Posts Tagged ‘Blue Valentine’
Wednesday, December 8th, 2010
Sweet.
Blue Valentine, which stars Michelle Williams and Ryan Gosling in a story that interweaves the beginning and end of a romance (and features some oral sex that some people apparently found controversial) has finally received a revised rating of “R” from the MPAA.
I was just bitching last night after the Blue Valentine press screening with some fellow film journos about how ridiculous it was that the film had been slapped with the dreaded “NC-17” for sex scenes that are far less graphic than those in The Kids Are All Right and certainly no more graphic than a similar girl-on-girl scene in Black Swan.
So congrats to Blue Valentine for the new rating. More on the film itself soonish.
UPDATE: I was concerned that maybe the film had been cut to get the “R” rating, but it was just confirmed to me by a publicist that the version I saw last night is the final cut, and that only the rating was changed. Most excellent.
Tags: Blue Valentine, Michelle Williams, MPAA, Ryan Gosling
Posted in Film, Film Essent, MCN Blogs, Politics | Comments Off on Blue Valentine Gets the Rating It Always Should Have Had
Thursday, November 4th, 2010
The Best Actor category is always loaded. This happens to be a strong year for Best Actress as well. But with the ladies, there are a good number of completely worthy performances. In the Actor this season, there are more than five Undeniables. Yet, some of them will be denied.
Javier Bardem is an Undeniable. There is no tougher movie in our American mainstream cinema this year than Biutiful. Compared to a film like Hereafter, it is the suicide bomb vs. the 100 virgins you party with after you are freed from your mortal coil. It’s the story of a man who is connected to The Dead finds out he is going to die himself and struggles mightily to tie up loose ends for his children and others whose lives he has touched, for better or worse. But Bardem… my God… he is not only 100% present in every moment we experience with him on screen, but he oozes empathy through all the harshness, never for a second falling into the sentimental, commanding the audience to stay with him… this is about you… this is about your soul… life is a scary ride, but here we go.
Robert Duvall is an Undeniable. One of our greatest actors and has been for decades. Get Low gives him room to perform to most of his strengths as an actor… all those colors, power seething under restraint. And then, he gives us one of the great one-person speeches, near the end of the film, and pulls it off brilliantly when it could have gone so wrong. This is the role that aging actors dream of finding… and Duvall wears it like a handmade glove.
Jesse Eisenberg is an Undeniable. His “Mark Zuckerberg” is not only the single most unforgettable character of the year so far, his reading of Aaron Sorkin’s unique verbal music is definitive in The Social Network. Lots of great actors have made wonderful moments of Sorkin’s words, but Eisenberg seemed born to it, a perfect blending of an actor’s unique being and a writer’s precision.
Colin Firth is an Undeniable. Last year, he broke through the awards ice with an unexpected, tortured, desperate man whose façade had all the charm of, well, Colin Firth. This year, his is still under siege, but his own mind is responsible in The King’s Speech. It’s closer to roles that we have known Firth in over the years, but a great balance between his ascendant prince, an uncommon Australian, and a wife who has a clear vision of the entire chess board makes audiences want to scoop up all three actors and thank them for being.
James Franco is an Undeniable. He holds the audience in his palm from the third minute of 127 Hours (when we first really see him) until the very last moment, when he hands it all back to the real Aron Ralston for a closing bow. It is a tribute to Franco and Boyle and the whole team that something as tightly defined as being stuck in a narrow passage of rock for more than 5 days feels like so much more. But first, it is on Franco. As an audience, we cannot disconnect from him for a single moment or the illusion is over. And we don’t.
That’s five. And that doesn’t start to take into account the performances that are on the way from reigning Oscar champ Jeff Bridges, Hollywood favorite Mark Wahlberg, and nice-to-see-you-back Jack Nicholson, at least two of which look like Undeniables in the making.
That’s seven, folks.
So whom do you leave out?
