BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Midnight in Paris- Woody Allen
America's favorite screenwriter celebrates his fifth win from the WGA on his 20th nomination. He previously won for Annie Hall, Broadway Danny Rose, Hannah & Her Sisters and Crimes & Misdemeanors. This is his first WGA award (not that he cares) since 1989. Allen received a WGA (but no Oscar nomination) for 2008's Vicky Christina Barcelona.
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
The Descendants- Alexander Payne, Jim Rash & Nat Faxon
This is Payne's third triumph at the WGA's, previously triumphing (with writing partner Jim Taylor) for both Sideways and Election. He was also nominated for About Schmidt. Rash and Faxon are both first-timers
Barring some unforeseen, Precious-like craziness, the Oscar will likely and predictably follow suit.
DOCUMENTARY SCREENPLAY: Better This World- Katie Galloway & Kelly Duane de la Vega
PAUL SELVIN AWARD: The Help- Tate Taylor- given to the script that best embodies the spirit of the constitutional and civil rights and liberties which are indispensable to the survival of free writers everywhere.
Showing posts with label THE DESCENDANTS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label THE DESCENDANTS. Show all posts
Sunday, February 19, 2012
USC Scripter Award
Created in 1988, the USC Scripter Award is handed out by the Friends of the USC Libraries and honors the Best Adapted Screenplay in filmmaking, saluting both its original source and the finished film.
The nominees for 2011 were, The Descendants triumphs:
A Dangerous Method
written by Christopher Hampton, adapted from the non-fiction book A Most Dangerous Method: The Story of Jung, Freud and Sabina Spielrein by John Kerr and the 2002 stage play The Talking Cure by Christopher Hampton.
The Descendants
written by Alexander Payne, Jim Rash & Nat Faxon, adapted from the novel by Kai Hart Hemmings.
Jane Eyre
written by Moira Buffini, adapted from the novel by Charlotte Bronte.
Moneyball
written by Steven Zailian & Aaron Sorkin, adapted from the novel Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game by Stan Chervin
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
written by Bridget O'Connor and Peter Straughan, adapted from the novel by John le Carre.
The nominees for 2011 were, The Descendants triumphs:
A Dangerous Method
written by Christopher Hampton, adapted from the non-fiction book A Most Dangerous Method: The Story of Jung, Freud and Sabina Spielrein by John Kerr and the 2002 stage play The Talking Cure by Christopher Hampton.
The Descendants
written by Alexander Payne, Jim Rash & Nat Faxon, adapted from the novel by Kai Hart Hemmings.
Jane Eyre
written by Moira Buffini, adapted from the novel by Charlotte Bronte.
Moneyball
written by Steven Zailian & Aaron Sorkin, adapted from the novel Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game by Stan Chervin
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
written by Bridget O'Connor and Peter Straughan, adapted from the novel by John le Carre.
ACE "Eddies" Awards
The American Cinema Editors Guild has spoken and the "Eddies" go to:
BEST FILM EDITING (Drama)
The Descendants
BEST FILM EDITING (Musical or Comedy)
The Artist
What does this tell us? Absolutely nothing, except confirm The Artist as frontrunner status, and give The Descendants a small sting of potential spoiler status.
BEST FILM EDITING (Drama)
The Descendants
BEST FILM EDITING (Musical or Comedy)
The Artist
What does this tell us? Absolutely nothing, except confirm The Artist as frontrunner status, and give The Descendants a small sting of potential spoiler status.
Saturday, January 21, 2012
Iowa Film Critics Awards
PICTURE: The Descendants
DIRECTOR: Alexander Payne, The Descendants
ACTOR: Brad Pitt, Moneyball
ACTRESS: Viola Davis, The Help
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christopher Plummer, Beginners
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Melissa McCarthy, Bridesmaids
ANIMATED FEATURE: Rango
BEST FILM YET TO OPEN IN IOWA: We Need to Talk About Kevin; Project Nim
DIRECTOR: Alexander Payne, The Descendants
ACTOR: Brad Pitt, Moneyball
ACTRESS: Viola Davis, The Help
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christopher Plummer, Beginners
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Melissa McCarthy, Bridesmaids
ANIMATED FEATURE: Rango
BEST FILM YET TO OPEN IN IOWA: We Need to Talk About Kevin; Project Nim
Monday, January 16, 2012
The 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards

PICTURE (Drama)- The Descendants
PICTURE (Musical or Comedy)- The Artist
DIRECTOR- Martin Scorsese, Hugo
ACTRESS (Drama)- Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady
ACTOR (Drama)- George Clooney, The Descendants
ACTRESS (Musical or Comedy)- Michelle Williams, My Week With Marilyn
ACTOR (Musical or Comedy)- Jean Dujardin, The Artist
SUPPORTING ACTRESS- Octavia Spencer, The Help
SUPPORTING ACTOR- Christopher Plummer, Beginners
SCREENPLAY- Midnight in Paris- Woody Allen
ANIMATED FEATURE- The Adventures of Tintin
FOREIGN FILM- A Separation
SCORE- The Artist- Ludovic Bource
SONG- "Masterpiece," W.E.
