Showing posts with label OSCARS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OSCARS. Show all posts
Monday, February 23, 2015
Academy Award Winners
PICTURE: Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
DIRECTOR: Alejandro González Iñárritu, Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
ACTOR: Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything
ACTRESS: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
SUPPORTING ACTOR: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Birdman- Alexander Dinelaris, Nicholás Giacobone,
Alejandro González Iñárritu, Armando Bo
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: The Imitation Game- Graham Moore
ANIMATED FEATURE: Big Hero 6
DOCUMENTARY: Citizenfour
FOREIGN FILM: Ida
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Birdman- Emmanuel Lubezki
COSTUME DESIGN: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Milena Canonera
PRODUCTION DESIGN: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Adam Stockhausen, Anna Pinnock
FILM EDITING: Whiplash- Tom Cross
MAKE-UP AND HAIRSTYLING: The Grand Budapest Hotel
SCORE: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Alexandre Desplat
ORIGINAL SONG: "Glory," Selma
ANIMATED SHORT FILM: Feast
DOCUMENTARY SHORT FILM: Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1
LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM: The Phone Call
SOUND MIXING: Whiplash
SOUND EDITING: American Sniper
VISUAL EFFECTS: Interstellar
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Oscar Nominations
PICTURE
American Sniper
Birdman
Boyhood
The Grand Budapest Hotel
The Imitation Game
Selma
The Theory of Everything
Whiplash
DIRECTOR
Wes Anderson, The Grand Budapest Hotel
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Birdman
Richard Linklater, Boyhood
Bennett Miller, Foxcatcher
Morten Tyldum, The Imitation Game
ACTOR
Steve Carell, Foxcatcher
Bradley Cooper, American Sniper
Benedict Cumberbatch, The Imitation Game
Michael Keaton, Birdman
Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything
ACTRESS
Marion Cotillard, Two Days, One Night
Felicity Jones, The Theory of Everything
Julianne Moore, Still Alice
Rosamund Pike, Gone Girl
Reese Witherspoon, Wild
SUPPORTING ACTOR
Robert Duvall, The Judge
Ethan Hawke, Boyhood
Edward Norton, Birdman
Mark Ruffalo, Foxcatcher
J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
Laura Dern, Wild
Keira Knightley, The Imitation Game
Emma Stone, Birdman
Meryl Streep, Into the Woods
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Birdman- Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Nicolás Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris, Jr. & Armando Bo
Boyhood- Richard Linklater
Foxcatcher- E. Max Frye, Dan Futterman
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Wes Anderson, Hugo Guinness
Nightcrawler- Dan Gilroy
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
American Sniper- Jason Hall
The Imitation Game- Graham Moore
Inherent Vice- Paul Thomas Anderson
The Theory of Everything- Anthony McCarten
Whiplash- Damien Chazelle
ANIMATED FEATURE
Big Hero 6
The Boxtrolls
How to Train Your Dragon 2
Song of the Sea
The Tale of the Princess Kaguya
DOCUMENTARY
Citizenfour
Finding Vivian Maier
Last Days in Vietnam
The Salt of the Earth
Virunga
FOREIGN FILM
Ida (Poland)
Leviathan (Russia)
Tangerines (Estonia)
Timbuktu (Mauritania)
Wild Tales (Argentina)
CINEMATOGRAPHY
Birdman- Emmanuel Lubezki
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Robert Yeoman
Ida- Lukasz Zal, Ryszard Lenczewski
Mr. Turner- Dick Pope
Unbroken- Roger Deakins
COSTUME DESIGN
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Milena Canonero
Inherent Vice- Mark Bridges
Into the Woods- Colleen Atwood
Maleficent- Anna B. Sheppard, Jane Clive
Mr. Turner- Jacqueline Durran
PRODUCTION DESIGN
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Adam Stockhausen, Anna Pinnock
The Imitation Game- Maria Djurkovic, Tatiana MacDonald
Interstellar- Nathan Crowley, Gary Fettis
Into the Woods- Dennis Gassner, Anna Pinnock
Mr. Turner- Suzie Davies, Charlotte Watts
FILM EDITING
American Sniper- Joel Cox, Gary D. Roach
Boyhood- Sandra Adair
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Barney Pilling
The Imitation Game- William Goldenberg
Whiplash- Tom Cross
ORIGINAL SCORE
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Alexandre Desplat
The Imitation Game- Alexandre Desplat
Interstellar- Hans Zimmer
Mr. Turner- Gary Yershon
The Theory of Everything- Jóhann Jóhannsson
ORIGINAL SONG
"Everything is Awesome," The LEGO Movie- Shawn Patterson
"Glory," Selma- John Stephens, Lonnie Lynn
"Grateful," Beyond the Lights- Diane Warren
"I'm Not Gonna Miss You," Glen Campbell...I'll Be Me- Glen Campbell, Julian Raymond
"Lost Stars," Begin Again- Gregg Alexander, Danielle Brisebois
SOUND EDITING
American Sniper- Alan Robert Murray, Bub Asman
Birdman- Martin Hernandez, Aaron Glascock
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies- Brent Burge, Jason Canovas
Interstellar- Richard King
Unbroken- Becky Sullivan, Andrew DeCristofaro
SOUND MIXING
American Sniper- John Reitz, Gregg Rudloff, Walt Martin
Birdman- Jon Taylor, Frank A. Montano, Thomas Varga
Interstellar- Gary A. Rizzo, Gregg Landaker, Mark Weingarten
Unbroken- Jon Taylor, Frank A. Montano, David Lee
Whiplash- Craig Mann, Ben Wilkins, Thomas Curley
VISUAL EFFECTS
Captain America: The Winter Soldier
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
Guardians of the Galaxy
Interstellar
X-Men: Days of Future Past
MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
Foxcatcher- Bill Corsco, Dennis Liddiard
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Frances Hannon, Mark Coulier
Guardians of the Galaxy- Elizabeth Yianni-Georgiou, Daid White
ANIMATED SHORT
The Bigger Picture
The Dam Keeper
Feast
Me and My Moulton
A Single Life
DOCUMENTARY SHORT
Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1
Joanna
Our Cruse
The Reaper
White Earth
LIVE ACTION SHORT
Aya
Boogaloo and Graham
Butter Lamp
Parvaneh
The Phone Call
American Sniper
Birdman
Boyhood
The Grand Budapest Hotel
The Imitation Game
Selma
The Theory of Everything
Whiplash
DIRECTOR
Wes Anderson, The Grand Budapest Hotel
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Birdman
Richard Linklater, Boyhood
Bennett Miller, Foxcatcher
Morten Tyldum, The Imitation Game
ACTOR
Steve Carell, Foxcatcher
Bradley Cooper, American Sniper
Benedict Cumberbatch, The Imitation Game
Michael Keaton, Birdman
Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything
ACTRESS
Marion Cotillard, Two Days, One Night
Felicity Jones, The Theory of Everything
Julianne Moore, Still Alice
Rosamund Pike, Gone Girl
Reese Witherspoon, Wild
SUPPORTING ACTOR
Robert Duvall, The Judge
Ethan Hawke, Boyhood
Edward Norton, Birdman
Mark Ruffalo, Foxcatcher
J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
Laura Dern, Wild
Keira Knightley, The Imitation Game
Emma Stone, Birdman
Meryl Streep, Into the Woods
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Birdman- Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Nicolás Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris, Jr. & Armando Bo
Boyhood- Richard Linklater
Foxcatcher- E. Max Frye, Dan Futterman
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Wes Anderson, Hugo Guinness
Nightcrawler- Dan Gilroy
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
American Sniper- Jason Hall
The Imitation Game- Graham Moore
Inherent Vice- Paul Thomas Anderson
The Theory of Everything- Anthony McCarten
Whiplash- Damien Chazelle
ANIMATED FEATURE
Big Hero 6
The Boxtrolls
How to Train Your Dragon 2
Song of the Sea
The Tale of the Princess Kaguya
DOCUMENTARY
Citizenfour
Finding Vivian Maier
Last Days in Vietnam
The Salt of the Earth
Virunga
FOREIGN FILM
Ida (Poland)
Leviathan (Russia)
Tangerines (Estonia)
Timbuktu (Mauritania)
Wild Tales (Argentina)
CINEMATOGRAPHY
Birdman- Emmanuel Lubezki
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Robert Yeoman
Ida- Lukasz Zal, Ryszard Lenczewski
Mr. Turner- Dick Pope
Unbroken- Roger Deakins
COSTUME DESIGN
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Milena Canonero
Inherent Vice- Mark Bridges
Into the Woods- Colleen Atwood
Maleficent- Anna B. Sheppard, Jane Clive
Mr. Turner- Jacqueline Durran
PRODUCTION DESIGN
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Adam Stockhausen, Anna Pinnock
The Imitation Game- Maria Djurkovic, Tatiana MacDonald
Interstellar- Nathan Crowley, Gary Fettis
Into the Woods- Dennis Gassner, Anna Pinnock
Mr. Turner- Suzie Davies, Charlotte Watts
FILM EDITING
American Sniper- Joel Cox, Gary D. Roach
Boyhood- Sandra Adair
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Barney Pilling
The Imitation Game- William Goldenberg
Whiplash- Tom Cross
ORIGINAL SCORE
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Alexandre Desplat
The Imitation Game- Alexandre Desplat
Interstellar- Hans Zimmer
Mr. Turner- Gary Yershon
The Theory of Everything- Jóhann Jóhannsson
ORIGINAL SONG
"Everything is Awesome," The LEGO Movie- Shawn Patterson
"Glory," Selma- John Stephens, Lonnie Lynn
"Grateful," Beyond the Lights- Diane Warren
"I'm Not Gonna Miss You," Glen Campbell...I'll Be Me- Glen Campbell, Julian Raymond
"Lost Stars," Begin Again- Gregg Alexander, Danielle Brisebois
SOUND EDITING
American Sniper- Alan Robert Murray, Bub Asman
Birdman- Martin Hernandez, Aaron Glascock
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies- Brent Burge, Jason Canovas
Interstellar- Richard King
Unbroken- Becky Sullivan, Andrew DeCristofaro
SOUND MIXING
American Sniper- John Reitz, Gregg Rudloff, Walt Martin
Birdman- Jon Taylor, Frank A. Montano, Thomas Varga
Interstellar- Gary A. Rizzo, Gregg Landaker, Mark Weingarten
Unbroken- Jon Taylor, Frank A. Montano, David Lee
Whiplash- Craig Mann, Ben Wilkins, Thomas Curley
VISUAL EFFECTS
Captain America: The Winter Soldier
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
Guardians of the Galaxy
Interstellar
X-Men: Days of Future Past
MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
Foxcatcher- Bill Corsco, Dennis Liddiard
The Grand Budapest Hotel- Frances Hannon, Mark Coulier
Guardians of the Galaxy- Elizabeth Yianni-Georgiou, Daid White
ANIMATED SHORT
The Bigger Picture
The Dam Keeper
Feast
Me and My Moulton
A Single Life
DOCUMENTARY SHORT
Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1
Joanna
Our Cruse
The Reaper
White Earth
LIVE ACTION SHORT
Aya
Boogaloo and Graham
Butter Lamp
Parvaneh
The Phone Call
Sunday, December 7, 2014
Best Documentary Short-List
- Art & Craft (directed by Sam Cullman, Jennifer Grausman, Mark Becker)
- The Case Against 8 (directed by Ben Cotner, Ryan White)
- Citizen Koch (directed by Carl Deal, Tia Lessin)
- Citizenfour (directed by Laura Poitras)
- Finding Vivian Maier (directed by John Maloof, Charlie Siskel)
- The Internet's Own Boy (directed by Brian Knappenberger)
- Jodorowsky's Dune (directed by Frank Pavich)
- Keep on Keepin' On (directed by Alan Hicks)
- The Kill Team (directed by Dan Krauss)
- Last Days of Vietnam (directed by Rory Kennedy)
- Life Itself (directed by Steve James)
- The Overnighters (directed by Jesse Moss)
- The Salt of the Earth (directed by Juliano Ribeiro Salgado, Wim Wenders)
- Tales of the Grim Sleeper (directed by Nick Broomfield)
- Virunga (directed by Orlando von Einsiedel)
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
2014: The Contenders
Last year about this time I indulged in a bit of madness trying to foresee what the 2013 Oscar contenders might be with a round-up of what the major, mini-major and straight-out mini studios had up their respective sleeves. I managed to include nearly every major film nominated for Oscars last year, with
the notable exception of one-- at this time one year ago, I (and likely
you) hadn't the sense that Philomena would go on and be The Weinstein Company's saving grace in the 2013 awards circuit. In fact, I hadn't heard of it at all, further proof that early prognosticating is likely an unhealthy sickness. That being said, why not go for a ridiculously early trip down the rabbit hole yet again.
