tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post116966475837816599..comments2024-03-18T00:41:13.588-07:00Comments on Sergio Leone and the Infield Fly Rule: OPEN FORUM: OSCAR TALK et alDennis Cozzaliohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01954848938471883431noreply@blogger.comBlogger40125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1170264990164675662007-01-31T09:36:00.000-08:002007-01-31T09:36:00.000-08:00CINEBEATS! K! Nice to hear from you! Yeah, please ...CINEBEATS! K! Nice to hear from you! Yeah, please do get that blog up and running again soon. I miss you, and I bet I'm not the only one!<BR/><BR/>(Oh, and by the way, I was thinking of you when I posted <A HREF="http://tinyurl.com/y6897p" REL="nofollow">this</A>, just in case you didn't see it.)<BR/><BR/>I'm with you on <I>Pan's Labyrinth</I>, for sure. I'm very excited about seeing Del Toro on stage at the Kodak. And you're right-- seeing Morricone accepting an Oscar will be sweet indeed. (TLRHB suggested that Clint and Eli Wallach should present it to him, flanking him from the extreme left and right of the stage!)<BR/><BR/>Like you, I started off kind of indifferent about the announcement of the nominees because, frankly, I just can't get too enthusiastic about the showering of awards on <I>Babel</I>, or even movies I kinda liked (<I>The Departed, Little Miss Sunshine</I>). But I realized that even when the movies are not top drawer, I still enjoy the show and the atmosphere surrounding it and the swirl of film talk in the air (even though it's pretty dumbed-down). So why not have fun?<BR/><BR/>So glad you're back in the blogosphere! Keep in touch, eh?Dennis Cozzaliohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01954848938471883431noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1170221832051064782007-01-30T21:37:00.000-08:002007-01-30T21:37:00.000-08:00One thing I forgot to mention - the highlight of t...One thing I forgot to mention - the highlight of this year awards will easily be Morricone getting a lifetime award! The lifetime awards are often the best part of the show for me and I usually like (as well as get all teary eyed) the homage they do to actors who recently died.Kimberly Lindbergshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17605498572070631516noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1170219320684955662007-01-30T20:55:00.000-08:002007-01-30T20:55:00.000-08:00Hello Dennis! I'm trying to get my blog up and run...Hello Dennis! I'm trying to get my blog up and running again and thought I'd stop by and say hello.<BR/><BR/>I also wanted to add that I'm afraid that I'm sort of disappointed with the Oscar noms this year or maybe it's just the movies? I haven't seen a lot of new films so my opinions on them are rather useless but here goes nothing...<BR/><BR/>If I was voting I'd give Scorsese a damn gold statue for best director & movie so he could stop trying to please everyone and get back to making good movies again. (on a side note - I haven't seen The Departed and my interest in it is minimal)<BR/><BR/>I hope Peter O'Toole finally wins for best actor (my love for him is endless) but I'd be just as happy to see Forest Whitaker win.<BR/><BR/>I'd like to see Helen Mirren win because I like her a lot and she'd never gotten an Oscar which is silly when they're handing them out to people like Gwyneth Paltrow & Halle Berry (obviously I'm not a fan of either).<BR/><BR/>I'd like to see An Inconvenient Truth win best doc just because it will probably annoy Bush and Co.<BR/><BR/>Last but not least, I hope Pan's Labyrinth wins every award it's nominated for.Kimberly Lindbergshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17605498572070631516noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1170137205277652602007-01-29T22:06:00.000-08:002007-01-29T22:06:00.000-08:00Edward: Aside from preaching to the converted, a q...Edward: Aside from preaching to the converted, a quality for which I am sure it is guilty (as are many documentaries, I'd guess-- I doubt Roger Mahoney was recommending to too many of his friends that they see <I>Deliver Us From Evil</I>), I thought that <I>Shut Up and Sing</I> told me plenty I didn't already know about the music business-- the degree to which music acts and their management emerse themselves, and are emersed, in distracting minutiae, the meticulousness of creating a musical recording, a sense of the day-to-day reality for three women who are as at home in stadiums and arenas as they are in their own houses. <BR/><BR/>But it also illuminated plenty about and deepened my perceptions of the personalities in the group, even going so far as to display the kind of self-righteous flippancy that can go along with defending yourself under attack (Natalie Maines is quite aware of the presence of the camera, and those moments when she chooses to acknowledge it to underline points she tries to score against the people putting pressure on her come off as the most uncomfortable kind of self-consciousness). <BR/><BR/>Most importantly, though, I don't know what it feels like to be persecuted, on any level, for saying what I believe to be true, and the movie made what that felt like to these people abundantly clear. Regardless of whether the Dixie Chicks are multimillion-dollar recording artists or some cover band pickin' and grinnin' down at the local hillbilly bar, they've got a right to say what they want to say without fear of industry reprisals, onstage humiliations from the likes of "patrotic" stars like Toby Keith, and death threats from an ex-fan base that equates their speaking out against a president and his policies with declaring a disdain for America itself. <I>Shut Up and Sing</I> may be pitched to an audience primed to root for the Dixie Chicks, but even if it is it seems to me than there is plenty in this movie to illuminate the meaning of the way their lives and careers were turned upside-down for those already familiar with the story, as well as how celebrities also function as citizens.Dennis Cozzaliohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01954848938471883431noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1170103714995774112007-01-29T12:48:00.000-08:002007-01-29T12:48:00.000-08:00Some writer I once read (I can't remember who; may...