Feb 28, 2009

LAMB #247 - I Love Horror

[Editor's Note: This site's url is no longer functioning. A moment of silence please...]

























URL: http://www.ilovehorror.net/
Site Name: I Love Horror
Categories: Horror
Rating: R

What is the main focus of your site?
To provide and foster intelligent discussion concerning horror films and the future of the industry.

What are your blogging goals, personally and/or professionally? In other words, what, if anything, are you trying to get out your blog?
This blog is more or less an avenue for me to hone my writing skills. It does, however, also serve as a means to simply discuss something I care about and, ultimately, provide writing samples for future endeavors.

Do you prefer an interactive 'community' for your blog or are you the teacher and your readers are the students?
Interactive community. What's a blog without reader feedback?

How long have you been movie blogging for, and how frequent do you post updates to your site?
I tend to update three to four times a week, depending on how crazy my life is going. I've had this blog since July of 2008.

Name up to three of your favorite movies (and no more).
Session 9, Oldboy, Ravenous.

How did you hear about the LAMB?
I believe it was through another horror website, Horror Happenings.

Any additional comments, or give yourself an interview question that's not listed above.
Glad to see a site such as this exists.

Feb 27, 2009

LAMB #246 - Awesome All Day














URL: http://www.awesomeallday.com/
Site Name: Awesome All Day
Categories: Reviews, Humor, Pop Culture, Commentary
Rating: PG-13 but, we make no distinction in the movies or products we review (It could be anywhere from G to NC-17 depending on if we're interested).

What is the main focus of your site?
Awesome All Day is primarily focused on watching films, traveling, and experiencing new things and them rating them for our readers based on 1 to 4 system.

What are your blogging goals, personally and/or professionally? In other words, what, if anything, are you trying to get out your blog?
We started the blog as a hobby but, hope some day to get advertisers to pay us tons of money and eventually become filthy stinking rich.

Do you prefer an interactive 'community' for your blog or are you the teacher and your readers are the students?
We love comments and controversy, the more interaction the better.

How long have you been movie blogging for, and how frequent do you post updates to your site?
The movie blogging is relatively new but is quickly becoming a primary feature (if not the primary feature) We've been posting on average about two times a week but our trying to increase that number. Awesome All Day has been up since September 2008.

Name up to three of your favorite movies (and no more).
Big Trouble Little China, Delicatessen, Blood Simple.

How did you hear about the LAMB?
Through the Jaded Viewer.

Any additional comments, or give yourself an interview question that's not listed above.
Awesome All Day is first and foremost an entertainment blog until we're kidnapped by aliens, pirates, or drunken abusive biological fathers we plan on being judgmental about anything we do (Including Movies).

Feb 25, 2009

LAMB Chops 02/11 - 02/17


Four submissions this week that were valid... (If you submitted a post for next period, I'm hanging on to it.)

Site Name: Rants of a Diva
Post Title/Link: Who I Spent Valentine's Day With
Submitted By: Valley Dreamin'

Site Name: Valley Dreamin'
Post Title/Link: The 10 Most Deserved Oscar Wins of the Decade
Submitted By: Valley Dreamin'

Site Name: Out of the Past
Post Title/Link: Pillow Talk @ The Brattle
Submitted By: Out of the Past

Site Name: Pluck You, Too
Post Title/Link: Conan, the Cimmerian
Submitted By: Pluck You, Too

Submissions are now open for 02/18 -02/24. E-mail them to me at 1416andcounting@gmail.com with the subject line "LAMB Chops Submission"...

LAMB #202 - Impromptu Audience Audientication

[Editor's Note: Impromptu Audience has been re-born as Audientication. As such, I've given the site's owner a do-over on her LAMB profile.]













URL: http://audientication.blogspot.com/
Site Name: Audientication
Categories: Film Reviews, Film News, Movie Trailers, Editorials, TV News, Gossip Girl Recaps, General, Etc.
Rating: PG-13

What is the main focus of your site?
Movies, some mainstream, some underrated, some overrated, every and any kind of movie. With a side order of TV and randomness thrown in.

What are your blogging goals, personally and/or professionally? In other words, what, if anything, are you trying to get out your blog?
I'm just another cinephile who wants to blog about her passion.

Do you prefer an interactive 'community' for your blog or are you the teacher and your readers are the students?
Interactive. Always.

How long have you been movie blogging for, and how frequent do you post updates to your site?
I've been movie blogging for almost a year now. I post sporadically around every 3 days. RL can be a beyotch.

Name up to three of your favorite movies (and no more).
Serenity, Wall-E, Almost Famous.

How did you hear about the LAMB?
Through bloghopping.

Any additional comments, or give yourself an interview question that's not listed above.
None.

The 2009 LAMB Oscars Pool Complete Results

Overall player performance (name, site, score):
1. Mikey Filmmaker - Spaghetti Sauce and Sweet Peas - 21
2. Noonan - - 20
3. Jonathan W. - - 20
4. Nick P. - Fataculture (http://fataculture.wordpress.com) - 20
5. Indalecio D. - - 20
6. Todd B. - - 20
7. David T. - - 20
8. argento2665 - - 19
9. Adam F. - Counting Down the Hours - 19
10. Joseph B. - www.blacksheepreviews.com - 19
11. gordon p. - - 19
12. Daniel - Getafilm - http://getafilm.blogspot.com - 19
13. Nina T. - - 19
14. Annemarie T. - - 19
15. Samantha H - - 19
16. T.S. - Screen Savour - 18
17. Forman - - 18
18. Danny P. - - 18
19. J.D. - Valley Dreamin' - 18
20. Eternality T. - Eternality@Filmnomenon INC - 17
21. Travis E. - - 17
22. Jess - - 17
23. Anil U. - The Long Takehttp://www.long-take.com - 17
24. Pat - Doodad Kind of Town - 17
25. Philip C. - Phil on Film - www.philonfilm.blogspot.com - 16
26. Movie Viewing Girl - http://moviewings.blogspot.com/ - 16
27. Nick - Random Ramblings of a Demented Doorknob. - 16
28. J.D. - Radiator Heaven (http://rheaven.blogspot.com/) - 16
29. Dobre C. - - 16
30. Nayana A. - The Center Seat - 16
31. Paul R. - Careful With That Blog, Eugene - 15
32. Gastón J. - - 15
33. Blake - http://www.bitchinfilmreviews.com - 15
34. Rector - natsukashi.wordpress.com - 15
35. Marc H. - Deep Dish (http://marcharshbarger.blogspot.com/) - 15
36. Alex K. - Film Forager (http://filmforager.blogspot.com) - 15
37. Bulsara - - 14
38. Rachel - www.rachelsreelreviews.com - 14
39. Dean T. - filmicability with Dean Treadway - 14
40. Leonardo D. - - 14
41. Jason P. - www.jasonthewebsite.com - 14
42. Mrs Fletch - - 14
43. Ivy Fuld - http://cheerfuld.blogspot.com - 14
44. TheMovieNess - http://www.themovieness.com - 13
45. juan - - 13
46. Stephanie - The Flick Chick - 13
47. eugene d. - http://newstimescommunity.com/blogs/chainsaw/ - 13
48. Linda S. - Is This Seat Taken? - 13
49. Srikanth - http://theseventhart.info - 13
50. Ed H. - http://seul-le-cinema.blogspot.com - 13
51. Mom Fletch - - 13
52. Anders W. - Cut Print Review - 12
53. TC K. - http://popcornnroses.com - 12
54. Clara M. - www.justchickflicks.com - 12
55. patrik b. - - 12
56. Care - bkclubcare.wordpress.com - 12
57. Travis Hopson - Punch Drunk Critics - 11
58. http://cinexcellence.com - Cinexcellence - 11
59. Dylan (Fletch) - Blog Cabins - 11
60. Thomas P. - www.pluckyoutoo.com - 10
61. O.K. - sophomorecritic.blogspot.com - 10
62. Soto - Invasion of the B Movies - 10
63. J. Wayne H. - http://www.reelwhore.com - 10
64. T.L. B. - www.thelightningbugslair.com - 9
65. Bianca H. - - 9
66. Fitz - Lair of the Green Knight (http://writer.fitzhome.com) - 8

