I'm unable to watch the Travers clip, but I did notice in his RS piece that Juno is his "First I loved you, but now I hate you even more cause you are pap that tricked me" flip-flop pick for this year in his predictions
― C. Grisso/McCain, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 23:44 (sixteen years ago) link
...And also in a previous Oscar piece, he jumped sides regarding the music from Enchanted, which went from "nice stuff" to "Sugary Disney pap."
― C. Grisso/McCain, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 23:47 (sixteen years ago) link
I am saddened by the general lack of love for Michael Clayton
― caek, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 23:52 (sixteen years ago) link
It got exactly the kind of love that gets it Oscar nods.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 23:54 (sixteen years ago) link
On this board, I mean.
― caek, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 00:00 (sixteen years ago) link
(Unless we have any Academy members I don't know about)
― caek, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 00:08 (sixteen years ago) link
Ugh, Michael Clayton is the worst. Stylelessness + idiotic content = tensionless middlebrow appeal
― Eric H., Wednesday, 20 February 2008 01:32 (sixteen years ago) link
ranking out BP nominees can sometimes be an exercise in surprising yourself about your own taste. Last year, I would've ranked Babel (a movie I couldn't really make one solid argument on its behalf) in second, though that might just be because I still haven't seen the other half of Clint Eastwood's WWII thing. (First half sucked.)
― Eric H., Wednesday, 20 February 2008 01:34 (sixteen years ago) link
Michael Clayton is much better than Babel; the former, in its muddled middlebrow way and stunted attempts at suspense, is rather good at nailing corporatespeak in a way that most American films shy away from. I'm thinking of Tony Gilroy's excellent imitations of CEO jargon uttered by Tilda Swinton without winking at the audience, or the video produced by the company she represents.
Mind you, I don't think it's a great film, but it's got more going on than a summary rejection would suggest.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 01:44 (sixteen years ago) link
George Clooney tearing up while petting horses might be the most unbelievable duty asked of an actor since Heath Ledger punched a wall in BBM.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 01:45 (sixteen years ago) link
Yah but that's like a textbook example of a fringe benefit and not at all what the movie's real focus is. If they'd made a movie about legalese and backstabbing corporate opportunism without the lame thriller trappings (and still kept Elswit's very good cinematography), I'd probably be into it as well in a Shattered Glass sort of way.
― Eric H., Wednesday, 20 February 2008 01:56 (sixteen years ago) link
Right. I said at the time that I wish the whole movie had been about Tilda Swinton's quiet compromises and Sydney Pollack reaction shots. But American films often focus on the wrong characters (I wish The Departed had concentrated on Mark Wahlberg and Martin Sheen).
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 01:58 (sixteen years ago) link
Atonement fumbles its meta thing (ie, its reason for being) so badly it does NOT rise to the level of even The English Patient, Out of Africa etc.
― Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 14:14 (sixteen years ago) link
-- Eric H., Wednesday, 20 February 2008 01:32 (13 hours ago) Bookmark Link
What does "middlebrow" mean here? Is stylelessness and idiotic content something known to be particularly appealing to university-educated busy people who aren't that into film?
― caek, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 14:58 (sixteen years ago) link
Stephanie Zancharek has no patience for DDL's mannerisms in There Will Be Blood:
The tragedy of Day-Lewis' performance in "There Will Be Blood" is that it defies the naturalism that made him a great actor -- and I use the word "great" unequivocally -- in the first place, as if he'd decided that naturalism is boring, that it no longer presents a challenge for him. Day-Lewis' Daniel Plainview is of a piece with Bill the Butcher, the character he played in Martin Scorsese's 2002 epic mess "Gangs of New York." Both performances are stuffed with exaggerated mannerisms and gimmickry: Day-Lewis struts through "Gangs" like a circus stilt-walker, as if, by design, he wants to seem larger than life. In both roles, he favors tortured locutions over simple declarativeness -- his "Gangs" accent is a thick, sludgy, semi-invented Noo Yawkese, probably calculated to suggest the savagery, the unvarnished manners, of a thug in old New York.
