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October 28, 2005
20 Weeks To Oscar 3
It's amazing during this time how many movies go from 0 to 50 or from 50 to 0 in 3 seconds flat. This is that time when every movie "screened great for the Academy" or was " a disaster at the Academy" or there are "problems in post" or "they are withholding it because they can and want to build tension" or "no one saw it" or "they are showing it to people." Lies will be told and apologized for. Truths will be discounted and then seem too obvious to have doubted.
Posted by poland at October 28, 2005 07:09 AM
Comments
re: Brokeback Mountain, you write:
"Focus seems to want to pretend that it's not a gay film."
How is that the case? The trailer seems pretty clear to me.
Posted by: James Leer
at October 28, 2005 08:05 AM
Also, I think the int'l poster for "Munich" has a "based on" credit, so that should probably go in Adapted now.
Posted by: James Leer
at October 28, 2005 08:11 AM
I still say the ads for Crash are touting Cheadle as Lead and if they're gonna nominate anyone from Crash it'll be Dillon. Then Thandie Newton.
I think Howard has a very real possibility though at being nominated. Reason? Don Cheadle. Will Smith. Denzel Washington. etc. There's no other African-American possibilities in any of the acting categories except Thandie. They like to appear racially tolerant these days. And apart from the chick from The New World and the Geisha's girls there's no non-caucasion people around.
How exactly are Focus pretending Brokeback Mountain isn't a gay film? By not showing Heath and Jake making out in the ads?
But, it works for musicals that aren't advertised as musicals....
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at October 28, 2005 09:11 AM
For a pretty solid year at the movies the best pictures aren't really shaping up.
- If "Geisha" makes the impact the book did, Gong Li is going to be the one to watch.
- "Syriana" has an unproven director but the right kind of politics. But if it has a strong Benicio Del Toro moral center, it could break the niche.
- "Munich" is anybody's guess. It doesn't seem like anything the director has done before so it could be one of those "rewriting the book" pictures we get every 8 or 9 years from Spielberg. Fingers crossed.
- "The Producers" won't offer much to anyone who didn't see it on the stage. Sorry DP but the trailer ain't selling it (and I'm a Mel Brooks maniac).
- "King Kong" doesn't really aspire to win an Oscar does it?
- "The New World" which will live or die by how well Malick can keep his head and camera (and our attention) out of the clouds.
Posted by: The Premadator
at October 28, 2005 09:59 AM
But in a year that's as "lacklustre" and "slow", or whatever people are saying, for movies, is it so hard to believe the Academy will fall for The Producers? I mean it could easily not, but I think it's god as good a chance as some of the ones people are touting (Capote for Best Picture and Director for instance. That seems like a classic "only Best Actor nomination" movie to me). You said it won't offer much to anyone who didn't see it on stage... but, ummm, a lot of people saw it on stage.
I'm sure King Kong aspires to win technical Oscars.
I either want Munich to be really good or really bad. If it's really good then that's swell. And if it's really bad then maybe Spielberg will stop belting out films so much, settle down, have a rest and get some great original ideas flowing. But, yes, if Munich is really good then that'll be even more exciting!
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at October 28, 2005 02:20 PM
Saw "The Libertine" last night...great performances from Depp and Morton and Malkovich...but the production and direction are terrible....it looks like a Dogme film and there are a lot of really bad decisions in terms of camerawork, music, lighting (looks like they only used natural light!)...it was really disconcerting as I think it's an interesting story/script and the acting was great, but it was really hard to get into it otherwise.
Posted by: EDouglas
at October 28, 2005 04:34 PM
I was just thinking how it was funny JARHEAD, ELIZABETHTOWN and PROOF have just slipped away from the Oscar pre-nom charts. I guess that's what you get for prognasticating a movie's success based on who's involved in it before it comes out.
Posted by: PetalumaFilms
at October 28, 2005 07:42 PM
After seeing Crash I don't think it has any shot of any awards. It was a movie of the week.