<EM>Some writer I once read (I can't remember who; maybe I should steal their idea and see if I can get away with claiming it as my own) suggested that the Oscars should split up the Best Costume category into Best Costume (Period) and Best Costume (Contemporary).</EM><BR/><BR/>Paul, were you thinking of this very good <EM>Slate</EM> slide show called <A HREF="http://www.slate.com/id/2137272/" REL="nofollow">"And the Oscar Goes to … Petticoats!" by Julia Turner</A>?andyhorbalhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11579148222763743531noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1170090070534852002007-01-29T09:01:00.000-08:002007-01-29T09:01:00.000-08:00Hopefully Blogger will be nice to me today and jus...Hopefully Blogger will be nice to me today and just post this once. As for as Shut Up & Sing goes, I felt it was entertaining enough, but it didn't really do much as a documentary. I knew everything it told me (aside from the sisters' fertility problems) so to me it felt less like a probing documentary than preaching to the converted. One of the previous posters mentioned how ridiculous it is to compare performances, something that has been mentioned forever. Bogart once famously said that perhaps the true way to pick the best actor was to have the five nominees each perform Hamlet's soliloquy, though he said that worried him since he was up against Olivier in that particular year. Someone else said -- and I wish I could remember who it was -- that too often the acting Oscars go not to the person who acts the best but the one who acts the most.Edward Copelandhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12463676135131274426noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169948239493192712007-01-27T17:37:00.000-08:002007-01-27T17:37:00.000-08:00GREGORY Plummer? Um. I meant Christopher Plummer, ...GREGORY Plummer? Um. I meant Christopher Plummer, of course. (: Not sure where Gregory came from, but maybe I'm just repressing memories of Sound of Music.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169948119698016622007-01-27T17:35:00.000-08:002007-01-27T17:35:00.000-08:00Dennis (and everyone)--This is why I love this blo...Dennis (and everyone)--<BR/>This is why I love this blog: I log on and I'm reminded of many films that had slipped through my memory, despite my enjoyment of them (chief among them, Inside Man, which I agree should've picked up more nominations-- Clive Owen, Lee, and the remarkable Gregory Plummer, to name just three). There's a lot here to (happily) absorb, but I did want to say a few words in praise of Kirsten Dunst, so fabulous in every thing from the sublime Bring It On to the already-praised Cat's Meow. But I happily think of her as Mary Jane Watson, too-- she may not have a lot to do in those films, but she brings a lovely combination of wry humor and open-faced wonder to the proceedings. I know it's hip to bash on superhero movies, but Sam Raimi and Bryan Singer bring me a lot more cinephiliac joy than overrated 'auteurs' like Haggis or Aronofsky.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169878741777388882007-01-26T22:19:00.000-08:002007-01-26T22:19:00.000-08:00I don't think it's just Academy members who haven'...I don't think it's just Academy members who haven't seen The Proposition, unfortunately. And of course you're right, the movie's far too dark to be an "Academy" movie, but a boy can dream, can't he?<BR/><BR/>Briefly - I can certainly appreciate where you're coming from with The Departed and that rat. What I enjoy about it, though, is how it demonstratesvsuch contempt for Damon's character, stripping all the carefully molded masks away with a blunt, sarcastic, final judgement. There's a morbid cheer to it - Scorsese dancing on Damon's grave - that was, for me, bracingly, darkly funny, and indeed, unexpected from someone like Scorsese. You're absolutely right that it's about as subtle as, well, a gunshot wound to the head, but for me The Departed was, by and large, not about subtlty - it was about being a dark, funny, operatic comic book of a movie - and within that context, the ending, rat and all, worked like a champ.<BR/><BR/>Damn, sounds like I need to check out more documentaries.<BR/><BR/>Most unfortunate omissions were Cuaron for director, Volver for Foreign Film, and the score from The Painted Veil.<BR/><BR/>I have to say, the nomination I'm most annoyed about is Paul Greengrass'. It's well made, of course, and Greengrass deserves credit for that, but the movie itself struck me as cynical and manipulative in the worst way. <BR/><BR/>Hey, sorry for rambling on, Dennis, and keep up the good work!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169859071518102752007-01-26T16:51:00.000-08:002007-01-26T16:51:00.000-08:00Wow, looks like Edward got a Blogger flogging. I m...Wow, looks like Edward got a Blogger flogging. I managed to get it down to five posts, Edward!