But do those choices tell us anything specific, anything that would otherwise be unknowable, about the inner lives of these characters? When I think of Daniel Plainvew and Bill the Butcher, I see technique, a set of artful schematics. When I think of the scruffy blond scrubber, Johnny, in "My Beautiful Laundrette" (1985), or the wheelchair-bound artist and writer Christy Brown in "My Left Foot" (1989), or the unjustly imprisoned Gerry Conlan in "In the Name of the Father" (1993), or Danny Flynn, the fighter with an IRA past in "The Boxer" (1997), I see people who live on the screen with so much clarity and vitality that the last thing I'm thinking of are the actorish smoke and mirrors it may have taken to put them there. In those performances -- and in numerous others, like those in "The Age of Innocence" (1993), "The Unbearable Lightness of Being" (1988) and, most recently, "The Ballad of Jack and Rose" (2005), directed by Day-Lewis' wife, Rebecca Miller -- Day-Lewis cuts to the truth of his characters' lives by challenging us. There's no challenge in Daniel Plainview: No moment where we fear, against our better judgment, that we might have some confusing, conflicting emotions for him.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 15:12 (sixteen years ago) link
ie, tailormade for gold statues. With some fava beans and a nice chianti.
― Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 15:18 (sixteen years ago) link
Middlebrow meaning lack of aspirations to be anything other than tasteful.
I know it's easier to bash films people are talking about than it is to give a shit one way or the other about movies no one cares about these days, but Morbs, have you tried to actually watch Out of Africa lately? What a nothing film that one is. I'd rather was Michael Clayton 10 times in a row.
― Eric H., Thursday, 21 February 2008 12:24 (sixteen years ago) link
well, of course I haven't. I wouldn't even try to watch Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon today.
... and y'know, as Isak Dinesen films go, Babette's Feast > Out of Africa. At least then.
How exactly did Cate Blanchett get restored to favorite in Supp Actress? I assumed her chances tanked with (the entirely foreseeable)mainstream rejection of I'm Not there, but most everyone's picking her ro "repeat." Is she the new Dianne Wiest/Jason Robards?
― Dr Morbius, Friday, 22 February 2008 14:34 (sixteen years ago) link
she'll play Paul Muni in an upcoming biopic.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Friday, 22 February 2008 14:47 (sixteen years ago) link
Chris Orr's picks.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Friday, 22 February 2008 15:49 (sixteen years ago) link
Who ought to win: Joel and Ethan Coen. (If not for the disastrous finale of There Will Be Blood, I might go the other way on this.)
Amy Ryan is on The Wire?
― Dr Morbius, Friday, 22 February 2008 16:03 (sixteen years ago) link
Weird, I thought a lot more people thought the finale to No Country was disastrous than Blood's.
Of course, if we were going strictly by the last minutes of every film, then give the award to Atonement.
― Eric H., Friday, 22 February 2008 17:36 (sixteen years ago) link
Hey, Holbrook fans: didjda read this EW interview? It's cute.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Friday, 22 February 2008 17:54 (sixteen years ago) link
I don't see Blood winning both cinematog & a.d. (or maybe either), but otherwise I think tehse match mine:
http://www.thefilmexperience.net/Awards/2007/tally.html
― Dr Morbius, Friday, 22 February 2008 19:49 (sixteen years ago) link
Yeah, Amy Ryan is in season 2 and back in a few season 4 eps, for sure (can't remember if she showed up in between).
(I'm not watching season 5 yet but it seems like she'd have a pretty big role?)
― Jordan, Friday, 22 February 2008 19:57 (sixteen years ago) link
For the record, I'm still seeing supporting actress as a Dee/Ryan showdown, but grudgingly admit that Clayton prolly has to win something and Swinton's category is the softest.
