on for a lifetime, is jaw-dropping astounding as master and commander.  What springs is an uncommonly good film that while tackling one of the single most important moments in our nations history, captures the idea, the mythology and the politics all shrouded around a grander notion of Abraham Lincoln.  For whatever reason-- perhaps goading from Kushner, or Day-Lewis, or thoughts of his own legacy, Spielberg made the more surprising and the better film.

4) FRANKENWEENIE
Director Tim Burton, whose warpy imagination has for too long now been branded by an industry that has little interest nor canny sensibility to do with it, did something quietly amazing in 2012.  Adapting his own live action short film, the same one that cost him his early gig at Disney, into a stop motion animated feature.  No matter that it tanked at the box office, this sweetly demented riff on monster movies and the lure of mans best friend was what Burton needed to do-- either as atonement for his recent output or creative recharging-- and what his long suffering fans hoped for year now.  Shot in gorgeous black and white, and made with the mystifying visual sense and style that made Burton such an electric artist to begin with, Frankenweenie was one of the most hopeful and buoyant cinematic experiences in all of 2012-- a religious experience for film nerds who came of age in the late 1980s/early 1990s.

3) BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD
Benh Zeitlin's astoundingly original and mythic tale of the denizens of "The Bathtub" and the intrepid young warrior named Hushpuppy engulf the cinematic imagination that delightful and intangible way of reminding the power and artfulness in which movie are capable of-- to absorb and the thrill the senses at the excitement of seeing something for the very first time.  Even the most jaded aficionados must have recoiled with that sense at some point during Beasts of the Southern Wild, which at its simplest details a lifestyle on the fringes-- in this case off the levees of Louisiana, left with nothing to do but surrender in the awe and scope of this grandly, yet scrappy tale of survival and mysticism.  Young Quvenzhane Wallis may have just been six when she made this film, but her charisma, drive and determination nets a performance that transcends mere accolades, and like the film, strikes the heart, just as the film creates an ever optimistic hopefulness for American independent filmmaking.

2) LES MISERABLES
Do you hear the people sing?  Well yes, and their singing live in Tom Hooper's moving and sincere epic telling of the beyond popular musical, itself derived from the immortal work by Victor Hugo. The endless gripping and drubbing of the film has done nothing to alter my take, my love and lust for this delectable movie musical.  Unapologetically wearing its heart on its sleeve and made with a go-for-broke brio that singes right into the immortal cinematic soul, Hooper's Les Miserables is firstly a grand performance piece with star Hugh Jackman baring all as the graceful lead of Jean Valjean, a fugitive imprisoned who seeks a redemptive life and Anne Hathaway's searingly emotional Fantine, a true miserables, glides in with a heavenly voice and immortalizes a classic song that long ago had faded into novelty.  What's most astonishing about Les Miserables, and may be a clue as to what get people all worked up at it, is the way Hooper and his team boldly go for the gut, making a riveting, thought long ago defunct emotional epic.  Les Miserables on a technical standpoint, or on a mere bits and pieces dissection may be the one film on this list that I have the most issues with, but I stand that in all strives in making the film more interesting and magical.

1) MOONRISE KINGDOM
A perfect melding of material with its artist.  Wes Anderson, eternally besieged as the precocious maker of the  preciously gilded and inventively art-directed.  The rules of the game continue with Moonrise Kingdom, but the surprise and the delight of his best feature film since 2001's The Royal Tenenbaums, is that there's an enchanting and lovingly melancholic undertone.  A tale of young, adolescent love and quirky at-odds grown-up in a vacuum of 1960s nostalgia, Moonrise Kingdom is engrossing and witty, but with the surprising tugs of something more, something deeper and ultimately something far more personal that Anderson has ever shared with us on screen before.  What's left and what's taken away is the best movie of 2012.
 

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

WGA Nominations

Within the yearly ritual of many key films ineligible for the Writers Guild prizes, it's often important to keep these with a grain of salt.  Still a nice showing and a leg up for a few key films.

