Showing posts with label LAMB Devours the Oscars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LAMB Devours the Oscars. Show all posts

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Picture: The King's Speech

Editor's note: Welcome to the last of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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!




If The King’s Speech earned a nickel every time the term “feel-good” or, more recently, “Oscar-bait,” was thrown around, well, they’d make a lot more money than they already have.  Personally, I am not a fan of the term “feel-good.”  Anytime I see, “The feel-good movie of the year!” splashed across an ad, the phrase makes me want to run in the other direction.  It seems too syrupy, too exaggerated—it can’t make everyone feel that way, right?  And I don’t like being told how I’m going to feel.  Just let me experience it for myself.

But this film absolutely left me feeling warm and happy and, in a word, good.  And not just because our underdog triumphs in the end.  It felt good because it is a good story told well.

As for the “Oscar-bait” thing, I think that phrase creates an atmosphere of judgment in which you can no longer see the story for itself, but only for the boxes it tics on an imaginary Academy checklist.  And then you’re thinking about the politics.  I’m not saying the Oscars aren’t about politics (we all know they are), and maybe people do tend to vote a certain way.  But since I don’t understand that process whatsoever, I don’t care.  I’m looking for the best storytelling, as created by the cinematography, the writing, the acting, the choices, the music, how it made me feel, what I came away with, and all that mushy subjective whatnot that goes into art and stuff.  It can certainly be argued that this is a more traditional film.  Maybe that’s not your cup of Earl Grey, but I don’t think anyone should shy away just because it may share some common denominators with past Oscar winners.  But that’s just me being defensive.  Let’s go back to the beginning.

As you probably already know, The King’s Speech tells the based-on-history story of Prince Albert (or Bertie), Duke of York, and his stutter.  That is to say, we follow how Bertie worked with (and befriended) Lionel Logue, an unconventional speech therapist, to overcome his debilitating stutter, all while also becoming King George VI just in time for World War II.  The film begins with a speech, his famously disastrous first attempt at radio-recorded public speaking at Wembley in 1925, and ends with a speech, his broadcast to the nation on the eve of war in 1939.  In the intervening 100 or so minutes, we watch this stuttering second son become a king.

I didn’t know this piece of British history before the film and apparently the movie takes a few liberties with historical timelines, but the manipulation of events for dramatic purposes is nothing new.  In any case, there really was a Bertie, who really had a stutter, who really became king when his brother Edward abdicated the throne in 1936, just in time to really be in charge as his country prepared to enter World War II.  All of which happened in an era of radio broadcasts, making things a bit difficult for a public figure who could not speak in public.  After all, who could have faith in a leader who can’t even speak?  It becomes important that Bertie overcome his stutter, not only to prove to his father that he is as good as his older brother, or to prove to his country that he can be king, but to prove to the world that he can guide Great Britain through the trying and painful times ahead in World War II.  We aren’t just watching a moving personal story (which would probably still be a good movie, especially with these actors).  Over the course of the film, the stakes are pushed higher and higher, moving seamlessly from personal to global significance.  And I think such built-in symbolism, micro to macro, in an essentially true story no less, is pretty damn sweet (to use a technical term). 

In thinking about why Bertie’s eventual triumph feels so good, I realized that with the nerves, high stakes, and public settings of his speeches, the movie can be paralleled to the classic underdog sports film format.  The sport may be public speaking, but Bertie is the underdog, he has a trainer, faces one hell of a big final “game,” and what bigger opponent could there be than the Nazis?  There is even a training montage!  But I don’t think this fact should be seen as reductive.  Rather, the format provides a very clear goal with a very clear obstacle, making for a well-crafted story in which nothing is wasted.  Though I suppose it could also seem old or a little too familiar to some.

In Entertainment Weekly, director Tom Hooper said his movie is “full of me actually challenging what you’d expect from this kind of film,” and that his goals were “to subvert, to be unconventional.”  While I’m not sure “unconventional” is a term that I would use to describe The King’s Speech (that’s a hard word to use around the Royal Family in general), I think the film deserves more than to be written off as Oscar-bait.

For me, it’s the performances that make the film so successful.  As King George VI, Colin Firth is brilliant and deserves that Best Actor Oscar.  He completely embodies his speech impediment, struggling with every fiber of his being to speak well, and his portrayal is the reason we feel his pain and cheer so loudly for him to succeed.  But while Firth is talented and likeable as he always has been, and would still be brilliant on his own, you wouldn’t have such a great performance from him or such a wonderful movie overall without Geoffrey Rush as Lionel Logue.  I was lucky enough to see Rush on Broadway in the play Exit the King and he was not only the best part of that show but the best performance I saw that year.  I learned firsthand what a masterful actor he is (something that I somehow did not get from seeing him play a hammy pirate… strange).  As Logue, he is a joy to watch – funny and lovely and at the tip top of his game, and the man plays a damn good game.  He elevates each scene in which he appears and the partnership between these two actors who are so fully present is what you’re there to see.  Their long scenes together are actually quite untraditional and a luxury, but then this is also a film about their friendship.  In the same Entertainment Weekly (clearly the Oscar coverage one, right?), Rush said that when they read the script they thought, “Who will want to see this film about two middle-aged men who become friends?”  When those men are Firth and Rush?  Yes, please, count me in.