(more…)
Tags: 127 Hours, Biutiful, Blue Valentine, Casino Jack, Get Low, Inception, Nowhere Boy, Rabbit Hole, Shutter Island, Somewhere, Stone, The King's Speech, The Social Network, the way back
Posted in 20 Weeks to Oscar, Awards Update, Awards Watch, MCN Originals, Movie City News | 25 Comments »
Thursday, October 21st, 2010
BEST PICTURE
|
|
Picture
|
Studio
|
Director
|
Stars |
Comment
|
The Ten, If I Had To Pick Today |
Dec 25
|
True Grit |
Par
|
Coens
|
Bridges
Brolin
Damon
|
|
Nov
24
|
The King’s Speech |
TWC
|
Marshall
|
Firth
|
|
Dec 1
|
Black Swan |
FxSch
|
Aronofsky
|
Portman
|
|
Oct 1
|
The Social Network |
Sony
|
Fincher
|
Eisenberg
|
|
Dec 10
|
The Fighter |
Par/Rel
|
O. Russell
|
Wahlberg
|
|
Nov 5
|
127 Hours |
FxSch
|
Boyle
|
Franco
|
|
Oct 22
|
Hereafter |
WB
|
Eastwood
|
Damon
|
|
June 18
|
Toy Story 3 |
Disney
|
Unkrich
|
–
|
|
July 16
|
Inception |
WB
|
Nolan
|
DiCaprio
|
|
July 9
|
The Kids Are All Right |
Focus
|
Cholodenko
|
Bening
Moore
|
|
The Next Tiers Of Likely |
Dec 17
|
Everything You’ve Got |
Sony
|
Brooks
|
Witherspoon
Nicholson
|
|
Nov 24
|
Love & Other Drugs |
Fox
|
Zwick |
Hathaway |
|
Dec 29
|
Another Year |
SPC
|
Leigh
|
Broadbent
Staunton
|
|
|
June 11 |
Winter’s Bone |
RdAtt
|
Granik
|
Lawrence
|
|
Feb 19
|
Shutter Island |
Par
|
Scorsese
|
DiCaprio
|
|
July 30
|
Get Low |
SPC
|
Schneider
|
Duvall
Spacek
Murray
|
|
Sept 15
|
Never Let Me Go |
FxSch
|
Romanek
|
Knightley
Mulligan
Garfield
|
|
Sept 17
|
The Town |
WB
|
Affleck
|
|
|
Nov 19
|
Made In Dagenham |
SPC
|
Cole
|
Hawkins
|
|
|
Oct 8
|
Secretariat |
Dis
|
Wallace
|
Lane
|
|
Dec 25
|
Somewhere |
Focus
|
Coppola
|
|
|
Dec 10
|
The Tempest |
Mir
|
Taymor
|
Mirren
|
|
Dec 31
|
Blue Valentine |
TWC
|
Cianfrance
|
Gosling
Williams
|
|
Dec 29
|
Biutiful |
RdAtt
|
Gonzalez-
Inarritu
|
Bardem
|
|
Dec 29
|
The Way Home |
NewMkt
|
Weir
|
Farrell
|
|
by David Poland
Previous Chart
Tags: 127 Hours, Another Year, Biutiful, Black Swan, Blue Valentine, Conviction, Due Date, Eat Pray Love, Everything You've Got, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf, Get Low, Godfather III, Hereafter, Inception, It's Kind Of A Funny Story, Love and Other Drugs, Made in Dagenham, Miral, Morning Glory, Never Let Me Go, Nowhere Boy, Roadside Attractions, Secretariat, Shutter Island, Somewhere, The American, The Fighter, The Kids Are All Right, The King's Speech, The Social Network, The Tempest, The Town, Toy Story 3, True Grit, Winter’s Bone
Posted in 20 Weeks to Oscar - Charts, Awards Watch | 10 Comments »
Thursday, October 21st, 2010
BEST ACTRESS
|
Actress – Film
|
Comment
|
Natalie Portman – Black Swan |
|
Anette Bening – The Kids Are All Right |
|
Carey Mulligan – Never Let Me Go |
|
Jennifer Lawrence – Winter’s Bone |
|
Reese Witherspoon – How Do You Know |
|
|
Nicole Kidman – Rabbit Hole |
|
Anne Hathaway – Love & Other Drugs |
|
|
Lesley Manville – Another Year |
|
Sally Hawkins – Made in Dagenham |
|
Michelle Williams- Blue Valentine |
|
Kimberly Elise – For Colored Girls… |
Hard to really know who will be the film’s choice for Lead |
Diane Lane – Secretariat |
|
Hilary Swank – Conviction |
|
Helen Mirren – The Tempest |
|
Rachel McAdams – Morning Glory |
|
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
|
Actress – Film
|
Comment
|
Helena Bonham Carter – The King’s Speech |
|
Hailee Steinfeld – True Grit |
|
Sissy Spacek – Get Low |
|
Barbara Hershey – Black Swan |
|
Whoopi Goldberg/Thandie Newton/Kerry Washington – For Colored Girls… |
Hard to really know who will be the film’schoice for Supporting |
|
Julianne Moore- The Kids Are All Right |
|
Melissa Leo – The Fighter |
|
Sandra Oh – Rabbit Hole |
|
Mila Kunis – Black Swan |
|
Miranada Richardson – Made in Dagenham |
|
Tags: 127 Hours, Another Year, Biutiful, Black Swan, Blue Valentine, Conviction, Due Date, Eat Pray Love, Everything You've Got, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf, Get Low, Godfather III, Hereafter, Inception, It's Kind Of A Funny Story, Love and Other Drugs, Made in Dagenham, Miral, Morning Glory, Never Let Me Go, Nowhere Boy, Roadside Attractions, Secretariat, Shutter Island, Somewhere, The American, The Fighter, The Kids Are All Right, The King's Speech, The Social Network, The Tempest, The Town, Toy Story 3, True Grit, Winter’s Bone
Posted in 20 Weeks to Oscar - Charts, Awards Watch | 3 Comments »
Thursday, October 21st, 2010
BEST ACTOR
|
Actor – Film
|
Comment
|
Colin Firth – The King’s Speech |
|
Jsmes Franco – 127 Hours |
|
Jesse Eisenberg – The Social Network |
|
|
Jeff Bridges – True Grit |
|
Robert Duvall – Get Low |
|
Mark Wahlberg – The Fighter |
|
|
Jack Nicholson – How Do You Know |
|
Javier Bardem – Biutiful |
|
Ryan Gosling – Blue Valentine |
|
Leo DiCaprio – Inception |
|
Kevin Spacey – Casino Jack |
|
Robert DeNiro – Stone |
|
Aaron Johnson – Nowhere Boy |
|
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
|
Actor – Film
|
Comment
|
Geoffrey Rush – The King’s Speech |
|
Matt Damon – True Grit |
|
Josh Brolin – True Grit |
|
Andrew Garflied – The Social Network |
|
Christian Bale – The Fighter |
|
|