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Flight- John Gatins
Looper- Rian Johnson
The Master- Paul Thomas Anderson
Moonrise Kingdom- Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola
Zero Dark Thirty- Marc Boal

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Argo- Chris Terrio
Life of Pi- David Magee
Lincoln- Tony Kushner
The Perks of Being a Wallflower- Stephen Chbosky
Silver Linings Playbook- David O. Russell

BEST DOCUMENTARY SCREENPLAY
The Central Park Five- Sarah Burns, David McMahon, Ed Burns
The Invisible War- Kirby Dick
Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God- Alex Gibney
Searching for Sugar Man- Malik Bendejelloul
We Are Legion- Brian Knappenberger
West of Memphis- Amy Berg & Billy McMilian

Central Ohio Film Critics

FILM: Moonrise Kingdom
DIRECTOR: Wes Anderson, Moonrise Kingdom
ACTOR: Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln
ACTRESS: Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Moonrise Kingdom- Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Lincoln- Tony Kushner
ENSEMBLE: Moonrise Kingdom
ANIMATED FEATURE: ParaNorman
DOCUMENTARY: How to Survive a Plague
FOREIGN FILM: The Kid with the Bike
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Skyfall- Roger Deakins
SCORE: Moonrise Kingdom- Alexandre Desplat
BREAKTHROUGH ARTIST: Bart Layton, The Imposter
ACTOR OF THE YEAR: Matthew McConaughey 
MOST OVERLOOKED FILM: Killer Joe

Friday, December 21, 2012

Utah Film Critics Awards

Wes Anderson wins his first Best Director prize of the season for Moonrise Kingdom
PICTURE: Zero Dark Thirty
runner-up: Looper

DIRECTOR: Wes Anderson, Moonrise Kingdom
runner-up: Kathryn Bigelow, Zero Dark Thirty

ACTOR: Joaquin Phoenix, The Master
runners-up: Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln; John Hawkes, The Sessions

ACTRESS: (tie) Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook; Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty

SUPPORTING ACTOR: Dwight Henry, Beasts of the Southern Wild
runner-up: Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Master

SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables
runner-up: Ann Dowd, Compliance

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Looper- Rian Johnson
runner-up: The Cabin in the Woods- Drew Goddard & Joss Whedon

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: The Perks of Being a Wallflower- Stephen Chbosky
runner-up: Silver Linings Playbook- David O. Russell

ANIMATED FEATURE: ParaNorman
runners-up: Frankenweenie; Wreck-It-Ralph 

DOCUMENTARY: Indie Game: The Movie
runner-up: The Invisible War 

NON-ENGLISH LANGUAGE FILM: Headhunters
runner-up: Amour 

CINEMATOGRAPHY: Skyfall- Roger Deakins
runner-up: Life of Pi- Claudio Miranda

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Film Comment Top Ten of 2012

The best in film from Film Comment magazine:


  1. Holy Motors (Leos Carax)
  2. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
  3. Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson)
  4. This Is Not a Film (Jafar Panahi & Mirtahmasb)
  5. Amour (Michael Haneke)
  6. The Turin Horse (Bela Tarr)
  7. The Kid with the Bike (Jean Pierre & Luc Dardenne)
  8. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)
  9. Lincoln (Steven Spielberg)
  10. Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow)

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Critics Choice Awards Nominations

The Broadcast Film Critics Association have announced their awards.  The winners-- everyone!

PICTURE
Argo
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Django Unchained
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Lincoln
The Master
Moonrise Kingdom
Silver Linings Playbook
Zero Dark Thirty

DIRECTOR
Ben Affleck, Argo
Kathryn Bigelow, Zero Dark Thirty
Tom Hooper, Les Miserables
Ang Lee, Life of Pi
David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook


ACTOR
Bradley Cooper, Silver Linings Playbook
Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln
John Hawkes, The Sessions
Hugh Jackman, Les Miserables
Joaquin Phoenix, The Master
Denzel Washington, Flight


ACTRESS
Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty
Marion Cotillard, Rust & Bone
Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook
Emmanuelle Riva, Amour
Quvenzhane Wallis, Beasts of the Southern Wild
Naomi Watts, The Impossible