I personally think The King’s Speech should win.  Not because it has a lot of the elements that the Academy traditionally rewards, but because it is a great film.  I will absolutely admit that I have not seen all of the Best Picture nominees, but this was the best film I saw last year.  Beautifully shot, fabulously acted, and telling a great story. 

Also, extra points because it has the best use of swearing that I have seen in a long time, possibly ever.  (If that was a category, it would be no contest.)

And, dammit, you’ll leave the film feeling good.  Tits.

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Animated Short

Editor's note: Welcome to the thirty-second of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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 Fletch from Blog Cabins

* Note 1: I am not a smart man. I was assigned the Animated Short Film category, so what did I do? I made sure to see the Live Action Shorts at the theater. Ordinarily, this wouldn't have been a problem at all, but with a newborn in the house, getting out to the theater isn't exactly a piece of cake. Thankfully, so many of the other writers had their stuff in on time, and Jess was able to push me back until today. Also helpful (since I couldn't, in fact, get to the theater again) was the fact that you can purchase many of the short films for $1.99/each via iTunes. Not a bad deal at all - at least, not until you consider that one of them (in both live action and animated) is not available. So that sucks, in that I'll only be able to provide an opinion on 80% of the nominated animated films. But that's a much better percentage than 0%, right?

* Note 2: The following intro was written for the live action shorts post I already put up on my site, but I'll include it here for perspective.



It's become somewhat of a tradition in the Fletch household to see the Academy Award-nominated short films each year - at least all but the docs, which aren't typically screened. This is the third year in a row my wife and I have gone to see them, and it's an event that I look forward to more and more with each passing year. They play away from our "home" theater (that's just a few miles away), but that's no deterrent - the longer drive is made up for by the picture house in which they are screened: the wonderful Harkins Valley Art theater in Tempe, Arizona. It's somewhat of a relic of days gone by, having stood for decades (a rarity in the Phoenix metro area) and being one of, if not the only, theaters in town that has but one screen. The lobby is no bigger than a large master bedroom, but that only adds to the charm, as does the retro art above the concession stand.


The setting puts us in a great frame of mind to catch some of that movie magic - short films are anything but commercial, so you know that they are made with loads of passion and heart. Every year leaves us with at least one short that has you rooting for the filmmakers' future, giving us a chance to one day possibly say "Hey, I knew about them from way back when." Who will it be this year?

Day & Night

Far as I can tell, Pixar's entry into this category - and the pre-show bonus for Toy Story 3 audiences - is the favorite to win, and for good measure. It's quick, to the point, and beautiful on a variety of levels. It tells a story of rivalry, tolerance, and, ultimately, understanding, by way of introducing us to two characters who at first seem polar opposites but soon find common ground. That it does so (mostly) without words and (of course) with a healthy dose of humor should come as no surprise to veterans of Pixar's work. The real kicker, however, is the brilliant blending of old- and new-school animation techniques, rendering a final product that can truly be enjoyed by audiences of all ages.

Fletch's Film Rating:

"It's in the hole!"
LAMBScore:
Large Association of Movie Blogs

Let's Pollute

Hey kids! Have you ever watched a PSA that turns its message on its head? That tells you to do something that you shouldn't or wouldn't want to do in a lazy attempt at humor and/or satire? Well, then sign right up for Let's Pollute, a short film so bewilderingly obvious that it blows my fucking mind that it was nominated for any awards at all, much less from the Academy! You'll blow your mind when you struggle to stay awake during this six-minute short that says that same thing over and over again! You'll shit your pants when you wonder how it is that a six-minute short can feel long and tedious!

Ugh.

Fletch's Film Rating:

"I want you to punch me as hard as you can."
LAMBScore:
Large Association of Movie Blogs

Madagascar, carnet de voyage

Madagascar will not win the Oscar, and will likely turn off a number of voters/viewers for one significant reason: it's 11 minutes long and doesn't tell much of a story at all. However, of the three short film categories, I've kind of always felt as though you might be able to get away with such a thing in the Animated category, as it hinges so strongly these days on technology and pure visuals than either of the others.

In that regard, Madagascar is a tremendous achievement, and a pretty literal adaptation of its title. "Carnet de voyage" essentially translates to "travel diary," and for those out there with even a hint of desire to visit Madagascar, I would assume that this might be the best place to start. Mixing seemingly dozens of animation styles, creator Bastien Dubois infuses each frame with so much vibrancy and life and sounds that you can't help but want to make the trip yourself. Let go of your need for narrative and just enjoy the scenery.

Fletch's Film Rating:

"Darn tootin."
LAMBScore:
Large Association of Movie Blogs

The Lost Thing

Is it possible to rate one film lower than the top spot and still have it be your favorite? The Lost Thing is certainly beautiful, but in that regard alone, it can not match either Day & Night or Madagascar. It tells a touching story of people being so fretfully busy with the lives around them that they neglect to open their eyes to the wondrous things in their world, but it's a story that feels a bit too familiar to really wow you. All in all, I guess you could say that the sum of the whole is greater than that of its individual parts. It has a childlike wonder, a compassion - a humanity - that, while found in the plotless Madagascar, is missing somewhat from Day & Night, which hits all the right notes, but feels too precise and organized (Partly Cloudy had the same effect on me a few years back). The Lost Thing meanders, charms, and introduces you to a dystopian world in need of cheering up, but in the end it's you that gets cheered up.