Overall category performance (category, winner, percent correct):
Best Picture - Slumdog Millionaire - 94%
Best Actor - Sean Penn, Milk - 41%
Best Actress - Kate Winslet, The Reader - 86%
Best Supporting Actor - Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight - 98%
Best Supporting Actress - Penelope Cruz, Vicky Christina Barcelona - 67%
Best Animated Feature Film - Wall*E - 98%
Best Art Direction - The Curious Case of Benjamin Button - 77%
Best Cinematography - Slumdog Millionaire - 62%
Best Costume Design - The Duchess - 76%
Best Director - Danny Boyle, Slumdog Millionaire - 89%
Best Documentary Feature - Man on Wire - 89%
Best Documentary Short Subject - Smile Pinki - 15%
Best Film Editing - Slumdog Millionaire - 65%
Best Foreign Language Film - Departures - 3%
Best Makeup - The Curious Case of Benjamin Button - 83%
Best Original Score - Slumdog Millionaire - 85%
Best Original Song - "Jai Ho" - Slumdog Millionaire - 53%
Best Animated Short Film - La Maison en Petits Cubes - 12%
Best Live Action Short Film - Spielzeugland (Toyland) - 35%
Best Sound Editing - The Dark Knight - 48%
Best Sound Mixing - Slumdog Millionaire - 17%
Best Visual Effects - The Curious Case of Benjamin Button - 79%
Best Adapted Screenplay - Slumdog Millionaire - 79%
Best Original Screenplay - Milk - 58%

Feb 24, 2009

The envelope please...

You know how they say possession is 9/10 of the law? Well, I'm in possession of the prizes for the LAMB Oscars Pool, so guess what - I win them!


Just kidding - what I meant to say was this: You know how they say possession is 9/10 of the law? Well, apparently proximity is 9/10 of winning Oscars Pools.


He probably already knows he won, but Mikey Filmmaker of Spaghetti Sauce and Sweet Peas, the only LAMB (that I know of) that lives within walking distance of the Kodak Theater, is the winner of the LAMB's 2009 Oscars Pool!


Mikey won it all by getting an awesome 21/24 categories correct, only missing Best Documentary Short Subject and the two Sound categories. Mikey was also the last person to enter the Pool.


After him, it was a six-way tie for second, between Noonan, Jonathan W., Nick P., Indalecio D., Todd B., and David T. Last year's winner, Sean R., did not participate.


I will be in contact with Mikey shortly to work out the details for his prizes. Thanks to all for playing.


By the way, I finished 59th out of 66 with a whopping 11 correct, and I also lost the annual Fletch Family Oscar Pool for the first time in god-knows-how-long to Mrs. Fletch by a score of 17-15. Not my year for psychic abilities, I guess.


The complete results will be posted later.

LAMB #245 - The Sophomore Critic


















URL: http://sophomorecritic.blogspot.com/
Site Name: The Sophomore Critic
Categories: Film history, (a limited amount of) Oscar commentary, contemporary films, classic films, film lists, film reviews, tv, sports, humor, box office analysis
Rating: PG-13

What is the main focus of your site?
I like to provide intelligent commentary with a twist and bridge together people with a contemporary understanding of films with people who have a deeper understanding. I try to utilize my knowledge of film history and box office trends to analyze current and previous movies. My primary focus is films, my secondary focus is tv, and I have a small amount of writing on politics or sports, but I veer away from that.

What are your blogging goals, personally and/or professionally? In other words, what, if anything, are you trying to get out your blog?
I am simply a writer by nature and I always like to write. I have been blogging for a little over two years now and those goals have changed but I would like to become a journalist or a columnist and earn money from it on the side, if I can. Lately, I am trying to get revenue from ads, donations, and DVD recommendations. I also enjoy being able to allow other people to write for the blog as I have had a small number of contributions.

Do you prefer an interactive 'community' for your blog or are you the teacher and your readers are the students?
I very much prefer interaction and encourage people to comment.

How long have you been movie blogging for, and how frequent do you post updates to your site?
I have been movie blogging since October of 2006. I had a website before that in 2004. I try to do a minimum of five a month but lately it’s picking up significantly. There are some months where I take a month off, but if I’m going to commit to a month, I try to do at least five or six. Hopefully with contributors, I can keep the blog going every month.

Name up to three of your favorite movies (and no more).
Chinatown, Touch of Evil, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.

How did you hear about the LAMB?
Another blog had a link to it.

Any additional comments, or give yourself an interview question that's not listed above.
None.

Feb 23, 2009

Last call for Chops

If you want to submit for Chops this week, you have to get them to me by Wednesday. E-mail them to me at 1416andcounting@gmail.com.

Also, the AMC Best Picture Showcase this weekend was a blast! I have reviews up now at my blog and I'll have a couple of pictures up later on this week for anyone who's interested.

Feb 22, 2009

Trailer Talk: The Award For Best Trailer Goes To...

This is so exciting. Aren't you excited? I'm excited. The votes have been cast and calculated, and I even rented myself a good blogging tux. I have to say though, I think I should have rented this thing earlier. It doesn't really fit right. The arms are a little short and the pants...well, they're more like shorts. I mean, if I went outside, I might end up with snow on my shins. Here I am though, in a strangely itchy and ill fitting tux to announce the winner of our award for Best Trailer!

What do you mean, why did I rent a tux? Hello? I'm presenting an award people. This is pretty prestigious. Glamorous even. One might even call it...where's my thesaurus..ah! Here we go, one might even call this illustrious!

Huh? What do you mean no one can see me? I got cut from the telecast? Those bastards!

That's not the reason? What do you mean it's not a real award?! It is too a real award. Sure, I'm not giving out fancy gift bags full of free stuff to glitzy celebrities. They've got enough crap already. And besides, as I learned yesterday, I don't exactly have the budget for that (or my tux for that matter. Learned that lesson a little too late. I mean, do you even realize how hard it is to find someplace where you can rent a tuxedo tshirt? I mean, come on! It's impossible! I wonder if I can deduct it on my taxes...), I apparently have a budget of...well, that's not important.

What's important, as everyone gets ready to start their liveblog of the event, is that we hand out today's first award. The LAMBcademy has spoken. Let's get a drumroll and we'll review the nominees.

Okay...there's no money in the budget for the drumroll. So...do like Mr Rogers taught you and pretend.

*imaginary drumroll*

The Dark Knight
Milk
Revolutionary Road
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Wall-E
Burn After Reading (Red Band)
Let The Right One In
Man on Wire
Slumdog Millionaire


And the envelope please? *sigh* Ok...

*imaginary envelope*

The winner of the LAMBcademy Award for Best Trailer goes to:

Milk!!!!

Congratulations, once again to Sean Penn, Gus Van Sant and the rest of that merry gang.

It was a close contest with Milk taking the prize with 27.27% of the vote. The Dark Knight and Revolutionary Road tied for second place with 22.73% and none of the others even made it to 10%.

Thanks for voting everyone. I hope this was as fun as you as it was for me. Now to return this tuxedo. Hopefully they don't notice the mustard stain.

Feb 21, 2009

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Picture

Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-fourth and final of a 24-part series dissecting the 81st Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!









By Blake of Bitchin' Film Reviews.