SUPPORTING ACTOR
Alan Arkin, Argo
Javier Bardem, Skyfall
Robert DeNiro, Silver Linings Playbook
Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Master
Tommy Lee Jones, Lincoln
Matthew McConaughey, Magic Mike


SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Amy Adams, The Master
Judi Dench, Skyfall
Ann Dowd, Compliance
Sally Field, The Sessions
Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables
Helen Hunt, The Sessions

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Django Unchained- Quentin Tarantino
Flight- John Gatins
Looper- Rian Johnson
The Master- Paul Thomas Andersno
Moonrise Kingdom- Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola
Zero Dark Thirty- Marc Boal

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Argo- Chris Terrio
Life of Pi- David Magee
Lincoln- Tony Kushner
The Perks of Being a Wallflower- Stephen Chbosky
Silver Linings Playbook- David O. Russell

ANIMATED FEATURE
Brave
Frankenweenie
Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Watned
ParaNorman
Rise of the Guardians
Wreck-It-Ralph

DOCUMENTARY
Bully
Central Park Five
The Imposter
The Queen of Versailles
Searching for Sugarman
West of Memphis

FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
Amour
The Intouchables
A Royal Affair
Rust & Bone


YOUNG ACTOR\ACTRESS
Elle Fanning, Ginger & Rosa
Kara Hayward, Moonrise Kingdom
Tom Holland, The Impossible
Logan Lerman, The Perks of Being a Wallflower
Suraj Sharma, Life of Pi
Quvenzhane Wallis, Beasts of the Southern Wild


ACTING ENSEMBLE
Argo
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Les Miserables
Lincoln
Moonrise Kingdom
Silver Linings Playbook

CINEMATOGRAPHY
Les Miserables- Danny Cohen
Life of Pi- Claudio Miranda
Lincoln- Janusz Kaminski
The Master- Mihai Malaimare Jr.
Skyfall- Roger Deakins


ART DIRECTION
Anna Karenina- Sarah Greenwood & Katie Spencer
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey- Dan Hennah, Ra Vincent & Simon Bright
Les Miserables- Eve Stewart & Anna Lynch-Robinson
Life of Pi- David Gropman & Anna Pinnock
Lincoln- Rick Carter & Jim Erickson

FILM EDITING
Argo- William Goldenberg
Les Miserables- Melanie Ann Oliver & Chris Dickens
Life of Pi- Tim Squyres
Lincoln- Michael Kahn
Zero Dark Thirty- William Goldenberg & Dylan Tichenor

COSTUME DESIGN
Anna Karenina- Jacqueline Durran
Cloud Atlas- Kym Barrett & Pierre-Yves Gayraud
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey- Bob Buck, Ann Maskrey & Richard Taylor
Les Miserables- Paco Delgado
Lincoln- Joanna Johnson

ORIGINAL SCORE
Argo- Alexandre Desplat
Life of Pi- Mychael Danna
Lincoln- John Williams
The Master- Jonny Greenwood
Moonrise Kingdom- Alexandre Desplat

ORIGINAL SONG
"For You," Act of Valor
"Learn Me Right," Brave
"Suddenly," Les Miserables
"Still Alive," Paul Williams Still Alive
"Skyfall," Skyfall 

MAKE-UP
Cloud Atlas
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Miserables
Lincoln

VISUAL EFFECTS
Cloud Atlas
The Dark Knight Rises
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Life of Pi
Marvel's The Avengers

ACTION MOVIE
The Dark Knight Rises
Looper
Marvel's The Avengers
Skyfall

ACTOR IN AN ACTION MOVIE
Christian Bale, The Dark Knight Rises
Daniel Craig, Skyfall
Robert Downey, Jr., Marvel's The Avengers
Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Looper
Jake Gyllenhaal, End of Watch

ACTRESS IN AN ACTION MOVIE
Emily Blunt, Looper
Gina Carano, Haywire
Judi Dench, Skyfall
Anne Hathaway, The Dark Knight Rises
Jennifer Lawrence, The Hunger Games

COMEDY MOVIE
21 Jump Street
Bernie
Silver Linings Playbook
Ted
This is 40 

ACTOR IN A COMEDY MOVIE
Jack Black, Bernie
Bradley Cooper, Silver Linings Playbook
Paul Rudd, This is 40
Channing Tatum, 21 Jump Street
Mark Wahlberg, Ted

ACTRESS IN A COMEDY MOVIE
Mila Kunis, Ted
Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook
Shirley MacLaine, Bernie
Leslie Mann, This is 40
Rebel Wilson, Pitch Perfect

SCI-FI\HORROR MOVIE
The Cabin in the Woods
Looper
Prometheus

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Moonrise Kingdom and Oscar?