Armie Hammer – The Social Network |
|
Paul Rudd or Owen Wilson – How Do You Know |
|
Jeremy Renner – The Town |
|
Bill Murray- Get Low |
|
John Malkovich – Red/Secretariat |
|
Due Date – Zach Galifianakis |
|
Harrison Ford – Morning Glory |
|
by David Poland
Previous Chart
Tags: 127 Hours, Another Year, Biutiful, Black Swan, Blue Valentine, Conviction, Due Date, Eat Pray Love, Everything You've Got, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf, Get Low, Godfather III, Hereafter, Inception, It's Kind Of A Funny Story, Love and Other Drugs, Made in Dagenham, Miral, Morning Glory, Never Let Me Go, Nowhere Boy, Roadside Attractions, Secretariat, Shutter Island, Somewhere, The American, The Fighter, The Kids Are All Right, The King's Speech, The Social Network, The Tempest, The Town, Toy Story 3, True Grit, Winter’s Bone
Posted in 20 Weeks to Oscar - Charts, Awards Watch | 2 Comments »
Thursday, October 21st, 2010
Tyler Perry was on Oprah this week. After all, it’s a little more than two weeks until his award aspirant, For Colored Girls, goes into theaters. But he didn’t say more than a couple of sentences about the film. Hmmm… But he’s going to be on again on his film’s opening day, November 5. And that episode was described by Oprah as being like no Oprah episode before. Interesting. So the movie… oh… no… the show will have 200 grown men who were molested as children, including Perry himself.
And that is how this Oscar season feels so far.
Not like molestation. It’s a great thing that Tyler Perry and Oprah are doing, trying to bring light to a shame that men are loathe to ever admit and therefore find it harder to heal.
What it is like is waiting for something exciting, something expected, something that shocks and surprises and makes it all fun. And not getting quite what we expected. What we get isn’t bad. It may even be incredibly valuable and worthwhile. But it’s just not exciting.
Toy Story 3 and Inception are both likely nominees, both are big commercial hits, and neither is likely to get much further than their nominations. TS3 can’t even hope to win Best Comedy at the Golden Globes, since the HFPAers like to segregate the animation. Even being nominated for Best Picture with 10 nominees feels like it’s The Pixar Slot after just one year getting nominated.
The Social Network is a hit and a likely nominee. But is it really the experience to stir (older) men’s souls? The King’s Speech, which isn’t open yet but is being given frontrunner status by some, is wonderful… but can anyone really say they have never been on that journey before?
The are a number of tiny indies that are terrific, from Never Let Me Go to Winter’s Bone to The Kids Are All Right to Get Low to Biutiful to Another Year to Rabbit Hole. I don’t know that we have seen any of these films before, really. They all play on ideas we have of older films, but each is really fresh in its own way, loaded with some great performances.
But is any one of them capable of becoming The One, even if they fight their way to nominations?
It now seems that the excitement of the season comes down the to small handful of films that are not yet in play. They may or may not be better than the films already out there, but there is something pulsing beneath the surface.
The glorious madness of Black Swan feels like it could blow audiences away, especially the actors, who will identify with the pain and paranoia of being a performer. Aronofsky has made an incredibly sophisticated horror film, which is going to make it a shooting star or somewhat earthbound by resistance of an older Academy.
The deceptive simplicity of 127 Hours and the audience’s pleasure in spending all that time with James Franco is a singular event this year. Of course, some people are already whining about one event in the last 15 minutes making the movie hard to take. But I would argue that the skill with which Boyle and his compatriots get through that one event, in a film of enormous tension that commands the compassion of the audience is a far greater achievement than any discomfort that is created.
Paramount, which is marketing and distributing The Fighter, has started to convince the talkers around town that they have a game changer. A new 2 minute ad – not a trailer – is turning heads and looking like Raging Rocky On The Waterfront. And it doesn’t help that Mark Wahlberg has become a working class hero in Hollywood, matched only by Matt Damon in his generation.
And then there is the film that is the last to start revving its engine – it started this week – The Coen Bros version of True Grit. John Wayne won the Oscar in the role played by last year’s winner, Jeff Bridges. Can he pull a Hanks? The original was not nominated for Best Picture. Nor were Kim Darby, Glen Campbell, or Jeff Corey, who played the roles now handled by Hailee Steinfeld, Matt Damon, and Josh Brolin. Yet…
It was 27 years between How The West Was Won being Best Picture nominated and two westerns in three years winning, Dances With Wolves and Unforgiven. That was 17 years ago, with no Westerns being nominated in the interim.