Fletch's Film Rating:

"It's in the hole!"
LAMBScore:
Large Association of Movie Blogs

The Gruffalo
The one film unavailable via iTunes, and it just so happens to be the longest, clocking in at 27 minutes. I tried to do some research on the film to gauge just where it might fit in, but opinion seems a bit split, largely due to said run time, which doesn't seem to be able to support the story being told. Adapted from the children's book by Julia Donaldson, but in a much sharper visual style, The Gruffalo features a loaded voice cast of top-notch British actors, including Helena Bonham Carter, Tom Wilkinson, John Hurt, and Robbie Coltrane. I hope to catch it soon.

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Original Song

Editor's note: Welcome to the thirty-first of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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 The Mad Hatter from The Dark of the Matinee

The Best Original Song category is a bit of an odd bird nowadays. Let’s skip past oddball rules that govern The Academy’s musical arm that rule quite a few original songs ineligible – that’s a debate for a whole other day. Instead, let’s zero in on the way original songs are used in films nowadays.

Once upon a time, films went out of their way to include a memorable song. These tunes would not only become indelibly hinged to the movies that spawned them, but would gain a life of their own as a stand-alone track.

Think “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” from THE WIZARD OF OZ
Think “Everybody’s Talkin” from MIDNIGHT COWBOY
Think “Time of My Life” from Dirty Dancing
Hell, think the theme from SHAFT!!

But in the nineties, and even more so in the new millennium, soundtracks have become a bit of an afterthought. No longer are producers feeling out musicians for new songs they may want to contribute. Nor are they going to one artist to write a whole album’s worth of songs for their film (Well, unless that artist is Eddie Vedder). Nay, these days, most soundtracks are a musical director trying to dazzle us all with an iTunes playlist…hoping to give an old song a new cache by playing it under just the right scene.

As such, the songs nominated in this category are getting weaker and weaker by the year…and more often than not, picking the winner becomes a gimme: Just listen for the one good one in that list of duds. Unfortunately though, even the winners aren’t really winners. I dare anyone to hum me eight bars of “I Need to Wake Up”…or even tell me what film it came from without looking it up.

That’s the state of it gang: nowadays for every “Falling Slowly” there’s also an “Into The West”

Looking at this year’s crop, I’m lacking one thing for two of them: context (namely for their use in COUNTRY STRONG and TANGLED). Might not seem like its all that important, but where recent winners like “The Weary Kind” are concerned, hearing their role within the film can make a ton of difference.

Still, we venture on…

“Coming Home” from COUNTRY STRONG

While it’s not enough to make me sit through this Gwyneth Paltrow opus, I really wish I had the context for this song. I’d wager it makes a sliver of difference. Then again, this take on the song is exactly what the academy gets when they nominate the songs – they’re not allowed to be sent screeners, only cd’s/mp3’s and/or sheet music.

If I didn’t know better, I’d swear that Diane Warren wrote this song, as it really plays like the sort of power ballad she became known for. While its possible that it’s role within the film makes all the difference, I wouldn’t bet heavily on this tune.

(Sidebar: To my American friends – am I way off base in thinking this track will get a lot of play next fall during Homecoming Weekend?)

“If I Rise” from 127 HOURS


Sonically, this song is actually quite interesting, and it is rather evocative of its films more introspective moments. Unfortunately it’s also entirely weightless and builds to nothing (where’s Diane Warren when you need her?). Actually that’s a lie – it builds to an oddly included children’s choir around the 2:55 mark. Close, but no gold guy for you this time Jai Ho.

“I See The Light “ from TANGLED


Now this is more like it. Here we have a solid ditty rather befitting the category. The House That Walt Built has accompanied one of their best animated films in a decade with the sort of film that sort of songs they used to give us year after year. Unfortunately, that’s also the hitch – it sounds too much like the sort of songs they used to give us year after year. Listen to that lift into the chorus – sounds a bit like “A Whole New World” no? Later in the chorus, a waft of “Go the Distance?” And here and there, traces of “Part of Your World”

It’s a contender for sure, if not a familiar contender.

“We Belong Together” from TOY STORY 3


Last but not least, Randy Newman. Again. Randy and John Ratzenberger must have the same agent given their involvement with Pixar though the years.

Like “I See the Light”, Randy’s tune seems familiar…only this time the familiarity hinges back to Randy himself. I listen to this and I can easily place it over the end credits of A BUG’S LIFE…or MONSTERS INC…or CARS…or the original TOY STORY…or…

If Randy has one thing in his favour, it’s the snappiness of this tune. This is the only nominee with a real beat, and given how many nominees through the years are earnest weepies designed to play over the end credits, Oscar just might be willing to reward something with a great beat that you can really dance to.

One of the weakest years for the category – weak enough to make one wonder if the category should be retired. But of these four, I’d put money down on Randy Newman to get his second Oscar in far less time than it took him to nab his first.