<BR/><BR/>On the subject of documentaries, I enjoyed <I>This Film Is Not Yet Rated</I> and appreciate the insight into the MPAA it gave me, but I often found the movie a little too flip and aware of its status as preaching to the choir. The inclusion of a more cogent argument in favor of the MPAA might have made the movie feel less smug to me. And maybe I'm just tiring of the Michael Moore-style antics. On the other hand, you mention <B><I>Anytown USA</I></B> and you are absolutely right-- this movie was riveting, witty, sharp documentary filmmaking. All politics might be local, as the movie's tag line goes, but it shows that even at their most specifically local, the stories behind politics-- greed, hubris, incompetence and vaulting ambition-- are as universal as it comes. I wasn't sure if this was released theatrically this year or not, but I really should have made some mention of this movie earlier. It's powerful, unassuming, brilliant stuff.<BR/><BR/>I did some superficial research, and I think you're right too-- I don't recall a year when four of five Best-Actor nominees were their respective movie's only nominations. I haven't heard Philip Glass's score yet, so I don't know, though you're not the first person I've heard single it out for abuse. Let's see-- worst nominee? How about the near unlistenable songs "Listen": and "Patience" from <I>Dreamgirls</I>? A lot of the <I>original</I> songs in that show were terrible and forgettable, and these two were no better.<BR/><BR/>Flower: I'm with you in your support for <I>The Proposition</I>, but that movie was just too grimy and gruesome and bleak-- I'm unaware of whether any significant money was spent to raise its profle, but I seriously doubt too many people in the Academy even saw it.<BR/><BR/>However, I will disagree with you and Bill re that rat at the end of <I>The Departed</I>. Where you guys saw a perfect little stinger for this rough-and-tumble tale, a great metaphor for Damon and the continued infuence of his like within the halls of power, in Boston and, of course, beyond, I was put off by the obviousness of the joke, and the relative clumsiness with which it was executed. It's been a while since I've seen the movie, so forgive me if I'm misremembering, but doesn't more than one person describe Damon as a filthy rat near the end of the movie? So why did Scorsese, never one with a necessarily light touch, but also never one, in my memory, to go for cheap gags, go with this one? It doesn't tell us anything new and the level at which it is pitched-- far below the sophistication of the rest of the movie, I feel-- caused it to illicit a fair amount of groans in the (small) theater in which I saw it. The movie didn't work for me on a deep level anyway, and I felt Scorsese struggling to keep a lid on Nicholson and keep the tone picthed more toward the dark side thrpoughout. So why would he undermine the effect of his film this way? I know several of you disagree that it was undermining to include that shot, but that was the result for me-- it tipped the movie toward the superficial and leeched away a lot of what might have been haunting residue in my mind.<BR/><BR/>Bill, re <I>The Prestige</I>, I look forward to seeing it again for the very reason you suggest-- plot holes will become clearer if I'm more aware of how my attentions are being misdirected. But that movie's big reveal, involving Bale's assistant, I actually figured it out fairly early on. Yet, curiously, the end result was not a lessening of the impact of the story for me. I remained interested in discovering how the "prestige" was played out, even when the cat (or the rabbit) was out of the bag. This must be interpreted, to some degree, as an attitude that came from being fairly and intelligently respected by the screenplay.<BR/><BR/>Paul: Interesting thought on the Costume Design category. I'm all for historical reserach and everything, but you're right-- rarely do movies whose costumes are an extension or a comment on the characters or the subject matter and themes of the movie manage to get much in the way of attention. That said, it's hard to imagine <I>Marie Antoniette</I>'s costumer getting overlooked, and I've only seen the trailer (It's on DVD Feb. 13). And I was absolutely enthralled (much more so than I was by the film's plot) with the fetishtic detail of the costumes in <I>Curse of the Golden Flower</I>, as well as the director's fetishism in allowing us such a long, close look at them. (I can still remember the the decoration on Gong Li's fingernails and how they were visually integrated with one of her long, delicately layered yellow dresses.)<BR/><BR/>However, and we may have to save this one for another forum, I'm going to have to take issue with your assessment of <I>Bringing Up Baby</I> as overrated! Let's revisit this one soon! :)<BR/><BR/>(Whew. This is what I get for being away from my computer for less than a day!)<BR/><BR/>Chris: I haven't seen <I>Click</I>, so I'm not even sure in what context its award-worthy makeup might occur, but you can bet someone spent some mighty cash to convince enough voters that an Adam Sandler comedy needed to have been/should have been nominated.<BR/><BR/>And come clean, why don't ya? Your heart is definitely still a-pounding over the Oscars-- I recognize the indignant tone! (Oh, man, you should read some of the fully outraged tirades I wrote and used to force all my family and friends to read back in the '80s, when the movies that were nominated were MUCH worse than the crop we're faced with this year. Tell 'em, Blaaagh!)