Fox Searchlight, the mini beneath the Big Fox banner, usually gets all the glory and that was certainly the case in 2013 where 12 Years a Slave bagged the top prize while films coming out of major fold were almost completely ignored save for the obligatory John Williams Score nod for his work in The Book Thief, but Big Fox (Searchlight will be profiled further down) had a banner 2012 with Life of Pi and has a few potential cards in the running for 2014. Two big ones, and mighty risky ones, but if they work could be major. Director Ridley Scott struck out for the studio with 2013's The Counselor, but returns this Christmas with Exodus, a biblical epic starring Christian Bale as Moses-- it's been a long while since a film of that ilk has scored with the Academy, but there's a mini-resurgence of them going on this year (Noah.) The other big card is Gone Girl, David Fincher's eagerly awaited adaptation of Gillian Flynn's best-selling novel-- it's a mystery starring Ben Affleck (2012's Oscar pity-partier and eventual golden boy) and Rosamund Pike. Might not be the Academy's taste, but his Girl With a Dragon Tattoo didn't seem so on paper either and ended up earning 5 nods and a statue for its Film Editing. Fincher, whether he cares or not, is in the club and thus it merits inclusion. Also on the roster is the based on true events drama True Story, which tells of the relationship between a journalist and a murderer-- the caveat is that they're played by James Franco and Jonah Hill from untested director Rupert Goold; then again Hill is now a 2-time Oscar nominee. The Fault in Our Stars is a teenage romantic weepie with Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elgort; probably not Oscar-bait, but the screenplay comes from the (500) Days of Summer/The Spectacular Now team of Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber, who one day should breakout with the Academy. The rest of Big Fox's Oscar chances lie in blockbusters hoping to break in with technical nods like X-Men: Days of Future Past (never once has has the series been nominated for anything) and Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (the 2011 film received a Visual Effects bid) and animated films Rio 2 (the first film didn't get into Animated Feature, but earned a Best Song nomination), The Book of Life, Home, Mr. Peobody and Sherman and How to Train Your Dragon 2 (the latter two are from DreamWorks Animation with Fox distributing.)
20th CENTURY FOX
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| Gone Girl |
Sunday, March 2, 2014
86th Academy Awards
PICTURE: 12 Years a Slave
DIRECTOR: Alfonso Cuarón, Gravity
ACTOR: Matthew McConaughey, Dallas Buyers Club
ACTRESS: Cate Blanchett, Blue Jasmine
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Jared Leto, Dallas Buyers Club
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Lupita Nyong'o, 12 Years a Slave
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Her- Spike Jonze
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: 12 Years a Slave- John Ridley
ANIMATED FEATURE: Frozen
DOCUMENTARY: 20 Feet From Stardom
FOREIGN FILM: The Great Beauty (Italy)
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Gravity- Emmanuel Lubezki
PRODUCTION DESIGN: The Great Gatsby- Catherine Martin & Beverley Dunn
COSTUME DESIGN: The Great Gatsby- Catherine Martin
FILM EDITING: Gravity- Mark Sanger & Alfonso Cuarón
ORIGINAL SCORE: Gravity- Steven Price
ORIGINAL SONG: "Let it Go," Frozen
ANIMATED SHORT: Mr. Hublot
DOCUMENTARY SHORT: The Lady in Number 6
LIVE ACTION SHORT: Helium
SOUND MIXING: Gravity
SOUND EDITING: Gravity
MAKE-UP AND HAIRSTYLING: Dallas Buyers Club
VISUAL EFFECTS: Gravity
DIRECTOR: Alfonso Cuarón, Gravity
ACTOR: Matthew McConaughey, Dallas Buyers Club
ACTRESS: Cate Blanchett, Blue Jasmine
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Jared Leto, Dallas Buyers Club
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Lupita Nyong'o, 12 Years a Slave
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Her- Spike Jonze
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: 12 Years a Slave- John Ridley
ANIMATED FEATURE: Frozen
DOCUMENTARY: 20 Feet From Stardom
FOREIGN FILM: The Great Beauty (Italy)
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Gravity- Emmanuel Lubezki
PRODUCTION DESIGN: The Great Gatsby- Catherine Martin & Beverley Dunn
COSTUME DESIGN: The Great Gatsby- Catherine Martin
FILM EDITING: Gravity- Mark Sanger & Alfonso Cuarón
ORIGINAL SCORE: Gravity- Steven Price
ORIGINAL SONG: "Let it Go," Frozen
ANIMATED SHORT: Mr. Hublot
DOCUMENTARY SHORT: The Lady in Number 6
LIVE ACTION SHORT: Helium
SOUND MIXING: Gravity
SOUND EDITING: Gravity
MAKE-UP AND HAIRSTYLING: Dallas Buyers Club
VISUAL EFFECTS: Gravity
Saturday, March 1, 2014
Final Oscar Predictions
It's almost here...and over. This exceedingly long awards season (prolonged a week further thanks to the Winter Olympics) will come to a conclusion in nearly twenty-four hours time and well, it's been a bit of bumpy ride. 2013, by most accounts an above average (if mildly over-praised) calendar year comes to a close with many races still fairly tight. Will surprises abound? I suppose they already have considering the Best Picture prize is still not the for-sure guarantee that it usually is the night before Hollywood's biggest night. And for all the nuttiness that occurred last season, the 2013 awards season has been even more rule-breaking and slightly infuriating-- yes, Ben Affleck's lack of a Best Director nomination was unprecedented, but Argo was a clean-sweeper once the guilds had their say.
2013 is way more nutballs by comparison with 12 Years a Slave and Gravity as the dueling, flip-a-coin frontrunners, while wily American Hustle hopes to messy up Oscar predictions even further-- the David O. Russell con job raked in 10 nominations (the most ever for this year-- tied with Gravity.) While a great many races appear almost neatly settled, there's still quite a few of those nagging categories that will leave us in suspense until the envelope is open...and Best Picture is one of them. Phew! Here's my feeble attempt to break down the 2013 Oscar race. I will go in the order in which the Oscars where presented at last years ceremony.
SUPPORTING ACTOR
Five dudes, all of whom are in movie nominated for Best Picture, compete and four of them will in all likelihood graciously clap when Jared Leto's name is called for Dallas Buyers Club. Surprisingly, a challenger never really took shape throughout the season as Leto streamlined through the awards circuit winning nearly everything in sight. Even, if only for a second, he looked vulnerable after a bit of fuss to his Golden Globe speech spelled slight trouble, the actor and 60 Seconds From Mars front-man adjusted and never looked back. Barkhad Abdi recently won the BAFTA (a prize that Leto strangely wasn't up for) for his role in Captain Phillips and Michael Fassbender looked a threat before the race started for 12 Years a Slave and his adamant, non-campaigning fuss, but neither looks to challenge.
Prediction: Jared Leto, Dallas Buyers Club
ANIMATED SHORT FILM
The short films used to be a sore ache in the Oscar prediction game, but after least years decision to open up voting to all Academy members added with the slight uptick in notoriety for shorts (all of them were granted brief theatrical releases this year), perhaps that's a thing of the past. This year, the frontrunner is likely Get a Horse, the bouncy old school meets new school Mickey Mouse hybrid that played in front of Frozen. It is easily the most seen of the five films and, as a novelty, would provide Mickey his first Oscar-winning vehicle ever. Feral and Mr. Hublot have fans and warm critical notices, but expect Get a Horse to triumph.
