Academy
Awards 2014
(Winners are in
BOLD type, my picks are in purple,
my wished for winner
is in blue- if that is not also my predicted
winner.)
Best Picture
Captain
Phillips
Gravity
12 Years a Slave
Philomena
American
Hustle
Her
Nebraska
The Wolf of
Wall Street
Dallas
Buyers Club
Directing
Alfonso CuarĂ³n, Gravity
Steve
McQueen, 12 Years A Slave
Alexander
Payne, Nebraska
David O.
Russell, American Hustle
Martin
Scorsese, The Wolf of Wall Street
Actor
Christian Bale, American Hustle
Bruce Dern,
Nebraska
Leonardo
DiCaprio, The Wolf of Wall Street
Chiwetel
Ejiofor, 12 Years a Slave
Matthew McConaughey, Dallas Buyers Club
Actress
Cate Blanchett, Blue Jasmine
Sandra Bullock, Gravity
Judi Dench,
Philomena
Amy Adams,
American Hustle
Meryl
Streep, August: Osage County
Supporting Actor
Barkhad
Abdi, Captain Phillips
Bradley Cooper, American Hustle
Michael
Fassbender, 12 Years a Slave
Jared Leto, Dallas Buyers Club
Jonah Hill,
Wolf of Wall Street
Supporting Actress
Sally
Hawkins, Blue Jasmine
Jennifer Lawrence, American Hustle
Lupita
Nyong’o, 12 Years a Slave
Julia
Roberts, August: Osage County:
June Squibb,
Nebraska
Animated Feature Film
The Croods
Despicable
Me 2
Frozen
Ernest &
Celestine
The Wind
Rises
Cinematography
The
Grandmaster, Philippe Le Sourd
Gravity, Emmanuel Lubezki
Inside
Llewyn Davis, Bruno Delbonnel
Nebraska,
Phedon Papamichael
Prisoners, Roger
A. Deakins
Costume Design
American Hustle, Michael Wilkinson
The
Grandmaster, William Chang Suk Ping
The Great Gatsby, Catherine Martin
The
Invisible Woman, Michael O’Connor
12 Years a
Slave, Patricia Norris
Makeup And Hairstyling
Dallas Buyers Club
Jackass
Presents: Bad Grandpa
The Lone
Ranger
Documentary Short Subject
CaveDigger
Facing Fear
Karma Has No
Walls
The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life
Prison
Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hill
Documentary Feature
The Act of
Killing
Cutie and
the Boxer
Dirty Wars
The Square
20 Feet From Stardom
Foreign Language Film
The Broken
Circle Breakdown, Belgium
The Great Beauty, Italy
The Hunt,
Denmark
The Missing
Picture, Cambodia
Omar,
Palestine
Music, Original Score
John
Williams, The Book Thief
Steven Price, Gravity
William
Butler and Owen Pallett, Her
Alexandre
Desplat, Philomena
Thomas
Newman, Saving Mr. Banks
Music, Original Song
“Alone Yet
Not Alone” from “Alone Yet Not Alone”, Music by Bruce Broughton; Lyric by
Dennis Spiegel
“Happy” from
“Despicable Me 2”, Music and Lyric by Pharrell Williams
“Let it Go,” from “Frozen”, Music and Lyric by Kristen Anderson-Lopez
and Robert Lopez
“The Moon
Song,” from “Her”, Music by Karen O; Lyric by Karen O and Spike Jonze
“Ordinary Love,” from “Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom”, Music
by U2; Lyric by Paul (Bono) Hewson
Production Design
American
Hustle
Gravity
The Great Gatsby
Her
12 Years a
Slave
Short Film, Animated
Feral
Get a Horse!
Mr. Hublot
Possessions
Room on the
Broom
Short Film, Live Action
Aquel No Era
Yo (That Wasn’t Me)
Avant Que De
Tout Perdre (Just Before Losing Everything)
Helium
Pitaako Mun
Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)
The Voorman
Problem
Film Editing
American
Hustle
Captain
Phillips
Dallas
Buyers Club
Gravity
12 Years a
Slave
Sound Editing
All Is Lost
Captain
Phillips
Gravity
The Hobbit:
The Desolation of Smaug
Lone
Survivor
Sound Mixing
Captain
Phillips
Gravity
The Hobbit:
The Desolation of Smaug
Inside
Llewyn Davis
Lone
Survivor
Visual Effects
Gravity
The Hobbit:
The Desolation of Smaug
The Lone
Ranger
Iron Man 3
Star Trek
Into Darkness
Writing, Adapted Screenplay
Before Midnight, Richard Linklater, Julie Delpy, Ethan
Hawke,
Captain
Phillips, Billy Ray
Philomena, Steve
Coogan and Jeff Pope
12 Years a Slave, John Ridley
Terence
Winter, The Wolf of Wall Street.