<BR/><BR/>I'm not sure, but I think you're saying there are no good animated movies nominated this year. (Or were you just using this as a "sometimes" example?) If you are, I'll admit my preference for non-nominees like <I>Flushed Away</I> over <I>Cars</I>, but <I>Cars</I> is still I movie I liked-- it's just that <I>Happy Feet</I> and <I>Monster House</I> were ones I adored. Hard to get flustered over this batch of terrific movies.<BR/><BR/>I get your enthusiasm for Scorsese, but (and this isn't the first time I've said this) I don't get the reverence for <I>GoodFellas</I> and I certainly don't get the reverence for <I>The Departed</I>. Both are good movies-- in fact, I might even argue that <I>The Departed</I> holds together from beginning to end in a way that <I>GoodFellas</I> does not. But to me Scorsese remains a great director who, ever since <I>Mean Streets</I> and <I>Taxi Driver</I>, remains in search of another great film-- and this comes from someone who reveres <I>Kundun, The Last Temptation of Christ, The King of Comedy, The Last Waltz</I> and his superb documentaries <I>A Personal Journey Through American Cinema, My Voyage to Italy</I> and <I>Italian-American</I>. <BR/><BR/>I do think it's interesting that <I>POTC: DMC</I> went over so well with you-- it seems to me to be the year's poster boy for the kind of mediocrity that you're accusing Oscar (and often with plenty of evidence) of kowtowing to. And one last thing: I've had this argument with others before, but I really feel I saw different movies than the rest of the public saw when I hear someone putting down the effects in <I>Poseidon</I> and <I>Superman Returns</I>. Of course, no film is going to be letter perfect in this regard, so it seems a bit perverse to grumble about obvious CG crowd scenes or whatever other minuitae it is when the overwhelming sense of both those films is one of extreme success within the visual range they've set for themselves. <I>Poseidon</I> is a well-made, occasionally silly movie, and whether or not you buy into it or not seems the responsibility of the writer, director and actors here. I can't think of one moment in that movie where I thought, "God, that cheap effect just threw me out of the scene." I'd say the same thing for <I>Superman Returns</I>.<BR/><BR/>And wow, if Scorsese still had the kind of pizazz you're imagining when he wins that Oscar, he might just have ended up making a picture that I would find as enthralling as you do.<BR/><BR/>Thanks for stirring it up, Chris! I'm with you on Zsigmond too. And if you ever meet Mott Hupfel, I hope I'm somewhere nearby!<BR/><BR/>And thanks, Manotupapau, for the kick in the ass to do a forum. I hope we can keep this one going for a while yet! (Where do you live that you're so cinema deprived?)<BR/><BR/>As I looked over the list of this year's nominees, I didn't find much to get too hot and bothered about. I still have yet to see a few titles, so maybe that's when my slow boil will begin. But what abouteveryone else? Taking up Chris and Edward's lead, what were the nominations that you all found most annoying? What were the year's most outrageous omissions?Dennis Cozzaliohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01954848938471883431noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169853940569715862007-01-26T15:25:00.000-08:002007-01-26T15:25:00.000-08:00Dennis - Thank's for giving this kind of forum a s...Dennis - Thank's for giving this kind of forum a shot: Hope you're finding it rewarding.<BR/><BR/>I used to worry about the Oscars, but now it only serves one worthwhile purpose to me: to see people talking about films they might not otherwise be talking about. But then, blogs like this have sort of taken over that area for me, so who needs the Oscars? It's almost a bizarre parody of a rite of spring: nubile actresses squeezed into outrageous costumes celebrate the death of the cinematic year - and after that, the sacrificial films are released on DVD for hoi polloi to discuss or not discuss and then one doesn't talk about these movies in polite society anymore. It becomes a rite of national amnesia. (Sometimes, Brokeback Mountain is still rolled out for a tired joke.) <BR/><BR/>There's a perverted sense of competition in trying to say Ryan Gosling is better in Half-Nelson than Leonardo Di Caprio in Blood Diamond (or insert any other two actors/directors/ etc into that formula). How can that be measured? It seems to me the only way to truly criticize a performance (actor, director, whatever) is in terms of its success within its own framework. So, did Di Caprio's performance enhance/weaken Blood Diamond as a film and how so? If Helen Mirren gives a brilliant dramatic performance in The Queen, how can it outdo a brilliant comic performance by Meryl Streep in The DevilWears Prada? (And are they mutually exclusive? I haven't seen either movie yet, but I've read that Streep has a central dramatic moment - does Mirren have no moments of sly lightness in The Queen?) Sorry, I know I'm not saying anything new here, but I seriously suggest that blogs like this are opening up a kind of openness of discussion on films that outdoes any of the ceremonial trappings of the Oscars. People stuck in no-theatre towns like mine can actually join in on a larger discussion and share their views.<BR/><BR/>But you asked about the Oscars, so, perusing the list, I'll say the following: I want to see Babel and The Departed; I really want to see Letters from Iwo Jima; I didn't watch Little Miss Sunshine, but I heard, with a smile, the two hours of bellylaughs it provided the rest of the household (they were watching it downstairs while I was busy reading); I'd really like to see Notes on a Scandal and Little Children and The Last King of Scotland. I'm dying to see Pan's Labyrinth, and thanks to AmazonUK, I'll be able to do that in March; thanks to the same, I was able to watch Children of Men this week. (Although, obviously Children of Men is a terrible movie since it's nominated only for Best Adapted Screenplay and Cinematography and Editing.) So, how's that for a penetrating analysis of the competitors?