Does anyone ever really agree with the Oscars? It seems like he can't just get a break sometimes, and then you start to feel sorry for him. But then you remember all the times he acted a fool and completely screwed things up. This offense is especially felt in the Best Picture category. Don't believe me? Let's take a look at the year 1997. Forrest Gump won the little statue for best picture over Tarantino's Pulp Fiction, and The Shawshank Redemption. Fast forward a few years to 2005, when the best picture category was over run with the following fantastic films: Brokeback Mountain, Capote, Good Night, and Good Luck, Munich, and, well, Crash (do the lyrics 'one of these things is not like the others' come to mind?). We all know the awful outcome of the 2006 awards, and what a shame.

I don't want to say that the Academy never hits the right notes. How about 1999's American Beauty? 1991's Silence of the Lambs, 1977's Annie Hall, or last year's No Country for Old Men? These films certainly deserved the coveted award that distinguishes it forever in history as the best of its time (although this isn't to say cases for the other films of those years in the same category couldn't be argued). The conundrum comes when you realize that it's really a crap shoot. Oscar may decide to finally give an award to a director that was really due twenty years earlier (this theory would certainly explain Ron Howard's win for best director of A Beautiful Mind), even though there are more deserving filmmakers in the category. He may decide to give it to the underdog just because, or he may award it seemingly based on domestic box office sales. Who can really guess the Academy's motives from year to year?

It's the opinion of this author that Oscar missed the boat all together this year with the overlooking of Sam Mendes' Revolutionary Road. Can anyone that has seen both movies really posit that The Reader is a better film than Revolutionary Road? This complaint aside, the Academy has recognized some truly terrific films that came out of 2008. Some are heart-warming celebrations of life, some are painfully politically and socially relevant, and some provide simply brilliant storytelling. Any informed movie-goer can argue that each deserves the award of best picture, and it's a complete guessing game as to who will win. The nominees are:

Slumdog Millionaire
It's not a question as to whether or not Danny Boyle belongs in this category. He's one of the most versatile directors out there and he really managed to do some fantastic things with a script that wasn't really that remarkable. It's a movie that's just edgy enough to convince people they've experienced something real, but still delivers the clear message that there is good in the world today. A happy ending never hurt anyone... except when it came down to winning the Oscar for best picture.



Frost/Nixon
This is the sort of movie the Academy likes to overlook when the director's previous projects have been less than satisfactory (shame on you Ron Howard! The Da Vinci Code is an embarrassment to American film). If Oscar can overlook the sad fact of Howard's previous, and planned projects, Frost/Nixon stands a real chance of winning. Not just because it's a tremendous film that will entertain even the least politically-minded, but because it's wish-fulfillment, and painfully relevant. They might as well substituted Nixon's name with Bush.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
I may be stoned for this, but this seems to be both one of the most overrated films of the year, and at the same time, a film that the Academy will voluntarily jump behind faster than you'd expect. It's super long, a little inaccessible, coming from respected source material (even if it bastardized it), and most importantly: coming from a respected director. Achievements in special effects and makeup can't be denied, but an aged Brad Pitt's faced on a shriveled, old man's body can only carry the film so far. Then again, thirteen nominations? The Academy always likes to out do itself, maybe this will be the film to break the record held by Ben-Hur and Titanic. Either way, I think David Fincher has safely secured at least one of the major awards.

The Reader
I was completely compelled by Stephen Daldry's The Reader...for the first hour, at which point I expected it to end. It didn't. It continued for almost another two hours broaching every subject deemed important by the Academy in the last thirty years: underage sexual awakening, illiteracy, the holocaust, unrequited love, etc., etc. To be honest, it's a complete mystery how this film ended up in the prestigious best picture category, and let's pray that the confusion isn't exacerbated by a win.



Milk
Milk was released during an incredibly relevant time. Proposition 8 had just been defeated in California, a minor, but serious setback for the GLBT gang (a defeat that Sean Penn seemed to take to heart). If only Van Sant's masterpiece had been released before the polls had closed...who knows what could have been? In all seriousness, the competency of this film is unusually brilliant. It manages to both inspire the understanding of a somewhat misunderstood culture, and inspire pure patriotism that America's constitution provides.

It's anyone's game. The category is filled with some great stuff, and was said before, anyone would be able to argue for any of these films. Who knows which one Oscar will choose?

Trailer Talk: It's Oscar Weekend, that's like a holiday, isn't it?

Somewhere along the way, I lost a week. I mean, I'd swear I set it down RIGHT THERE and now it's gone! Disappeared amongst the single socks and stray keys. I know it will turn up as soon as I stop looking for it.

You may remember that a couple of weeks ago, I very seriously asked

what if the winner of the Best Picture award were selected solely by it's trailer. Obviously, a lot more effort would go into them, but that's not what I mean. And I don't mean, what was the best trailer of last year. Just, looking at the trailer, if that was ALL you had to go on, who would win?

I asked and *YOU* answered!

That's right, it's time to reveal the Official Trailer Talk Best Picture Oscar Prediction Based Solely On The Film's Trailer(tm)!

With a solid 44.44% of the vote, it's a lock! The winner will be Milk!

*insert celebration here. maybe a balloon drop if the money is available. that remind me, I need to ask Fletch what my budget is for this sort of thing*

Congratulations all around to Sean Penn and Gus Van Sant for their tremendous work. Enjoy that award guys, you earned it!

And, in the interest of transparency and full disclosure, here are the final results:

Milk  44.44%
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button  33.33%
Frost/Nixon  11.11%
The Reader  5.56%
Slumdog Millionaire  5.56%

And, don't forget, today is the last day to vote for Best Trailer!

Feb 20, 2009

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Original Screenplay

Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-third of a 24-part series dissecting the 81st Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!









By Anil of The Long Take.

It's a well-known fact that when it comes to the Best Picture category, Academy's hand is rather shy at making brave choices. Being 'brave' here means to be able to choose the movie which holds higher artistic significance and predictably will have a bigger impact to the future of filmmaking, instead of the one that sways popular opinion of that day. It's favoring low-budget indies over studio mammoths, if they actually are better. It's awarding 'excellence' more than marketing. The examples to the years in the Oscar history where this was not the case are many, and those instances are way overemphasized already by cinephiles of all shapes and sizes (including myself) and in all possible platforms (including my blog). Beginning from internet's first days of widespread usage, such public outcries have avalanched out of control and today you have the luxury of being able to read why the Academy sucks from hundreds of different blogs, each stating many different reasons. Regardless, let me keep beating the dead dog for the sake of refreshing your memories:
  • 1941: How Green Was My Alley won over Citizen Kane
  • 1944: Going My Way won over Double Indemnity
  • 1951: An American in Paris won over A Streetcar Named Desire
  • 1964: My Fair Lady won over Dr. Strangelove
  • 1971: The French Connection won over A Clockwork Orange
  • 1973: The Sting won over The Exorcist
  • 1976: Rocky won over Taxi Driver
  • 1979: Kramer vs Kramer won over Apocalypse Now
  • 1980: Ordinary People won over Raging Bull
  • 1990: Dances with Wolves won over Goodfellas
  • 1994: Forrest Gump won over Pulp Fiction and Shawshank Redemption
  • 1996: The English Patient won over Fargo
  • 1997: Titanic won over L.A. Confidential and Good Will Hunting
  • 1998: Shakespeare in Love won over The Thin Red Line and Saving Private Ryan
  • 2001: A Beautiful Mind won over Gosford Park, Moulin Rouge and The Lord of the Rings, Fellowship of the Ring
  • 2004: Million Dollar Baby won over Sideways
  • 2005: Crash won over Good Night and Good Luck
You can add to or remove from this list some films according to your own tastes but there's no question that Academy often misfires. That's ok, I'm not making a big deal out of it - after all no real or hypothetical awards authority can always get it right; especially if the definition and meaning of the term 'right' is as subjective as it is in movie business. Over the years, I have learned well to stop complaining about overlooked films that obviously fall outside the context of the Academy Awards and accept the phenomenon for what it really is. After its 81 years of existence, it should be well established by now that yes, independent films are underrepresented, comedies are almost non-existent, foreign films merely have a single category for themselves and almost everything nominated is epic, expensive dramas equipped with exquisite crowd-pleasing qualities. That does not change the fact that cornerstones in the American film history are exhaustively represented among Oscar winners in several categories, nor the fact that this event is no less significant than any other (A plausible assertion would condemn the whole process of handing out self-congratulatory awards rather than a single one - only then all these complaints would find a reasonable basis)