Writing, Original Screenplay
American Hustle, Eric Warren Singer and David O. Russell
Blue
Jasmine, Woody Allen
Dallas
Buyers Club, Craig Borten & Melisa Wallack
Her, Spike
Jonze
Nebraska,
Bob Nelson
Oscar Snubs:
‘Inside Llewyn Davis,’ Robert Redford And Oprah Deserved Better
(By Ann Hornaday, Washington
Post, 16 January 2014)
First, you
kvell. When the 2014 Academy Awards
nominees were announced early Thursday, all ears were attuned to the expected
names. Jared Leto, Lupita Nyong’o, Cate Blanchett, Matthew McConaughey and
Bruce Dern given nods in their respective categories? Check. “Gravity,” “American Hustle” and “12 Years a
Slave” dominating nominations for acting, writing, directing and best picture?
No big surprises there, and all as it should be. Then, you cry. No nomination for Robert
Redford for his astonishing one-man show in the gripping seafaring thriller
“All Is Lost”? Outrage! No Tom Hanks, who delivered such a subtle tour de force
in “Captain Phillips”? The nerve! No Oprah Winfrey or Forest Whitaker for their
superb performances in “Lee Daniels’ The Butler”? Robbed, I tell you, robbed! No love for “Inside Llewyn Davis,” other than
deserved nods for sound mixing and cinematography? (The film’s brilliantly
satiric ditty “Please Mr. Kennedy” should have been a shoo-in for best original
song but was deemed
not original enough due to its sly nods to previous ’60s folk songs.) No
“Stories We Tell” in the lineup for best documentary?
Oh, Academy
of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. You exist to make us crazy. Granted, in a year as strong as 2013, there
are bound to be heartbreaks once the winnowing process begins. But Thursday’s
shutouts were notable, especially the near-complete zotzing of “Saving Mr.
Banks,” a paean to Hollywood studio big-footing (er, collaboration) that only
earned one nomination, for original score. Emma Thompson, who many predicted
would be recognized for her tart portrayal of “Mary Poppins” author P.L.
Travers, went un-lauded, her spot presumably on permanent hold for Meryl
Streep. Still, having nominated nine
films for best picture, surely the Academy could have come up with a 10th in
such a strong year. What a perfect way to honor “Fruitvale Station,” Ryan
Coogler’s stunning debut featuring a quietly electrifying lead performance by Michael
B. Jordan- or at least “Saving Mr.
Banks,” “Blue Jasmine” or “Inside Llewyn Davis.” The day’s biggest “Huh?” came when the
nominees for best original song were announced. Exactly which left field did
“Alone Yet Not Alone” come from, and how did it snag a coveted Oscar
nomination? After the kvelling and the
crying, the questioning begins.
Oscar Nominations: '12 Years A Slave' Remains The Film
To Beat
(By Scott
Feinberg, Hollywood Reporter, 16 January 2014)
At long last, our questions have been
answered! Or have they? The Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced its nominations for the 86th Oscars on Thursday morning,
and while some are undoubtedly feeling disappointed by the choices (i.e. the
campaigns behind Inside Llewyn Davis and the brothers Ethan Coen
and Joel Coen, Saving Mr. Banks and Emma Thompson, Lee
Daniels' The Butler and Oprah Winfrey, Rush, Robert
Redford and Tom Hanks), many have major cause for celebration (i.e. American
Hustle and Gravity, which led the field with 10 noms each, plus Nebraska
and The Wolf of Wall Street, which outperformed most people's expectations).
Now, as we head into the second phase of one of the most wide-open and
competitive Oscar races in recent memory, the question, of course, is what does
it all mean?
My take... Even though it scored one nom
fewer than Hustle and Gravity, 12 Years a Slave remains
the film to beat among the nine best picture nominees. It has what most of the
others lack -- namely, gravitas, social significance and relevance to the
present day, plus the support of most of the key constituencies in the Academy
(actors, directors, writers, film editors, etc.). It basically got everything
that it could have realistically hoped for, save for noms for best
cinematography (Sean Bobbitt hasn't worked much in this country before)
and best original score (Hanz Zimmer being snubbed is bizarre and
perhaps attributable only to the fact that he had several other scores in
contention, as well, including Rush and Man of Steel, which may
have split his support). And, as a result of its strong showing, I suspect that
most of the Academy members who have heretofore resisted seeing the film for
fear of being too disturbed by its content -- a not inconsiderable number, from
what my fellow Oscar bloggers and I have been able to gauge on the circuit --
will reconsider that position and adopt a more conscientious one.
Gravity, meanwhile, looks like the Life of Pi of
this year: a 3D film with amazing visual effects that will have a shot at
winning best picture (although only two other films in the last 58 years -- The
Sound of Music and Titanic -- have won best pic without a screenplay
nom, and no film released predominately in 3D has ever won before); will
probably win best director (Alfonso Cuaron) because of the magnitude of
its ambition and daring; and will clean up in the technical categories (it is
only the fifth film -- after Titanic, Master and Commander: The Far
Side of the World, Hugo and Life of Pi -- to score noms in
all seven technical Oscar categories best cinematography, film editing, best
original score, best sound editing, best sound mixing and best visual effects).
Moving on to American Hustle, it
must be noted that David O. Russell has been on an unbelievable hot
streak these last four years, during which he has directed three films that
received best picture nominations and brought him best director nominations.