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Picture: Toy Story 3

Editor's note: Welcome to the thirtieth of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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 Castor from Anomalous Material

Toy Story 3 picks up with a grown-up Andy getting ready to leave for college. His mother has him empty his room by forcing him to either take his possession with him, storing them in the attic, or tossing them in the garbage. Andy, faithful to his companion of 17 years, decides to take Woody with him but puts all the other toys in a garbage bag for storage in the attic. Through a series of mishaps and misunderstandings, Woody and his companion soon find themselves being “donated” to Sunnyside Daycare with most of the toys now believing that Andy abandoned them for garbage disposal. Welcomed by a grandfatherly teddy bear named Lotso, the daycare initially appears to be a heaven for toys. That is until our friends meet the youngest children –not the most delicate beings after all– and discover the truth about the inner-workings of the place. It is up to Woody to free his friends from the authoritarian group of toys which reigns with an iron fist over Sunnyside.

As we have come to expect from Pixar, the film is visually pleasing and technically masterful. The story-telling albeit unoriginal is still highly effective and engaging throughout. What is surprising to me is that this movie is clearly oriented to children and yet, it takes the turn for the dark, the grim and even the creepy. One of the main antagonist is Big Baby, a semi-nightmarish baby doll with one broken eye and a creepy laugh. Needless to say, Big Baby would have no problem fitting in some horror movies so I would strongly think before taking the youngest children to see this film. The young-ins may also be distressed to find that when our protagonists fall into a fatal trap with no way out, they silently resolve themselves for their imminent ending, holding hands and staring death in the face. This is also what makes Toy Story 3 a good animation: For once, it doesn’t only cater to children and finds way to unleash torrents of emotions in the most simple of ways.

The comedy albeit mostly funny is somewhat disappointingly cheap with humor about farts, effeminacy (a.k.a. gay jokes) and latino culture peppered throughout. Despite that, the underlying themes of the franchise such as friendship, loyalty and fear of rejection remain as strong as ever. The meaning behind the metaphors are rather vague and this may well be why this movie is so mass-appealing and affecting. For many, it may be about those beloved toys of our childhood. For parents, it may be about watching their kids grow up and leave for college and adulthood. For others, it may be about aging and death. Director Lee Unkrich manages to punctuate the franchise with an happy albeit bittersweet ending which is sure to pull on the heartstrings. Who would have thought a bunch of inanimate objects can leave you with a little lump in the throat as you leave the movie theater?

A loving and resonant farewell to the franchise, Toy Story 3 will satisfy children and adults alike.

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Documentary Short Subject

Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-ninth of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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!  
 



Though the Academy Awards have always had a rather frivolous and shallow history when it comes to handing out awards, as well as its obsession with the gorgeous gowns on the red carpet (not that there is not a place for such things), the Oscars have always been quite politically topical when it has come to the documentary categories - both feature length and, the topic of this essay, the short subject, alike.  With Oscar winning titles such as Churchill's Island, The Battle of Midway, December 7th, Hitler Lives, Why Korea?, Nine From Little Rock, Czechoslovakia 1968, Interviews with My Lai Veterans, Karl Hess: Toward Liberty, Twin Towers, Chernobyl Heart and The Blood of Yingzhou District, we get a serious look at what is in the people's hearts and minds and consciousnesses of the day.  This year's batch of five Documentary Short Subject nominees, with their subjects of terrorism, the effects of war on soldiers, climate change, pollution and the education of our "lost" children, are no different - no matter which one ends up taking home the Oscar.  Let us look at these nominees now.

Strangers No More - This is the fourth Oscar nod for directors Kirk Simon and Karen Goodman.  Taking a wishful Utopian look at both the world's education system and the larger idea (and ideal) of different cultures coming together in a harmony that will probably never be fully formed, this doc looks at a unique school in Israel. Perhaps it does get a bit preachy for everyone's tastes (my own included).  Bringing together kids from 43 different countries, including Jewish, Christian and Muslim children learning and playing side-by-side, we are given a brief glimpse of what could be, if only. 

Poster Girl - Probably a bit whiny at times (more on behalf of the behavior, no matter how rightfully so, of its subject than on the content of its issues), though full of great subversive imagery (both iconic and ironic) but still touching importantly on an important subject - that of the government and/or military not taking care of its soldiers, its warriors. Sara Neeson's film shows us another side of war.  Having put her life on the line for said country, and becoming one of the "faces" of women at war (hence the title), an Iraqi vet now must fight and struggle for the disability compensation she has coming to her.  Another sad reality in the face of war.

Killing in the Name - A provocative work produced by the great, Oscar-nominated filmmaker Liz Garbus, Killing in the Name, takes a look at terrorism from a different perspective - that of the non-extremist Muslim populace.  Showing the face of true Islam - it is NOT the great evil so many have vilified it into being since 9/11 - this doc takes us into how terrorism (and counter-terrorism) affects those living inside the Middle East.  How it affects those who are just trying to live their daily lives, without the extremist views of those rightfully vilified Islamists. 