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169852325112331582007-01-26T14:58:00.000-08:002007-01-26T14:58:00.000-08:00Gee Edward, you really had something to say. This...Gee Edward, you really had something to say. This Film is Not Yet Rated was great, but of course, the irony of the Academy pointing out how arbitrary the movie business is before giving the best picture to something trite and worthless is too much for the Oscars to handle. Thus, it wasn't nominated.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169837307236398972007-01-26T10:48:00.000-08:002007-01-26T10:48:00.000-08:00Brian, I had forgotten about Jonestown. It played ...Brian, I had forgotten about <I>Jonestown</I>. It played here for one week and it was impossible for me to get to it when it did. But thanks for reminding me-- this has been a very good week for adding movies to the Netflix queue.<BR/><BR/>So you're not happy about the coronation of Helen Mirren? Is it because of the performance, the movie, or the whole so-front-runner-she-has-the-award-already status? (A status that the Academy deflated pretty effectively re <I>Dreamgirls</I>.) And who would your choice be, among the ones nominated, and in your perfect world?<BR/><BR/>Thanks for the good wishes. I'm headed to first grade today!Dennis Cozzaliohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01954848938471883431noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169837001021134542007-01-26T10:43:00.000-08:002007-01-26T10:43:00.000-08:00Good luck on your teaching gig, Dennis! You asked...Good luck on your teaching gig, Dennis! <BR/><BR/>You asked for documentaries we thought were snubbed from the list. My pick: <I>Jonestown: the Life and Death of People's Temple</I>. But I guess this year the momentum was behind films that tackle current-day political issues head-on, not historical relevancy.Brian Darrhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17693169310367670898noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169832437339137172007-01-26T09:27:00.000-08:002007-01-26T09:27:00.000-08:00Good morning, everybody.I'm running late today and...Good morning, everybody.<BR/><BR/>I'm running late today and have to leave for a teaching job in about an hour and a half, so I can't stay long. But there's plenty I want to get back to, especially some of Chris S.'s comments and thoughts on Scorsese's rat. So please keep this going. I'll be back.<BR/><BR/><I>Crash</I> plus co-hit <I>CSA</I>. Very interesting. By the way, you can read Benaiah's blog, entitled <I><B>Back to Bard</I></B> right <A HREF="http://tinyurl.com/ynneh2" REL="nofollow">here</A>.<BR/><BR/>As a crutch-bound Arnold so hilariously put it to cap off the Golden Globes a couple of weeks ago, "I'll be back!" (See? Got the same stunned nonresponse he did. There must be a future for me in politics.)Dennis Cozzaliohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01954848938471883431noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169832063849047492007-01-26T09:21:00.000-08:002007-01-26T09:21:00.000-08:00I finished my review of CSA, and posted it on my b...I finished my review of <I>CSA</I>, and posted it on my blog. After watching it a second time it stands out as my pick for movie of the year. I want to organize a double feature of <I>Crash</I> and <I>CSA</I>, just to juxtapose how the two movies make the audience feel.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169830797943147572007-01-26T08:59:00.000-08:002007-01-26T08:59:00.000-08:00I was hoping that The Proposition's screenplay wou...I was hoping that The Proposition's screenplay would get a nomination - and while I loved Ray Winstone in the same picture, I thought Emily Watson gave THE outstanding performance in that film.<BR/><BR/>Loved the last shot of The Departed, but it's about a 50/50 split among my friends (quickly polled in advance of this post!). Aside from making me laugh - a lot - the shot links Damon to the system that tacitly supports the corruption he represents (the capitol dome in the background), suggests that little will really change (Wahlberg's act of vengeance not withstanding), and provides the perfect cynical bookend to the film (following the beginning, which couches Nicholson's rise as a component of Boston's institutionalized racism).<BR/><BR/>Dennis, I just recently watched Three Times (largely based on your recommendation). It was my first Hou, and I thought it was excellent - the way he conveyed different social/political eras was just extraordinary. At first I didn't like the silent section, but by the time I got to the third story, and was able to feel how different each story was - I really started to appreciate the film.<BR/><BR/>And speaking of unheralded performances, has anyone seen Francois Ozon's Time to Leave? There's a sequence toward the middle in which the main character, dying of cancer, goes to visit his grandmother (played magnificently by Jeanne Moreau). It was a beautiful sequence, perfectly played and achingly real. It was a tiny film that didn't really get any attention (I rented it off Netflix), but Moreau's brief performance is extraordinary.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169828827770056312007-01-26T08:27:00.000-08:002007-01-26T08:27:00.000-08:00I loved "The Prestige", too, but I suspect that th...I loved "The Prestige", too, but I suspect that there are some pretty big holes in the plot. I won't know until I've seen it again, and I'll be happy to be wrong, but we'll see...