Prediction: Get a Horse
ANIMATED FEATURE
Things looked dire in this category until Frozen blew in and became a worldwide phenomenon, nearly ensuring an animated feature Oscar for the Mouse House on top of its (almost) billion dollar gross. The art housers admire The Wind Rises but this looks to be one of the easier predictions of the evening.
Prediction: Frozen
CINEMATOGRAPHY
The last few years, the Cinematography Oscar has been in a bit of rut, honoring effects-heavy behemoths like Avatar, Hugo and Life of Pi sparking a debate as to the efforts of the Director of Photography versus a film's visual effects artists. Well, with Gravity so far ahead of the pack this year, that debate will linger at least a year longer, but the silver lining is that multiple nominee, but Oscar-less Emmanuel Lubezki (the poet who shot Y Tu Mama Tambien,Children of Men, The Tree of Life, The New World, Sleepy Hollow) will garner a statue, and that's a good thing. The competition is impressive (Inside Llewyn Davis, The Grandmaster, Nebraska and Prisoners), but this is one (of potentially very many) awards in the bag for Gravity.
Prediction: Gravity
2013 is way more nutballs by comparison with 12 Years a Slave and Gravity as the dueling, flip-a-coin frontrunners, while wily American Hustle hopes to messy up Oscar predictions even further-- the David O. Russell con job raked in 10 nominations (the most ever for this year-- tied with Gravity.) While a great many races appear almost neatly settled, there's still quite a few of those nagging categories that will leave us in suspense until the envelope is open...and Best Picture is one of them. Phew! Here's my feeble attempt to break down the 2013 Oscar race. I will go in the order in which the Oscars where presented at last years ceremony.
SUPPORTING ACTOR
Five dudes, all of whom are in movie nominated for Best Picture, compete and four of them will in all likelihood graciously clap when Jared Leto's name is called for Dallas Buyers Club. Surprisingly, a challenger never really took shape throughout the season as Leto streamlined through the awards circuit winning nearly everything in sight. Even, if only for a second, he looked vulnerable after a bit of fuss to his Golden Globe speech spelled slight trouble, the actor and 60 Seconds From Mars front-man adjusted and never looked back. Barkhad Abdi recently won the BAFTA (a prize that Leto strangely wasn't up for) for his role in Captain Phillips and Michael Fassbender looked a threat before the race started for 12 Years a Slave and his adamant, non-campaigning fuss, but neither looks to challenge.
Prediction: Jared Leto, Dallas Buyers Club
ANIMATED SHORT FILM
The short films used to be a sore ache in the Oscar prediction game, but after least years decision to open up voting to all Academy members added with the slight uptick in notoriety for shorts (all of them were granted brief theatrical releases this year), perhaps that's a thing of the past. This year, the frontrunner is likely Get a Horse, the bouncy old school meets new school Mickey Mouse hybrid that played in front of Frozen. It is easily the most seen of the five films and, as a novelty, would provide Mickey his first Oscar-winning vehicle ever. Feral and Mr. Hublot have fans and warm critical notices, but expect Get a Horse to triumph.
Prediction: Get a Horse
ANIMATED FEATURE
Things looked dire in this category until Frozen blew in and became a worldwide phenomenon, nearly ensuring an animated feature Oscar for the Mouse House on top of its (almost) billion dollar gross. The art housers admire The Wind Rises but this looks to be one of the easier predictions of the evening.
Prediction: Frozen
CINEMATOGRAPHY
The last few years, the Cinematography Oscar has been in a bit of rut, honoring effects-heavy behemoths like Avatar, Hugo and Life of Pi sparking a debate as to the efforts of the Director of Photography versus a film's visual effects artists. Well, with Gravity so far ahead of the pack this year, that debate will linger at least a year longer, but the silver lining is that multiple nominee, but Oscar-less Emmanuel Lubezki (the poet who shot Y Tu Mama Tambien,Children of Men, The Tree of Life, The New World, Sleepy Hollow) will garner a statue, and that's a good thing. The competition is impressive (Inside Llewyn Davis, The Grandmaster, Nebraska and Prisoners), but this is one (of potentially very many) awards in the bag for Gravity.
Prediction: Gravity
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Friday, January 24, 2014
"American Hustle" and Oscar History
David O. Russell's American Hustle earned an extremely rare feat: four acting Oscar nominations, one for each acting category. Russell accomplished the same thing last year for Silver Linings Playbook, which collected a win for Jennifer Lawrence in the Best Actress category. In doing some research, this marked the first time in history that a filmmaker had successfully gotten a nomination in each of the four acting categories twice, in two consecutive years no less. At this point, surely every agent and actor in the industry will be clamoring to work on Russell's follow-up films. To date, only fifteen films in the history of the Academy Awards have earned acting nominations in all four categories. Interestingly, none of the films to have accomplished this have ended up winning Best Picture. American Hustle detractors can take note of that I suppose. And they are:
MY MAN GODFREY (1936)- directed by Gregory La Cava
Actor: William Powell
Actress: Carole Lombard
Supporting Actor: Mischa Auer
Supporting Actress: Alice Brady
No winners in the group, and it's the only case in Academy history when a film earned the magic four acting nods without a coinciding Best Picture nomination.
MRS. MINIVER (1942)- directed by William Wyler
Actor: Walter Pidgeon
Actress: Greer Garson
Supporting Actor: Henry Travers
Supporting Actress: Teresa Wright; Dame May Whitty
Garson and Wright won Oscars in Wyler's WWII drama which also won the Best Picture prize. Mrs. Miniver went a step even further, get a mention in not only all four acting categories, but two in Supporting Actress William Wyler has directed more Oscar-nominated performances than any other filmmaker. He directed 36 performances to a nomination and 14 to a win; Elia Kazan (also a director with a credit on this list) is his closet competitor with 24 nominated performances and Martin Scorsese (not listed) is the closet living director with a chance of defeating said record with 22 nominated performances.
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| Lombard and Powell in My Man Godfrey |
MY MAN GODFREY (1936)- directed by Gregory La Cava
Actor: William Powell
Actress: Carole Lombard
Supporting Actor: Mischa Auer
Supporting Actress: Alice Brady
No winners in the group, and it's the only case in Academy history when a film earned the magic four acting nods without a coinciding Best Picture nomination.
MRS. MINIVER (1942)- directed by William Wyler
Actor: Walter Pidgeon
Actress: Greer Garson
Supporting Actor: Henry Travers
Supporting Actress: Teresa Wright; Dame May Whitty
Garson and Wright won Oscars in Wyler's WWII drama which also won the Best Picture prize. Mrs. Miniver went a step even further, get a mention in not only all four acting categories, but two in Supporting Actress William Wyler has directed more Oscar-nominated performances than any other filmmaker. He directed 36 performances to a nomination and 14 to a win; Elia Kazan (also a director with a credit on this list) is his closet competitor with 24 nominated performances and Martin Scorsese (not listed) is the closet living director with a chance of defeating said record with 22 nominated performances.
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Oscar Nomination Eve
Like many a youngster on the night before Christmas morning, I wait-- sleepless and anxiety-filled-- for the announcement of the 86th Academy Award nominations, set to arrive in less than two hours time. Unlike Christmas gifts however, these are presents that cannot be returned and the hope is always that this will be year that Academy makes the right decisions across the board. Those decisions vary from person to person, but in the hours before all is set in stone and industry bloodbath really reaches its ugliest, there's still that hope, that quiver of anticipation. It's silly. It's ridiculous. But those unlike myself (and a great many who hold their films and awards mania fandom more to themselves), this is Christmas morning. What shiny presents will Santa leave under our tree? Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs and Chris Hemsworth, he of such defined abdomens, will tell us at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater at the break of this coming Los Angeles dawn.
All our predictions, for which we've been second guessing ourselves on over the past few weeks and most urgently, in the past few hours, will either be righted or wronged. What surprises will emerge? Will American Hustle, currently in the esteemed position of holding the most guild mentions of any film in 2013, pull of on upset in the leading tally of nominations setting itself for the Best Picture gold? Or will 12 Years a Slave, the film that's been pegged ever since its first screening at Telluride, lead the field? Or is it Gravity, the undisputed visual feast of the year, ripe for the taking?
And what of Robert Redford, whose had a bumpy awards season after being named Best Actor from the New York Film Critics, only to be snubbed from the SAG and BAFTA line-up and overtaken by Matthew McConaughey at the Golden Globes? Or the entire Best Actor field for that matter, arguably the most competitive category which no matter what will result in more than a few painful snubs? Will Leonardo DiCaprio be catapulted into the race from all the buzzed about controversy stemmed from The Wolf of Wall Street, a maelstrom that hit its apex whilst voting was taking place? Or what of Amy Adams-- can she really usurp Meryl Streep's assumed eighteenth nomination? So many questions, so little confidence in anything at this unruly hour-- who knows, maybe James Franco's gonzo Spring Breakers performance will make it in with all it's "Consider This Sh*t" bravado. Or maybe, just maybe, enough Academy members watched my Frances Ha (yes, I claim perverse ownership of it) and will reward it amply across the field in a giant middle finger sigh of rebellion to the rules of awards prognosticating. That's the insomnia creeping in, but let me have my moment...