The naval gazing of the Hollywood Foreign Press is done with, and usual suspects like George Clooney and Meryl Streep added shiny new statues to go with their several old dusty ones, and The Artist lead the field with 3 wins and The Descendants followed with 2 awards. I'm curious if this share the good-will act will continue with the Academy Awards, as this year has but a few consensus titles, but of which (The Artist, The Descendants, Hugo, The Help, Moneyball) could all find themselves in small spots of recognition.
One question that I've been hovering on lately is if the race is in fact between The Artist and The Descendants, might the Clooney-ness of it all be enough for a Best Picture win. The Artist is the clear winner of the critical derby, and has the Weinstein loyalty for it, but it's also a low-grossing black and white silent film made by and starring a French guy. In truth, inside Hollywood types of films, even glowing homages to old-Hollywood have never been awarded Best Picture in the past. Some crystal ball gazing tells me the next month may not be as kind to The Artist. I fear of backlash-- though am glad that that silly Kim Novak-raping-of-Vertigo fuss wasn't enough to start one.
The Descendants, one the other hand (despite not being the best film of 2011) is an all-American drama-comedy, one with an exotic-enough Hawaiian location that is distinctive, but not off-putting. It seems reminiscent of past Best Picture winners like Kramer vs. Kramer, Terms of Endearment and Ordinary People. Then again, movies like that haven't been honored in twenty-eight years. I assume that some questions might be solved come SAG Award evening...
For the record, Meryl Streep's victory for The Iron Lady marked her 25th Golden Globe nomination and eighth award. Her Golden Globe collection:
- Kramer vs. Kramer (1979, Best Supporting Actress)
- The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981, Best Actress-Drama)
- Sophie's Choice (1982, Best Actress- Drama)
- Adaptation. (2002, Best Supporting Actress)
- Angels in America (2003, Best Actress- TV Mini-Series)
- The Devil Wears Prada (2006, Best Actress- Musical or Comedy)
- Julie & Julia (2009, Best Actress- Musical or Comedy)
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Kansas City Film Critics
PICTURE: The Descendants
DIRECTOR: Terrence Malick, The Tree of Life
ACTOR: George Clooney, The Descendants
ACTRESS: Kirsten Dunst, Melancholia
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christopher Plummer, Beginners
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Jessica Chastain, The Tree of Life
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Beginners- Mike Mills
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Moneyball- Steven Zaillian & Aaron Sorkin
ANIMATED FEATURE: Rango
DOCUMENTARY: Cave of Forgotten Dreams
FOREIGN FILM: A Separation
FANTASY FILM: Hugo
DIRECTOR: Terrence Malick, The Tree of Life
ACTOR: George Clooney, The Descendants
ACTRESS: Kirsten Dunst, Melancholia
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christopher Plummer, Beginners
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Jessica Chastain, The Tree of Life
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Beginners- Mike Mills
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Moneyball- Steven Zaillian & Aaron Sorkin
ANIMATED FEATURE: Rango
DOCUMENTARY: Cave of Forgotten Dreams
FOREIGN FILM: A Separation
FANTASY FILM: Hugo
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Flordia Film Critics Circle
PICTURE: The Descendants
DIRECTOR: Martin Scorsese, Hugo
ACTOR: Michael Fassbender, Shame
ACTRESS: Michelle Williams, My Week With Marilyn
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Albert Brooks, Drive
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Shailene Woodley, The Descendants
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: The Artist
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: The Descendants
ANIMATED FEATURE: The Adventures of Tintin
DOCUMENTARY: Project Nim
FOREIGN FILM: The Skin I Live In
ART DIRECTION: Hugo
CINEMATOGRAPHY: The Tree of Life
VISUAL EFFECTS: Rise of the Planet of the Apes
BREAKOUT PERFORMANCE: Elizabeth Olsen, Martha Marcy May Marlene
DIRECTOR: Martin Scorsese, Hugo
ACTOR: Michael Fassbender, Shame
ACTRESS: Michelle Williams, My Week With Marilyn
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Albert Brooks, Drive
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Shailene Woodley, The Descendants
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: The Artist
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: The Descendants
ANIMATED FEATURE: The Adventures of Tintin
DOCUMENTARY: Project Nim
FOREIGN FILM: The Skin I Live In
ART DIRECTION: Hugo
CINEMATOGRAPHY: The Tree of Life
VISUAL EFFECTS: Rise of the Planet of the Apes
BREAKOUT PERFORMANCE: Elizabeth Olsen, Martha Marcy May Marlene
Monday, December 19, 2011
Southeastern Film Critics Association
PICTURE: The Descendants
Top Ten of 2011:
- The Artist
- Hugo
- Moneyball
- The Tree of Life
- Drive