The reason why I listed a fragment of an all-too-familiar list above is because I want to start looking at the 'Best Original Screenplay' Oscar from quite a broad perspective. After all, we are talking about the category which underwent the most whimsical evolutionary period over the years and therefore one that deserves no less. But before moving on to that, here is a very brief summary of that journey, which begins in the fateful year of 1927:

1927-1928 Period

Categories:
  • Writing (Adaptation)
  • Writing (Original Story)
  • Writing (Title Writing)
This is back when the Academy was not a gigantic monster of an institution with load of rules and regulations but merely a group of people who wanted to award excellence in film but didn't know what the best way to do that was. That's why the third category makes absolutely no sense. I am as clueless as you are when it comes to what 'Title Writing' means exactly; all I know is that it's an award that is not associated with a specific film title. Imagine the writing version of the honorary award where you could also have nominees.

1928-1930 Period

Categories:
  • Writing
Clean and simple and how it should've stayed if you ask me. Is 'adapting' as opposed to writing an original one a vastly distinct art form? Why don't we have the same two categories for directors and producers as well then? Their jobs must be just as much detached.

1930-1935 Period

Categories:
  • Writing (Adaptation)
  • Writing (Original Story)
First roots of the categories that we have today. First signs of the assumption that doing these two require different set of talents.

1935-1940 Period

Categories:
  • Writing (Screenplay)
  • Writing (Original Story)
So screenplays cannot consist of original stories? I guess 'screenplay' is another word whose meaning eroded with old age.

1940-1948 Period

Categories:
  • Writing (Screenplay)
  • Writing (Original Screenplay)
  • Writing (Original Motion Picture Story)
This is where the whole thing turns into a David Lynch film. I've tried but honestly, I cannot distinguish these three from each other in any way. The only explanation I can come up with for these puzzling 8 years is that Writer's Guild went on a strike for a third category and the Academy had no chance but to comply.

1948-1949 Period

Categories:
  • Writing (Motion Picture Story)
  • Writing (Screenplay)
A sinister attempt at reducing the number back to 2 but...

1949-1956 Period

Categories:
  • Writing (Motion Picture Story)
  • Writing (Screenplay)
  • Writing (Story and Screenplay)
...the Writer's Guild is will not be made fool of. Here is another ridiculous and incomprehensible trio. I am looking at these names as an alien from 50 years ahead and the third one definitely looks like to grand writing prize to me. Apparently, the first guy wrote a great story, the second guy did a good job with the screenplay but it was only the third who was able to get both of them right. I guess you wouldn't be that happy if you won one of the first two; they make you face your failures as well as your triumphs. Very constructive actually.

1956-Present

Categories:
  • Writing (Original Screenplay)
  • Writing (Adapted Screenplay)
Despite changing names fairly frequently during the 50-something years, what the categories meant did not show any significant difference so I have grouped all of them under the same title.

Unlike its long history, the way 'Best Original Screenplay' Oscars have been handed out for the last few decades follows a very simple pattern. Looking at it from a broad perspective (as I've promised couple of paragraphs above) yields two predominant rules which define this pattern quite accurately:

1) If one of the nominees is a lock or at least a heavy favorite in the 'Best Picture' category, it's highly probable that 'Best Original Screenplay' will also go to the same film. Statistics from the last 52 years (so that we don't go back to a weird period that I don't know how to handle) show that among the 'Best Picture' winners who were also nominated for 'Best Original Screenplay', 67% of them won the writing award as well. In fact this is true for both of the writing categories; the ratio of films who won best picture without any writing awards is only 31%. Nick of Random Ramblings of a Demented Doorknob recently addressed in his article for LAMB Devours The Oscars the age-old question that had been haunting the 'Best Director' category for eternity: "Should the director of the 'Best Picture' not be named 'Best Director'?" In other words, do we really need to have two seperate categories to be able to award the producers? My personal response to this question obviously should be saved for another article, but let me point out that the same question is also valid for the writing categories. The statistics I've given above show that most of the time, the Academy finds the question meaningful and supports the notion that 'Best Picture' is also the best-written film of the year.

2)
If either the 'Best Picture' had an adapted screenplay, or it failed to secure a nomination or a win in 'Best Original Screenplay', other parameters come into equation. In this case, the winner is almost always one of two things:

i) A film not as good/important as the 'Best Picture' winner but one that definitely deserved and needed recognition and special mention from the Academy. Here are some examples:
  • 2007: Juno (Best Picture: No Country for Old Men)
  • 2003: Lost in Translation (Best Picture: The Lord of the Rings, The Return of the King)
  • 2002: Talk To Her (Best Picture: Chicago)
  • 2000: Almost Famous (Best Picture: Gladiator)
  • 1993: The Piano (Best Picture: Schindler's List)
  • 1991: Thelma & Louise (Best Picture: Silence of the Lambs)
  • 1986: Hannah and Her Sisters (Best Picture: Platoon)
ii) A film that is vastly superior to the 'Best Picture' winner and therefore a soothing effect on our feelings of unrest caused by the laughable choices examplified by the list I've given at the beginning of this article. If writers and not the whole academy voted for 'Best Picture', or if we all of a sudden stopped acting like that 'Best Picture' is the most important Oscar and place a greater importance on 'Best Original Screenplay', following films would've replaced the current winners in the history of the Academy Awards:
  • 2006: Little Miss Sunshine (Replacing: The Departed)
  • 2005: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (Replacing: Million Dollar Baby)
  • 2001: Gosford Park (Replacing: A Beautiful Mind)
  • 1997: Good Will Hunting (Replacing: Titanic)
  • 1996: Fargo (Replacing: The English Patient)
  • 1995: The Usual Suspects (Replacing: Braveheart)
  • 1994: Pulp Fiction (Replacing: Forrest Gump)
  • 1989: Dead Poets Society (Replacing: Driving Miss Daisy)
  • 1976: Network (Replacing: Rocky)
Oh it would be such a wonderful world indeed...

One should notice the obvious shift from simple and popular towards complex and artistically pleasing introduced with these 'new' choices. It's also obvious both of the rules imply that 'Best Original Screenplay' category functions as an alternative/secondary 'Best Picture' award above all else. Now, I am not suggesting that this is a part of the collective minds of the Academy-member writers - I acknowledge that something as temperamental and arbitrary as any collective mind is impossible to formulize. Yet assuming the role of a statistician, the category makes much more sense from this perspective than as one that awards excellence in writing. Deliberate or not, the only consistency 'Best Original Screenplay' has had, is nothing more than this.

To me, this also means that this category is the second most important one in this awards show, for obvious reasons.

Going for a typical way to end this article, let me conclude (like many of my other friends in LAMB did) by a brief analysis of this year's nominees (the parantheses show which of the two rules described above the given film will qualify for if it wins this year):

1. Frozen River (Rule #2i)
This is the little indie that managed to impress Academy members this year and to snatch two nominations from the iron claws of bigger studio productions (and of course from those of the vicious Harvey Weinstein). I have written about this one previously so my dissatisfaction with the film is quite clear. In any case, this is Academy's way of honoring Courtney Hunt for all her efforts and, of course, for being a woman in this man-infested industry. It is one of those films for which the nomination is a win and it's clear there is no next step. I would be unpleasantly surprised if this one goes on to win the award among the other four nominees.