So even though there was plenty of Southwestern dust in No Country For Old Men, True Grit may offer the excitement of a true throwback. Or not.
And what of The Way Back, which has replaced Tree of Life, now officially relegated to 2011 (along with Miral), as the Popular, But Unsure, New Distributor Wildcard Choice?
Where else can we look for excitement? Well, James Franco is a newcomer to the awards circuit, as is Jesse Eisenberg. And will voters find the idea of nominating the dual role played by Armie Hammer fun? Personally I think it is a bit ugly that Tobey Maguire hasn’t been Oscar nominated yet… but will voters be amused by the idea of sending the new Spider-Man to his spandex suit with an Oscar nomination in tow?
And how about “second time’s the charm?” Colin Firth. Natalie Portman. Josh Brolin. Mark Wahlberg. Ryan Gosling. Anne Hathaway. Carey Mulligan.
There are veterans we love and don’t see enough of in front of that camera these days, from Robert Duvall to Sissy Spacek to Barbara Hershey to Miranda Richardson to Annette Bening, and even Jack Nicholson, who has gone three years without a movie since The Bucket List.
Then there’s this year’s rocket girl, Jennifer Lawrence.
Okay… now I am getting interested… a bit excited even. I want to hear Academy members debate the subtexts of Black Swan and discuss whether they remember the real events of The King’s Speech and try to remember the first True Grit and to consider the actors and filmmakers who are going to take us into the future, from Fincher to Nolan to Aronofsky to Hooper to Granik to Romanek to Russell and embracing the veterans they’ve honored over the years like Jim Brooks and Scorsese and Boyle and Eastwood and The Coens.
Things are just a little slow out of the blocks this year. But we’re almost there. And it could be fun. It may not be as fresh or unexpected as some years… but away we go, dudes, party on.
by David Poland
Previous Column
Tags: 127 Hours, Another Year, Biutiful, Black Swan, Blue Valentine, Conviction, Due Date, Eat Pray Love, Everything You've Got, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf, Get Low, Godfather III, Hereafter, Inception, It's Kind Of A Funny Story, Love and Other Drugs, Made in Dagenham, Miral, Morning Glory, Never Let Me Go, Nowhere Boy, Roadside Attractions, Secretariat, Shutter Island, Somewhere, The American, The Fighter, The Kids Are All Right, The King's Speech, The Social Network, The Tempest, The Town, Toy Story 3, True Grit, Winter’s Bone
Posted in 20 Weeks to Oscar, Awards Update, Awards Watch, MCN Originals, Movie City News | 17 Comments »
Monday, October 11th, 2010
Tags: 127 Hours, Another Year, Biutiful, Black Swan, Blue Valentine, Everything You've Got, Fair Game, For Colored Girls, Get Low, Hereafter, Inception, Love and Other Drugs, Made in Dagenham, Never Let Me Go, Rabbit Hole, Secretariat, Shutter Island, Somewhere, The Fighter, The Kids Are All Right, The King's Speech, The Social Network, The Town, The Tree of Life, the way back, Toy Story 3, True Grit, Waiting For 'Superman', Winter's Bone
Posted in Awards Update, Awards Watch, Gurus o' Gold, MCN Originals, Movie City News | 15 Comments »
Wednesday, September 29th, 2010
I was going to write about how tight the Oscar race already is as we enter the month of October. But looking back at last season’s post-Toronto column… 8 of 10 of the eventual nominees were already well in focus. And had I not been so stubborn about believing that District 9 could make it, I would have had every film except The Blind Side in my Top 13 possibles at the time.
The point is not to ring my own bell, but to pay tribute, really, to how early and how strong the Oscar push efforts are these days. They are still stealth. No one is supposed to notice that a campaign has been going on for months. In fact, no one wants to be up in front, towards the head of the pack, this early. You can be sure that a lot of competitors are giddy that The Social Network has such heat around it RIGHT NOW.
The biggest news coming out of Toronto, aside from films that were non-starters, was that we now have only seven films, by my count, that are in any way contenders that have not been widely available to be seen by The Press and some public. And the only one that seems to be an inevitable nominee – scary words, those – is True Grit.
That is not to say that the other unseen films are not serious contenders. Four are comedies – Due Date, How Do You Know, Love & Other Drugs, and Morning Glory – three from very serious directors and one from the director of one of last year’s commercial phenoms, The Hangover. The Fighter is from revered David O. Russell… who has never made it into the Oscar race. And another, For Colored Girls…, is from critically reviled Tyler Perry, who is a commercial sensation and is working from a play that was one of the most widely seen in the 70s and 80s.
And then there are the films that have already garnered a lot of love. Movies like The Kids Are All Right, Winter’s Bone, and Get Low have many fans and supporters. The Town has had a few weeks as the hot title to discuss, to be followed this weekend by The Social Network. Shutter Island is Scorsese’s biggest worldwide grosser ever, slightly ahead of Best Picture winner The Departed. And what of Oscar faves Clint Eastwood, Mike Leigh, and Alejandro Gonzalez-Inarritu?