(Only 11 other directors -- and only one since 1960 -- have matched the latter
feat.) Even more impressively, he has now directed his actors to noms in each
of the four acting categories for the second year in a row -- this year it's Christian
Bale for best actor, Amy Adams for best actress, Bradley Cooper
for best supporting actor and Jennifer Lawrence for best supporting
actress -- something that has only been done 15 times ever. Talk about
an actors' director!
But does American Hustle have a
clear path to victory in any of its races? The last dramedies to win the best
picture Oscar were Annie Hall 35 years ago and Terms of Endearment
30 years ago, so that may be an uphill climb. And its actors are all thought to
be trailing in their respective races -- Bale behind Dallas Buyers Club's
Matthew McConaughey, The Wolf of Wall Street's Leonardo
DiCaprio, 12 Years a Slave's Chiwetel Ejiofor and Nebraska's
Bruce Dern; Adams behind Blue Jasmine's Cate Blanchett;
Cooper behind Dallas Buyers Club's Jared Leto; and Lawrence
behind 12 Years a Slave's Lupita Nyong'o (although that one is
going to be very close). Consequently, I would think that its strongest shot is
for best original screenplay -- which would bring Russell his first Oscar.
Captain Phillips enters phase two a little wounded, with a best
picture nomination but without two noms that its backers expected it would
have: best director (Paul Greengrass was this year's only DGA nominee
who was snubbed by the Academy) and best actor (Tom Hanks had been
nominated for Globe, Critics' Choice, SAG and BAFTA awards, a quartet that
almost always predicts an Oscar nom). But it did do well elsewhere, with noms
in the supporting actor (Barkhad Abdi), adapted screenplay, film
editing, sound effects and sound mixing categories. Its lack of the directing
nom, in particular, will dissuade many from considering it a film that can win
the best picture Oscar, since only four films have ever won best picture
without one: Wings (1927/28), Grand Hotel (1931/32), Driving
Miss Daisy (1989) and Argo (2012).
Nebraska had a terrific morning, becoming just the eighth
predominately or entirely black-and-white film since 1970 to score a best
picture nomination -- and it did land a spot in the best director lineup
(its helmer, Alexander Payne, probably bounced Greengrass).
Additionally, it scored acting noms (best actor nominee Bruce Dern, 35
years since his last Academy's acknowledgment for Coming Home, becomes
the third oldest man ever nominated in his category, and best supporting
actress nominee June Squibb, who becomes the third oldest woman ever
nominated in her category) and noms for its original screenplay and
cinematography. Its Achilles heel: its lack of a film editing nom (Kevin
Tent was passed over for Dallas Buyers Club's John Mac McMurphy
and Martin Pensa), without which only nine films have ever won the best
picture Oscar. That is also going to be an obstacle for fellow best picture
nominees The Wolf of Wall Street, Philomena and Her.
Speaking of Dallas Buyers Club, a
well-made film about a serious subject, perhaps people should take it a bit
more seriously as a best picture threat than they have up to this point. In
addition to its aforementioned best picture, best actor, best supporting actor
and best film editing noms, it was also acknowledged with noms for best
original screenplay (which Craig Borten worked on for 20 years, the last
11 of them with Melisa Wallack) and best makeup and hairstyling. That's
pretty widespread and broad support. As
The Weinstein Co.'s best picture nominee, you can bet that Philomena, a
small film about a big scandal, will get a major push. The moving drama -- the
talent and subject of which have been getting standing-O's on the Q&A
circuit, of late -- ended up with four total noms: best picture, best actress (Judi
Dench's seventh, all of which have come since she turned 63, a record),
best adapted screenplay (co-star Steve Coogan shares this nom with Jeff
Pope and, as a producer of the film, was also nominated for best pic) and
best original score (Alexandre Desplat's sixth nom in the category over
the last eight years). One of the arguments that will be mounted on Dench's
behalf -- particularly as the 79-year-old remains in England recovering from
recent surgery -- is that, while she has won a best supporting actress Oscar
(15 years ago for Shakespeare in Love), she has never won in the lead
actress category and deserves to as much as anyone. There's definitely some
merit to that argument -- although the same one can be made for Blanchett.
The best picture nom for Her, a
quirky and eccentric film -- a.k.a. "a Spike Jonze film" -- is
certainly not everyone's cup of tea, which led me to suspect that it would make
the cut as a result of the Academy's unusual voting system for the category, which
rewards passionate support (i.e. highly placed votes on even a relatively small
number of ballots) over lower votes on more ballots (i.e. the sort of support
that Saving Mr. Banks and The Butler probably received). But
perhaps it did have broader support than I gave it credit for, since it also
scored noms for best original screenplay, best production design, best original
score and best original song -- if not best director. As for the controversial The Wolf of Wall
Street, I see it as a total wild-card that could do some major damage at
the Oscars or could just as easily go home empty-handed. It's got the support
of directors (Martin Scorsese), actors (DiCaprio was no sure thing for
best actor and virtually no one other than me was predicting Jonah Hill for
best supporting actor -- the 30-year-old is now a two-time Oscar nominee) and
screenwriters (Terence Winter bagged his first Oscar nom). But film
editors, who usually come through for the great Thelma Schoonmaker, did
not this time (perhaps because she was forced to edit so much so quickly and
couldn't do her usual flawless work). And feelings about the film, in general,
are very divided. Its best shot may well be for DiCaprio, who is only 39 but
has given so many strong performances that a considerable number of people
already regard him as overdue for recognition, and who could give Dallas
Buyers Club's McConaughey -- with whom he also shares a terrific scene in Wolf
-- a run for his money.