Sun Come Up - Directed by Jennifer Redfearn, this doc takes on the all-too-true tragedy of climate change (though I am sure some of those in the righter side of the political spectrum may argue the validity of such change) and tells the tale of Pacific Islanders who are literally losing their homes to rising waters.  Set on a smaller scale (though still set inside a much larger scale) we come to feel for these people who have nowhere to turn.  In this critic's opinion, this is the most emotionally draining of the nominees - even if some may say it is somewhat manipulative.

The Warriors of Quigang - Director Ruby Yang and writer Thomas have already won an Oscar in the short doc category, for 2007's The Blood of Yingzhou District.  Now they take on an environmental horror movie, looking at the vast (and getting worse) pollution problems of China.  Only here, neither Bruce Willis nor Wil Smith comes rushing into the last minute cliffhanger rescue.  This is the most likely winner come Oscar night, if not for its tragic story (others in the competition may be my emotionally wrenching to many) then for its political stance.

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Visual Effects

Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-eighth of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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!

Think about all of the summer blockbusters we’ve seen in the past several years. The form is full of special-effects-driven spectacles, with giant robots going head-to-head, whole cities being laid to waste, and gorgeous new worlds being built. And as the technology improves, these effects become sharper and more realistic, allowing filmmakers to bring to life even more wonders. But with this comes a problem: more and more films are abusing the use of visual effects, making effects drive the story (or semblance of a story, as is too often the case). The kinds of effects that the Academy should honor, then, are the opposite of this: the effective use of visual effects, which is the story is supported and enhanced by the effects, whether through important plot points (like 2008’s winner, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button) or by creating a world for the story to take place in (like last year’s champion, Avatar, which admittedly didn’t have much in its favor outside of its effects). 

Now that the Academy has expanded the Visual Effects category from three to five nominees, there are more opportunities to honor the use of effects. The decision to expand to five nominees is certainly symbolic of how many films are driven by special effects now. The question is, how many of these five nominees are effective uses of visual effects?

Alice in Wonderland certainly isn’t a shining example. In fact, I’d say that it’s the perfect representation of everything that’s wrong with blockbusters these days. It’s not that the world of Underland shouldn’t have been built by special effects; surely it was necessary. The problem is that the world is so ugly, the effects so poorly rendered (especially in 3D) that it’s ridiculous to even think that the film could earn a nomination here. If you want evidence of just how bad it gets, look no further than the abomination known as the Futterwacken scene toward the film’s end. If there’s any justice in the world, this will win nothing come Oscar night.

Iron Man 2 also fails on this front. The effects in this film aren’t nearly as ugly as those in Alice in Wonderland, but they do fall short in another way: they’re boring. The film shows us nothing new, nothing that we haven’t seen done before (and better) in other movies. And that’s a tragic short-coming for an effects-driven film. All around Iron Man 2 was a disappointment compared to the original, including its effects. Did the film really deserve this nomination? Not when the digital-cool world of Tron:Legacy and the brilliant (and perfectly used) visuals in Scott Pilgrim vs. the World were ignored (the latter, by the way, had the best visual effects of the year, hands down).   

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1 is a difficult film to figure out in regards to visual effects. The whole film series doesn’t make magic look particularly fun or magical, despite using cutting-edge technology. The strengths of these films’ effects come from other things, such as Lupin’s werewolf transformation in Prisoner of Azkaban or the bridge collapse in Half-Blood Prince. In Part 1, the big effects pieces are few, and there’s nothing really stunning about them. I’m guessing next year’s Part 2, featuring the climactic Battle of Hogwarts, will be a lock for next year’s Visual Effects prize, and this year’s nomination is simply filler for the category.

Hereafter was not among many people’s favorite films. It was a big-idea piece that didn’t really have anything to say, with plot strands that went nowhere and a third-act that completely derailed the film. But the tsunami scene at the beginning of the film was terrific, completely unexpected in a Clint Eastwood film and wonderfully executed. I wouldn’t say that the film is worthy of winning the Oscar, but it is a film in which the story, for better or worse, is supported by the effects rather than the other way around. Though the glimpses into the afterlife weren’t terribly thrilling, the tsunami was certainly worth a nod.  

That just leaves Inception. The film is obviously built as a effects piece, the kind of film that couldn’t exist unless the technology for the effects existed. But the great thing about Inception is that the film isn’t dominated by computer-generated visual effects. For example, the oft-discussed hallway fight sequence was filmed on a rotating set, utilizing camera tricks instead of CGI. Of course, digital effects were employed as well, and unlike the other four films they created truly memorable spectacles, such as Paris folding in upon itself and Cobb’s meticulously detailed Limbo world. All of which never took precedence over the story. And that is the most special effect of all in this film (well, that and Marion Cotillard *sigh*). 

So there you have it: five films that supposedly exemplify the best visual effects of 2010. Maybe next year the Academy won’t ignore such shining examples as Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, recognizing the truly special effects of 2011 (however many there are).