After snatching the Best Feature prize at the Gotham Awards-- the first awards proper of the season-- and snagging five big Independent Spirit Awards nominations, does Moonrise Kingdom have what it takes to take it's youthful love story all the way to the Academy Awards?

Well the golden reviews the Wes Anderson film received this summer were pretty impressive.  A 94% on critical aggregate Rotten Tomatoes, and a 84 on Metacritic are comparable to falls heavy hitters (and certain Best Picture nominees) Argo and Lincoln; my review here.  Plus, it's $45 million at the summer box office is good enough (more so than The Artist made last year.)  It was a bonafide sleeper that played and played and played well.  It held the record for the biggest opening weekend per-screen average for a live action feature of all time, until Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master yanked it away a mere four months later.  It's an enchanting film, and upon its debut as the opener of this years Cannes Film Festival, many were wistful of the personally-honed nature that Wes Anderson channeled within his own idiosyncratic charm.
There's a quiver and a hopefulness that perhaps now is his time, and a shot with Oscar.  Anderson was previously nominated for Best Original Screenplay (with Owen Wilson) for 2001's The Royal Tenenbaums and for Best Animated Feature for 2009's Fantastic Mr. Fox, but aside from that the Academy has been immune to his gifts.  Moonrise Kingdom is against odds, a seminal Anderson selection about a budding young romance between two misfits, elaborately and preciously staged, but there's a longing and romanticism and dare one say, soulfulness, that he's never expressed on screen before.  He lies on the artifice, as Anderson does, and does superbly, but there's also a stripped down fragility at the heart of Moonrise Kingdom that expresses a loneliness and tenderness he perhaps hasn't yet achieved on screen before.

While Moonrise Kingdom will forever remain a dark horse Best Picture (and even more so Best Director) candidate, these early gets offer a nice bit of exposure for a film surely to be forgotten in the haste of the coming weeks.  If nothing more, it solidifies what will surely be Moonrise's best bet-- an Original Screenplay nomination.  Hopefully, the coming weeks will set up a win. 

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Gotham Awards

Your Sister's Sister's tight ensemble (Mark Duplass, Emily Blunt and Rosemarie DeWitt) besting big guns like Moonrise Kingdom, Silver Linings Playbook, Bernie and Safety Not Guaranteed.

FEATURE 
Moonrise Kingdom

DOCUMENTARY
How to Survive a Plague

ENSEMBLE
Your Sister's Sister

BREAKTHROUGH FILMMAKER
Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild

BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMER
Emayatzy Corinealdi, Middle of Nowhere

BEST FILM NOT PLAYING AT A THEATER NEAR YOU
An Oversimplification of Her Beauty 

Independent Spirit Award Nominations

Jennifer Lawrence nets her first nomination of the season for Female Lead in Silver Lining Playbook

And we're off!  Summer sleeper Moonrise Kingdom and potential fall sleeper Silver Linings Playbook lead the nominations for the Independent Spirit Awards with five each, with Beasts of the Southern Wild and the Sundance hit Middle of Nowhere following closely behind.

After a surprise win at the Gothams, Moonrise Kingdom co-leads Indie Spirits with 5!