But, to put this whole morning in context
-- something that I know is not easy for many of us to do, including myself --
I would urge you to consider the following. History will record that the
following great films were not nominated for a single Oscar: Blackfish, Casting
By, Enough Said, Fruitvale Station, Lee Daniels' The
Butler, Out of the Furnace, Rush, Short Term 12, The
Spectacular Now, Stories We Tell and Tim's Vermeer.
Meanwhile, when our grandchildren Google Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa, Iron
Man 3, The Lone Ranger and Star Trek Into Darkness, they will
read that they were Oscar nominees. So,
in short, an exciting morning has produced as many questions as answers -- and
we still have just over six weeks to go until Oscar night!
Oscar Nominations By The Numbers: Fun Facts And Shocking
Stats
(By Scott
Feinberg , Hollywood Reporter, 16 January 2014)
THR's awards analyst dug through the Oscar
record books to see how this year's nominees stack up against the nominees of
yesteryear. The results are fascinating.
For Oscar buffs -- read "Oscar
geeks" -- like me, one of the great thrills of each year's Academy Awards
nominations announcement is the opportunity to dig through the eight-plus
decades of Oscar record books and investigate. There's no way to truly compare
the classics of yesteryear with the finest films of today, but in a weird way
this allows us to do something like that -- and, while that's not particularly
useful, it sure is a blast to do! So, without further ado, here are the fun
factoids and shocking stats that I've come up with about the new crop of Oscar
nominees.
- Sony's American Hustle becomes only the 15th film to score at least one nomination in each of the four acting categories -- and the second David O. Russell film to do so in two years! The others: My Man Godfrey (1936), Mrs. Miniver (1942), For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943), Johnny Belinda (1948), Sunset Blvd. (1950), A Streetcar Named Desire (1951), From Here to Eternity (1953), Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), Bonnie and Clyde (1967), Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), Network (1976), Coming Home (1978), Reds (1981) and Silver Linings Playbook (2012).
- American Hustle becomes only the second film since Reds (1981) to score nominations for best picture, best director, best adapted screenplay or best original screenplay and in each of the four acting categories. The other: Silver Linings Playbook (2012).
- Warner Bros.' Gravity becomes only the sixth film released predominantly in 3D to receive a best picture nomination. The others: Avatar (2009), Up (2009), Toy Story 3 (2010), Hugo (2011) and Life of Pi (2012).
- Paramount's Nebraska becomes the eighth predominantly or entirely black-and-white film since 1970 to score a best picture nomination, following The Last Picture Show (1971), Lenny (1974), The Elephant Man (1980), Raging Bull (1980), Schindler's List (1993, won), Good Night, and Good Luck (2005) and The Artist (2011, won).
- Gravity becomes only the fifth film to score Oscar nominations in all seven technical Oscar categories: best cinematography, film editing, best original score, production design, best sound editing, best sound mixing and best visual effects. The others: Titanic (1997), Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2002), Hugo (2011) and Life of Pi (2012).
- Twenty-seven-year-old Megan Ellison (American Hustle and Her) becomes only the fourth producer -- and the first female producer -- to score more than one best picture Oscar nomination in a single year since 1951. The others: Francis Ford Coppola and Fred Roos (1974's The Conversation and The Godfather, Part II) and Scott Rudin (2010's The Social Network and True Grit).
- Three perennial nominees who never have won an Oscar will have a shot at breaking their losing streaks this year: 12 Years a Slave's 82-year-old costume designer Patricia Norris scored her sixth nom 35 years after her first; Saving Mr. Banks' composer Thomas Newman is 0-for-11 in years past, but maybe the 12th will be the charm; and Prisoners' cinematographer Roger Deakins is hoping that he will finally win on his 11th try.
- Meryl Streep (August: Osage County), with her best actress nomination, extends her record for most nominations by an actor or actress with her 18th. She has scored 15 best actress nominations (winning twice) and three supporting actress nominations (winning once).
- Judi Dench (Philomena), with her best actress nomination, has now scored seven acting nominations, all of which have come since she turned 63. No one else has scored anywhere near as many after the age of 60. (Also, six of her seven noms have come in films distributed by Harvey Weinstein.)
- Jennifer Lawrence (American Hustle), with her best supporting actress nomination, becomes the youngest three-time acting nominee. She is just 23; Teresa Wright was 24 years old when she received her third nomination in 1942.
- Amy Adams (American Hustle), with her best actress nomination, has now scored five Oscar nominations in a span of just nine years. This is her first outside the best supporting actress category.
- Barkhad Abdi (Captain Phillips), with his best supporting actor nomination, becomes the first Somali actor to ever receive an Oscar nomination.