I am pretty comfortable that at least 6 of my 7 Most Liklies will be there in the end. The only real question, to me, is whether both Black Swan and 127 Hours, both masterful, artful, commercial films will make the cut. And that’s when distributors have to decide how they are going to craft their efforts. Does a Sony Classics move forward on all fronts or do they decide which of their films is the most realistic nominee? Does a Roadside Attractions, which has very strong candidates in Best Actor and Best Actress, push for more… aside from maybe screenplay nods? Does Lionsgate believe that either of their actor-nom chasing films are BP candidates? And how does Sony balance what feels like a lock for The Social Network when they have a Jim Brooks movie with Oscar winners Reese Witherspoon and Jack Nicholson in the hopper?
But the thing that really, really strikes me at this moment is that it is a very competitive race for a dozen or so movies looking to fit into a few slots (anything can happen in Phase II… there is no such thing as a frontrunner to win at this point), GREAT is not necessary. In fact, GREAT may be a problem for some of these films. This is the Oscar season of Really Good.
There is no The Hurt Locker… no film offering itself up as one. There’s no deep underdog like Precious. There is no Avatar. Toy Story 3 and Inception will be the highest grosser amongst BP nominees (assuming TS3 makes it). But neither film has had the kind of impact that Avatar had and will be two of at least five $700 million worldwide grossing films this year.
So we may be back to the best liked movies over the best movies. How lovable is Made in Dagenham? Is Ed Zwick at an advantage making his first comedy in almost 25 years instead of another drama? Do Academy members really want to wrestle with the heaviness of Never Let Me Go and Winter’s Bone and Biutiful and Rabbit Hole when Black Swan and Shutter Island feel both a little weighty, but are also movie movies that leave you leaving the theater excited by the craft of filmmaking?
I’m really curious. All six of the still unseen non-Coen films could be left on the sidelines. Or they could represent 3 or 4 of the final 10.
In any case, we’ve all been whining about the first half of 2010 and I have to say, there are a lot of good times at the movies coming down the pike. And if even half the unseen films are Really Good, it’s kind of a thrilling year… all of a sudden… out of nowhere.
Cool.
Tags: 127 Hours, Another Year, Biutiful, Black Swan, Blue Valentine, Conviction, Due Date, Eat Pray Love, Everything You've Got, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf, Get Low, Godfather III, Hereafter, Inception, It's Kind Of A Funny Story, Love and Other Drugs, Made in Dagenham, Miral, Morning Glory, Never Let Me Go, Nowhere Boy, Roadside Attractions, Secretariat, Shutter Island, Somewhere, The American, The Fighter, The Kids Are All Right, The King's Speech, The Social Network, The Tempest, The Town, Toy Story 3, True Grit, Winter’s Bone
Posted in 20 Weeks to Oscar, Awards Update, Awards Watch, MCN Originals, Movie City News | 6 Comments »
Wednesday, September 29th, 2010
BEST
PICTURE
|
|
Picture
|
Studio
|
Director
|
Stars |
Comment
|
The Films
Most Likely (by release date) |
June 18
|
Toy Story 3 |
Disney
|
Unkrich
|
–
|
|
July 16
|
Inception |
WB
|
Nolan
|
DiCaprio
|
|
Oct 1
|
The Social Network |
Sony
|
Fincher
|
Eisenberg
|
|
Nov 5
|
127 Hours |
FxSch
|
Boyle
|
Franco
|
|
Nov
24
|
The King’s Speech |
TWC
|
Marshall
|
Firth
|
|
Dec 1
|
Black Swan |
FxSch
|
Aronofsky
|
Portman
|
|
Dec 25
|
True Grit |
Par
|
Coens
|
Bridges
Brolin
Damon
|
The only film in this category that hasn’t been seen. |
Duking It Out For 3 or 4 Slots (by release date) |
July 30
|
Get Low |
SPC
|
Schneider
|
Duvall
Spacek
Murray
|
|
Feb 19
|
Shutter Island |
Par
|
Scorsese
|
DiCaprio
|
|
June 11 |
Winter’s Bone |
RdAtt
|
Granik
|
Lawrence
|
|
July 9
|
The Kids Are All Right |
Focus
|
Cholodenko
|
Bening
Moore
|
|
Sept 15
|
Never Let Me Go |
FxSch
|
Romanek
|
Knightley
Mulligan
Garfield
|
|
Sept 17
|
The Town |
WB
|
Affleck
|
|
|
Oct 8
|
Secretariat |
Dis
|
Wallace
|
Lane
|
|
Oct 22
|
Hereafter |
WB
|
Eastwood
|
Damon
|
|
Nov5
|
Due Date |
WB
|
Phillips
|
Downey
Galifianakis
|
|
Nov 5
|
For Colored Girls… |
LGF
|
Perry
|
Elise
Goldberg
Newton
|
|
Nov 12
|
Morning Glory |
Par
|
Michell
|
McAdams
Ford
|
|
Nov 19
|
Made In Dagenham |
SPC
|
Cole
|
Hawkins
|
|
Nov 24
|
Love & Other Drugs |
Fox
|
Zwick
|
Gyllenhaal
Hathaway
|
|
Dec 10
|
The Fighter |
Par/Rel
|
O. Russell
|
Wahlberg
|
|
Dec 17
|
How Do You Know |
Sony
|
Brooks
|
Witherspoon
Nicholson
|
|
Dec 17
|
Rabbit Hole |
