10at10 Club
Main Discussion Area => Stream of Consciousness => Topic started by: RGMike on January 25, 2005, 07:49:50 AM
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for those who care:
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/a/2005/01/25/entertainment0843EST0513.DTL
My 2 cents: most overrated nominee: "Finding Neverland". Sadly snubbed: Liam Neeson and Paul Giamatti.
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And for an opposing viewpoint: The Razzie nominations...
http://www.razzies.com/asp/directory/25thNoms.htm
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The big surprise to me was that Passion of the Christ and Fahrenheit 9/11 were both ignored in the major categories. Of course, I'm wholly unfamiliar with the films that scored all the noms (would have liked to see Kinsey, though).
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The big surprise to me was that Passion of the Christ and Fahrenheit 9/11 were both ignored in the major categories.
Passion wasn't expected to get anything major, but the craft unions are a bit more blue-collar (and thus more conservative) and so technical noms (it got 3) were no surprise.
Fahrenheit, a docu that wasn't in the docu running because Moore didn't submit it in that category, was only eligible (I think) for Pic & Director. And Hollywood has kinda moved on at this point.
Kinsey is still around and well worth seeing; it is far more deserving of noms than Neverland, IMHO.
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As usual- I haven't seen a goddamned thing Oscar-nom'd movie-wise.
Well, except for the first 2/3rds of a pirated Incredibles. That was cool.
So, I hope it wins.
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for those who care:
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/a/2005/01/25/entertainment0843EST0513.DTL
my wishes/guesses:
Performance by an actor in a leading role
Jamie Foxx in “Ray” (Universal)
Performance by an actress in a leading role
Catalina Sandino Moreno in “Maria Full of Grace” (HBO Films in association with Fine Line Features)
Achievement in cinematography
“A Very Long Engagement” (Warner Independent Pictures)
Bruno Delbonnel
Best motion picture of the year
“The Aviator” (Miramax, Initial Entertainment Group and Warner Bros.)
A Forward Pass/Appian Way /IMF Production
Nominees are still to be determined.
Adapted screenplay
“Sideways” (Fox Searchlight/20th Century Fox)
Screenplay by Alexander Payne & Jim Taylor
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F9/11 couldn't get out of the notoriously incestuous documentary branch because they know that if put to the vote of the wider (read: more liberal) academy it would win & they really don't want to see Michael Moore give an acceptance speach aever again. But that means Super Size Me has a great shot, so it's okay with me.
Hard to believe Paul Giamatti got overlooked for best actor after all that, but I guess the academy likes the idea of balancing the former-teen-hearthrob ticket with Johnny Depp better than the idea of journeyman-character-actor-shines-in-indy-critic-fave. I hope Don Cheadle wins anyway (yeah, like that's gonna happen).
It says here that Scorsese & Bening get revenge for past snubs, with the only-in-Hollywood kicker of Bening & Swank reversing the outcome of their face-off from Boys Don't Cry & American Beauty.
I sure hope The Incredibles beats out Shrek 2.
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F9/11 couldn't get out of the notoriously incestuous documentary branch because they know that if put to the vote of the wider (read: more liberal) academy it would win & they really don't want to see Michael Moore give an acceptance speach aever again.
F9/11 wasn't eligible for best docu becuase Moore didn't submit it in that category -- he had hoped to get it aired on national TV before the election, which would then have disqualified it (the docu category has different rules about that than regular films do, apparently). Of course it didn't get shown on TV, but that was his reasoning. And docus don't traditionally get Best Picture noms; that was a long-long-shot at best.
But you're right, the docu branch is quite inbred -- they've tried to open it up the past few years, but one probelm is getting people to actually watch all the eligible docus -- you're required to see 'em to vote in this category. So alot of (older, more conservative) retirees with lots of free time volunteer to screen docus every year.
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for those who care:
Sadly snubbed: Liam Neeson and Paul Giamatti.
I was surprised when I read that Paul Giamatti is the son of A. Barlett Giamatti, who was the president of Yale University, and served as the commissioner of baseball for a short time (less than a year I think) before his death.
Did they just say 86 or 96?
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A. Bartlett was comish for only 5 months. He personally banned Pete Rose, and after he unceremoniously croaked the ban took on a an 'etched-in-stone' quality that he could probably have never given it otherwise. It was almost like he said, "Pete Rose gets in over my dead body," and then actually backed it up!
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A. Bartlett was comish for only 5 months. He personally banned Pete Rose, and after he unceremoniously croaked the ban took on a an 'etched-in-stone' quality that he could probably have never given it otherwise. It was almost like he said, "Pete Rose gets in over my dead body," and then actually backed it up!
I was working with Howard Cosell the day that Giamatti died. They were good friends, and Cosell loved the fact that the baseball commish had come from academia rather than from what Howard called "the jock-ocracy". I never saw Cosell so emotionally affected by anything -- he was very broken up.