- Midnight in Paris
- Win Win
- War Horse
- The Help
DIRECTOR: Martin Scorsese, Hugo
ACTOR: George Clooney, The Descendants
ACTRESS: Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christopher Plummer, Beginners
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Janet McTeer, Albert Nobbs
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Midnight in Paris- Woody Allen
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: The Descendants- Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon & Jim Rash
ANIMATED FEATURE: Rango
DOCUMENTARY: Project Nim
FOREIGN FILM: A Separation
CINEMATOGRAPHY: The Tree of Life- Emmanuel Lubezki
ENSEMBLE: The Help
Golden Satellite Awards
PICTURE: The Descendants
DIRECTOR: Nicholas Winding Refn, Drive
ACTOR: Ryan Gosling, Drive
ACTRESS: Viola Davis, The Help
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Albert Brooks, Drive
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Jessica Chastain, The Tree of Life
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: The Tree of Life- Terrence Malick
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: The Descendants- Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon & Jim Rash
ANIMATED FEATURE: The Adventures of Tintin
DOCUMENTARY: Senna
FOREIGN FILM: Mysteries of Lisbon
ART DIRECTION: The Artist- Gregory S. Hooper & Laurence Bennett
CINEMATOGRAPHY: War Horse- Janusz Kaminski
COSTUME DESIGN: Water for Elephants- Jacqueline West
SCORE: Soul Surfer- Marco Beltrami
SONG: "Lay Down Your Head," Albert Nobbs
SOUND: Drive
VISUAL EFFECTS: Hugo
FIRST FEATURE: Tyrannosaur- Paddy Considine
ENSEMBLE: The Help
The Satellites can't really ever be trusted, neither as Oscar prognosticator, nor as a legitimate film society based on some of the nuttier mentions, and the constant "Who are they?" factor. How else to explain a Screenplay mention for The Tree of Life, which features little to none actual spoken dialogue, an esoteric (or nearly invisible) structure or narrative...visually daring, absolutely...as a master class of writing, probably not.
Still it's a little fun to see such oddball mentions thrown out there as well, such as the score for Soul Surfer getting a random slot, as well as the costume design for Water for Elephants, which is a film that should be getting more mentions for it's technical achievements...it's a very pretty movie for a vacant drama. The rest, a predictable lot...
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Dallas-Ft. Film Critics Association
PICTURE: The Descendants
Top Ten of 2011:
- The Artist
- Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
- Midnight in Paris
- The Tree of Life
- Hugo
- 50/50
- Drive
- Shame
- Moneyball
DIRECTOR: Alexander Payne, The Descendants
runners-up:
- Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist
- Terrence Malick, The Tree of Life
- Martin Scorsese, Hugo
- Woody Allen, Midnight in Paris
ACTOR: George Clooney, The Descendants
runners-up:
- Jean Dujardin, The Artist
- Michael Fassbender, Shame
- Brad Pitt, Moneyball
- Michael Shannon, Take Shelter
ACTRESS: Michelle Williams, My Week With Marilyn
runners-up:
- Tilda Swinton, We Need to Talk About Kevin
- Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady
- Charlize Theron, Young Adult
- Kirsten Dunst, Melancholia
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christopher Plummer, Beginners
runners-up:
- Albert Brooks, Drive
- Max von Sydow, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
- Armie Hammer, J. Edgar
- Kenneth Branagh, My Week With Marilyn
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Shailene Woodley, The Descendants
runners-up:
- Berenice Bejo, The Artist
- Octavia Spencer, The Help
- Melissa McCarthy, Bridesmaids
- Carey Mulligan, Shame
SCREENPLAY: The Descendants
FOREIGN FILM: A Separation
DOCUMENTARY: Cave of Forgotten Dreams
ANIMATED FEATURE: Rango
CINEMATOGRAPHY: The Tree of Life- Emmanuel Lubezki
RUSSELL SMITH AWARD: We Need to Talk About Kevin
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Houston Film Critics Awards
PICTURE: The Descendants
DIRECTOR: Nicholas Winding Refn, Drive
ACTOR: Michael Fassbender, Shame
ACTRESS: Tilda Swinton, We Need to Talk About Kevin
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Albert Brooks, Drive
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Shailene Woodley, The Descendants
SCREENPLAY: The Descendants- Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon & Jim Rash
ANIMATED FEATURE: Rango
DOCUMENTARY: Project Nim
FOREIGN FILM: I Saw the Devil
CINEMATOGRAPHY: The Tree of Life- Emmanuel Lubezki
SCORE: The Artist- Ludivoc Bource
SONG: "Life's a Happy Song, " The Muppets
WORST FILM OF THE YEAR: Your Highness
DIRECTOR: Nicholas Winding Refn, Drive
ACTOR: Michael Fassbender, Shame
ACTRESS: Tilda Swinton, We Need to Talk About Kevin
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Albert Brooks, Drive
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Shailene Woodley, The Descendants
SCREENPLAY: The Descendants- Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon & Jim Rash