LGF
|
Mitchell
|
Kidman
|
|
Dec 29
|
Another Year |
SPC
|
Leigh
|
Broadbent
Staunton
|
|
Dec 29
|
Biutiful |
RdAtt
|
Gonzalez-
Inarritu
|
Bardem
|
|
The
Rest Of The Contenders (by release date) |
Mar 26
|
How to Train Your Dragon |
DW/Par
|
|
|
|
Aug 13
|
Eat Pray Love |
Fox
|
|
J Roberts
|
|
Sept 1
|
The American |
Focus
|
Corbijn
|
Clooney
|
|
Sept 24
|
It’s Kind Of A Funny Story |
Focus
|
Boden/
Fleck
|
E Roberts
|
|
Sept 24
|
Wall Street 2 |
Fox
|
Stone
|
Douglas
Mulligan
|
|
Oct 15
|
Conviction |
FxSch
|
Goldwyn
|
Swank
|
|
Dec 25
|
Somewhere |
Focus
|
Coppola
|
|
|
Dec 1
|
Miral |
TWC
|
Schnabel
|
–
|
|
Dec 10
|
The Tempest |
Mir
|
Taymor
|
Mirren
|
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Dec 31
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Blue Valentine |
TWC
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Cianfrance
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Gosling
Williams
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Tags: 127 Hours, Another Year, Biutiful, Black Swan, Blue Valentine, Conviction, Due Date, Eat Pray Love, Everything You've Got, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf, Get Low, Godfather III, Hereafter, Inception, It's Kind Of A Funny Story, Love and Other Drugs, Made in Dagenham, Miral, Morning Glory, Never Let Me Go, Nowhere Boy, Roadside Attractions, Secretariat, Shutter Island, Somewhere, The American, The Fighter, The Kids Are All Right, The King's Speech, The Social Network, The Tempest, The Town, Toy Story 3, True Grit, Winter’s Bone
Posted in 20 Weeks to Oscar - Charts, Awards Watch | 8 Comments »
Monday, September 6th, 2010
Welcome to the first Gurus gathering of this upcoming season.
It always seems a little silly to offer strong opinions before the Toronto International Film Festival has even begun. So we don’t. Consider these a gentle guide to what the buzz is, very early in the season.
We asked The Gurus to offer their 15 favorites to end up nominated for Best Picture come January. No ranking, No “sure things.” Just instinct and as much insight as is possible at this moment.
Last year, we did the same and the result was that The Gurus hit seven of the final ten in their Top Ten from this long distance. Two more were picked in the Top Sixteen. And the only film to get nominated that was nowhere to be found on this early list? The Blind Side. (Perhaps that explains the shock from the media when it got nominated… even after becoming a well-reviewed massive box office hit.) So maybe this early poll isn’t really all that silly .
Is there a stone unturned this year? Well, not Stone, which got a vote from Pete Howell. And not Tree of Life, which got 4 votes last year at this time… and just 3 votes this time around (2 of them from the same Gurus as last year).
This is not the look for the future of Gurus moving forward. But our team is designing a databased system that will launch when Gurus goes full-out in November. So, until then…
UPDATE, 9/7/10 – The last three Gurus have now chimed in.
The Participating Gurus
Anthony Breznican – USA Today
Greg Ellwood – Hitfix
Pete Hammond – Deadline Hollywood
Eugene Hernandez – indieWIRE
Pete Howell – Toronto Star
Dave Karger – Entertainment Weekly
Mark Olsen – LA Times
David Poland – Movie City News
Steve Pond – The Wrap
Sean Smith – Entertainment Weekly
Sasha Stone – Awards Daily
Kris Tapley – In Contention
Anne Thompson -indieWIRE
Susan Wloszczyna – USA Today
Tags: 127 Hours, Another Year, Biutiful, Black Swan, Blue Valentine, Brighton Rock, Casino Jack, Everything You've Got, For Colored Girls, Hereafter, How to Train Your Dragon, Inception, Inside Job, Love and Other Drugs, Made in Dagenham, Miral, Never Let Me Go, Next Three Days, Secretariat, Shutter Island, Somewhere, Stone, The American, the conspirator, The Debt Fair Game, The Fighter, The Ghost Writer, The Kids Are All Right, The King's Speech, The Social Network, The Tempest, The Tourist, The Town, The Tree of Life, the way back, Toy Story 3, True Grit, Winter's Bone
Posted in Awards, Awards Update, Awards Watch, Festivals, Gurus o' Gold, MCN Blogs, MCN Originals, Movie City News, The Hot Blog, TIFF Originals, Toronto Film Festival | 22 Comments »
Monday, September 6th, 2010
The awards season has gotten off to a rousing “uh, okay.”
Yeah, the festival season is upon us and there is a lot of drool dripping over some of these films – including my own happy salivations – but it is easy to mistake strong players using the fests to launch their long, complex, and expensive awards plans and the notion that festival excitement is, in and of itself, an answer. It’s not… at least, not to the positive.