― Eric H., Friday, 22 February 2008 20:07 (sixteen years ago) link
most yielding
I see Ed is going Swinton... haha, I'm Not There is "possibly more obnoxious than American Gangster," that guy is getting a talking-to when I finally meet him...
― Dr Morbius, Friday, 22 February 2008 20:39 (sixteen years ago) link
I'm pretty sure I remember him saying that movie would've been on his list of "worsts" if they would have done them this year.
― Eric H., Friday, 22 February 2008 20:53 (sixteen years ago) link
YES. Mr. 29 Palms!
― Dr Morbius, Friday, 22 February 2008 20:57 (sixteen years ago) link
I hated that one too.
― Eric H., Friday, 22 February 2008 20:57 (sixteen years ago) link
anyone read EW's usual interviews with anonymous insider voters? Not a single one of the four voted for Christie or Blanchett.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Friday, 22 February 2008 20:58 (sixteen years ago) link
Yeah, and all six voted for Bardem too, so :( for Holbrook.
― Eric H., Friday, 22 February 2008 20:59 (sixteen years ago) link
i'm taking holbrook (mostly because i don't want bardem to win, i haven't even seen into the wild), and blanchett for similarly rah-rah reasons.
― tipsy mothra, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:02 (sixteen years ago) link
well, are these individuals reliable bellwethers? Like, the Baldwin brothers?
Holbrook's nomination is honor enough; before this role he'd become to me exactly what he was when I was 7 years old: Mark Twain (not even Deep Throat).
Can't see the Academy going Cotillard/Cate; do they want bio-melodramas or freewheeling meditations?
I really don't see lack-of-Dylan-fandom being the explanation for ppl who dislike/hate INT; I mostly liked Velvet Goldmine and never really got (retrospectively) the faggy glam thing...
― Dr Morbius, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:05 (sixteen years ago) link
Gad, I'd no idea Holbrook was in "Evening Shade."
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:06 (sixteen years ago) link
not really, she's just in the background. underutilized (i love her), but the wire has so many good people that everybody ends up underutilized.
― tipsy mothra, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:07 (sixteen years ago) link
help me fill out my pool ballot. sound editing/mixing? should i just assume these are going to no country?
― tipsy mothra, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:09 (sixteen years ago) link
consensus seems to be that Bourne may well win one of those.
― Dr Morbius, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:11 (sixteen years ago) link
(also see Slant & FilmExperience links above)
― Dr Morbius, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:12 (sixteen years ago) link
foreign language? i haven't seen any of these. counterfeiters has some buzz i guess.
― tipsy mothra, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:13 (sixteen years ago) link
don't bet vs Nazis
― Dr Morbius, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:15 (sixteen years ago) link
i guess it helps that it's austrian, so they don't have to give it to two german films in a row.
― tipsy mothra, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:16 (sixteen years ago) link
ok i went ahead and put bardem. sigh. (will be kicking myself if hh pulls it out.) sticking with cate, though, on general principles.
― tipsy mothra, Friday, 22 February 2008 21:21 (sixteen years ago) link
shitload of "best oscars ever" guff in UK press today. will be so glad for it all to be over. wonder if 'semi pro' and 'vantage point' will get a look-in next year. guess not.
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Saturday, 23 February 2008 11:14 (sixteen years ago) link
A friend insists Cotillard will win, and maybe in another year she might since the role is pure Oscar bait (playing a real person, she cries, screams, lunges across the room).
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Saturday, 23 February 2008 14:27 (sixteen years ago) link
(It will be Dee and not Swinton I mark on my personal pool ballot, btw.)
― Eric H., Sunday, 24 February 2008 01:42 (sixteen years ago) link
Not on uk tv?
― G00blar, Sunday, 24 February 2008 20:48 (sixteen years ago) link
apparently not! i think it might be on sky?
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Sunday, 24 February 2008 20:51 (sixteen years ago) link
I can only seem to find "red carpet coverage" on E, which we don't get.
― G00blar, Sunday, 24 February 2008 20:52 (sixteen years ago) link