ANIMATED FEATURE: Rango
DOCUMENTARY: Project Nim
FOREIGN FILM: I Saw the Devil
CINEMATOGRAPHY: The Tree of Life- Emmanuel Lubezki
SCORE: The Artist- Ludivoc Bource
SONG: "Life's a Happy Song, " The Muppets
WORST FILM OF THE YEAR: Your Highness
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Los Angeles Film Critics Association
PICTURE: The Descendants
runner-up: The Tree of Life
DIRECTOR: Terrence Malick, The Tree of Life
runner-up: Martin Scorsese, Hugo
ACTOR: Michael Fassbender, A Dangerous Method, Shame, Jane Eyre, X-Men: First Class
runner-up: Michael Shannon, Take Shelter
ACTRESS: Yun Jung-hee, Poetry
runner-up: Kirsten Dunst, Melancholia
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christopher Plummer, Beginners
runner-up: Patton Oswalt, Young Adult
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Jessica Chastain, Coriolanus, The Debt, The Help, Take Shelter, Texas Killing Fields
runner-up: Janet McTeer, Albert Nobbs
SCREENPLAY: A Separation- Asghar Farhadi
ANIMATED FEATURE: Rango
runner-up: The Adventures of Tintin
FOREIGN FILM: City of Life & Death
runner-up: A Separation
DOCUMENTARY: Cave of Forgotten Dreams
runner-up: The Arbor
CINEMATOGRAPHY: The Tree of Life- Emmnanuel Lubezki
runner-up: City of Life & Death
PRODUCTION DESIGN: Hugo
runner-up: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
SCORE: Hanna
runner-up: Drive
NEW GENERATION AWARD: the creative team of Martha Marcy May Marlene
LA gave it's nod to The Descendants (some day, I'll get around to posting a review of it; I wasn't as fond as some)...I suppose The Artist is a New York thing. However, that's all it won, as the Los Angeles film critics spread their love to The Tree of Life, Michael Fassbender and Jessica Chastain, and even Hanna.
One can always count on Los Angeles to have their sort of personality with Best Actress; rarely is a frontrunner (or an American) on their roster, for instance:
2010: Kim Hye-Ja, Mother
2009: Yolande Moreau, Seraphine
2008: Sally Hawkins, Happy-Go-Lucky
2007: Marion Cotillard, La Vie en Rose
2006: Helen Mirren, The Queen
2005: Vera Farmiga, Down to the Bone
2004: Imelda Staunton, Vera Drake
Sure two of these were eventual winners...one other was a nominee, and another a just-missed nominee...the rest however...
runner-up: The Tree of Life
DIRECTOR: Terrence Malick, The Tree of Life
runner-up: Martin Scorsese, Hugo
ACTOR: Michael Fassbender, A Dangerous Method, Shame, Jane Eyre, X-Men: First Class
runner-up: Michael Shannon, Take Shelter
ACTRESS: Yun Jung-hee, Poetry
runner-up: Kirsten Dunst, Melancholia
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christopher Plummer, Beginners
runner-up: Patton Oswalt, Young Adult
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Jessica Chastain, Coriolanus, The Debt, The Help, Take Shelter, Texas Killing Fields
runner-up: Janet McTeer, Albert Nobbs
SCREENPLAY: A Separation- Asghar Farhadi
ANIMATED FEATURE: Rango
runner-up: The Adventures of Tintin
FOREIGN FILM: City of Life & Death
runner-up: A Separation
DOCUMENTARY: Cave of Forgotten Dreams
runner-up: The Arbor
CINEMATOGRAPHY: The Tree of Life- Emmnanuel Lubezki
runner-up: City of Life & Death
PRODUCTION DESIGN: Hugo
runner-up: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
SCORE: Hanna
runner-up: Drive
NEW GENERATION AWARD: the creative team of Martha Marcy May Marlene
LA gave it's nod to The Descendants (some day, I'll get around to posting a review of it; I wasn't as fond as some)...I suppose The Artist is a New York thing. However, that's all it won, as the Los Angeles film critics spread their love to The Tree of Life, Michael Fassbender and Jessica Chastain, and even Hanna.
One can always count on Los Angeles to have their sort of personality with Best Actress; rarely is a frontrunner (or an American) on their roster, for instance:
2010: Kim Hye-Ja, Mother
2009: Yolande Moreau, Seraphine
2008: Sally Hawkins, Happy-Go-Lucky
2007: Marion Cotillard, La Vie en Rose
2006: Helen Mirren, The Queen
2005: Vera Farmiga, Down to the Bone
2004: Imelda Staunton, Vera Drake
Sure two of these were eventual winners...one other was a nominee, and another a just-missed nominee...the rest however...
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Gotham Award Nominees
And so it begins (insert evil laugh and twirling of the handle-bar mustache), the awards season that is. The Gotham Awards, a New York based society that showcases the best in independent American filmmaking. They are also the first one's out of the gate every time, and while eventual Academy overlap may bear little on the group as a whole, recent films like Winter's Bone and The Hurt Locker were awarded the top prize here on their way to the Kodak stage. The nominees are:
BEST FEATURE
BEST ENSEMBLE PERFORMANCE
BEST DOCUMENTARY
BREAKTHROUGH DIRECTOR
BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMER
BEST FILM NOT PLAYING AT A THEATER NEAR YOU
Best acknowledgement: Beginners in the Ensemble field, the warm and gentle father\son tragicomedy was one of most generous films so far in terms of its actors.