- June Squibb (Nebraska), with her best supporting actress nomination, becomes that category's third oldest nominee ever, at the age of 84 years and 71 days.
- Woody Allen (Blue Jasmine), with his best original screenplay nomination, extends his record for most nominations by a screenwriter. (All 16 of his have come in the original screenplay category.)
- Nebraska becomes the 11th predominantly or entirely black-and-white film to score a best cinematography nom since the elimination of the black-and-white cinematography category in 1967. The others: In Cold Blood (1967), The Last Picture Show (1971), Lenny (1974), Raging Bull (1980), Zelig (1983), Schindler's List (1993, won), The Man Who Wasn't There (2001), Good Night, and Good Luck (2005), The White Ribbon (2009) and The Artist (2011).
- Alexandre Desplat (Philomena) has now scored six noms for best original score, all within the last eight years.
- John Williams (The Book Thief) scores his 44th nomination for best original score, passing the late Alfred Newman to become the category's sole record holder. (Newman still leads Williams for wins, though, nine to five.) Williams has 49 overall nominations, the second most for an individual in Oscar history, trailing only Walt Disney.
- It has been a long time since the Academy last nominated Nebraska's Bruce Dern (35 years), Her's Spike Jonze (14 years) and August: Osage County's Julia Roberts (13 years).
- Thursday brought the first Oscar nominations for eight of this year's 20 acting nominees: Barkhad Abdi, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender, Sally Hawkins, Jared Leto, Matthew McConaughey, Steve McQueen, Lupita Nyong'o and June Squibb.
- Seven of this year's 20 acting nominees are past winners: Christian Bale, Cate Blanchett, Sandra Bullock, Judi Dench, Meryl Streep, Jennifer Lawrence and Julia Roberts.
- American Hustle's Amy Adams, Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence are the only three acting nominees this year who were also nominated last year -- last year Adams was nominated for best supporting actress, Lawrence was nominated for best actress and Cooper was nominated for best lead actor. This year they are all nominated in different categories.
- David O. Russell has now received three best director Oscar nominations within a span of just four years: The Fighter (2010), Silver Linings Playbook (2012) and American Hustle. Only 11 other directors ever -- and only one since 1960 -- have matched that hot streak: Lewis Milestone, Frank Capra, Michael Curtiz, John Ford, William Wyler, Sam Wood, Clarence Brown, John Huston, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Billy Wilder and Clint Eastwood.
- David O. Russell becomes only the seventh filmmaker to receive directing and writing nominations in consecutive years. The others: Billy Wilder, David Lean, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, John Huston, Richard Brooks and Woody Allen (who did it twice).
- Martin Scorsese has now directed more best picture Oscar nominees than any other living director, eight. The Wolf of Wall Street's nom breaks a tie among him, Woody Allen and Steven Spielberg.
- Prior to this year, the last time that every best actor nominee came from a best picture-nominated film was 1966.
- Hayao Miyazaki (The Wind Rises), with his best animated feature nomination for The Wind Rises, the third of his career, becomes the most nominated person in the category's history.
- With its best foreign-language film nomination for The Great Beauty, Italy reduces the margin by which France, which did not score a nom this year, leads it on the tally of most nominated films per country, from 36-27 to 36-28. (If The Great Beauty wins, then Italy will tie France for the most wins for any country, with 13.)
- Catherine Martin (The Great Gatsby), with her best costume design and best production design nominations, becomes the second person to receive nominations in those two categories for the same film in the same year on more than one occasion. She previously did so for Moulin Rouge! (2001). The other person who did so was Piero Gherardi, who did so in three different years (1961, 1963 and 1966).
- Thomas Newman (Saving Mr. Banks), with his best original score nomination for Saving Mr. Banks, has now accumulated 12 noms in the category -- without having ever won -- and extends the Newman family's record of most nominations for a single family to 88. (His relatives include Alfred Newman, Lionel Newman, Emil Newman, Thomas Newman, David Newman and Randy Newman.)
- With its best foreign-language film nomination for The Missing Picture, Cambodia becomes the second country to score a nom in that category for a documentary. The other: Waltz with Bashir (2008).
- Sandra Bullock has now starred in four films that were nominated for the best picture Oscar, all of which were released within the past nine years: Crash (2005), The Blind Side (2008), Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close (2011) and Gravity.
- Leonardo DiCaprio has now starred in seven films that were nominated for the best picture Oscar: Titanic (1997), Gangs of New York (2002), The Aviator (2004), The Departed (2006), Inception (2010), Django Unchained (2012) and The Wolf of Wall Street.
- Tom Hanks has now starred in seven films that were nominated for the best picture Oscar: Forrest Gump (1994), Apollo 13 (1995), Saving Private Ryan (1998), The Green Mile (1999), Toy Story 3 (2010), Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close (2011) and Captain Phillips.
- George Clooney has now starred in six films that were nominated for the best picture Oscar: The Thin Red Line (1998), Good Night, and Good Luck (2005), Michael Clayton (2007), Up in the Air (2009), The Descendants (2011) and Gravity.
- Paramount's The Wolf of Wall Street becomes the movie with the most uses of the word "f---" to receive an Oscar nomination -- no other film, let alone Oscar-nominated film, has ever featured more than its 522.