Of what is clear is that three films are at the very top-- American Hustle, 12 Years a Slave and Gravity. The locks in the Best Picture line-up. All three managed PGA, DGA, BAFTA and considerable guild mentions. Captain Phillips follows and is safe and sound and likely will end up as one of the films with the highest nomination tally even as a single win seems unlikely. From there on, things get shaky. Nebraska, which earned guild mentions from the Producers, Writers, Cinematographers and anchored by Oscar-ready performances from Bruce Dern and June Squibb, looks to be in about fifth slot. It helps that the film likely plays right the sweet spot of older Academy base and plays beautifully on screener. The Wolf of Wall Street earned Martin Scorsese a DGA nomination and film earned a PGA nod, but SAG ignored it and its awards season has been spotted and rife with endless arguments over everything and anything. The film is likely in the Best Picture field because how can it really be resisted, but how adventurous are these Academy members anyway? Dallas Buyers Club has a shockingly robust awards season. The film was assured slots for actors McConaughey and Jared Leto, but it seemed at the start that would be ample reward enough. Considering it's strong showing at PGA, WGA and that weird SAG Ensemble nomination, it would be hard to predict in the top award winning the trophy for the greatest divide between industry love and the merits of the film itself-- it also represents a closing chapter to James Schamus' deservedly heralded reign of Focus Features, which makes a bit more sense. Her, Spike Jonze's beautifully melancholic romance has done wonderfully with the critics and is assured passion votes, but the film is fairly youth-skewing and the most hipster upscale film in the line-up. The film may break in, but it could easily be snubbed-- consider: how many older members of the Academy will this appeal to anyhow? The older members likely frothed at the mouth to the decidedly un-hip Philomena, which is the Weinstein Company's best bet a Best Picture nomination-- I feel it's in in a pinch, if the field is expanded to nine like it has been the last two years running. And then there's Blue Jasmine, which earned PGA and WGA nods, Saving Mr. Banks, a slow burner that earned a PGA nomination and Lee Daniels' The Butler, which earned a SAG Ensemble mention and Inside Llewyn Davis, with all its critical love all the hopefully siphon enough votes away for a surprise nomination.
Anyhow, here's my NO GUTS, NO GLORY takes:
All our predictions, for which we've been second guessing ourselves on over the past few weeks and most urgently, in the past few hours, will either be righted or wronged. What surprises will emerge? Will American Hustle, currently in the esteemed position of holding the most guild mentions of any film in 2013, pull of on upset in the leading tally of nominations setting itself for the Best Picture gold? Or will 12 Years a Slave, the film that's been pegged ever since its first screening at Telluride, lead the field? Or is it Gravity, the undisputed visual feast of the year, ripe for the taking?
And what of Robert Redford, whose had a bumpy awards season after being named Best Actor from the New York Film Critics, only to be snubbed from the SAG and BAFTA line-up and overtaken by Matthew McConaughey at the Golden Globes? Or the entire Best Actor field for that matter, arguably the most competitive category which no matter what will result in more than a few painful snubs? Will Leonardo DiCaprio be catapulted into the race from all the buzzed about controversy stemmed from The Wolf of Wall Street, a maelstrom that hit its apex whilst voting was taking place? Or what of Amy Adams-- can she really usurp Meryl Streep's assumed eighteenth nomination? So many questions, so little confidence in anything at this unruly hour-- who knows, maybe James Franco's gonzo Spring Breakers performance will make it in with all it's "Consider This Sh*t" bravado. Or maybe, just maybe, enough Academy members watched my Frances Ha (yes, I claim perverse ownership of it) and will reward it amply across the field in a giant middle finger sigh of rebellion to the rules of awards prognosticating. That's the insomnia creeping in, but let me have my moment...
Of what is clear is that three films are at the very top-- American Hustle, 12 Years a Slave and Gravity. The locks in the Best Picture line-up. All three managed PGA, DGA, BAFTA and considerable guild mentions. Captain Phillips follows and is safe and sound and likely will end up as one of the films with the highest nomination tally even as a single win seems unlikely. From there on, things get shaky. Nebraska, which earned guild mentions from the Producers, Writers, Cinematographers and anchored by Oscar-ready performances from Bruce Dern and June Squibb, looks to be in about fifth slot. It helps that the film likely plays right the sweet spot of older Academy base and plays beautifully on screener. The Wolf of Wall Street earned Martin Scorsese a DGA nomination and film earned a PGA nod, but SAG ignored it and its awards season has been spotted and rife with endless arguments over everything and anything. The film is likely in the Best Picture field because how can it really be resisted, but how adventurous are these Academy members anyway? Dallas Buyers Club has a shockingly robust awards season. The film was assured slots for actors McConaughey and Jared Leto, but it seemed at the start that would be ample reward enough. Considering it's strong showing at PGA, WGA and that weird SAG Ensemble nomination, it would be hard to predict in the top award winning the trophy for the greatest divide between industry love and the merits of the film itself-- it also represents a closing chapter to James Schamus' deservedly heralded reign of Focus Features, which makes a bit more sense. Her, Spike Jonze's beautifully melancholic romance has done wonderfully with the critics and is assured passion votes, but the film is fairly youth-skewing and the most hipster upscale film in the line-up. The film may break in, but it could easily be snubbed-- consider: how many older members of the Academy will this appeal to anyhow? The older members likely frothed at the mouth to the decidedly un-hip Philomena, which is the Weinstein Company's best bet a Best Picture nomination-- I feel it's in in a pinch, if the field is expanded to nine like it has been the last two years running. And then there's Blue Jasmine, which earned PGA and WGA nods, Saving Mr. Banks, a slow burner that earned a PGA nomination and Lee Daniels' The Butler, which earned a SAG Ensemble mention and Inside Llewyn Davis, with all its critical love all the hopefully siphon enough votes away for a surprise nomination.
Anyhow, here's my NO GUTS, NO GLORY takes:
- Spike Jonze surprises with a Best Director nomination alongside Steve McQueen, Alfonso Cuarón, David O. Russell and Paul Greengrass over-taking Martin Scorsese and Alexander Payne.
- Leonardo DiCaprio in; Robert Redford out.
- Meryl Streep in; Amy Adams left snubbed and already deemed the frontrunner for next year with Big Eyes.
Monday, January 6, 2014
Final 'Hail Mary' FYC Pleas
The nomination voting polls close for the 87th Academy Award on Wednesday, January 8th. If Academy members are anything like me then this time of year is filled with endless anxiety and frustration. Fears of being hopelessly behind just as the lull of the new year wants to push me forward. Did I see everything I wanted to or needed to? What did I miss? How can I process all the hours of cinemas I've crammed in the past few weeks into a cohesive whole celebrating the very best of the past film year? It's all a little too much. If Academy members have this feeling, I'm understand, I sympathize...I'm here to help. Here are some of my favorites, my last minutes pleas of the 2013 cinematic year that I hope you consider. Heck, even if you haven't seen some of them, but are unsure of what to fill your ballots with, just go ahead a trust me.
BEST ACTRESS: Julie Delpy, Before Midnight
The leading actress category is pretty full and full of Oscar vets of varying degrees of worthiness, but one name that should have a higher profile is Delpy, the brittle heart and anguishing soul of Before Midnight. She was worthy the last go around as well in Before Sunset, so perhaps more than little guilt over that upset could be remedied by nominating her here. She brings such a volcanic display of passion, intelligence and anger to the third chapter of the Before series, but there's a consummate craft that modulates the performance and furthermore the film. Delpy already earned Indie Spirit and Globe nominations for her effort, so this isn't totally out of the realm of feasibility, so plop the screener in, acknowledge these great films, or just check it off to rid thyselves of past sins.
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Enough Said- Nicole Holofcener
It's a shame that Holofcener has never been nominated for writing before since her style is so specific and witty and almost elementary in what makes up good writing. She came close, perhaps, a few years ago when her script for Please Give earned a WGA nomination, but the Academy has never bitten. Sure, there's a bit of a Woody Allen thing that centers her films, as all her films take the perspective of a white and neurotic middle class woman grappling with white middle class issues, but Allen has been out of touch for years (decades?) and the Academy still bites when he's done something decent. Holofcener, on the other hand, has always brought a brittle, perceptive economy to her films and Enough Said is one of her strongest, a deft, funny, utterly relatable human drama about real grown-ups. Deceptively simple perhaps to a fault (and it's true that sometimes the filmmaking itself is somewhat pedestrian), but urgent, heartfelt, tender and real.
BEST PICTURE: Frances Ha
How about this-- any Oscar voter currently stumped, why not just vote for Noah Baumbach's joyous and scrumptious comedy of manners in every category. I mean if The King's Speech was beloved enough to merit sound nominations, there really is no ceiling for the besotted ones. And nothing in 2013 was deserving of unanimous praise than this witty, generous Greta Gerwig-headlined gift. I've gushed time and time again about the may joys of the film and while I'm not silly enough to think for a second that this plea won't fall on deaf ears, I encourage each and all to find this gorgeous amalgam of vintage Woody Allen, French New Wave cinema and very contemporary hipster-dom and discover for themselves. We can all dance around the streets to the tune of Bowie afterward.
BEST DIRECTOR: Spike Jonze, Her
Moving along from straight up fantasy to a very real contender that hopefully doesn't get shafted. Hey Academy, remember, you once dug Spike Jonze-- you even nominated him for his feature directorial debut Being John Malkovich all the way back in 1999, so this isn't even that crazy to ask of you to acknowledge the pristine polish, magic and artistry he brought to Her. While he's surely going to nominated for writing the screenplay to the boy meets operation system romantic dramedy, it's the direction of the film that's the real selling point-- all that fantastic, subtle, playful and evocative flourishes to a totally feasible, yet soft world building of a near future Los Angeles should not go unnoticed. And while you're at it, please remind your production designer and director of photography friends that Her is worthy of slots there as well.
BEST COSTUME DESIGN: The Hunger Games: Catching Fire- Trish Summerville
Summerville already proved her laurels with her chic and stylish designs for The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, becoming David Fincher's go-to costumer (she'll re-team with him on Gone Girl), but her Catching Fire costumes were eye-catching and alluring in contrasting the grimy and poor cloth in the districts to the opulent, whatsits all around the Capitol. The budget clearly rose in the second chapter, and the film is a richer, bolder, more colorful thing because of it, but the artistry on display-- especially from Summerville-- was definitely Oscar worthy.