Best film title: Codependent Lesbian Space Alien Seeking Same; I feel a strong need to watch this immediately!
BEST FEATURE
- Beginners
- The Descendants
- Meek's Cutoff
- Take Shelter
- The Tree of Life
BEST ENSEMBLE PERFORMANCE
- Beginners- Ewan McGregor, Christopher Plummer, Melanie Laurant, Goran Visnjic, Kal Lennox, Mary Page Keller, Keegan Boos
- The Descendants- George Clooney, Shailene Woodley, Beau Bridges, Robert Forster, Judy Greer, Matthew Lillard, Nick Krause, Amara Miller, Mary Birdsong, Rob Huebel
- Margin Call- Kevin Spacey, Paul Bettany, Jeremy Irons, Zachary Quinto, Penn Badgley, Simon Baker, Mary McDonnell, Demi Moore, Stanley Tucci, Aasif Mandvi
- Martha Marcy May Marlene- Elizabeth Olsen, Christopher Abbott, Brady Corbet, John Hawkes, Hugh Dancy, Maria Dizzia, Julia Garner, Louisa Krause, Sarah Paulson
- Take Shelter- Michael Shannon, Jessica Chastain, Tova Stewart, Shea Whigham, Katy Mixon, Kathy Baker, Ray McKinnon, Lisa Gay Hamilton, Robert Longstreet
BEST DOCUMENTARY
- Better This World
- Bill Cunningham New York (available on Netflix instant play)
- Hell & Back Again
- The Interrupters
- The Woodmans
BREAKTHROUGH DIRECTOR
- Mike Cahill, Another Earth
- Sean Durkin, Martha Marcy May Marlene
- Vera Farmiga, Higher Ground
- Evan Glodell, Bellflower
- Dee Rees, Pariah
BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMER
- Felicity Jones, Like Crazy
- Elizabeth Olsen, Martha Marcy May Marlene
- Harmony Santana, Gun Hill Road
- Shailene Woodley, The Descendants
- Jacob Wysocki, Terri
BEST FILM NOT PLAYING AT A THEATER NEAR YOU
- Codependent Lesbian Space Alien Seeks Same
- Green
- The Redemption of General Butt Naked
- Scenes of a Crime
- Without
- Charlize Theron (handily right in time for her mainstream Oscar bid, Young Adult)
- Gary Oldman (likewise, for Tinker, Tailer, Soldier, Spy)
- David Croenberg (what do you know, his A Dangerous Method opens next month)
- Tom Rothman (big studio hotshot- Meryl Streep famously thanked him for signing the checks in her hilarious Golden Globe acceptance speech for The Devil Wears Prada...aside)
Best acknowledgement: Beginners in the Ensemble field, the warm and gentle father\son tragicomedy was one of most generous films so far in terms of its actors.
Best film title: Codependent Lesbian Space Alien Seeking Same; I feel a strong need to watch this immediately!
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Something's Coming
While it may be hard to tell, but the movie seasons are slowly but surely beginning to change. While perhaps hard to see from the perspective of the regular filmgoer (which sadly I'm apart of) who had to witness a sad past weekend where the brightest thing was a soggy Helen Mirren thriller and Shark Night 3-D (both of which were bested by a month old message picture), the fall festival seasons is most certainly underway. The Telluride Film Festival has already wrapped, and the shined a few lights on a few noteworthy films coming our way. The festival, a favorite of the exclusive cinephiles, for that it announces its selection after tickets are already sold. The exclusives the festival typically brings are the reason it can get away with such things. Recent films like The King's Speech, Slumdog Millionaire, Up in the Air and Juno made their first big splashed at Telluride. That's not all, however, as the Venice Film Festival is underway-- last year's opening night film-- Black Swan-- made it all the way to an Oscar nomination. Then comes the big festival orgy of the Toronto Film Festival, which offers even more films than anyone could possibly hope to see in one lifetime, and that it offers that on a yearly basis is quite exhausting. Later on, comes the New York Film Festival (last year The Social Network opened), this year the honor belongs to Roman Polanski's Carnage. After that comes the London Film Festival (Fernando Mierelles, director of City of God, opens that festival with his latest ensemble drama 360, starring Rachel Weisz and Jude Law.) And that's followed by the AFI Film Festival, which will unspool Clint Eastwood's latest J. Edgar, starring Leonardo DiCaprio...whew!
Carnage:
Roman Polanski's latest, adapted from the Tony Award winning play, God of Carnage, played Venice, with it's very starry cast-- Jodie Foster, Kate Winslet, John C. Rielly and Christoph Waltz, and was greeted with lukewarm praise, all of which translates to a potentially interesting, but possibly non-awards caliber type of film. For a film shot in real time, set in one apartment over a group of two squabbling parents, the film reeks of potential stagy-ness. And the tone of melodrama and overt comedy may harken its chances of awards and a large audience, but still how can one not be curious.
The Daily Telegraph said:
"It's well-acted and giddily enjoyable, if slightly less so once the characters start to analyse their descent into barbarism."