BEST FEATURE
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Bernie
Keep the Lights On
Moonrise Kingdom
Silver Linings Playbook

BEST DIRECTOR
Wes Anderson, Moonrise Kingdom
Julia Loktev, The Loneliest Planet
David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook
Ira Sachs, Keep the Lights On
Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild

BEST FIRST FEATURE
Fill the Void
Gimme the Loot
The Perks of Being a Wallflower
Safety Not Guaranteed
Sound of My Voice

JOHN CASSAVETTES AWARD (Best Feature under $500,000)
Breakfast with Curtis
The Color Wheel
Middle of Nowhere
Mosquita & Mari
Starlet

BEST MALE LEAD
Jack Black, Bernie
Bradley Cooper, Silver Linings Playbook
John Hawkes, The Sessions
Thure Lindhardt, Keep the Lights On
Matthew McConaughey, Killer Joe
Wendell Pierce, Four

Perhaps a preview of whats in store for the most competitive category of the year...the Best Actor race has six candidates including John Hawkes in The Sessions.  Co-star Helen Hunt was also nominated, but the film was snubbed everywhere else.

BEST FEMALE LEAD
Linda Cardellini, Return
Emayatzy Corinealdi, Middle of Nowhere
Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook
Quvenzhane Wallis, Beasts of the Southern Wild
Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Smashed

BEST SUPPORTING MALE
Matthew McConaughey, Magic Mike
David Oyelowe, Middle of Nowhere
Michael Pena, End of Watch
Sam Rockwell, Seven Psychopaths
Bruce Willis, Moonrise Kingdom

BEST SUPPORTING FEMALE
Rosemarie DeWitt, Your Sister's Sister
Ann Dowd, Compliance
Helen Hunt, The Sessions
Brit Marling, Sound of My Voice
Lorraine Toussaint, Middle of Nowhere

BEST SCREENPLAY
Keep the Lights On- Ira Sachs
Moonrise Kingdom- Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola
Ruby Sparks- Zoe Kazan
Seven Psychopaths- Martin McDonaugh
Silver Linings Playbook- David O. Russell

BEST FIRST SCREENPLAY
Celeste & Jesse Forever- Rashida Jones & Will McCormack
Fill the Void- Rama Burshstein
Gayby- Jonathon Lisecki
Robot & Frank- Christopher Ford
Safety Not Guaranteed- Derek Connolly

BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM
Amour
Once Upon a Time in Anatolia
Rust & Bone
Sister
War Witch

BEST DOCUMENTARY
Central Park Five
How to Survive a Plague
The Invisible War
Marina Abramoviac: The Artist is Present
The Waiting Room

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Here
End of the Watch
Moonrise Kingdom
Valley of Saints

ROBERT ALTMAN AWARD (presented to a films director, casting director and ensemble cast)
Starlet

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Gotham Independent Film Award Nominations



Moonrise Kingdom earns two nominations, including Best Feature.


The 2012 awards season is officially underway as the first governing body has announced its selections for the best of 2012.  The Gotham Awards are always the first organization to do so, and while their nominations aren't necessarily clear bellwethers for the Oscars, they put a few things on the map, giving them a boost, so to speak, as the season starts getting crazy.


BEST FEATURE
Bernie
The Loneliest Planet
The Master
Middle of Nowhere
Moonrise Kingdom

BEST DOCUMENTARY
Detropia
How to Survive a Plague
Marina Abramavi?: The Artist is Present
Room 237
The Waiting Room

BEST ENSEMBLE PERFORMANCE
Bernie
Moonrise Kingdom
Safety Not Guaranteed
The Silver Linings Playbook
Your Sister's Sister

BREAKTHROUGH DIRECTOR
Antonio Mendez Esparza, Aqui y Alla
Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild
Brian M. Cassidey & Melanie Shatzky, Francine
Jason Corlund & Julia Halperin, Now, Forager
Zal Batmanglij, Sound of My Voice

BREAKTHROUGH ACTOR
Mike Birbiglia, Sleepwalk with Me
Emayatzy Corineldi, Middle of Nowhere
Thure Lindhardt, Keep the Lights On
Melanie Lynskey, Hello, I Must Be Going
Quevenzhane Wallis, Beasts of the Southern Wild

BEST FILM NOT PLAYING AT A THEATER NEAR YOU
Kid-Thing
An Oversimplification of Her Beauty
Red Flag
Sun Don't Shine
Tiger Tall in Blue
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