- In the 86 years in which the best picture category has existed, only 11 films have won that prize without scoring at least one acting nomination: Wings (1927/1928), All Quiet on the Western Front (1929/1930), Grand Hotel (1931/1932), An American in Paris (1951), The Greatest Show on Earth (1952), Around the World in Eighty Days (1956), Gigi (1958), The Last Emperor (1987), Braveheart (1995), The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) and Slumdog Millionaire (2008). That is bad news for the best picture prospects of only one of the nine best picture nominees: Her.
- In the 86 years in which the best cinematography category has existed, only 31 films have won best picture without also being nominated for best cinematography -- one of which was Argo last year. That is bad news for only one of the nine best picture nominees: Her.
- In the 79 years in which the best film editing category has existed, only nine films have won best picture without being nominated for best film editing -- none since Ordinary People (1980) 33 years ago. That is bad news for the best picture prospects of Her, Nebraska, Philomena and The Wolf of Wall Street.
- Categories for story and/or screenplay have existed for all 86 years of Oscar history. In the past 58 years, only two films have won best picture without also being nominated for one of them -- The Sound of Music (1965) and Titanic (1997) 14 years ago. That is bad news for the best picture prospects of only one of the nine best picture nominees: Gravity.
- Of the 10 films nominated for the PGA Award -- which was a fairly accurate predictor of the best picture Oscar under the Academy's old voting system -- eight were also nominated for the best picture Oscar. The PGA nominated two films that the Academy did not (Blue Jasmine and Saving Mr. Banks), and the Academy nominated one film that the PGA did not (Philomena).
- Of the 10 films nominated for the Broadcast Film Critics Association's Critics' Choice Award for best picture -- another fairly accurate predictor of the best picture Oscar under the Academy's previous voting system -- eight were also nominated for the best picture Oscar. The BFCA nominated two films that the Academy did not (Inside Llewyn Davis and Saving Mr. Banks) and the Academy nominated one film that the BFCA did not (Philomena).
- The SAG Awards' ensemble nominations, which have an iffy track record of predicting best picture Oscar nominations, corresponded with only three this year. The two that differed? SAG nominated August: Osage County and Lee Daniels' The Butler, which the Academy did not.
- The SAG Awards' acting nominations -- which corresponded with 19 of 20, 17 of 20 and 14 of 20 of the Academy's nominees over the past three years, respectively -- corresponded with 14 of 20 this year. The only discrepancies: SAG nominated Tom Hanks (Captain Phillips), Forest Whitaker (Lee Daniels' The Butler), Emma Thompson (Saving Mr. Banks), Daniel Bruhl (Rush), James Gandolfini (Enough Said) and Oprah Winfrey (Lee Daniels' The Butler), whom the Academy replaced with Christian Bale (American Hustle), Leonardo DiCaprio (The Wolf of Wall Street), Amy Adams (American Hustle), Bradley Cooper (American Hustle), Jonah Hill (The Wolf of Wall Street) and Sally Hawkins (Blue Jasmine).
- The Golden Globe Awards' acting nominees (10 lead actors and lead actresses and five supporting actors and supporting actresses) -- which corresponded with 15 of 20, 15 of 20 and 16 of 20 of the Academy's nominees over the past three years, respectively -- corresponded with 19 of 20 this time. The only Oscar nominee who was not also a Globe nominee: Hill.
- Hill becomes just the 18th of 260 actors or actresses since 2001 to score an Oscar nomination without having received either a SAG or Globe nom en route to the big show.
- Hanks, Thompson and Bruhl become just the 20th, 21st and 22nd of 260 actors or actresses since 2001 to score both SAG and Globe nominations but not an Oscar nom.
- Of the nine best picture nominees, zero were released during the
spring or summer, eight were released during the fall (Gravity on
Oct. 3, Captain Phillips on Oct. 10, 12 Years a Slave on
Oct. 17, Dallas Buyers Club on Nov. 1, Nebraska on Nov. 15, Philomena
on Nov. 22, American Hustle on Dec. 12 and Her on Dec. 18)
and one was released during the winter (The Wolf of Wall Street on
Dec. 25).
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/race/oscar-nominations-by-numbers-fun-671357?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_term=hollywoodreporter_therace&utm_campaign=THR%20Race%20Alerts_now_knordyke
MY PICK: (1) American Hustle; (2) 12 Years a Slave; (3) The Wolf of Wall Street
MY PICK: David O. Russell (American Hustle)
MY PICK: Christian Bale (American Hustle)
MY PICK: Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine)
MY PICK: Bradley Cooper (American Hustle)
MY PICK: Jennifer Lawrence (American Hustle)
MY PICK: 12 Years a Slave
MY PICK: American Hustle
MY PICK: I abstain.
MY PICK: I abstain.
MY PICK: The Hunt
MY PICK: Gravity
MY PICK: American Hustle
MY PICK: American Hustle
MY PICK: Dallas Buyers Club
MY PICK: I abstain.
MY PICK: I abstain.
MY PICK: American Hustle
MY PICK: Gravity
MY PICK: Gravity
MY PICK: Gravity
MY PICK: I abstain.