The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Snappy, nasty, deftly acted and perhaps the fastest paced film ever directed by a 78-year-old, this adaptation of Yasmina Reza's award-winning play God of Carnage fully delivers the laughs and savagery of the stage piece..."
A Dangerous Method:
David Croenberg's latest- a period drama and study of the relationship between Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung and the girl caught in the middle stars Michael Fassbender, Viggo Mortenssen and Keira Knightley. The film earned mixed reviews from its bow at Telluride and Venice and due to the kinky but seemingly austere nature of the film may not be able to become the film that finally warms the Academy to endless but idiosyncratic talents of Croenberg. The performances and the technical aspects of A Dangerous Method seem to have earned high praise, but the film seems to have come across as the least-Croenberg-like film he's every created, and a lot of attention was payed to Knightley's performance that seems to be dividing critics.
The Daily Telegraph said:
"It's Knightley that one remembers, for a full-on portrayal that is gutsy and potentially divisive in equal parts."
The Guardian said:
"A Dangerous Mind feels heavy and lugubrious. It is a tale that comes marinated in port and choked on pipe-smoke."
The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Precise, lucid and thrillingly disciplined, this story of boundary-testing in the early days of psychoanalysis is brought to vivid life by the outstanding lead performances of Keira Knightley, Viggo Mortensen and Michael Fassbender."
The Descendants:
The brightest thing potentially from Telluride was Alexander Payne's latest feature starring George Clooney as a husband and father trying to rebuild his family after his wife is struck with a life-threatening ailment. It's been seven years since Payne unleashed the huge critical sweep (and Oscar winner for Best Adapted Screenplay) Sideways, and should at the very least, on paper, be primed for another awards contender. While the trailer may have read a bit nondescript and possibly lacking in the usual humor one might expect from Payne, there's bound to be a great deal of attention towards the film, as well as Clooney's performance, and with distributor Fox Searchlight, it's fairly certain a stellar campaign will be mounted. The next step is Toronto, where perhaps the film will truly sink or swim.
Variety said:
"Some movies aim to distract us; others seek to help us understand. "The Descendants" tackles some of the prickliest issues a contempo family can face -- coping with a loved one's right-to-die decision -- with such sensitivity that it's hardly noticeable you're being enlightened while entertained. As a Hawaiian father of two negotiating complex emotions while his wife lies comatose after a boating accident, George Clooney reveals yet another layer of himself. His involvement, plus the welcome return of "Sideways" director Alexander Payne, will bring in auds; their tell-a-friend enthusiasm should spell sleeper success among catharsis-seeking adults."
The Ides of March:
George Clooney's is everywhere, as per usual. The stars and directs this film, which opened the Venice Film Festival, and while play Toronto. A timely, political story with an all star cast-- Ryan Gosling, Marisa Tomei, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Evan Rachel Wood, Paul Giamatti, and Jeffrey Wright. The film received mostly kind, if unspectacular notices. Yet many seem to assume the film, a very American story, will play better here than in Venice, and if the film reaches out to the uber-Hollywood liberal elite, it could certainly be an awards film.
The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Classy and professional throughout, the technical work gracefully holds all the threads together."
Time Magazine said:
"Clooney sees blustering bustle and edgy familiarity - giant closeups of private conversations - as the contrasts of political campaigns, which are, at heart, all rhetoric and no accountability."
Variety said:
"[An] intriguing but overly portentous drama, which seems far more taken with its own cynicism than most viewers will be."
Shame:
A film of definite interest that played both Telluride and Venice to a lot of good notice was Steve McQueen's second feature starring Michael Fassbender and Carey Mulligan. Defined as an unflinching film about the relationship between a depraved sex addict and wayward sister, the film seems to have gotten a lot of attention, not perhaps as a magnet for upcoming awards, but it's frank, and full-frontal realism. While much press on the film has noted that the film will likely be rated NC-17, there still seems to be a lot of interest in the story as an alleged bidding war is underway between Fox Searchlight, The Weinstein Company and Sony Pictures Classics. Whatever there's to make of the outcome, one certainly hopes that McQueen follows through on the promise of his hard-edged, provocative, but ultimately dazzling debut feature, Hunger, which (depending on what year the few of you that caught it, actually saw it-- release dates for the little ones can be confusing-- was the real breakout feature for the formidable Fassbender.) The film will trek onto Toronto next.
The Guardian said:
"This is fluid, rigorous, serious cinema; the best kind of adult movie."
This is London said:
"McQueen's film-making is undoubtedly powerful and without compromise, especially during the frequent sex scenes, which depict a man on the edge intent on propelling himself over the cliff."
W.E.:
Directed by Madonna, W.E. was snapped up by The Weinstein Company well before it made its auspicious and critically reviled premiere at Venice. Described as a Julie & Julia-like biopic of Wallis Simpson (the woman King Edward III abdicated the throne for) and a modern woman obsessed with the tale. The film stars Andrea Riseborough and Abbie Cornish. Perhaps the Weinstein's were hoping for a side story of sorts to last years champ The King's Speech. Either way the film received a critical drubbing, and will surely rouse endlessly curiosity and hisses as it approaches theaters; Madonna just can't get a break in films, can she?