2. Happy-Go-Lucky (Rule #2i)
You can't go wrong with Mike Leigh. With his latest film that puts Amelie to shame in its optimism and would make Tarantino envious with the beautiful flow of the dialogue, Leigh analyzes the eccentric in all of us and its unexpected consequences. In the title role that is easily this year's most interesting, Sally Hawkins shines and it's a shame someone else stole her nomination this year. An win in this category might compensate for all that (and purely from the writing perspective, the film would definitely deserve it) but success here still seems like a distant possibility. In a weaker year, it would've had a lot more chance.

3. In Bruges (Rule #2ii)
One of the films that left me speechless last year, so much that I couldn't get myself to write a review for it. With such perfection in both writing and direction, what is left to say on the film anyway? Martin McDonagh's debut In Bruges is one of those films that would be spoilt by explanation - the sheer impact of the whole experience should best be left undisturbed. Among not only these nominees but all the films came out this year, this one deserves to win 'Best Original Screenplay' more than any other - and since it was recognized in no other category (and with the help of the screenplay's absolute perfection) it becomes an automatic frontrunner.

4. Milk (Rule #1)
If In Bruges loses this sunday, it will lose to this one. If fire rains from the heavens and the world turns upside down and Slumdog doesn't score a 'Best Picture' win, it will be Milk which replaces Boyle's film in that category. While that is almost completely impossible, that kind of buzz gives any screenplay nominee an edge over others (for reasons discussed above). Dustin Lance Black's screenplay is mostly unimpressive and merely an entertainment piece but award-handers of all types have been begging to differ. Bad news is, they might go so far as to crown Milk with a screenplay award since it's going to miss out on all the other major ones (excluding 'Best Actor' - Penn is the frontrunner in that race).

5. Wall-E (Rule #2ii)
A lot of people, including me, were upset and angry to see that Wall-E was not nominated for 'Best Picture', especially in a year where the films replacing it are so weak (same argument is valid for The Dark Knight as well). A pinnacle in animation technologies and a daring example in visual storytelling, Wall-E is a film that has something for all minds of all ages. I can't see the Academy bending its unwritten rules to hand out a screenplay award to an animation so chances are slim for this writing trio. Nevertheless, it's both refreshing and exciting to see this one as a nominee in this category - the writers are once again on the right track.

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The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Visual Effects

Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-second of a 24-part series dissecting the 81st Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!










By Paul of Careful With That Blog, Eugene.

The Academy Award for Visual Effects is not, as you may think, an award given to the movie that blows up the most stuff. If that were the case, the words “Academy Award” would be synonymous with movies like The Phantom Menace and Transformers.

A high volume of, frankly, awful movies are nominated every year because so many awful movies rely chiefly on visual effects as a crutch, a gimmick, and a lure for the people who watch movies chiefly for the purpose of watching giant CGI robots watch creepy ex-Disney stars make out with hot chicks on the hood of one of their compatriots.

The purpose of the award is not to acknowledge superb special effects of a common nature. It’s one thing to create a digital Empire State Building. It’s quite another to render a giant ape crawling up the side of the Empire State Building as 1930’s Manhattan panics below. So Transformers is not an Oscar nominated film for its gratuitous amount of TNT. Those creepy robots took time, effort, skill, and artistry to create, and it’s nice to acknowledge the highest grossing films of the year somehow, even if said movie sucks.

So we have the 2009 Summer Blockbuster class, and it was one hell of a summer. The movies nominated for Best Visual Effects this year are good by anybody’s standards. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is up for Best Picture. The Dark Knight is widely regarded as having been snubbed, even with its 8 nominations. Iron Man was the best pure action movie of 2008. But, as they say in professional wrestling, THERE MUST BE A WINNER!

The Dark Knight

My guess is that The Dark Knight has been nominated for two words: Harvey Dent. Dent’s transformation into Two Face, rushed as you may or may not have been depending on how you like your epic movies, resulted in the creation of one of the most grotesque human disfigurements in recent cinema history. Compare and contrast The Dark Knight with Batman Forever and the comic book version:



While Tommy Lee Jones looks like he’s been dipped Mrs. Field’s style into some Willy Wonka experiment gone wrong, Aaron Eckhart not only looks plausible, he often looks real. The people behind Two Face’s design went all the way. Pay close attention when Dent is in the hospital and you can see blood on the pillow. Watch him at the bar and see the little dribble of alcohol dribbling down the lipless side of his face. It’s masterful, incredible, and it subtly adds to the movie. Considering how much went into this movie, that’s saying a lot.

Iron Man

More things blow up per-second in Iron Man than in all but maybe the other Robert Downey Jr. movie that’s been nominated for something, but for good reason: Tony Stark flies around in a tin can with rockets strapped to it.

It is not the Iron Man suit itself that will win Iron Man a statue, if that is indeed its fate. It’s all the little things besides the suit, and maybe that the suits were done in such a way that those watching the film still had a sort of emotional response to the people flying the really expensive WMDs.

Tony Stark’s mansion is a marvel of technology, from the robots that assemble the armor around him to the glowing chest piece that’s keeping him alive. Here is Tony Stark, suiting up to some incredible music:



Some of the robots in Stark’s house have personalities, like Wall-E, but without a soul. The movie moves on to where Tony Stark must face a man in a much bigger robotic suit of armor. The summer’s other Marvel Comics film, The Incredible Hulk, featured a similar match-up between original and bigger newcomer. One looks like it was done on a computer, totally void of actors (extras notwithstanding). The other manages to turn The Dude into an evil, megalomaniacal, first rate corporate executive asshole. It doesn’t quite reach the heights of Spider-Man 2, but this won’t be taking home an Oscar.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

I wonder if, upon hearing the premise of the movie, the people in charge of nominations screamed “EURKA!” and penciled this in under every category. Benjamin Button is a movie tailor made to win this sort of award, if only because a crew of folks slaving at a computer have succeeded in taking one of Hollywood’s young and beautiful and turning him into an old, decrepit man.



Benjamin looks rather ripped for an old man, but that’s beyond the point. This movie would have been impossible without its visual effects team. There’s a wrinkly old baby, a WWII naval battle, and a long, drawn out procession of Brad Pitt as the stages of aging. Some of the credit for Pitt certainly goes to the make-up department, but this movie features a seamless blend of the two arts: You can’t tell where one ends and the other begins.

The Winner

Benjamin Button, but the prediction comes with a story. A friend of mine and I always argue about the nature of “special” effects in movies, both of us being big Star Wars nerds. The biggest compliment handed out to any of the prequels was that it “had really nice special effects,” which was a nice way of saying that it was a bad movie that looked good.

I was with the it-sucked-but-was-aesthetically-pleasing crowd. My friend said that the whole movie was basically one effect, rendering none of the effects special. The effects, he argued, acted as a crutch for George Lucas and hampered the actors. I eventually agreed with him. If you watch any of the scenes where Anakin and Padme are discussing serious business amongst so much computer generated opulence, the acting is so heavy that you can almost see the green screen.

It’s almost the same way with Benjamin Button. There isn’t a single “special” effect within the movie because there is no one stand-out scene where the effects break new ground or go away so as to be unnoticed for five minutes, and some really good actors and actresses struggled with that aspect of the movie.

But the winner of this award will be the film judged to have the visual effects that had the most impact on their film, and with the best possible quality. The Dark Knight wins quality points, but effects weren’t necessary. Effects were necessary in Iron Man, but they look better and mean more in Benjamin Button. It may not seem fair, considering that Benjamin Button is one long graphics showcase, but there ain’t nothing special about Best Visual Effects – its just a practical award presiding over an impractical field.