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: In a World...- Lake Bell
This probably won't happen and that's cool, however In a World... kind of got a bum rap. Bell won the Screenwriting Prize at Sundance last winter and the film made but a minor splash when it premiered last summer, but the film is so sneaky and smart and deserved a lot more than it got. Using the conceit of voice over artists as a microcosm of the film industry as a whole, Bell displayed such wit and insight in gender politics while maintaining an steely, amusing grip of the film as a whole. It's a comedy, and a damn good one, but there's more to it. Plus, if you're gonna ignore Holofcener, there should be a few female writers nominated this year-- 2013 was a great year for female actors and filmmakers, you just had to (as this film makes implicitly clear) really search for them.
BEST ACTOR: Oscar Isaac, Inside Llewyn Davis
Likely one of the actors teetering on the dreaded sixth or seventh slots of a very crowded Best Actor race, but there's still a chance (right?) that Isaac's glorious chamber piece of a performance in the Coen Brothers' folk rock odyssey that right can prevail in the end. In truth Isaac plays a difficult character-- a brooding failure of a folk singer trying to break through right on the cusp of when Bob Dylan was about to start a revolution. He's not always likable in that cookie-cutter way we like our leading men to be, but the film goads us swiftly into rooting for him. It helps that his voice is a thing of wonder and Isaac portrays Llewyn Davis as an uniquely charismatic, endlessly talented loser. Plus, really, just think how cool the actors branch will look in history for nominating it? Seriously, your grandchildren are judging you.
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: The Spectacular Now- Scott Neustadter & Michael H. Weber
A certain amount of leeway can be forgiven for the lack of awardage for The Spectacular Now-- it's a movie about teenagers that all but touts its after-school-like programming as a badge of honor, but the fresh and invigorating adaptation of Tim Tharp's novel is perceptive and alive and allows for its actors to do great work in such a rare way, it would be shame for it be unacknowledged. Perhaps it feels too-lived in and the film is likely too-little seen, but that's no excuse. Neustadter & Weber were on the cusp of a nomination five years ago for the original screenplay (500) Days of Summer that never came to fruition, but their work on The Spectacular Now is better and bigger (by being smaller) that it's all the more deserving.
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY: Spring Breakers- Benoît Debie
I understand that Spring Breakers probably wasn't really your thing. I'm okay with that, it wasn't really my thing either. In fact, I didn't even particularly care for Harmony Korine's brash, the kids-are-not-alright neon nightmare. However, separating tremendous technical achievements from the overall quality of a film is another matter and one that the Academy membership should appreciate as well. Debie, the rigorous and exhausting talent who's lensed films like Enter the Void, The Runaways and Irreversible is a undisputed talent. The fever dream shots make give the film the nightmare-dreamlike setting that it needed but didn't deserve. His contributions were utterly fantastic and awards worthy.
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: The World's End- Simon Pegg & Edgar Wright
Yeah, the pub carousing turned apocalyptic comedy probably isn't something that was ever on your radar, I understand that. But the witty, inventive and intelligently sharp screenplay for The World's End handles so many neat parlor tricks that it was easy to forget that the film is actually quite moving. All of the sci-fi/frat house comedy that's packed on the surface doesn't take away the quietly sobering grace notes of human connection and growing pains that face a group of high school friends now faced with the hobbles of grown-up existence. Have a pint and get a sense of humor.
Okay, I was pretty rough on you, but heed my advise.
BEST ACTRESS: Julie Delpy, Before Midnight
The leading actress category is pretty full and full of Oscar vets of varying degrees of worthiness, but one name that should have a higher profile is Delpy, the brittle heart and anguishing soul of Before Midnight. She was worthy the last go around as well in Before Sunset, so perhaps more than little guilt over that upset could be remedied by nominating her here. She brings such a volcanic display of passion, intelligence and anger to the third chapter of the Before series, but there's a consummate craft that modulates the performance and furthermore the film. Delpy already earned Indie Spirit and Globe nominations for her effort, so this isn't totally out of the realm of feasibility, so plop the screener in, acknowledge these great films, or just check it off to rid thyselves of past sins.
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Enough Said- Nicole Holofcener
It's a shame that Holofcener has never been nominated for writing before since her style is so specific and witty and almost elementary in what makes up good writing. She came close, perhaps, a few years ago when her script for Please Give earned a WGA nomination, but the Academy has never bitten. Sure, there's a bit of a Woody Allen thing that centers her films, as all her films take the perspective of a white and neurotic middle class woman grappling with white middle class issues, but Allen has been out of touch for years (decades?) and the Academy still bites when he's done something decent. Holofcener, on the other hand, has always brought a brittle, perceptive economy to her films and Enough Said is one of her strongest, a deft, funny, utterly relatable human drama about real grown-ups. Deceptively simple perhaps to a fault (and it's true that sometimes the filmmaking itself is somewhat pedestrian), but urgent, heartfelt, tender and real.
BEST PICTURE: Frances Ha
How about this-- any Oscar voter currently stumped, why not just vote for Noah Baumbach's joyous and scrumptious comedy of manners in every category. I mean if The King's Speech was beloved enough to merit sound nominations, there really is no ceiling for the besotted ones. And nothing in 2013 was deserving of unanimous praise than this witty, generous Greta Gerwig-headlined gift. I've gushed time and time again about the may joys of the film and while I'm not silly enough to think for a second that this plea won't fall on deaf ears, I encourage each and all to find this gorgeous amalgam of vintage Woody Allen, French New Wave cinema and very contemporary hipster-dom and discover for themselves. We can all dance around the streets to the tune of Bowie afterward.
BEST DIRECTOR: Spike Jonze, Her
Moving along from straight up fantasy to a very real contender that hopefully doesn't get shafted. Hey Academy, remember, you once dug Spike Jonze-- you even nominated him for his feature directorial debut Being John Malkovich all the way back in 1999, so this isn't even that crazy to ask of you to acknowledge the pristine polish, magic and artistry he brought to Her. While he's surely going to nominated for writing the screenplay to the boy meets operation system romantic dramedy, it's the direction of the film that's the real selling point-- all that fantastic, subtle, playful and evocative flourishes to a totally feasible, yet soft world building of a near future Los Angeles should not go unnoticed. And while you're at it, please remind your production designer and director of photography friends that Her is worthy of slots there as well.
BEST COSTUME DESIGN: The Hunger Games: Catching Fire- Trish Summerville
Summerville already proved her laurels with her chic and stylish designs for The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, becoming David Fincher's go-to costumer (she'll re-team with him on Gone Girl), but her Catching Fire costumes were eye-catching and alluring in contrasting the grimy and poor cloth in the districts to the opulent, whatsits all around the Capitol. The budget clearly rose in the second chapter, and the film is a richer, bolder, more colorful thing because of it, but the artistry on display-- especially from Summerville-- was definitely Oscar worthy.
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: In a World...- Lake Bell
This probably won't happen and that's cool, however In a World... kind of got a bum rap. Bell won the Screenwriting Prize at Sundance last winter and the film made but a minor splash when it premiered last summer, but the film is so sneaky and smart and deserved a lot more than it got. Using the conceit of voice over artists as a microcosm of the film industry as a whole, Bell displayed such wit and insight in gender politics while maintaining an steely, amusing grip of the film as a whole. It's a comedy, and a damn good one, but there's more to it. Plus, if you're gonna ignore Holofcener, there should be a few female writers nominated this year-- 2013 was a great year for female actors and filmmakers, you just had to (as this film makes implicitly clear) really search for them.
BEST ACTOR: Oscar Isaac, Inside Llewyn Davis
Likely one of the actors teetering on the dreaded sixth or seventh slots of a very crowded Best Actor race, but there's still a chance (right?) that Isaac's glorious chamber piece of a performance in the Coen Brothers' folk rock odyssey that right can prevail in the end. In truth Isaac plays a difficult character-- a brooding failure of a folk singer trying to break through right on the cusp of when Bob Dylan was about to start a revolution. He's not always likable in that cookie-cutter way we like our leading men to be, but the film goads us swiftly into rooting for him. It helps that his voice is a thing of wonder and Isaac portrays Llewyn Davis as an uniquely charismatic, endlessly talented loser. Plus, really, just think how cool the actors branch will look in history for nominating it? Seriously, your grandchildren are judging you.
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: The Spectacular Now- Scott Neustadter & Michael H. Weber
A certain amount of leeway can be forgiven for the lack of awardage for The Spectacular Now-- it's a movie about teenagers that all but touts its after-school-like programming as a badge of honor, but the fresh and invigorating adaptation of Tim Tharp's novel is perceptive and alive and allows for its actors to do great work in such a rare way, it would be shame for it be unacknowledged. Perhaps it feels too-lived in and the film is likely too-little seen, but that's no excuse. Neustadter & Weber were on the cusp of a nomination five years ago for the original screenplay (500) Days of Summer that never came to fruition, but their work on The Spectacular Now is better and bigger (by being smaller) that it's all the more deserving.
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY: Spring Breakers- Benoît Debie
I understand that Spring Breakers probably wasn't really your thing. I'm okay with that, it wasn't really my thing either. In fact, I didn't even particularly care for Harmony Korine's brash, the kids-are-not-alright neon nightmare. However, separating tremendous technical achievements from the overall quality of a film is another matter and one that the Academy membership should appreciate as well. Debie, the rigorous and exhausting talent who's lensed films like Enter the Void, The Runaways and Irreversible is a undisputed talent. The fever dream shots make give the film the nightmare-dreamlike setting that it needed but didn't deserve. His contributions were utterly fantastic and awards worthy.
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: The World's End- Simon Pegg & Edgar Wright
Yeah, the pub carousing turned apocalyptic comedy probably isn't something that was ever on your radar, I understand that. But the witty, inventive and intelligently sharp screenplay for The World's End handles so many neat parlor tricks that it was easy to forget that the film is actually quite moving. All of the sci-fi/frat house comedy that's packed on the surface doesn't take away the quietly sobering grace notes of human connection and growing pains that face a group of high school friends now faced with the hobbles of grown-up existence. Have a pint and get a sense of humor.