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Picture: The Social Network

Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-sixth of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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 Tom of Movie Reviews by Tom Clift

It seems like only yesterday when the blogosphere – myself included – was condemning the premise of David Fincher’s The Social Network as an utterly preposterous idea for a movie, and a colossal waste of a very talented director’s time. After all, how could they possibly make a movie about Facebook into something worth seeing? Yet as we count down the days to the 83rd Annual Academy Awards, that very same movie now finds itself one of the forerunners in the hotly contested Best Picture race. With a phenomenal and deeply nuanced screenplay by "West Wing" scribe Aaron Sorkin, an electrifying, propulsive score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, rich dark digital cinematography from frequent Fincher collaborator Jeff Cronenweth, and one of the best ensemble casts of under thirty actors ever assembled, The Social Network is somehow one of the most discerning, enthralling and exhilarating motion pictures of the fledgling decade, and proof that under the guidance of a director as bold and meticulousness as David Fincher, even the most pedestrian subject matter can be turned into something great.

By now, the Oscar race has essentially boiled down to two films. In one corner is the aforementioned The Social Network. A favourite for a large majority of this year’s awards season, the film won many precursor accolades including the National Board of Review, a considerable majority of the US Critics Associations awards, as well the increasingly irrelevant yet highly publicized Golden Globe awards. In the other corner is Tom Hooper’s The King’s Speech, a film that has been gaining steam in recent weeks by taking three very important awards, namely: Best Ensemble Cast at the SAG (Screen Actors Guild) awards, Best Picture at the PGA (Producers Guild of America) awards and, most surprisingly and from The Social Network’s perspective most ominously, Best Director at the DGA (Directors Guild of America) awards. With only a few weeks until the winners of Hollywood’s ultimate honours are announced, it seems as though The Social Network is about to be overtaken, defeated at the last minute as the Academy prepares to select what in many ways would be a more traditional Best Picture choice. What follows is my argument as to what a mistake that would be.

The King’s Speech is not a bad film. In point of fact, The Kings Speech is an excellent film, one that is well made, superbly acted and at times legitimately moving. But for all its many qualities, The Kings Speech is a stunningly safe choice for the Academy to make; it is exactly the kind of film that springs to mind when you hear the words “Oscar bait”. The Kings Speech represents cinema’s past. The Social Network, on the other hand – shot on the innovative new RED camera, easily one of the most beautiful films to ever be captured digitally – represents all we have to be excited about for in cinema’s future. While The Kings Speech is filled with veteran actors who have long since been showered with acclaim, The Social Network features the very best that young Hollywood has to offer, whose talent and potential is only just starting to be recognized. While The Kings Speech features a largely traditional score by a well established filmic composer, The Social Network is scored by a rock-star, one who employed urgent, propulsive sounds to unique and electrifying ends.

Most importantly of all however, while Tom Hooper churns out Oscar bait, David Fincher has made a career out of creating dark and distinctive pictures that resonate with young, discerning moviegoers. And as a film that tells the story of the founding of one of the most visited websites on the internet, The Social Network has a particular relevance to youthful audiences of today. The film has been praised up and down by critics as speaking to the beliefs and attitudes of the so called “Facebook generation” – personally, I think this praise misses its correct target by just an inch. What makes the film so great is that it takes the birth of a recent social phenomenon, and uses it to tell a story with themes as old as humanity; a story of greed, ambition and
betrayal. Where the movie really delivers its critique of digital citizens is in its portrayal of Mark Zuckerberg. To quote from my review of the film:

“The Facebook CEO as portrayed by Eisenberg is a character for the ages; quick witted, abrasive, socially inept and unexpectedly ruthless – essentially every characteristic we would associate a youth who makes a life for himself online…Sorkins dialogue is rapid-fire and razor-sharp, and is delivered with the kind of blithe sarcasm and detached irony that is characteristic of internet users all around the world.”

We live in an age where the internet, and especially Facebook, allows us to be funnier, smarter and more capable than we actually are. But it also allows us to be crueler, and more detached. And what character is recent history better embodies that state of mind than Mark Zuckerberg, a billionaire barely more than a child; not an asshole, but trying so hard to be.

With eight nominations, The Social Network sits equal with Inception for the third highest number of nominations, behind only The Kings Speech with twelve, and True Grit with ten. If it were up to me, the film win Best Picture, not to mention Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Actor (Jesse Eisenberg) and, in the light of Tron: Legacy and Inception going un-nominated, Best Original Score and Best Editing as well. As it stands, the movie seems practically a lock for Screenplay categories, while at the other end Eisenberg can be essentially ruled out of the actor race in favour of Colin Firth more showy (though indisputably brilliant)
performance in The Kings Speech. I do think there is a reasonable chance that Fincher could defy the precedent set by the DGA to take Best Director. But unfortunately, when it comes to the night’s top prize, my money is on Tom Hooper’s conventional historical drama.

But whether or not The Social Network does get overlooked, in five years I have little doubt as to which film will be remembered. I will conclude by again returning to a quote from my review:

“The Social Network transcends the realm of movie based on true events; it is a masterpiece of modern screenwriting, a veritable acting clinic and a subtly gorgeous aural and visual experience. It is also one of the most discerning movies yet made in and about the internet era, and is the most mature entry in its director’s entire filmography. David Fincher ended the nineteen-nineties by producing one of its most important films; with The Social Network, he has started the twenty-tens in a similar fashion.”