Posted by: BluStealer
at October 28, 2005 10:35 PM
Anyone that thinks Syriana is an SOcar contender should go out and rent Abandon. And then you will know why no one thinks that way.
Posted by: joefitz84
at October 28, 2005 10:37 PM
It is hard work rating films as award winners months before they come out or even screen. They're getting burnt left and right by accomplished directors. An award winning resume is no lock to have another award winning movie.
Posted by: Bruce
at October 28, 2005 10:39 PM
Jarhead's off the chart? I've seen it and I think it could get some nominations.
And to compare Syriana to Abandon is insane...it's George Clooney vs. Katie Holmes and a far different subject matter.
Posted by: EDouglas
at October 29, 2005 04:32 AM
To repeat what I said here months ago: Matt Dillon will get an Oscar nomination for "Crash."
Posted by: Joe Leydon
at October 29, 2005 06:26 AM
For want is worth Kris is reporting over at the oscarwatch boards that Keaton and Parker might flip with Keaton going Supporting now and Parker lead. I guess with they going to go with the supporting parents route and try to get Keaton in (a lock for sure now if true) and bring along Nelson too?
Posted by: Paul8148
at October 29, 2005 06:51 AM
I'd take that Matt Dillon bet. Kevin Dillon has a better shot at an emmy.
Posted by: Sanchez
at October 29, 2005 07:00 AM
"It was a movie of the week."
if the week extended for about half the year though. Crash is STILL being talked about, which if nothing else means it should at least still be considered. A screenplay nomination is at least very VERY possible, if not a lock. I hate saying anything is a lock, but it does seem like it will happen. Even if it gets nothing else. However, I think at this stage it will.
If Keaton goes supporting then I'm thinking she'll be good for the WIN. They love Keaton so it'd make sense.
The main thing that is disappointing about this Oscar season is the zero amount of foreign possibilities. In the last few years we've had such Oscar-nominated movies like City of God, A Very Long Engagement, House of Flying Daggers, Motorcycle Diaries, Talk To Her, etc... this year? None. Even if it were elligible, Bruno Ganz wouldn't even be considered for Downfall.
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at October 29, 2005 10:14 AM
It's only being talked about bya few and thats people plugging Matt Dillon and such. As a black man I don't need white men guilt being portrayed as talking about race.
Posted by: LesterFreed
at October 29, 2005 06:49 PM
I watched Crash again about a week ago. A friend really wanted to see it. The cast is exceptional and a few of the performances are excellent, but its flaws are even more glaring the second time around. Too many characters are one-dimensional, it gets way too preachy, there are too many coincidences, and too much of it seems really simplistic. I just don't think it's all that good.
Posted by: Stella's Boy
at October 29, 2005 06:57 PM
Stella's Boy is right. Its decent. Not even close to Oscar worthy.
Posted by: Bruce
at October 29, 2005 07:05 PM
Crash=No chance
Posted by: Angelus21
at October 29, 2005 07:23 PM
Jarhead is already done. The noncontenders are falling by the wayside.
Posted by: PandaBear
at October 29, 2005 07:48 PM
Jarhead hasn't even been released yet and it's already done? Jeez.
Posted by: jeffmcm
at October 29, 2005 11:23 PM
But what I'm saying is that in a year such as this where movies such as Jarhead are apparently over and done with before they've even been released, can you really count out a movie that still has people talking and is still getting buzz.
"It's only being talked about bya few and thats people plugging Matt Dillon and such. As a black man I don't need white men guilt being portrayed as talking about race."
What you forget is that a large portion of the Academy are white men.
The movie feels important, which could see it get something. It's definitely on course for a screenplay nomination and I thought that was pretty much accepted by oscar watchers.
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at October 30, 2005 06:44 AM
Yeah, just because it's a bad movie doesn't mean it can't be an Oscar contender.
Posted by: jeffmcm
at October 30, 2005 06:46 AM
I think we've seen that happen many atime, non?
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at November 2, 2005 06:36 AM
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