Okay, I was pretty rough on you, but heed my advise.
Friday, December 20, 2013
2013 Foreign Language Film Shortlist
- The Broken Circle Breakdown (Belgium)
- An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker (Bosnia & Herzegovina)
- The Grandmaster (Hong Kong)
- The Great Beauty (Italy)
- The Hunt (Denmark)
- The Missing Picture (Cambodia)
- The Notebook (Hungary)
- Omar (Palestine)
- Two Lives (Germany)
Monday, August 12, 2013
Updates Coming
Lots of (hopefully) exciting content is on the way! Musings and Stuff is coming back with a non-threatening vengeance after an unexpected break. Excitement underway:
| Meryl vs. Oprah? |
- Oscar season beginning-- what Telluride, Toronto and Venice coming soon, we continue onward to another awards season. Today's unexpected announcement: Meryl Streep going Supporting for her role in August: Osage County. Will Streep go up against Oprah in Lee Daniels' The Butler? Anyone else hoping Uma Thurman gets awards traction for Lars von Trier's Nymphomaniac for an encore of Oprah/Uma Oscar jokes....
- Reviews-- lots coming up including: The Way, Way Back, We're the Millers, Fill the Void, Elysium and Ain't Them Bodies Saints.
- and more...
Saturday, August 3, 2013
But Will She Sing "We Saw Your Boobs?"
| Hopefully the Jaws theme didn't play her off |
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!
The one-sheet for Disney's Saving Mr. Banks, which goes behind the scenes of the making of Mary Poppins, which is incidentally the one and only live-action Disney film to get a Best Picture Oscar nomination-- Walt himself, won 22 Academy Awards, but received only one nomination for the big one. Tom Hanks plays Walt Disney; Emma Thompson plays Poppins author P.L. Travers.
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Halftime
The first half of the year usually is devoid of Oscar-y titles-- typically a dumping ground for product and the hopeful launch of things big and shiny-- but nonetheless we are well behind the first six months of 2013 and a short time ahead of the fall festival circuit when things start getting wonky. Are there any takeaways thus far that may have any impact on the 2013 Oscar race?
It's true that Best Picture winners and nominees typically are introduced in the latter part of the calendar year-- since 2000 only three eventual Best Picture winners were released in the first half (The Hurt Locker, Crash, Gladiator) and only a handful of nominees (Up, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Midnight in Paris, Moulin Rouge!, Erin Brockovich) have managed that feat. Still at this stage of the game when all is mere speculation and all in the movie awards land still feels pure and innocent, it's fun to ponder the playful possibilities.
It's true that Best Picture winners and nominees typically are introduced in the latter part of the calendar year-- since 2000 only three eventual Best Picture winners were released in the first half (The Hurt Locker, Crash, Gladiator) and only a handful of nominees (Up, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Midnight in Paris, Moulin Rouge!, Erin Brockovich) have managed that feat. Still at this stage of the game when all is mere speculation and all in the movie awards land still feels pure and innocent, it's fun to ponder the playful possibilities.
| The only Best Pictures winners since 2000 to be released before July. |
BEST PICTURE
Last year, the winner of the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance was a plucky bit of poetry called Beasts of the Southern Wild which managed the nearly unbelievable task of netting four Oscar nominations including Picture and Director-- it became just the third Sundance to Oscar translation in history following Precious (2009) and Winter's Bone (2010.) This year Sundance bestowed its top prize (as well as the Audience Award) to Fruitvale Station, Ryan Coogler's feature debut about the 2009 BART shooting of Oscar Grant. The Weinstein Company hopes magic strikes again for the well-received film. It opened last week in limited release to one of the biggest per-screen averages of the year (third to only Spring Breakers and A Place Beyond the Pines) and may very well enter the zeitgeist due to the sense of urgency bestowed due to the Zimmerman verdict (also last weekend.) The key, of course, will be the position the great Harvey puts the film in towards the end of the year (remember, he's got a lot of awards potential set to come at the end of the year including August: Osage County, Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom, Philamena and Grace of Monaco.)
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
The 10 Most Awesome New Members of the Academy
The Academy recently invited 276 new members to join in the annual circus of voting for the Oscars. In a striking move, AMPAS seems to be making an effort to listen to the many critics of the membership and the eventual types of movies that appear on the lists year after year as examples of "the best" of the year. The invitations have been sent, and while we will be unaware to who will eventually accept, here's the most awesome. And while it's cool that the director of Fantastic Four and The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants were invited to the club, those names will not appear on this list.
runners-up: Emily Mortimer (actror)-- and a lovely one that as films as varied as Lovely & Amazing, Shutter Island, Match Point and Young Adam can attest. ~ Jason Schwartzman (actor)-- eclectic actor and member of the Coppola dynasty; star of Rushmore and I Heart Huckabees. ~ Kimberly Elise (actor)-- gifted actress of For Colored Girls and Beloved fame, and far worthier than the typical roles she's been granted. ~ Emmanuelle Riva (actor)-- beloved French actress and should have been recent Oscar-winner for Amour. ~ Ava DuVernay (writer/director)-- gifted filmmaker who made a huge wave with last fall's indie hit Middle of Nowhere. ~ Jeff Nichols (writer/director)-- director of Take Shelter and Mud, surely to be an Oscar contender shortly...one hopes. ~ Cliff Martinez (composer)-- in demand cool composer for films as varied as Drive, Contagion, Traffic and the soon to be released Only God Forgives; never Oscar-nominated.
10. GREIG FRASER (cinematography branch)
Infinitely gifted director of photography whose been on the rise since lensing Jane Campion's Bright Star (2009.) 2012 proved a banner year with expert, frame-worthy work on films as varied as Zero Dark Thirty, Snow White & the Huntsman and Killing Them Softly. Next up is Bennett Miller's Foxcatcher. Fraser has never been nominated for an Oscar but hopefully as a member that might help his chances.
9. JAFAR PANAHI (documentary branch)
This Is Not a Film, Panahi's impassioned protest documentary was an avid indictment for the importance of the art form. The film, shot in Panahi's native Iran, was done in secret and made illegally capturing the filmmakers house arrest after being persecuted for his art by the Iranian government. Shot partly on an iPhone and smuggled out the country in a cake, the fact that exists at all is worthy enough to affirm AMPAS membership; that the film was eventually shortlisted for an Oscar nomination was something short of miraculous.
8. BENH ZEITLIN (directors branch)
Whatever becomes of the Beasts of the Southern Wild filmmaker, his legend is certainly already cemented with the glorious Cinderella story of his breakout film and what it stand for. In the ever harsh movie-making climate of contemporary cinema, Zeitlin went out in the trenches and made a film with a shoestring budget and it turned into one of the most magical, original and epic splices of filmmaking in years. Beasts is a totem for the modern independent film movement and Zeitlin deserves a free pass at his stab, as well as an Academy membership-- I'd be curious to see his picks for sure.
7. RIAN JOHNSON (directors branch)
Brick and The Brothers Bloom introduced a quirky new filmmaker to the modern indie landscape, one who showcased an expert sleight of hand in meshing and mashing genres. Last years Looper established Johnson as a filmmaker capable of upping the ante on terms of budget and scale without losing any wit, insight or ambition-- in truth this a filmmaker who should be at the top of every studios list for directing their tentpoles. Or really directing anything for that matter. He deserved at the very least a writers nod for Looper just last year.
6. JULIE DELPY (actors branch)
Nominated in 2004 for co-writing the screenplay of Before Sunset (with Richard Linklater and Ethan Hawke), Delpy might find herself an Oscar contender this year for her performance in Before Midnight, but aside from the wondrous trilogy for which she has been a part of for the better part of the last twenty years, she's proven herself and delectable talent on and off screen as an director, writer and actor.
5. STEVE McQUEEN (directors branch)
Hunger and Shame were both inexplicably shut out from the Academy-- in truth it was expected, but still...not cool. However McQueen has proven to be on the most interesting and provocative filmmakers in recent years-- his films may be tough, but they are also incredibly artful and substantial. If nothing else, this fall's 12 Years a Slave will prove his highest profile release to date, as well as this richly deserved invitation to the Academy.
4. AGNÉS VARDA (documentary branch)
The iconoclast French New Wave member is one of the "how the hell is she not a member yet" invitees this year. However, it's better late than never-- which may also explain why she's never received an Oscar nomination either despite beautiful work with recent films like The Gleaners & I and The Beaches of Agnés and old classics like Cleo From 5 to 7.
3. SARAH POLLEY (writers branch)
The multi-talented Polley, whose most recent work Stories We Tell is currently a must see in specialized theaters around the country, is a most splendid choice, even if the invitation is years overdue-- this talented actress, writer, director made her breakout in 1997's The Sweet Hereafter, a hit with the Academy, even if Polley herself was snubbed. She wasn't snubbed for her writing effort for her debut feature film Away From Her, and is a strong possibility for a nomination for Stories We Tell. Well done and finally, she is freaking awesome!
2. PRINCE (music branch)
Just because...plus he's an Oscar winner for Purple Rain.
1. MATT GROENING (animation branch)
Best. Invitee. Ever.
![]() |
| Jeff Nichols |
10. GREIG FRASER (cinematography branch)
Infinitely gifted director of photography whose been on the rise since lensing Jane Campion's Bright Star (2009.) 2012 proved a banner year with expert, frame-worthy work on films as varied as Zero Dark Thirty, Snow White & the Huntsman and Killing Them Softly. Next up is Bennett Miller's Foxcatcher. Fraser has never been nominated for an Oscar but hopefully as a member that might help his chances.
9. JAFAR PANAHI (documentary branch)
This Is Not a Film, Panahi's impassioned protest documentary was an avid indictment for the importance of the art form. The film, shot in Panahi's native Iran, was done in secret and made illegally capturing the filmmakers house arrest after being persecuted for his art by the Iranian government. Shot partly on an iPhone and smuggled out the country in a cake, the fact that exists at all is worthy enough to affirm AMPAS membership; that the film was eventually shortlisted for an Oscar nomination was something short of miraculous.