<BR/><BR/>Regarding the last shot in "The Departed": I'd heard nothing but criticism of it, before I saw the movie, but I'd avoided finding out anything about what the shot was. Seeing it, I thought the rat was absolutely fitting. For one thing, it was completely in keeping with the tone of the film. For another thing, I read it as a simple, nasty kick to Matt Damon's corpse. I happen to be very pro-cop, and the movie, cynical as it was, struck me as being very pro-cop, as well (not as much as "Infernal Affairs", but still). While I understand that Scorsese may have been going for something more with the rat-shot (considering which building we see in the background), I'm sticking with my initial reading of it, and on those grounds I thought it worked.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169824874676147102007-01-26T07:21:00.000-08:002007-01-26T07:21:00.000-08:00I'm not going to bore you with all the statistical...I'm not going to bore you with all the statistical nonsense that fascinates me and which seems less and less relevant with each new Oscar year. (I haven't gone all the way back to check, but I think it's unprecedented to have four out of the 5 best actor nominees be the sole nomination for their respective films. The last time someone won best actor on his film's only nomination was Michael Douglas in 1987 for Wall Street and before that Cliff Robertson for Charly in 1968. Still, I don't think this means DiCaprio is winning.) As much as I loathed Babel, I was expecting its nominations, so the nomination the pushed the most vomit up into my throat was Philip Glass for his horrid intrusive score in Notes on a Scandal which almost made the film unwatchable at time.Edward Copelandhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12463676135131274426noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169778543558787572007-01-25T18:29:00.000-08:002007-01-25T18:29:00.000-08:00Some writer I once read (I can't remember who; may...Some writer I once read (I can't remember who; maybe I should steal their idea and see if I can get away with claiming it as my own) suggested that the Oscars should split up the Best Costume category into Best Costume (Period) and Best Costume (Contemporary). <BR/><BR/>I couldn't agree more! This category has arguably featured, year after year, the most unimaginative, narrow nominees of any category in the ceremony except maybe for Best Documentary. It's always a list of five period pictures--movies where the costumes tend to be inspired more by historical research than by insight into the characters. I'm going to sound like much more of a LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE diehard than I really am here, but I thought the costumes in that movie were perfectly chosen and did as much to set the tone of the film as the art direction and the music. Same goes for the costumes in movies like INSIDE MAN and MIAMI VICE.<BR/><BR/>I can certainly understand the criticisms that guys like James Wolcott and Ken Jennings have for LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE, and I feel a little bit helpless in the face of them. All I can think of to say is, the wildly overrated BRINGING UP BABY is full of even more contrived and precious situations than LMS, and people think that thing's a classic. I know, I know: heresy! And I'm not trying to claim that LMS is some kind of underappreciated classic comedy either. But for me, it was funny enough and the cast was charming enough to win me over. (Corpse-stealing scene excepted. And while Alan Arkin is a national treasure, I'd have nominated Greg Kinnear or Steve Carell instead.)<BR/><BR/>Anyway, let me echo the praise for the stinging satire of CSA (my pick for the best film of the year) and the fearlessly committed performance of Sacha Baron Cohen in BORAT, which might be the comedy equivalent of Robert De Niro's work in RAGING BULL.<BR/><BR/>And am I the only person here who thinks THE PRESTIGE deserved a nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay?Paul Matwychukhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01917384620564525389noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169773096970877042007-01-25T16:58:00.000-08:002007-01-25T16:58:00.000-08:00CLICK!?! CLICK!? SERIOUSLY, that CLICK!?Oscar Time...CLICK!?! CLICK!? SERIOUSLY, <I>that</I> CLICK!?<BR/><BR/>Oscar Time! The idea used to set my heart a-pounding... and then I stopped being 12 years old. I don't even know what the Academy pretends the awards mean any longer. The institution that tells us Kevin Costner is a better director than Martin Scorsese is giving out statues? Hooboy. Positing the awards as a competition or a contest obviously offends anyone serious about art, but hey, I'm a sucker for lists, rankings and horse races. The Thing about Olympic competition, though, is that the strongest, fastest, most graceful entrant is supposed to win; the atrocious taste of the nomination and voting bodies and the reality of the procedure align the Oscars as a popularity contest. There is more ideological purity in the motives of the People's Choice Awards.<BR/><BR/>This year's noms continue the 79 year quest to establish a canon of middlebrow claptrap. In most of the categories, there is no real winner. It's impossible to care if any of those men - all (save Gosling) fine actors, all nominated for middling junk - win Best Actor. They weren't the best actors. No Academy member can look you in the eye and say Ryan Gosling gave a better performance than Ray Winstone and Guy Pearce in THE PROPOSITION. That Will Smith's performance will live beyond Hugo Weaving in VENDETTA. That DiCaprio was better in BLOOD DIAMOND than THE DEPARTED. Sadly, the game becomes "which mediocre-to-bad nomination is least offensive?"