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Costume Design

Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-fifth of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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 Rich of  Wide Screen World

I should explain what you're about to read.

City Mouse is a cartoon character I created a few years ago, when I briefly lived in Columbus, Ohio. He was the star of my strip City Mouse Goes West. He started out as an avatar of myself, as I wrote about small town life and how it compared to a previous lifetime of big city life. He evolved into his own character over time. He's still me, kind of, but at the same time he's also become a unique character unto himself, if that makes any sense. Collie the Columbus Cow is his pal. I have no control over what she does at all.

I haven't regularly worked on any new City Mouse strips since I moved back to New York, but I thought it might be fun to pull him and Collie out of limbo and create a new strip for them, and this seemed like a good way to introduce them to a new audience. I hope you like it.






The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Documentary Feature

Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-fourth of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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 from Random Ramblings of a Demented Doorknob

The following post is a true story.

(Fade In)

What’s it time for? A controversial post! Why is this a controversial post? Because I don’t know what the hell I’m talking about! Let’s get started.

I don’t typically watch documentaries. I’ve seen a handful, of course, but they’re generally not my thing. I prefer fiction over non-fiction, as it were. However, having seen a groundbreaking two documentaries of this year’s crop, I got the job.

Let me set this straight. I don’t really pay attention to the pre-awards awards shows. In other words, I only watch the Academy Awards, and I don’t read up on all those others. I know they say who wins all these others will win at the Oscars, but… whatever.

Every year there are usually about two main documentaries that I’ve heard of (whether or not I’ve seen them is irrelevant). Then there are 3 others I’d never heard of at all. Obviously, the winner typically comes from the couple I’d heard of. There have been two documentaries that I’ve heard about this year, as usual. Those docs? Restrepo and Exit Through The Gift Shop. As for the other three? I had to look up what they were.

First up is Exit Through The Gift Shop, which I actually own. According to IMDB, it’s had 9 nominations (outside the Oscars) and 7 wins for an overall total of 16 nominations. Some could argue the legitimacy of is documentary-ship, as there is some controversy behind the film on how true it actually is. The director, Banksy, is a notorious street artist who might have made this as just another social commentary, as most of his art is. However, it’s been on quite a winning streak, and this seems to be the frontrunner.

Next up is Restrepo, which I’ve also seen. According to imdb, it’s had 5 nominations (outside the Oscars) and 4 wins for an overall total of 9 nominations. It’s pretty obvious how this could be a contender. It’s about the war in the middle east. America! F*ck yeah! (And stuff.) It’s a tough doc to watch, but it’s good, if a bit too unfocused.

Inside Job was nominated for a whopping 10 awards (outside the Oscars). Unfortunately, it’s won nothing. I suppose that puts it as a decent contender against the big two, but I doubt it’ll win. It’s about the financial crisis. I think it would be funny if they tried to bribe the voters for a win.

Waste Land was nominated for 2 (outside the Oscars) with 4 wins, giving it a total of 6 nominations overall. It’s about art or something. I think we already have one of those this year, and it’s a bit more popular. Sorry.

Gasland was nominated for 1 (outside the Oscars) and won another for a grand total of 2 total nominations.  Technically and/or statistically speaking, it has the best gap between nominations and wins. But that doesn’t really mean anything, especially considering is has the fewest nominations. And it’s about energy. How boring.

I’m sure those other three are good docs, but I feel the frontrunners are easily Gift Shop and Restrepo. And with the former getting so many wins (and nominations), not to mention the highest score on imdb of all 5, I’d say it has the best chance of actually taking the trophy that night. Maybe we’ll get to see Banksy’s face or at least hear him talk. That’d be fun.

Those are my thoughts. No extensive research. No watching all of them. Not even the trailers. No anything. Just that. You don’t even get posters for this post. Take that! So… yeah.

(Fade Out)

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Picture: True Grit


Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-third of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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 Clarabela from Just Chick Flicks
Known for movies featuring quirky, off-beat characters and botched crimes, the writing, producing and directing team, Joel and Ethan Coen are no stranger to the Oscars. With multiple nominations for Best Screenplay, Directing they finally won a Best Picture Oscar in 2009 for No Country For Old Men. Working again with Big Lewbowski star, Jeff Bridges the Coen's take on a new genre, the American Western with True Grit. Unlike the 1969 John Wayne movie, the Coens' True Grit closely follows the original Charles Portis novel, which focuses on the coming of age story of young Mattie Ross.

True Grill tells the story of Mattie Ross, a girl from Yell County, who due to hard circumstances is forced to grow up beyond her 14 years. Mattie arrives in town to handle the affairs of her murdered father. The plain-talking, serious young girl wants justice for her father's murder. Mattie hears of the reputation of Marshal Rooster Cogburn for having 'grit' and she hires him to track down and capture Tom Chaney, the man who killed her father.

Reuben (Rooster) Cogburn is a tough, unapologetically violent man who often shoots first and sorts out the details later. Tom Chaney is also a wanted man for the murder of a Texas politician and is pursued by a Texas Ranger named LaBoeuf. Played with a snarky attitude, Matt Damon's pompous Texan is a great comic antagonist for the cantankerous Marshall Cogburn. The two men join forces in their pursuit of Chaney, leaving Mattie behind.