The Guardian said:
"What an extraordinarily silly, preening, fatally mishandled film this is."
The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Madonna's second foray into directing is pleasing to the eyes and ears, but lacking anything for the soul."
Variety said:
"Burdened with risible dialogue and weak performances, pic doesn't have much going for it apart from lavish production design and terrific, well-researched costumes."
Other possible films of interest include Albert Nobbs, the two decades long passion project for Glenn Close, who both stars and scripted the gender-bending tale of a woman who poses as a man in 19th century Ireland. While reviews were mild, there's still bound to be interest and praise given to Close (who received a Lifetime Achievement Award at Telluride) and who, after five tries and an Oscar track record in the 1980s that rivaled Meryl Streep, still has yet to win the big award. What the irony that Streep herself as an Oscar bid in her Margaret Thatcher biography The Iron Lady coming out later this year...a festival run is thus far unannounced for that one. And what of the further irony if eventually when all pans out if Viola Davis ends up becoming the victor for The Help...
Cannes favorites The Artist and We Need to Talk About Kevin also played Telluride, further building potentially buzz. The Artist, which was snapped by the very busy Weinstein Company earlier this year seems likely to benefit most from the fall festival circuit (it will play Toronto as well), and crowd-pleasing old Hollywood throwback to silent era, might very well be the toast of this coming season, if early reaction is any indication. Kevin, on the other hand might have a bit more trouble seeing it's rough subject matter-- a family drama centered around a Columbine-like high school shooting. However the film's star Tilda Swinton has received a lot of acclaim, and received a tribute at Telluride, as did George Clooney, and its distributor, Roadside Attraction (also handling Albert Nobbs) had a good run last year with not so easy sells like Winter's Bone and Biutiful.
Carnage:
Roman Polanski's latest, adapted from the Tony Award winning play, God of Carnage, played Venice, with it's very starry cast-- Jodie Foster, Kate Winslet, John C. Rielly and Christoph Waltz, and was greeted with lukewarm praise, all of which translates to a potentially interesting, but possibly non-awards caliber type of film. For a film shot in real time, set in one apartment over a group of two squabbling parents, the film reeks of potential stagy-ness. And the tone of melodrama and overt comedy may harken its chances of awards and a large audience, but still how can one not be curious.
The Daily Telegraph said:
"It's well-acted and giddily enjoyable, if slightly less so once the characters start to analyse their descent into barbarism."
The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Snappy, nasty, deftly acted and perhaps the fastest paced film ever directed by a 78-year-old, this adaptation of Yasmina Reza's award-winning play God of Carnage fully delivers the laughs and savagery of the stage piece..."
A Dangerous Method:
David Croenberg's latest- a period drama and study of the relationship between Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung and the girl caught in the middle stars Michael Fassbender, Viggo Mortenssen and Keira Knightley. The film earned mixed reviews from its bow at Telluride and Venice and due to the kinky but seemingly austere nature of the film may not be able to become the film that finally warms the Academy to endless but idiosyncratic talents of Croenberg. The performances and the technical aspects of A Dangerous Method seem to have earned high praise, but the film seems to have come across as the least-Croenberg-like film he's every created, and a lot of attention was payed to Knightley's performance that seems to be dividing critics.
The Daily Telegraph said:
"It's Knightley that one remembers, for a full-on portrayal that is gutsy and potentially divisive in equal parts."
The Guardian said:
"A Dangerous Mind feels heavy and lugubrious. It is a tale that comes marinated in port and choked on pipe-smoke."
The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Precise, lucid and thrillingly disciplined, this story of boundary-testing in the early days of psychoanalysis is brought to vivid life by the outstanding lead performances of Keira Knightley, Viggo Mortensen and Michael Fassbender."
The Descendants:
The brightest thing potentially from Telluride was Alexander Payne's latest feature starring George Clooney as a husband and father trying to rebuild his family after his wife is struck with a life-threatening ailment. It's been seven years since Payne unleashed the huge critical sweep (and Oscar winner for Best Adapted Screenplay) Sideways, and should at the very least, on paper, be primed for another awards contender. While the trailer may have read a bit nondescript and possibly lacking in the usual humor one might expect from Payne, there's bound to be a great deal of attention towards the film, as well as Clooney's performance, and with distributor Fox Searchlight, it's fairly certain a stellar campaign will be mounted. The next step is Toronto, where perhaps the film will truly sink or swim.
Variety said:
"Some movies aim to distract us; others seek to help us understand. "The Descendants" tackles some of the prickliest issues a contempo family can face -- coping with a loved one's right-to-die decision -- with such sensitivity that it's hardly noticeable you're being enlightened while entertained. As a Hawaiian father of two negotiating complex emotions while his wife lies comatose after a boating accident, George Clooney reveals yet another layer of himself. His involvement, plus the welcome return of "Sideways" director Alexander Payne, will bring in auds; their tell-a-friend enthusiasm should spell sleeper success among catharsis-seeking adults."