<BR/><BR/>Sometimes there is no answer. There is no worthy animated feature nominated. There are no good Original Songs nominated. Everyone loses.<BR/><BR/>I'm pulling for THE DEPARTED on all fronts, Wahlberg, Schoonmaker, Scorsese, and Monahan. I'm saddened by the audience indifference to the movie almost as much as I found it enthralling. I just <I>can't stop watching</I> the damned thing, and it's shot onto my list of favorite Scorsese pictures. Granted, I lean toward AFTER HOURS, KING OF COMEDY and AGE OF INNOCENCE: genre is Scorsese's creative hotplate. It is a shame THE DEPARTED's leads were not given any love, though.<BR/><BR/>In a few categories, my preferred picks (or 2nd picks) were actually nominated: PAN'S LABYRINTH's makeup, POTC: DEAD MAN'S CHEST's art direction and effects (and it's up against SUPERMAN RETURNS and POSEIDEN... two films with remarkably <I>bad</I> effects), BORAT's screenplay-or-whatever-it-was. I'm also keeping fingers crossed for Zsigmond and BLACK DAHLIA, though I am one of the few who was not the least disappointed by the film.<BR/><BR/>I Wish Dept.: PIRATES' rousing score was nominated, as well as Depp's fithy/sexy weirdo performance, the diverse and detailed costumes, a few of the supporting players (Nighy and Naomie Harris), and its much-lamented screenplay, which I loved very much. The PIRATES script is a marvel of excess and character-development tangent, like a KILL BILL for kids. I wish INLAND EMPIRE were not snubbed, but I'm far beyond caring what the Academy thinks of David Lynch. I wish DePalma's name were up there. I wish SCANNER DARKLY's Winona Ryder and Keanu Reeves' would replace Will Smith and Kate Winslet.<BR/><BR/>Very, very most of all, I wish Mott Hupfel's cinematography for THE NOTORIOUS BETTIE PAGE were nominated all by itself, with no other contenders. If I ever meet Hupfel, I'm going to tongue-kiss him.<BR/><BR/>I sincerely hope Scorsese steps up to the lectern, grabs his Golden Boy, statue-whips the host and tells the Academy to insert a .44 Magnum in their collective vagina. Now that, you should see. CLICK!Chris Stanglhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06300723935864517305noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169764421985321002007-01-25T14:33:00.000-08:002007-01-25T14:33:00.000-08:00Ken Jennings brings up that final shot in The Depa...Ken Jennings brings up that final shot in <I>The Departed</I>. Since we're talking about endings that hit you in the gut (<I>CSA</I> worked that way for me, as the capper to, as Benaiah says, an escalating historical bonfire), regardless of how everyone felt about the movie as a whole, yea or nay, how did everyone feel about that little joke Scorsese throws in there in the final shot? The cherry on top, or a cheap, obvious zinger? <BR/><BR/>Christian: Off the top of my head, I can't think of a movie shot by Vilmos Zsigmond that didn't look fundamentally amazing-- <I>Jersey Girl</I>, I guess, which would be a rare instance of a brilliant cinematographer not being able to override or inform the visual acuity of the director and bring something extra to the party that normally isn't there in his other movies.<BR/><BR/>As for his work on <I>The Black Dahlia</I>, even though I cared not for the movie, I'd be hard-pressed to find fault with what Zsigmond did with the Panavision palate here. Much like in his work on <I>Blow Out</I>, the darkness of night in <I>Dahlia</I> has a particularly tactile quality, as if it's made of the harshest velvet, and even the California sunshine is given a slightly curdled sheen. It's exciting that none of the nominees in the Cinematography category match the Best Picture nominees, so there's the possibility for some actual suspense here. And the category is full of riches, so even if Zsigmond doesn't win, maybe Lubiezki will...<BR/><BR/>All this talk of cinematographers seems particularly relatable to something I'm experiencing at work right now. In the past few days I've had a chance to look at the 1935 version of <A HREF="http://tinyurl.com/27bkkk" REL="nofollow"><I>Les Miserables</I></A>, starring Fredric March as Valjean and Charles Laughton, gloriously demented here, as Javert. The movie is directed by one Richard Boleslawski, a director of Russian heritage with whom I was previously unfamiliar. A quick check on IMDb reveals he directed other notable movies, including an early version of <I>The Painted Veil</I> (1934) starring Greta Garbo and the first version of <I>Three Godfathers</I> (1936) starring Chester Morris and Walter Brennan.<BR/><BR/>Based on <I>Les Miserables</I>, he's a director who I hope to learn more about and whose movies I hope to see more of. This movie shows off a fascinating visual style, mixing long takes with exressionistic compositions and lingering, imposing close-ups-- it's a patch and a half on the logy 1952 version with Michael Rennie, which seems to be intent on lending weight to all the least important aspects of Hugo's narrative.<BR/><BR/>But my point with <I>Les Miserables</I> is that it was shot by Gregg Toland, and so part of the upcoming investigation of Boleslawski's movies for me is going to be how they vary visually and stylistically from film to film. Because I'm curious to get a handle on how much of <I>Les Miserables</I> was Boleslawski and how much can be reasonably credited to the man who shot <I>Citizen Kane</I>. The only way to get even a slight handle on this is to compare a few of his films and see what they look like stacked up next to each other.