MY PICK: (1) 12 Years a Slave; (2) Dallas Buyers Club; (3) Gravity; (4) Captain Phillips; (5) American Hustle; (6) Her; (7) Nebraska; (8) The Wolf of Wall Street; (9) Philomena
MY PICK: Alfonso Cuaron (Gravity)
MY PICK: Matthew McConaughey (Dallas Buyers Club)
MY PICK: Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine)
MY PICK: Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club)
MY PICK: Lupita Nyong'o (12 Years a Slave)
MY PICK: 12 Years a Slave
MY PICK: Dallas Buyers Club
MY PICK: I abstained.
MY PICK: I abstained.
MY PICK: I abstained.
MY PICK: Gravity
MY PICK: I abstained.
MY PICK: Captain Phillips
MY PICK: Dallas Buyers Club
MY PICK: Saving Mr. Banks
MY PICK: "Let It Go" (Frozen)
MY PICK: I abstained.
MY PICK: Lone Survivor
MY PICK: Lone Survivor
MY PICK: Gravity
BEST DIRECTOR
[Martin] Scorsese went a little over the top on certain things, but that's kind of what he does; he doesn't really "get down." But, anyway, this wasn't a question for me. It's [Alfonso] Cuaron. [Gravity] was a massive movie, and a lot of people worked on it, but he was the boss. How do you shoot that movie? How do you direct actors without anything around them? How do you even pitch that movie? I thought it was a rare, singular achievement.
VOTER PROFILE: This Oscar voter is a member of the Academy's 377-member directors branch.
MY PICKS: (1) Gravity, (2) American Hustle, (3) Captain Phillips
MY PICK: Alfonso Cuaron (Gravity)
MY PICK: Matthew McConaughey (Dallas Buyers Club)
MY PICK: Sandra Bullock (Gravity)
MY PICK: Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club)
MY PICK: Lupita Nyong'o (12 Years a Slave)
MY PICK: Captain Phillips
MY PICK: American Hustle
MY PICK: Frozen
MY PICK: The Square
MY PICK: The Hunt
MY PICK: "Happy" (Despicable Me 2)
MY PICK: Captain Phillips
MY PICK: Captain Phillips
MY PICK: Gravity
MY PICK: Get a Horse!
MY PICK: The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life
MY PICK: Helium
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/race/brutally-honest-oscar-voter-ballot-684849?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_term=hollywoodreporter_therace&utm_campaign=THR%20Race%20Alerts_2014-03-02%2014%3A00%3A00%20America%2FLos_Angeles_ehayden
Oscar Voter Reveals Brutally Honest Ballot
(Anonymous, As
told to Scott Feinberg, Hollywood Reporter, 26 February 2014)
This story is the first of five
"brutally honest" Oscar ballots shared with THR by Academy members,
one of which will post each day leading up to the Oscar ceremony on Sunday,
March 2.
BEST PICTURE
Captain Phillips struck me as a slightly hokey, overacted, not
particularly gripping action movie. Gravity pales in
comparison with Cosmos, Neil deGrasse Tyson's
recent 13-part reboot of Carl Sagan's famous TV series about the
universe. Philomena, which I've wanted to call Philomania ever
since the Golden Globes, was an effective tearjerker -- I was moved by it --
but that doesn't make it a great film. Nebraska was skillfully done but
limited by its limited ambitions and its’ overly measured pace. Her interested
me because of my complete ignorance of everything in it -- it was like sitting
through a class that I wasn't necessarily enjoying but that I knew was good for
me. (And just because I fall asleep in a movie doesn't necessarily mean I don't
admire and like it; I've actually occasionally fallen asleep in my own
movies.) Dallas Buyers Club was very good, and I was engaged
by it all the way through, but there were no real surprises in it. The
Wolf of Wall Street has almost nothing to say, but I found it
hysterically funny. Conversely, with 12 Years a Slave, you don't
even crack a smile, but it was interesting, admirable and well done; I must
say, though, that contrary to what some have asserted, it's not as if it
required great courage to make that movie -- maybe if you made it in
Mississippi in 1930. As for American Hustle, its ambition is not
overwhelming, but it takes an interesting subject and very interesting
characters and delivers 100 percent on what could be done with it in a very
engaging, entertaining, interesting and truthful way. I would not put it in the
legendary masterpiece category, but it doesn't fail on any level.MY PICK: (1) American Hustle; (2) 12 Years a Slave; (3) The Wolf of Wall Street
BEST DIRECTOR
David O. Russell, hands down. Steve McQueen made an
admirable movie, but I don't think it's remotely as ambitious or good as his
previous film, Shame. Wolf is like Casino and GoodFellas
-- fun, bubble-gum Scorsese. Payne -- whatever. And Cuaron was part of a committee
of technicians who made that movie, and I have seen things at the planetarium
that were at least as impressive. MY PICK: David O. Russell (American Hustle)
BEST ACTOR
Ejiofor was
good. DiCaprio has been better; this is a popcorn performance.