Feb 19, 2009

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Art Direction

Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-first of a 24-part series dissecting the 81st Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!










By Mike of Spaghetti Sauce and Sweet Peas.

Achievement in Art Direction
Changeling, Art Direction: James J. Murakami, Set Decoration: Gary Fettis
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Art Direction: Donald Graham Burt, Set Decoration: Victor J. Zolfo
The Dark Knight, Art Direction: Nathan Crowley, Set Decoration: Peter Lando
The Duchess, Art Direction: Michael Carlin, Set Decoration: Rebecca Alleway
Revolutionary Road, Art Direction: Kristi Zea, Set Decoration: Debra Schutt

It feels like any category without a Slumdog nomination is a huge relief for the other films. Especially, a film like Benjamin Button, which may get shut out (though I think that's unlikely). The Art Directors Guild announced their winners last week. They were the following:

Best period film design: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Best fantasy film design: The Dark Knight
Best contemporary film design: Slumdog Millionaire

Even before the guild announced their winners, Button was the frontrunner in this race. This should only further establish that. On a side note, I'm still trying to figure out why The Dark Knight is a fantasy film. I personally think this should be one of the less dramatic categories of the night.

Changeling would be more of a threat if the film was better received within the Academy. I also think it's comparable to Button and that film's art direction is superior. Anyway, this is Murakami's second nomination ('84 for The Natural) and Fettis' second as well ('90 for The Godfather: Part III). Both are looking for their first win. When you watch this film, it just feels like a standard 1920s LA re-creation.

Button is the frontrunner in this category and rightfully so. It's very epic and the film spans almost a hundred years. That's a lot of different worlds to create and they should be rewarded for it. This is actually the first nomination for both Burt and Zolfo. I feel like if Button can only win this award, then this should be it.

The Dark Knight presents a different type of art direction. It's not a period film, but a comic book adaptation (or a fantasy film according to the ADG). The city of Gotham is dark and creepy at times. This is the second nomination for Crowley ('06 for The Prestige) and first for Lando. The last couple years the Academy has gone with more fantasy in this category (Pan's Labyrinth and Sweeney Todd), so that could bode well for Knight. I just don't know how much the Academy really likes this film. It was shut out of Best Picture, but landed all these technical categories. I feel like this film could either take home like five Oscars or one. This film could be a real wild card.

The Duchess is a classic period piece that almost always gets nominated for this category. This is the first nomination for both Carlin and Alleway. I saw this film and couldn't really get into it. The art direction and costumes were great, but will the quality of film hurt its chances? For costumes the film’s quality hasn't mattered recently (Marie Antoinette and Elizabeth: The Golden Age), but I don't see it winning here at all.

Revolutionary Road recreates classic 50s suburbia. This is the second nomination for Zea ('97 for As Good As It Gets) and first nom for Schutt. Like The Duchess, I don't like this film's chances. I love the 50's, but this film is greatly misunderstood by many people. It definitely is not liked within the Academy as it failed to get nominations for both Kate and Leo. It will suffer from that and the chances of a film like this winning would seem slim to none.

I expect Button to win this category. I wouldn't say it's a lock, but I'm fairly confident. A lot of people don't like this film, but obviously the Academy likes it enough to give it 13 nominations. While I don't see it winning anything major on Sunday, it should still win a few Oscars. Look out for possibly The Dark Knight, but I would consider that to be an upset.

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Actress

Editor's note: Welcome to the twentieth of a 24-part series dissecting the 81st Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!










By Nayana of The Center Seat.

As I've complained ad nauseum on The Center Seat, I've been a very bad film geek this year. I'll spare you the gory details, but life has conspired... and I've actually had to make a conscious effort to see all the 2009 Oscar films. But still, I thought I was doing pretty well... until Fletch assigned me Best Actress, a category in which I had, at that point, seen only one of the nominated films!

Actually, it was a good thing. I got off my booty and went to the theater (and, in one case, Blockbuster), and now I can hold my head up in the LAMB's distinguished company. So, here we go.

Melissa Leo, Frozen River

This was a gripping story about a recently single mother who resorts to border smuggling to pay the bills--and it's the Canadian border. Cool twist, right? We're saturated with Mexico border stories, so this was refreshing. And I have to say... maybe it was the snowy backdrop, or the northern accent, or the raw desperation to keep her head above water, but I saw a lot of people I know in Melissa Leo's character. She's real, frank, unadorned, the anti-glamour-puss. Of course a lot of the credit for that must be shared with the person who created the character: screenwriter Courtney Hunt, who is also nominated.

Leo is fairly unknown; a quick perusal of her IMDB page reveals lots of guest stints on Law & Order and CSI, and roles in various obscure films, perhaps the least obscure of which is Mr. Woodcock. Did you see that one? Yeah, me neither.

I'm actually really cool with Leo's obscurity. How great would it be if relative unknowns were nominated at every Academy Awards? Of course she doesn't have a chance in hell, but it'll be nice to see her there Sunday night.

Meryl Streep - Doubt

Meryl Streep has gotten fifteen Academy Award nominations. Fifteen. That's more than any other actor or actress in the history of the Oscars. I'm sure there's a chair somewhere in the Kodak Theatre with Meryl's ass-print permanently molded onto the seat.

Still, it shouldn't be a surprise. Girlfriend can act. Overall, Doubt was a bit depressing for me (it's the story of a priest who may or may not have misbehaved with one of his school's young male students), but it was one of those movies that seemed custom-built as a showcase for great acting. And, naturally, Streep didn't disappoint. She portrayed a harsh, militant nun who suspected the priest of wrongdoing and did all she could to prove herself right. That character had so much potential to be flat and uncomplicated, but Streep gave her flashes of humanity, with a fleeting look of uncertainty or a slight shaking of the hands. This is one case in which the actress seems to have made the character who she was. But, fairly or not, that's what we've come to expect of Meryl Streep. Anything less than perfection in her would be a disappointment. Kind of a tough place to put her in, huh? Whatever. She's got fifteen Oscar nominations.

Kate Winslet - The Reader

I came to this movie with the distinct disadvantage of having read the book. We all know that books tend to far surpass their movie adaptations. Nevertheless, I really enjoyed this movie, with its raw sexuality and complicated morality.

It's hard to think of a more complicated, conflicted character to challenge Kate Winslet. In this movie, she played an illiterate Nazi war criminal who has an affair with a 16-year-old boy. It's kind of Summer of '42-meets-Judgment at Nuremberg-meets-...I don't know... a Lifetime movie about illiteracy. Of course Winslet pulls it off. She is somehow able to portray vulnerability and pride simultaneously, but perhaps her greatest feat is that we forget about Kate Winslet and instead become wholly absorbed in the story. This is a case, in contrast to Doubt, in which the acting is merely a part of the experience of the film.

Anne Hathaway - Rachel Getting Married

This is it. We are officially no longer allowed to dismiss Anne Hathaway as Princess Mia. I think we all suspected she was awesome (how much ass did she kick in Brokeback?) but now, there it is in black and white. She is a contender for the Academy Award for Best Actress.

It wasn't just handed to her either. In a film which was sometimes difficult to watch, Hathaway delivered a stunning performance as a recovering addict trying to fit in with her family upon her return from rehab. She's the classic black sheep, but the issues go deeper than that. In fact, the myriad issues of this textbook dysfunctional family explode at perhaps the worst possible time: the days surrounding the wedding of the "good" sister.

I have never seen Anne Hathaway like this. She knocked me on my ass. Frankly, she would absolutely get my vote for this particular Oscar, if it had not been for the final contender in this category...