The Ides of March:
George Clooney's is everywhere, as per usual. The stars and directs this film, which opened the Venice Film Festival, and while play Toronto. A timely, political story with an all star cast-- Ryan Gosling, Marisa Tomei, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Evan Rachel Wood, Paul Giamatti, and Jeffrey Wright. The film received mostly kind, if unspectacular notices. Yet many seem to assume the film, a very American story, will play better here than in Venice, and if the film reaches out to the uber-Hollywood liberal elite, it could certainly be an awards film.
The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Classy and professional throughout, the technical work gracefully holds all the threads together."
Time Magazine said:
"Clooney sees blustering bustle and edgy familiarity - giant closeups of private conversations - as the contrasts of political campaigns, which are, at heart, all rhetoric and no accountability."
Variety said:
"[An] intriguing but overly portentous drama, which seems far more taken with its own cynicism than most viewers will be."
Shame:
A film of definite interest that played both Telluride and Venice to a lot of good notice was Steve McQueen's second feature starring Michael Fassbender and Carey Mulligan. Defined as an unflinching film about the relationship between a depraved sex addict and wayward sister, the film seems to have gotten a lot of attention, not perhaps as a magnet for upcoming awards, but it's frank, and full-frontal realism. While much press on the film has noted that the film will likely be rated NC-17, there still seems to be a lot of interest in the story as an alleged bidding war is underway between Fox Searchlight, The Weinstein Company and Sony Pictures Classics. Whatever there's to make of the outcome, one certainly hopes that McQueen follows through on the promise of his hard-edged, provocative, but ultimately dazzling debut feature, Hunger, which (depending on what year the few of you that caught it, actually saw it-- release dates for the little ones can be confusing-- was the real breakout feature for the formidable Fassbender.) The film will trek onto Toronto next.
The Guardian said:
"This is fluid, rigorous, serious cinema; the best kind of adult movie."
This is London said:
"McQueen's film-making is undoubtedly powerful and without compromise, especially during the frequent sex scenes, which depict a man on the edge intent on propelling himself over the cliff."
W.E.:
Directed by Madonna, W.E. was snapped up by The Weinstein Company well before it made its auspicious and critically reviled premiere at Venice. Described as a Julie & Julia-like biopic of Wallis Simpson (the woman King Edward III abdicated the throne for) and a modern woman obsessed with the tale. The film stars Andrea Riseborough and Abbie Cornish. Perhaps the Weinstein's were hoping for a side story of sorts to last years champ The King's Speech. Either way the film received a critical drubbing, and will surely rouse endlessly curiosity and hisses as it approaches theaters; Madonna just can't get a break in films, can she?
The Guardian said:
"What an extraordinarily silly, preening, fatally mishandled film this is."
The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Madonna's second foray into directing is pleasing to the eyes and ears, but lacking anything for the soul."
Variety said:
"Burdened with risible dialogue and weak performances, pic doesn't have much going for it apart from lavish production design and terrific, well-researched costumes."
Other possible films of interest include Albert Nobbs, the two decades long passion project for Glenn Close, who both stars and scripted the gender-bending tale of a woman who poses as a man in 19th century Ireland. While reviews were mild, there's still bound to be interest and praise given to Close (who received a Lifetime Achievement Award at Telluride) and who, after five tries and an Oscar track record in the 1980s that rivaled Meryl Streep, still has yet to win the big award. What the irony that Streep herself as an Oscar bid in her Margaret Thatcher biography The Iron Lady coming out later this year...a festival run is thus far unannounced for that one. And what of the further irony if eventually when all pans out if Viola Davis ends up becoming the victor for The Help...
Cannes favorites The Artist and We Need to Talk About Kevin also played Telluride, further building potentially buzz. The Artist, which was snapped by the very busy Weinstein Company earlier this year seems likely to benefit most from the fall festival circuit (it will play Toronto as well), and crowd-pleasing old Hollywood throwback to silent era, might very well be the toast of this coming season, if early reaction is any indication. Kevin, on the other hand might have a bit more trouble seeing it's rough subject matter-- a family drama centered around a Columbine-like high school shooting. However the film's star Tilda Swinton has received a lot of acclaim, and received a tribute at Telluride, as did George Clooney, and its distributor, Roadside Attraction (also handling Albert Nobbs) had a good run last year with not so easy sells like Winter's Bone and Biutiful.
Friday, May 27, 2011
The Descendants Trailer
The first trailer to Alexander Payne's latest film starring George Clooney. On first glance, it seems a bit generic for a filmmaker of Payne's infinite gifts, but hopefully this is just one of those hard-to-peg-down type of films. Coincidentally, this is his first film that Payne didn't co-write with his longtime writing partner Jim Taylor; Payne wrote the screenplay with Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, based on the novel by Kaui Hart Hemmings.
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
The Descendants
First imagery of Alexander Payne's latest film; his first since his Oscar-winning Sideways (2004). Sigh, I loathe that I must wait so long for follow-up projects from the filmmakers I admire.
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