Films will die at VeniTelluRonto™, but even the most robust winners/survivors cannot assume they’re set. Some actors will lock in, probably… but not Picture. Two of last year’s ten nominees premiered at one of these festivals in the year they were released. (The Hurt Locker is the third… which was in Toronto in 2008… and almost failed to sell.) Slumdog was the only one of the five the year before. 2007 saw 4 of 5. But that was the exception that reminds us of the rule. In 2006… 1 of 5.
I’m not saying that these festivals are not a great tool for movie marketers to grab a great deal of attention. (And the Oscar race is a marketing event first and an artistic event second, make no mistake.) And who knows? There are those who feel that TIFF 2010 will have more than half the nominees in its theaters. No reason it can’t be the case. But again… it’s the start of a marathon, not a sprint where the first winners get automatic byes.
There are plenty of players in the game for Oscar 2010, but for the first time in a very long time, there are virtually no “you can lock that in from months away” candidates sitting there. You have Eastwood and you have The Coens and Sony over the moon about Fincher’s The Social Network. After that, even amongst pedigree players, it is hard for anyone to get a realistic temperature out there.
In the immortal words of Nancy Meyers, something’s gotta give. But what?
Danny Boyle has his golden statue and a movie that’s a thriller and a crowd pleaser… but is it Oscar? Mike Leigh is always a threat, but one never knows which film will leap up. Jim Brooks has batted .600 overall, with 3 of his first four films getting BP nods… but it’s been 13 years and a flop since he went to The Carpet.
The next group is pretty muscular, but still, a bit aspirational. Ed Zwick is always around The Money, so maybe a lighter film will get him to gold. Julian Schnabel hasn’t made a movie that didn’t get serious awards interest, but Miral may or may not be “good for The Jews.” Julie Taymor may get Shakespeare back in the game for the first time since Ken Branagh. (You remember Ken… director of Thor… right?) Randall Wallace has been to the dance, but is his horse movie too Disney to be embraced as seriously as it will need to be?
David O. Russell is one of the most storied young directors… but has never been nominated… is The Fighter his The Wrestler? And what of young Aronofsky? Is his thriller too thrilling for The Senior Circuit? Also challenging voters with fresh intensity are Mark Romanek, Anton Corbjin, and Ben Affleck (back, this time starring in his sophomore, somewhat more conventional but still very 70s, directorial effort).
Right in what seems like The Oscar Pocket are Tony Goldwyn with a period overcoming-the-odds flick, Calendar Guy Nigel Cole with a warmer Norma Rae, Tom Hooper segueing from John Adams and the well-liked but unrewarded The Damned United to something more Queen-erific, and Roger Michell doing another turn on classic Jim Brooks.
And the Really Young Set… or at least, young to The Academy: Cholodenko, Boden/Fleck, Cianfrance, and Schneider. All in play for real… but still a bit of a mystery to the voters, who, in reality, are not cineastes, but industry pros, as given to whims as any other large group.
Debra Granik is a remarkable director and undeniably a starmaker, but Roadside Attractions needs to leap into the Oscar game with both feet is her Winter’s Bone is to get out of summer and take a firm position in the awards season. RA also picked up the Bardem-starrer from Alejandro Gonzalez-Inarritu, making them The New Awards Player in town. They have earned a taste for all this, after winning Oscar last year for Best Doc. They just picked up the new Ondi Timoner doc, hoping for a repeat. Roadside certainly doesn’t want to follow too closely in the footsteps of Sidney Kimmel and Bob Yari, as both men have, ahem, narrowed their film interests since they were seen chasing awards. They don’t have the support of horny vampires, a la Summit. But in the land of 10 Best Picture nominees and extremely strong candidates for Actor & Actress, it may be their time.
And who has the fullest stable of contenders? Harvey Weinstein… natch. But damned if I know whether he has the cash, staff, and will to grab what, from a distance, could easily be 2 BP slots out of 10.
Of course, there are the pictures that have already done their big theatrical releases: Toy Story 3, Inception, and Shutter Island. Plus we’ll see pushes from Alice in Wonderland and How To Train Your Dragon.
Floating out there are a new Peter Weir film (aka, the Scott Rudin movie that has no distribution) and a first from screenwriting Oscar winner William Monahan. But who wants to jump onto a moving train to get them into the race in the next 3 months?
And Tyler Perry’s presence is now official. And if he doesn’t get some love, Academy members could just find themselves Madeaed. Watch out.
Does any of this make you feel more settled about what happens next?
Thing is… it will turn into some solids as we move forward. It always does. And those sure bets are often not as sure as we all like to think. But right now, there is a lot more passionate churning about every category but Best Picture. And I have to say… kinda cool for a change.