<BR/><BR/>I guess what I'm wondering is, is Boleslawski the real thing, or is he Kevin Smith to Toland's Vilmos Zsigmond?Dennis Cozzaliohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01954848938471883431noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169759861761794692007-01-25T13:17:00.000-08:002007-01-25T13:17:00.000-08:00Ken Jennings, the Jeopardy champ, has a very amusi...Ken Jennings, the Jeopardy champ, has a very amusing, quirky blog (www.ken-jennings.com/blog/), which I'd recommend to all. Sometimes, he weighs in on movies. Here is his take on this year's Oscar race:<BR/><BR/> Now i was never a huge fan of, say, Chicago, or Gladiator, but if Little Miss Sunshine wins next month, it’ll be the most clueless Academy Best Picture pick since Forrest Gump in 1994. There’s not one solitary second of this formulaic road-trip crapfest that felt true or honest to me (much less perceptive or lovingly observed) in any way. Not for one moment did I believe any of it. The cast isn’t a family. They’re not even characters. They’re always just actors–and actors I like very much–bouncing around at the “but-wouldn’t-it-be-funny-if” whims of an endlessly quirk-plagued script. The big audience laughs–Grandpa’s doing heroin! Steve Carell’s buying gay porn! Greg Kinnear’s stealing a body!–are just the worst examples; every scene is full of contrived crap like this. The unbearably misconceived pageant finale, from the gag-ridden “we’re-gonna-make-it” car chase borrowed from a 1970s Disney movie all the way down to the queasy striptease, doesn’t work at all–in a way, it’s the apotheosis of clownish unbelievability the movie’s been promising all along.<BR/><BR/>I laughed out loud at the out-of-nowhere ending tacked onto The Departed, and I’d still rather see that flawed movie beat up on Little Miss Sunshine. In fact, I want to see Mark Wahlberg literally beat up Abigail Breslin, preferably while she’s dressed like the Bee Girl from the Blind Melon “No Rain” video. Yup, if Children of Men or Pan’s Labyrinth can’t be nominated, I’m actually rooting for The Departed. For a change, I actually want the sympathy-vote old-timer obviously-lesser-work to win over the token hip indie. Oh yeah, and Peter O’Toole too, sorry Forest. Thank you and good night.The 'Stachehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03426658288145524160noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169759139074235842007-01-25T13:05:00.000-08:002007-01-25T13:05:00.000-08:00That end actually didn't surprise me. For one thi...That end actually didn't surprise me. For one thing, in <I>Ghost World</I> Eden's character uses a piece of found art that I am pretty sure was featured at the end of the movie. The movie's swath seemed so much bigger than the ending that I was almost disappointed that the ending kind of wrapped up the movie like a bow. Honestly, that was the most difficult movie experience I have had in a long time (it didn't help that I was expecting a narrative comedy, not a pseudo-documentary). I just kept punching you in the stomach and topping itself. The whole movie was the answer to that question. I was shocked. I felt guilty, I felt excited because it was such a powerful statement, I felt like it could be widely interpreted as condemnation for everything it references and maybe its focus was much more specific. Just a powerhouse of a movie. <BR/><BR/>I read some negative reviews that focused on the misinterpretation of history and I was disgusted. That is like saying that Dorothy should have encountered a more realistic adventure in Oz. History is lit on fire by the movie, so why worry about accuracy. Anyway, I just stop before I steal my own thunder. I am going to watch the movie again tonight and see how I feel the second time around.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8795280.post-1169758233679639572007-01-25T12:50:00.000-08:002007-01-25T12:50:00.000-08:00Dennis: I haven't posted here since the "Black Dah...Dennis: I haven't posted here since the "Black Dahlia" discussion, during which I attributed the dazzling effect of so many De Palma films to the work of his cinematographers. You liked the idea and said it might deserve a post of its own.<BR/><BR/>I don't know if that's called for, or if you have any further thoughts to share on "Dahlia," which you didn't care for, but I thought this would be an opportune time to ask what you think of Zsigmond's cinematography nomination? Bravo, I say! Even those who didn't care for the storytelling singled out Zsigmond's amazing work.<BR/><BR/>As someone who, at times, has a hard time differentiating between the way a film looks and what a film says -- who thinks that the visuals *are* the story, to a large extent -- I am thrilled with this nomination. Normally, such a nomination wouldn't have a prayer, as the cinematography Oscar so often goes to the Best Picture winner. But this year, with none of the Cinematography nominees matching the Best Picture nominees, I'm holding out hope for a little Oscar glory for "The Black Dahlia."<BR/><BR/>I have the DVD on hold at the library, but I fear a second viewing will be underwhelming. Not so much because of the problems you've pointed to with the script, but because the visual experience of seeing "Dahlia" an a huge screen will be severely compromised on my 27-inch TV set. <BR/><BR/>Then again, if "Dahlia" holds up in that environment, I guess it really is the masterpiece we (few) fans claim it to be! ;)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com