Not willing to trust the drunken, slothful Cogburn, a fiercely determined Mattie follows Cogburn and LaBoeuf to make sure he does the job properly. Mattie, Rooster and La Boeuf set off on the trail of Tom Chaney, encountering dangers from man, beast and nature. Along the way, each one is tested and discovers the meaning of having 'true grit'. Like most of the Coen's movies, True Grit is set in a world all its own. It is a harsh, gritty and bleak old west with hard-faced, dirty people who speak in a plain straight-forward, contraction-free sentences. And like, most Coen Brothers movies, True Grit must be watched more than once to truly appreciate the greatness of the film. Fortunately, the more you watch any movie by Joel and Ethan Coen, the better they get. The same will be true of True Grit.

Against the stark landscapes in True Grit stand the brilliantly colored performances of Jeff Bridges as Rooster Cogburn, Hailee Steinfeld as Mattie Ross and Matt Damon as La Boeuf. In the smaller, yet memorable roles Josh Brolin is the murder, Tom Chaney, Barry Pepper is Lucky Ned Pepper. Jeff Bridges, who is nominated for a Best Actor Oscar for his portrayal of the gravel-voiced, quick triggered Rooster Cogburn gives a performance, completely different from John Wayne's swaggering Rooster.

The stand out performance comes from Hailee Steinfeld in her first major movie role. She holds her own alongside veteran actors like Jeff Bridges and Mat Damon. Hailee received a Supporting Actress nomination for her first major acting role as the strong-willed Mattie. But as the main character and appearing in almost every scene in the movie, Steinfeld should have been nominated for Best Actress.

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Original Screenplay

Editor's note: Welcome to the twenty-second of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd 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 Jason McKinnon from The Athletic Nerd

I love the big franchises, comic book adaptations, sequels and remakes.  Sometimes, going back to a world you adore is a great way to spend a couple hours in a theater.

However, I still love the beauty of discovering something entirely new.  Original movies always have a way of reminding us why we love movies in the first place.  It's a different experience when you are getting to know new characters and worlds.  So, even though I'm addicted to my beloved franchises, I think my allegiance lies in the unknown.  In what I've never seen before.

This is why I love the Best Original Screenplay Oscar.  It's probably every screenwriters favorite category.  This year's race is a tough one to predict as each of the 5 nominees successfully created something new, exciting and wonderful.  It's down to 5 remarkable films that had a huge impact on the audiences they entertained in 2010. 

5 amazing screenplays. 
5 amazing films. 
Originality at it's finest.

Another Year
Written by Mike Leigh

This film is a perfect way to spend a rainy afternoon.  It's incredibly difficult to create a film with so many wonderfully honest and endearing characters and that's why Another Year is a phenomenal achievement.  The comedy/drama has been the talk of many critics as well as fans of Mike Leigh's work.  It's a well deserved nomination but that's probably as far as it will go.

The Fighter
Screenplay by Scott Silver and Paul Tamasy & Eric Johnson. Story by Keith Dorrington & Paul Tamasy & Eric Johnson

Movies based on true events are just as difficult to capture on the page.  You have a completely different set of challenges to overcome.  What makes The Fighter so great is how well the screenwriters told the story of Mickey Ward's struggle to gain boxing glory.  The Fighter is a fantastic film with incredible performances fueled by a truly amazing screenplay.

Inception
Written by Christopher Nolan

If you base this award purely on originality then Inception has to be the favorite.  A film this complicated must have been difficult to craft into a workable script.  Yet Christopher Nolan presents this mind blowing world with such a precise and seemingly effortless style of storytelling.  Each scene building on the one before it until you are completely wrapped up in a story full of action and beautiful effects.  Beyond that, Nolan created a film that makes you think and sticks with you long after the credits roll.

The Kids Are All Right
Written by Lisa Cholodenko & Stuart Blumberg

The Kids Are All Right is another example of how to write incredibly complex and honest characters.  The Kids Are All Right takes you deep into a family dealing with very real issues when the 2 children set out to find their donor father.  The results of that search have a huge impact on their mothers who must deal with more than just the new man in their lives.  They face a true test of their relationship, their family and their lives.

The King's Speech
Screenplay by David Seidler

I think The King's Speech does something wonderfully unique in how it presents not only the fascinating King but of the world at a time of war.  It's a powerful backdrop for a touching and funny story about courage, dedication and finding the strength to overcome difficult challenges in order to do the right thing and become a leader.  The inspirational tale wasn't easy to relate to at first but it stuck with me in the end.  That's what a good original script should do.  It should show you a world you've never seen and allow you the chance to truly live it and feel it.  The King's Speech definitely succeeds to accomplish those goals.

The Frontrunner:  The King's Speech
The Dark Horse: The Kids Are All Right
The Long Shot: Another Year
The Nerd's Pick: Inception

When it comes to predicting who will win, it's difficult to take your own personal tastes out of the equation.  I hope Christopher Nolan wins for his brilliant work on Inception but I don't think it will happen.  That won't stop me from cheering for the film but I think it will come down to The King's Speech and The Kids Are All Right with the King coming out on top.