![]() |
| Benh Zeitlin |
Whatever becomes of the Beasts of the Southern Wild filmmaker, his legend is certainly already cemented with the glorious Cinderella story of his breakout film and what it stand for. In the ever harsh movie-making climate of contemporary cinema, Zeitlin went out in the trenches and made a film with a shoestring budget and it turned into one of the most magical, original and epic splices of filmmaking in years. Beasts is a totem for the modern independent film movement and Zeitlin deserves a free pass at his stab, as well as an Academy membership-- I'd be curious to see his picks for sure.
7. RIAN JOHNSON (directors branch)
Brick and The Brothers Bloom introduced a quirky new filmmaker to the modern indie landscape, one who showcased an expert sleight of hand in meshing and mashing genres. Last years Looper established Johnson as a filmmaker capable of upping the ante on terms of budget and scale without losing any wit, insight or ambition-- in truth this a filmmaker who should be at the top of every studios list for directing their tentpoles. Or really directing anything for that matter. He deserved at the very least a writers nod for Looper just last year.
6. JULIE DELPY (actors branch)
Nominated in 2004 for co-writing the screenplay of Before Sunset (with Richard Linklater and Ethan Hawke), Delpy might find herself an Oscar contender this year for her performance in Before Midnight, but aside from the wondrous trilogy for which she has been a part of for the better part of the last twenty years, she's proven herself and delectable talent on and off screen as an director, writer and actor.
5. STEVE McQUEEN (directors branch)
Hunger and Shame were both inexplicably shut out from the Academy-- in truth it was expected, but still...not cool. However McQueen has proven to be on the most interesting and provocative filmmakers in recent years-- his films may be tough, but they are also incredibly artful and substantial. If nothing else, this fall's 12 Years a Slave will prove his highest profile release to date, as well as this richly deserved invitation to the Academy.
4. AGNÉS VARDA (documentary branch)
The iconoclast French New Wave member is one of the "how the hell is she not a member yet" invitees this year. However, it's better late than never-- which may also explain why she's never received an Oscar nomination either despite beautiful work with recent films like The Gleaners & I and The Beaches of Agnés and old classics like Cleo From 5 to 7.
3. SARAH POLLEY (writers branch)
The multi-talented Polley, whose most recent work Stories We Tell is currently a must see in specialized theaters around the country, is a most splendid choice, even if the invitation is years overdue-- this talented actress, writer, director made her breakout in 1997's The Sweet Hereafter, a hit with the Academy, even if Polley herself was snubbed. She wasn't snubbed for her writing effort for her debut feature film Away From Her, and is a strong possibility for a nomination for Stories We Tell. Well done and finally, she is freaking awesome!
![]() |
| Sarah Polley |
Just because...plus he's an Oscar winner for Purple Rain.
1. MATT GROENING (animation branch)
Best. Invitee. Ever.
Friday, June 28, 2013
Welcome Members
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has invited 276 new members to join the club. What's notable about this years announcement list is that the Academy seems to actually be kinda/sorta listening to some of the complaints that have been hurled in their direction. The ratio of female vs. male / Caucasian vs. non-Caucasians on the list is about even. That can only mean good things, but there is but a caveat in that being invited to join the Academy doesn't mean everyone will accept, and further along that it will make a tremendous amount of difference in the stodginess of the yearly proceedings. Bitterness aside, welcome new members:
ACTORS
Jason Bateman (Up in the Air, Juno)
Miriam Colon (City of Hope, Scarface)
Rosario Dawson (Rent, Sin City)
Kimberly Elise (For Colored Girls, Beloved)
Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Lincoln, The Dark Knight Rises)
Charles Grodin (Midnight Run, The Heartbreak Kid)
Rebecca Hall (Iron Man 3, The Town)
Lance Henriksen (Aliens, The Terminator)
Jack Huston (Not Fade Away, Factory Girl)
Milla Jovovich (Resident Evil, Chaplin)
Lucy Liu (Kill Bill: Volume One, Chicago)
Jennifer Lopez (What to Expect When You're Expecting, Selena)
Alma Martinez (Born in East L.A., Under Fire)
Emily Mortimer (Hugo, Lars & the Real Girl)
Sandra Oh (Rabbit Hole, Sideways)
Paula Patton (Mission: Impossible: Ghost Protocol, Precious)
Michael Pena (End of Watch, Crash)
Emmanuelle Riva (Amour, Hiroshima, Mon Amour)
Jason Schwartzman (Moonrise Kingdom, Rushmore)
Geno Silva (Mulholland Drive, Amistad)
Danny Trejo (Machete, Heat)
Chris Tucker (Silver Linings Playbook, Rush Hour)
DIRECTORS
Nikolaj Arcel (A Royal Affair, Truth About Men)
Ava DuVernay* (Middle of Nowhere, I Will Follow)
Paul Feig (The Heat, Bridesmaids)
Catherine Hardwick (Twilight, Thirteen)
Kirk Jones (What to Expect When You're Expecting, Waking Ned Devine)
Ken Kwapis (Big Miracle, The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants)
Pablo Larraín (No, Tony Manero)
Steve McQueen (Shame, Hunger)
Kim Nguyen (War Witch, City of Shadows)
Jafar Panahi* (This Is Not a Film, The Circle)
Todd Phillips (The Hangover, Old School)
Joachim Ronning (Kon-Tiki, Max Manus)
Espen Sandberg (Kon-Tiki, Max Manus)
Tim Story (Think Like a Man, Fantastic Four)
Benh Zeitlin (Beasts of the Southern Wild, Glory at Sea)
WRITERS
Jessica Bendinger (Aquamarine, Bring it On)
Reggie Rock Bythewood (Notorious, Get on the Bus)
Tina Gordon Chism (Peeples, Drumline)
Julie Delpy (Before Midnight, 2 Days in Paris)
Lena Dunham (Nobody Walks, Tiny Furniture)
Ava DuVernay* (Middle of Nowhere, I Will Follow)
John Gatins (Flight, Coach Carter)
John Hamburg (I Love You, Man, Meet the Parents)
John Lee Hancock (Snow White & the Huntsman, The Blind Side)
Rian Johnson (Looper, Brick)
Jeff Nichols (Mud, Take Shelter)
Sarah Polley (Take This Waltz, Away From Her)
Chris Terrio (Argo, Heights)
![]() |
| Joseph Gordon-Levitt |
Jason Bateman (Up in the Air, Juno)
Miriam Colon (City of Hope, Scarface)
Rosario Dawson (Rent, Sin City)
Kimberly Elise (For Colored Girls, Beloved)
Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Lincoln, The Dark Knight Rises)
Charles Grodin (Midnight Run, The Heartbreak Kid)
Rebecca Hall (Iron Man 3, The Town)
Lance Henriksen (Aliens, The Terminator)
Jack Huston (Not Fade Away, Factory Girl)
Milla Jovovich (Resident Evil, Chaplin)
Lucy Liu (Kill Bill: Volume One, Chicago)
Jennifer Lopez (What to Expect When You're Expecting, Selena)
Alma Martinez (Born in East L.A., Under Fire)
Emily Mortimer (Hugo, Lars & the Real Girl)
Sandra Oh (Rabbit Hole, Sideways)
Paula Patton (Mission: Impossible: Ghost Protocol, Precious)
Michael Pena (End of Watch, Crash)
Emmanuelle Riva (Amour, Hiroshima, Mon Amour)
Jason Schwartzman (Moonrise Kingdom, Rushmore)
Geno Silva (Mulholland Drive, Amistad)
Danny Trejo (Machete, Heat)
Chris Tucker (Silver Linings Playbook, Rush Hour)
DIRECTORS
![]() |
| Pablo Larrain |
Nikolaj Arcel (A Royal Affair, Truth About Men)
Ava DuVernay* (Middle of Nowhere, I Will Follow)
Paul Feig (The Heat, Bridesmaids)
Catherine Hardwick (Twilight, Thirteen)
Kirk Jones (What to Expect When You're Expecting, Waking Ned Devine)
Ken Kwapis (Big Miracle, The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants)
Pablo Larraín (No, Tony Manero)
Steve McQueen (Shame, Hunger)
Kim Nguyen (War Witch, City of Shadows)
Jafar Panahi* (This Is Not a Film, The Circle)
Todd Phillips (The Hangover, Old School)
Joachim Ronning (Kon-Tiki, Max Manus)
Espen Sandberg (Kon-Tiki, Max Manus)
Tim Story (Think Like a Man, Fantastic Four)
Benh Zeitlin (Beasts of the Southern Wild, Glory at Sea)
WRITERS
![]() |
| Sarah Polley |
Jessica Bendinger (Aquamarine, Bring it On)
Reggie Rock Bythewood (Notorious, Get on the Bus)
Tina Gordon Chism (Peeples, Drumline)
Julie Delpy (Before Midnight, 2 Days in Paris)
Lena Dunham (Nobody Walks, Tiny Furniture)
Ava DuVernay* (Middle of Nowhere, I Will Follow)
John Gatins (Flight, Coach Carter)
John Hamburg (I Love You, Man, Meet the Parents)
John Lee Hancock (Snow White & the Huntsman, The Blind Side)
Rian Johnson (Looper, Brick)
Jeff Nichols (Mud, Take Shelter)
Sarah Polley (Take This Waltz, Away From Her)
Chris Terrio (Argo, Heights)
Saturday, May 25, 2013
Cannes ----> Oscar?!?!