Tags: 127 Hours, Another Year, Biutiful, Black Swan, Blue Valentine, Conviction, Everything You’ve Got, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf, Get Low, Harvey Weinstein, Hereafter, Inception, It’s Kind Of A Funny Story, London Boulevard, Love and Other Drugs, Made in Dagenham, Miral, Morning Glory, Never Let Me Go, Roadside Attractions, Secretariat, Shutter Island, The American, The Fighter, The Kids Are All Right, The King’s Speech, The Social Network, The Tempest, The Town, Toy Story 3, True Grit, Winter’s Bone
Posted in 20 Weeks, 20 Weeks to Oscar, Awards, Awards Update, Awards Watch, Columns, Festivals, MCN Originals, Movie City News, Poland, The Hot Blog, TIFF Originals, Toronto Film Festival | 44 Comments »
Wednesday, September 1st, 2010
New Orleans, August 27, 2010 – New Orleans Film Society is pleased to announce that the opening and closing feature films have been selected to screen at the 21st Annual New Orleans Film Festival taking place October 14-21, 2010. This year, Welcome to the Rileys will be the opening film with Blue Valentine rounding out the festival.
“We are thrilled to bring these renowned independent films to the New Orleans community as they set a strong tone for this year’s New Orleans Film Festival,” says Larry Blake, President of the New Orleans Film Society. “Each year the festival strives to expose the latest in independent film and movie culture to the New Orleans metropolitan area.”
Welcome to the Rileys is directed by Jake Scott, son of director Ridley Scott, and made its debut at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. Welcome to the Rileys follows a damaged man (James Gan- dolfini) and his wife (Melissa Leo) who have been driven apart by grief after losing their daughter but are brought back together when they meet a troubled young woman (Kristen Stewart) on a busi- ness trip to New Orleans.
Blue Valentine, which will be closing out the film festival, is directed by Derek Cianfrance and premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival and screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival. Blue Valentine is a story of love found and love lost told in past and present moments in time. Flooded with romantic memories of their courtship, Dean (Ryan Gosling) and Cindy (Michelle Williams) use one night to try and save their failing marriage.
The 2010 New Orleans Film Festival will take place October 14-21, screening at various venues city wide. The Renaissance Arts Hotel New Orleans will serve as the official hotel and headquarters for the festival and play host to panels and a VIP lounge. Festival attendees are also able to take part in a generous $79/night room discount.
All-Access and Six-Film passes will be available soon at www.neworleansfilmsociety.org.
About New Orleans Film Society
The New Orleans Film Society is the leading exhibitor of independent cinema in the New Orleans metropolitan area. The centerpiece of their annual programming is the New Orleans Film Festival (NOFF), a week-long showcase of Competitive Division films, curated films, and special screenings with an emphasis on Louisiana-made films.
Tags: Blue Valentine, Welcome to the Rileys
Posted in Movie City News, Press Releases | Comments Off on 2010 New Orleans Film Festival Selects Renowned Independent Features for Festival’s Opening and Closing Films
It shows how out of it I was in trying to be in it, acknowledging that I was out of it to myself, and then thinking, “Okay, how do I stop being out of it? Well, I get some legitimate illogical narrative ideas” — some novel, you know?
So I decided on three writers that I might be able to option their material and get some producer, or myself as producer, and then get some writer to do a screenplay on it, and maybe make a movie.
And so the three projects were “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep,” “Naked Lunch” and a collection of Bukowski. Which, in 1975, forget it — I mean, that was nuts. Hollywood would not touch any of that, but I was looking for something commercial, and I thought that all of these things were coming.
There would be no Blade Runner if there was no Ray Bradbury. I couldn’t find Philip K. Dick. His agent didn’t even know where he was. And so I gave up.
I was walking down the street and I ran into Bradbury — he directed a play that I was going to do as an actor, so we know each other, but he yelled “hi” — and I’d forgot who he was.
So at my girlfriend Barbara Hershey’s urging — I was with her at that moment — she said, “Talk to him! That guy really wants to talk to you,” and I said “No, fuck him,” and keep walking.
But then I did, and then I realized who it was, and I thought, “Wait, he’s in that realm, maybe he knows Philip K. Dick.” I said, “You know a guy named—” “Yeah, sure — you want his phone number?”
My friend paid my rent for a year while I wrote, because it turned out we couldn’t get a writer. My friends kept on me about, well, if you can’t get a writer, then you write.”
~ Hampton Fancher
“That was the most disappointing thing to me in how this thing was played. Is that I’m on the phone with you now, after all that’s been said, and the fundamental distinction between what James is dealing with in these other cases is not actually brought to the fore. The fundamental difference is that James Franco didn’t seek to use his position to have sex with anyone. There’s not a case of that. He wasn’t using his position or status to try to solicit a sexual favor from anyone. If he had — if that were what the accusation involved — the show would not have gone on. We would have folded up shop and we would have not completed the show. Because then it would have been the same as Harvey Weinstein, or Les Moonves, or any of these cases that are fundamental to this new paradigm. Did you not notice that? Why did you not notice that? Is that not something notable to say, journalistically? Because nobody could find the voice to say it. I’m not just being rhetorical. Why is it that you and the other critics, none of you could find the voice to say, “You know, it’s not this, it’s that”? Because — let me go on and speak further to this. If you go back to the L.A. Times piece, that’s what it lacked. That’s what they were not able to deliver. The one example in the five that involved an issue of a sexual act was between James and a woman he was dating, who he was not working with. There was no professional dynamic in any capacity.
~ David Simon