Angelina Jolie - Changeling

I get a lot of flak from people I respect (Pistola, I'm talking to you) about my professional regard for Ms. Jolie. In this case, it's sometimes hard to distinguish feelings about Jolie's personal choices from judgment of her acting ability. Many people dismiss her as a skank/homewrecker/baby factory/whatever, and I'm not necessarily arguing with that. But I have always been a fan of Angelina Jolie the actress. From her first major role as a doomed supermodel in Gia, to her Oscar-winning turn as a sociopathic mental patient in Girl, Interrupted, to her heartbreaking portrayal of her own friend Marianne Pearl in A Mighty Heart, to this most recent role as a bereaved mother in Changeling, Angelina Jolie is a devastating actress. Her work speaks for itself.

I was shaking after I saw Changeling... Jolie is heartbreaking as a mother who tirelessly fights to find her lost son, even angering police and being thrown in a mental institution in the process. Of course she's a great actress, but she brought something outstanding to this particular role. We all know, regardless of our personal feelings for her, that she loves her kids. In addition, she lost her own mother shortly before starting filming on Changeling. Perhaps it was this personal experience that allowed her to lay herself open on screen in such a raw way.

I am going to unabashedly throw my full support behind Angelina Jolie for this Oscar. But the truth is, no matter who wins this year, we can't lose. The Academy has nominated five outstanding actresses, and whoever wins will do so because of merit, and not because of pity, or politics, or "it's about time", as in certain previous years (Halle Berry, I'm looking at you.)

Feb 18, 2009

LAMB Chops 02/04 - 02/10

Four submissions this week...

Site Name: Pluck You, Too!
Post Title/Link: Fanboys
Submitted By: Pluck You, Too!

Site Name: Cinema Viewfinder
Post Title/Link: M.I.A. on Region 1 DVD Tribute Month: The African Queen
Submitted By: Cinema Viewfinder

Site Name: Cinema Viewfinder
Post Title/Link: Movie Review: Two Lovers - Serious Romance Charms With Its Emotional Depth
Submitted By: Cinema Viewfinder

Site Name: Movie Viewing Girl
Post Title/Link: Variations on a Frank Capra theme
Submitted By: Movie Viewing Girl

That's all for this week. You can now e-mail me at 1416andcounting@gmail.com with submissions for 02/11 - 02/17.

ALSO, I'll be attending AMC's Best Picture Showcase in Dallas this weekend with a reader - and if you want to follow along as I update twitter during the showcase, then by all means, follow me on Twitter here. I'll be taking pictures at the event too...

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Director

Editor's note: Welcome to the nineteenth of a 24-part series dissecting the 81st Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!










By Nick of Random Ramblings of a Demented Doorknob.

When I started doing research on the Best Director award, I saw a question asked that is a very good one: If the director is in charge of making the movie as great as it is, why are there two separate categories for Best Director and Best Picture? If you’re the best director, shouldn’t that mean you’ve technically made the superior film? Especially in years like this, wherein the Best Director slots and the Best Picture slots share the same films.

But then there was a really good answer to go along with it… though I want to extend on it myself. The director is like the “author.” He or she is ‘god’ of the film, so to speak. Whatever he or she says goes. The director has control over everything, from getting the script to where he/she likes it to how the film is edited in post-production. And as an author, I can relate to that sentiment. However, I can also extend on it. Most people who write books (and I’m no exception) will tell you that there is a certain point where the characters just take a life of their own and write the story themselves. They take it in places you (as the ‘god’ figure) didn’t even expect the story to go. In essence, while the ‘author’ has the final say, it’s the little pieces that build themselves that make the work good or bad.

Now, to translate that into the movie realm, it’s the actors, actresses, set designers, etc… all of them working together to create things that even the director might not have expected (which you do hear quite often, especially in DVD commentaries). Actors are more phenomenal than the director first imagined. The costume or set designers or special effects teams create better visuals than even the director could have fathomed at the start. So in other words, just because you have a great director that formulates all this together into one work does not mean the picture is going to turn out the best.

But this also works vice versa. You can see In The Name of the King with a bunch of great actors and whatnot, but that still doesn’t make up for the fact that it was directed by Uwe Boll and turned into a complete mess. So that brings us to the Best Director category. The Best Director is somebody who not only works with excellent people, but uses those excellent people to create an excellent film. The director takes everything he or she is given and uses it to the best of his/her abilities. And then those efforts have to be better than the other four that they’re up against.

In the past, only 59 directors have also won Best Picture for their films (out of 80). That’s barely less than 3/4 of the count. And only three movies have won Best Picture without the director having also been at least nominated. And only two directors have won for films that were not nominated for Best Picture (which was back in the 20s). But as I’ve stated before, all the Best Directors and Best Pictures line up equally this year. So with all of that in mind, let’s look at this year’s nominees:

For specification, Previous Academy Nominations means how many times has the director been nominated as such for other films in the past for the Academy Awards. Previous Academy Wins is how many of those nominations were won. Direction Nominations For Current Film Elsewhere means how many other awards (Golden Globes, BAFTAs, etc.) nominated him for current film. Wins… well, that’s obvious. And then there’s percentage for winning the Oscar. And the numbers are just based on what I could find. So here we go.

Ron Howard (Frost/Nixon)
Previous Academy Nominations: 2
Previous Academy Wins: 1
Director Nominations For Current Film Elsewhere: 4
Director Wins For Current Film Elsewhere: 1
Percentage To Win Oscar For Current Film: 1%

In my review for this film, I noted that Ron Howard, as a director, didn’t do anything groundbreaking here. He made a great film, but the directing was nothing particularly special. He didn’t take any chances. I knew even before seeing the movie that it was going to involve juxtapositions with past news footage, because that would be the predictable thing to do with this kind of film. He also kept the same actors from the stage play. Nothing with the camera work or editing was special. Nothing with the music was mind-blowing. Good film it was. Best Director it isn’t.

Gus Van Sant (Milk)
Previous Academy Nominations: 2
Previous Academy Wins: 0
Director Nominations For Current Film Elsewhere: 5
Director Wins For Current Film Elsewhere: 1
Percentage To Win Oscar For Current Film: 3%

Gus Van Sant can be a pretty good director (except for Elephant, which was self-indulgent, pretentious crap. If you want a great movie on school shootings, watch Bang Bang You’re Dead. But I digress). I also have yet to see Milk as of this point due to where I live. But I can tell that if any of the movies were to give the forerunner a run for its money, it would probably be this one. But we still all know it’s not gonna win.

Stephen Daldry (The Reader)
Previous Academy Nominations: 2
Previous Academy Wins: 0
Director Nominations For Current Film Elsewhere: 4
Director Wins For Current Film Elsewhere: 0
Percentage To Win Oscar For Current Film: 1%

I haven’t seen The Reader, so I can’t comment on it much, especially Director-wise. I’ve also never seen Billy Elliot or The Hours, the other two films for which he was nominated for an Academy Award in the past. It doesn’t really matter anyway. We all know he’s not gonna win.

David Fincher (The Curious Case of Benjamin Button)
Previous Academy Nominations: 0
Previous Academy Wins: 0
Director Nominations For Current Film Elsewhere: 4
Director Wins For Current Film Elsewhere: 2
Percentage To Win Oscar For Current Film: 1%

I think everybody can agree David Fincher is a great director: Seven, The Game, Fight Club, Zodiac… okay, so Alien 3 wasn’t the greatest, but every director has at least one bad movie. But does Ben Button stand up with the aforementioned four, or is it in the realm of Alien 3? Most would say the latter. Personally, I enjoyed the film (and apparently so did the Academy with it’s insane amount of nominations for the film). But is it worthy of Best Director? Did Fincher know when to leave stuff in or cut stuff out? Did he know how to pace his movie so not to bore the mass population that saw it? Was he able to get the best performances out of all his actors, including Brad Pitt? Was he able to make something original out of the script he was given? Most will answer these questions with a resounding “No.” But the real question is: Does the Academy care what everybody else thinks?