Fun fact: only two movies have ever won the top prize at the Cannes Film Festival as well as the Best Picture Academy Award. Ever. In history. In that, it brings a certain irony that the festival strikes a chord and chill year after year for potential and future awards crystal ball gazing. The last time Cannes and the Academy agreed was in 1955- for Marty, so it's not even a close record. It's unsurprising that the cool and the fabulous creed that makes up the most esteemed film festival in history would veer off from the typically middlebrow consciousness of AMPAS naval-gazing. It's a yearly document, however, of the lofty legacy of the year of cinema though and the Cannes programmers and the Hollywood distributors have perhaps always been bedfellows, even if the yearly jurors tend to dismiss the competition options that may have a chance of gold statutes in the their future. Still, it would nice if one day Marty and Billy Wilder's 1964 addiction drama The Lost Weekend had some company. Not that there haven't been contenders. The following are films that won the Palme d'Or and collected a Best Picture nomination sans prize:
- Friendly Persuasion (1957)
- M*A*S*H (1970)
- The Conversation (1974)
- Taxi Driver (1976)
- Apocalypse Now (1979)
- All That Jazz (1980)
- Missing (1982)
- The Mission (1986)
- The Piano (1993)
- Pulp Fiction (1994)
- Secrets & Lies (1996)
- The Pianist (2002)
- The Tree of Life (2011)
- Amour (2012)
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
The (Oscar) Producers
It was announced today that the Academy is bringing back the producing team of Craig Zadan and Neil Maron for the 2014 Academy Awards. Zadan and Maron produced this past years telecast which drew high ratings and a whole cavalcade of criticism. The ratings themselves may have been key to the re-hiring of the team who this past year focused their Oscar telecast on the theme of music in film (which featured Shirley Bassey singing "Goldfinger," Barbra Streisand singing a poignant rendition of "The Way We Were," as well as awkward musical tributes to Chicago, Dreamgirls and last years Les Miserables. The telecast was also highly criticized for host Seth MacFarlane's hosting stint (which many claimed was crude and sexist), sloppy execution (the Jaws theme playing off winners?) as well as it's strange devotion to the film Chicago, which was produced by Zadan and Maron.
I suppose none of these things matters to much as the ratings were significantly up. It matters nil after all since it really does always revert back to the movies themselves-- remember six of the last years nine Best Picture nominees were huge hits that grossed north of $100 million. If 2013 can match that success story, there's little to fear. That being said, I wish for a more streamlined telecast and wish the team good luck to that. As well as the always controversial choice of Oscar host.
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
2013: First Quarter
Time flies quickly. We're already a quarter into 2013 and it feels like it just begun. While the first couple of months of the cinematic year are clearly focused by the craziness and nonsense of the awards mania, movies did in fact come out. While typically a dumping ground for inferior product and whatsits, I thought I'd pontificate.
Here's the "best" of the new year in terms of popularity, which means dollars and cents:
The top ten per-screen averages of 2013:
Enough with the numbers game! It's about the quality dammit. And while 2013 has been so far, as previously mentioned, a few months of the waiting game, there have been a few things to pay attention too. Here's my take:
Honorable mentions: Stoker and The Place Beyond the Pines aren't quite films that work for me as a whole, but they are worthy auteural installments of the collections of their filmmakers, Chan-wook Park and Derek Cianfrance. Both have lovely visual touches and are worthy argumentative pieces of film. Also of note are two films that had blink and you miss them 2012 Oscar qualifying releases that were shafted aside into early spring 2013 by tentative indie studios clearly mismanaging their properties-- On the Road and Ginger & Rosa. Again neither film is perfect, but both have indelible performances worthy of discussion and foaming at the mouth. On the Road features a hopefully star-making turn by Garrett Hedlund and Ginger & Rosa has a worthy one for Elle Fanning. Both of them deserve better-- casting directors take notice. Warm Bodies, a surprise box office hit was a quiet charmer as well, even though it clearly follows the strident Twilight mold.
The real deals:
4) Beautiful Creatures- Speaking of a film that follows the strident Twilight formula, Beautiful Creatures reversed roles of teenage witch and mortal falling in love in a fried green tomato backdrop. It shouldn't have worked and well, audiences didn't go for it, which in a way may be an outside complement for a film that's smarter, funnier and fresher than it really has any right to be. Director Richard LaGravenese brought a literary sense to this tweener, but also had a top drawer cast in Alice Englart (also a find in Ginger & Rosa) and Alden Ehrenreich (both refreshing newcomers), and able support in Jeremy Irons, Viola Davis, Emmy Rossum, Eileen Atkins, Margo Martindale, and most wondrous of all, Emma Thompson. The mix of tones and acting styles, a gentle mix of earnest and camp made this a delightful surprise. Terribly marketed by an unsure Warner Bros. seemingly desperate to brand this as something it wasn't quite, it's worthy of a look and a cult when it comes out on Blue-Ray. Review here.
3) Side Effects- Steven Soderbergh's alleged swan song from the cinema was a lean, nervy potboiler. Perhaps a film that could have been done in his sleep, it matters not. Review here.
2) No- The most artful film thus far of 2013 was actually a Foreign Language Oscar nominee this year, and dare I say it (shameful I'm aware), I feel it might actually be better the winner. Review here.
1) Room 237- The most refreshing and entertaining celebration of film geekery, perhaps of all time. The Shining was one messed up movie. Review here.
Well, Oz: The So-So & Kinda Sexist will have an outside shot at effects awards, but the nature of the blockbuster contingent can be hard to predict as we're not quite sure what the rest of the year will hold. Alice in Wonderland, Tim Burton's ugly revisionist tale did well with the Academy and Oz was clearly made in the same mold, so Production Design seems a near given, but who really knows. Stoker and The Place Beyond the Pines will have its critical champions and are worthy perhaps of some plaudits, but since neither will likely be audience favorites nor money makers, the Oscars aren't probable. Aside from that James Franco has an bonafide Indie Spirit nod in the making for Spring Breakers. That's all folks.
Here's the "best" of the new year in terms of popularity, which means dollars and cents:
- Oz: The Great & Powerful- $200.2
- Identity Thief- $130.0
- The Croods- $93.8
- Mama- $71.5
- Safe Heaven- $69.8
- A Good Day to Die Hard- $66.5
- Warm Bodies- $65.2
- Jack the Giant Slayer- $61.5
- Olympus Has Fallen- $56.5
- G.I. Joe: Retaliation- $55.5
- Oz: The Great & Powerful- $414.2
- A Good Day to Die Hard- $295.6
- The Croods- $242.7
- Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters- $216.4
- Jack the Giant Slayer- $158.0
- Identity Thief- $146.7
- G.I. Joe: Retaliation- $135.9
- Mama- $127.0
- Warm Bodies- $104.5
- Gangster Squad- $99.2
The top ten per-screen averages of 2013:
- Spring Breakers- $87,667
- The Place Beyond the Pines- $69,864
- Somebody Up There Likes Me- $34,362
- From Up on Poppy Hill- $28,793
- Quartet- $23,561
- Stoker- $22,935
- 56 Up- %22,088
- Gimme the Loot- $21,065
- The Gatekeepers- $20,517
- Oz: The Great & Powerful- $20,223
Enough with the numbers game! It's about the quality dammit. And while 2013 has been so far, as previously mentioned, a few months of the waiting game, there have been a few things to pay attention too. Here's my take:
Honorable mentions: Stoker and The Place Beyond the Pines aren't quite films that work for me as a whole, but they are worthy auteural installments of the collections of their filmmakers, Chan-wook Park and Derek Cianfrance. Both have lovely visual touches and are worthy argumentative pieces of film. Also of note are two films that had blink and you miss them 2012 Oscar qualifying releases that were shafted aside into early spring 2013 by tentative indie studios clearly mismanaging their properties-- On the Road and Ginger & Rosa. Again neither film is perfect, but both have indelible performances worthy of discussion and foaming at the mouth. On the Road features a hopefully star-making turn by Garrett Hedlund and Ginger & Rosa has a worthy one for Elle Fanning. Both of them deserve better-- casting directors take notice. Warm Bodies, a surprise box office hit was a quiet charmer as well, even though it clearly follows the strident Twilight mold.
The real deals:
4) Beautiful Creatures- Speaking of a film that follows the strident Twilight formula, Beautiful Creatures reversed roles of teenage witch and mortal falling in love in a fried green tomato backdrop. It shouldn't have worked and well, audiences didn't go for it, which in a way may be an outside complement for a film that's smarter, funnier and fresher than it really has any right to be. Director Richard LaGravenese brought a literary sense to this tweener, but also had a top drawer cast in Alice Englart (also a find in Ginger & Rosa) and Alden Ehrenreich (both refreshing newcomers), and able support in Jeremy Irons, Viola Davis, Emmy Rossum, Eileen Atkins, Margo Martindale, and most wondrous of all, Emma Thompson. The mix of tones and acting styles, a gentle mix of earnest and camp made this a delightful surprise. Terribly marketed by an unsure Warner Bros. seemingly desperate to brand this as something it wasn't quite, it's worthy of a look and a cult when it comes out on Blue-Ray. Review here.
3) Side Effects- Steven Soderbergh's alleged swan song from the cinema was a lean, nervy potboiler. Perhaps a film that could have been done in his sleep, it matters not. Review here.
2) No- The most artful film thus far of 2013 was actually a Foreign Language Oscar nominee this year, and dare I say it (shameful I'm aware), I feel it might actually be better the winner. Review here.
1) Room 237- The most refreshing and entertaining celebration of film geekery, perhaps of all time. The Shining was one messed up movie. Review here.
OSCAR-Y?
Anything coming out so far have any awards potential?Well, Oz: The So-So & Kinda Sexist will have an outside shot at effects awards, but the nature of the blockbuster contingent can be hard to predict as we're not quite sure what the rest of the year will hold. Alice in Wonderland, Tim Burton's ugly revisionist tale did well with the Academy and Oz was clearly made in the same mold, so Production Design seems a near given, but who really knows. Stoker and The Place Beyond the Pines will have its critical champions and are worthy perhaps of some plaudits, but since neither will likely be audience favorites nor money makers, the Oscars aren't probable. Aside from that James Franco has an bonafide Indie Spirit nod in the making for Spring Breakers. That's all folks.
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