Danny Boyle (Slumdog Millionaire)
Previous Academy Nominations: 0
Previous Academy Wins: 0
Director Nominations For Current Film Elsewhere: 23
Director Wins For Current Film Elsewhere: 22
Percentage To Win Oscar For Current Film: 94%

I really think the numbers say it all. Regardless of Ben Button getting the numbers in nominations, I think Slumdog is gonna run the gamut. Boyle had the film edited masterfully, keeping a great pace with numerous flashbacks and multiple things going on at once. He chose great music. He received great performances, even from his child actors with no experience. He found beautiful (or beautifully gritty) places to shoot his settings. He even got people to stay in their seats, enthralled, during the credits. There’s really no doubt that Boyle is going to walk away with the award this year. And what’s next for Boyle after winning an Oscar? Hopefully 28 Months Later…

LAMB #244 - Foolish Blatherings












URL: http://foolishblatherings.wordpress.com/
Site Name: Foolish Blatherings
Categories:Reviews
Rating: I would give it an "R". Some of the subject matter is not for small children.

What is the main focus of your site?
The main focus of my site is to give my two cents about films from my perspective. I want to recommned the movies that haven't been seen or the movies that should be avoided at all costs.

What are your blogging goals, personally and/or professionally? In other words, what, if anything, are you trying to get out your blog?
My goal is to have a good number of people to see what I have to say. Make like-minded friends in the blogging community. Having a say about what movies are underrated and what movies are overrated. Maybe, somewhere down the line, make a living reviewing movies professionally.

Do you prefer an interactive 'community' for your blog or are you the teacher and your readers are the students?
At the present time, it's more teacher/student. But when I receive a comment, I want to have an intellegent dissection of how a person gauges a movie's themes, symbolism and intentions.

How long have you been movie blogging for, and how frequent do you post updates to your site?
I have been blogging since late September. I update my blog at least five times a week with more unique entries of movies that I have seen or recommend to the readers.

Name up to three of your favorite movies (and no more).
My favorite movies are The Color Purple, The Shawshank Redemption and Stand By Me. These are the movies that I watch repeatedly.

How did you hear about the LAMB?
I heard about LAMB on BlogCatalog when I was signing up for the service.

Any additional comments, or give yourself an interview question that's not listed above.
I have seen so many movies that I lost count. I also seek out multiple reviews site to gauge what different people think of the same movie.

Feb 17, 2009

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Documentary Feature

Editor's note: Welcome to the eighteenth of a 24-part series dissecting the 81st Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!










By Daniel of Getafilm.

If 2007 was considered one of the strongest years for feature films in nearly a decade, 2008 deserves the same recognition for its incredibly impressive lineup of documentaries. Having seen upwards of 20 of them, it was pretty hard for me to narrow down a personal list of the Best Documentaries of 2008, so I can imagine how difficult it must have been for AMPAS to eventually choose five nominees for Best Documentary Feature.

I only saw four of the five last year, and of those only three landed on my own list - but this isn't about my picks, it's about the winning picks. And in this case, the race has been over for more than a year. Unless Academy voters have grown a conscience about Hurricane Katrina in the last few months and come down from their adrenaline high, Man on Wire will continue a winning streak that extends back to January of 2008, when it won the "World Cinema – Documentary" prize at the Sundance Film Festival.

But as a formality, let's take a look at all of the nominees, in alphabetical order:

The Betrayal (Nerakhoon) – My memory is a little foggy of this one since it's been almost a year since I saw it, but know this much: few people have had as rough a life as Thavi Phrasavath, and even fewer have bounced back with such impressive resilience. After fleeing Laos as a teen when the U.S. betrayed its ally in the Vietnam War, Thavi's family was given "refuge" in the urban jungle of Brooklyn, NY (which in the early 80's was not yet, it should be noted, a gentrified hipster enclave). Soon after, another betrayal within the family left Thavi as a confused, frustrated young man who felt abandoned by both his old country and his new country.

It was during this tumultuous time – 1985, to be exact – that a young filmmaker named Ellen Kuras would discover Thavi and begin filming his daily life as part of a grad school project. Twenty-three years later, the film is complete, even if the story is not. Kuras, whose name may be familiar to people from her work as a cinematographer (He Got Game, Blow, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Be Kind Rewind), reportedly has a great reputation in Hollywood. Will it be enough to earn her an Oscar as a first-time nominee? It would be a great story, but a win would still be a major upset considering that the film has not yet seen a wide release.

Encounters at the End of the World – Best seen on a massive, sprawling screen, this love letter to Antarctica (and, believe it or not, Roger Ebert) is part "Planet Earth" and part, well, Werner Herzog (if you've seen enough of his films you know he defies categorization). The brilliance of Encounters, aside from the technical aspects and jaw-dropping underwater cinematography, is that Herzog seamlessly blends an examination of the science-fiction creatures living at the bottom of the earth with an examination of the science-obsessed nerds sharing the ice with them. It's like a trip to the zoo in winter, but there are people on display here as well.

The chance for a win here is questionable considering the film wasn't universally considered a success, but Herzog is greatly admired and his demographic is right in the sweet spot of the Academy voting block. Plus, there are no doubt some people still sore that his 2005 acclaimed documentary Grizzly Man was ruled ineligible a few years ago. This could be a chance at redemption, which the Academy loves to do across all categories (Scorsese's win, Denzel Washington's win, etc.).

The Garden – The only nominee I haven't seen and the one that deserves the award for Most Boring Title, if nothing else. It's centered around the legal battle that resulted from the City of Los Angeles selling a 14-acre piece of land in South Central that had been developed into a thriving urban farm. The trailer makes it look like a gripping legal thriller in the style of Michael Clayton, but I'm not buying it. Few people have even seen this film (try to find reviews of it), but then again it's probably a bigger story in L.A., where much of the Academy resides, than anywhere else. Maybe some hometown love? Doubtful, so this remains the longshot.

Man on Wire – Easily the most popular documentary since An Inconvenient Truth, this has been the front-runner for a solid 12 months, and it landed on many critics' and bloggers' Top 10 lists (mine included, but only #4 in the doc list). Heavily using reenactments and archival footage, it retells the riveting story of Philippe Petit's historic high wire walk between the World Trade Center towers in 1974. The fact that Petit is interviewed throughout the film in the present day somehow doesn't register when you see him walking thousands of feet in the air – how did this person not die? Even if Man on Wire didn't affect me on a deeply emotional level, I can appreciate that the story of Petit's feat is completely engrossing, and a real testament to the best of the human spirit in all of us. I'll be shocked if James Marsh is not holding an Oscar statuette on Sunday night.

Trouble the Water – Winner of the "Documentary" prize at Sundance in 2008 (alongside Man on Wire, which as I mentioned took home the "World Cinema – Documentary" prize), Trouble the Water represents not one, but two major themes that have comprised several recent documentaries: 1.) it's not actually what you think it's about, which in this case is Hurricane Katrina (the same can be said for Surfwise and Blindsight); and 2.) the completed film didn't resemble what the filmmakers originally set out to make (Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father this year and My Kid Could Paint That last year).

So what it is about? Well, a lot of things, but primarily the daily lives of individuals in the lower economic classes of America. The disastrous response to Hurricane Katrina is simply the lens through which this indictment is made clear - these class differences were around long before Katrina, and they'll be around long after her. But that doesn't stop Kimberly and Scott Roberts, the subjects of the film, from determinedly bettering themselves and their community. It's depressing and inspiring at the same time, and among these five nominees it would likely receive my personal vote. I think its chances of beating Man on Wire are slim, but still better than the other nominees.

Final Prediction: Man on Wire

P.S. You might remember I predicted No End in Sight to win last year. It didn't.