McConaughey was very good; he's really doing some great stuff now, and I would
give it to him for True Detective. Dern is a great guy
and a friend and is excellent in the movie, and if I were not as taken by
Bale's performance as I am, I would have voted for him. But Bale had a much
juicier role -- Dern's role is very contained, whereas Bale is all
over the place -- so I had to go with him. It's the role of a lifetime. MY PICK: Christian Bale (American Hustle)
BEST ACTRESS
Blanchett has to win this.
Bullock is the weak link -- she's just OK. For Streep, whom I love,
this is a bottom-drawer performance. Dench is a terrific actress, and
she's very good in this film. Adams I love. But you have to vote for who's
truly the best, and to me, Blanchett -- whom I'm normally not that
wild about, with the exception of Bandits -- is that. She was
just a revelation; she was just spectacular. MY PICK: Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Everyone was at least very good, but
Cooper was the best. I think this is the best he's been in anything. If he
wasn't in the category, I'd probably end up voting for Jonah Hill,
only because I found him so funny. Jared Leto was good
and will win, but he's getting tremendous points because of the person he's
playing more than the way he played it, which is as close to pandering as you
can get.MY PICK: Bradley Cooper (American Hustle)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Lawrence and Hawkins are the two obvious
best of the five. Hawkins had a difficult part -- it's not an attractive role,
and she's intentionally overshadowed constantly by Blanchett, but she
registers strongly in each scene she's in. Jennifer was even better -- she has
that extra level of excitement in every scene she's in. She just dazzles; she's
always doing something original and bold and surprising and believable. June
Squibb was fine. Julia Roberts was horrendous.
And Lupita was very good, but a lot of the commotion over her is
attributable to people's tremendous empathy with and sympathy for the role
she's playing. MY PICK: Jennifer Lawrence (American Hustle)
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
12 Years a Slave wins easily. Wolf is
enjoyable, and if you were giving awards for most fun, it probably would be the
biggest winner this year, along with American Hustle, which is a
much better movie overall. On the other hand, by that logic, Step
Brothers would have won. Philomena is an earnest and
emotionally effective tearjerker, but that doesn't mean its script is
great. Captain Phillips is one step above hokum. And Before
Midnight is a travesty of ineptitude and dreadful writing, like the
other two in that horrible trilogy -- if I was sitting next to those people, I
would run in the opposite direction. MY PICK: 12 Years a Slave
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
All five scripts are extremely good. Her is
a worthy contender, and what it has over the others is that it's completely
original, but, even though I was impressed by the movie, I found myself nodding
out periodically, so that meant I couldn't put it on the same level as American
Hustle and Blue Jasmine. I often choose personal
friendship when I am torn between two almost equally good options, but in this
case I'm friends with both David and Woody, so that doesn't help. … I'm going
for American Hustle because Woody has already been
overwhelmingly rewarded. I feel very badly about the absurd bullshit that's
flying Woody's way, but that can't intrude one way or the other on voting. Both
films have literally not a single dead spot in them.MY PICK: American Hustle
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
I have seen none of them. I have no
interest whatsoever. That ended when I was 6. My son dragged me to a few when
he was 6; I would seat him and go outside and make phone calls. MY PICK: I abstain.
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
I actually liked several of the movies,
especially 20 Feet From Stardom, but I refuse to dignify the
category by voting in it. Even with its new rules, the documentary category has
about as much claim to legitimacy as the Bush-Gore presidential election. It's
an incestuous little club. MY PICK: I abstain.
BEST FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM
I immediately rule out Palestine for Omar because
I saw it, and it's a bunch of f---ing anti-Semitic swine. The Hunt was
the best, by far -- the performance, the writing, the boldness of the
approach. The Great Beauty is
unbelievably f---ing slow and dull; that's another movie where you
can sit there and pass out five times and miss nothing. I stopped Broken
Circle Breakdown halfway and Cambodia's after 20 minutes.MY PICK: The Hunt
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
There was some pretty impressive stuff
in Gravity. I didn't think any of the other movies were shot on the
level of the really great films -- Prisoners was excellent but
a cut below Roger Deakins' best work, such as Andrew Dominik's film
and the Coen brothers' films -- but Gravity was. MY PICK: Gravity
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
American Hustle, unquestionably. Everything about the period is
done not only accurately and believably but adds to the movie. I lived through
that period, and it all rang true. MY PICK: American Hustle
BEST FILM EDITING
American Hustle is light years better than anything else.
There is nothing but sharp cuts and rhythm in the movie -- there is not a
wasted frame. Captain Phillips is, to me, the chickenshit way
of editing; it's usually done because you're terrified of boring the audience,
so you keep cutting, and it actually becomes unbelievably tedious and
headache-inducing, and it's not the way the mind perceives reality, either.
And 12 Years a Slave had about 15 to 20 minutes of sluggish,
boring stuff that I would have ripped out.MY PICK: American Hustle
BEST MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
To me, the only one is Dallas Buyers
Club. It's the most prominent thing about the movie. It works unbelievably.
I was aware of it, and ordinarily when you say you're aware of something it
means it's not working very well, but I was aware of it as something that was
done very skillfully and believably. I was shocked to hear it had a $250 budget
for makeup.MY PICK: Dallas Buyers Club
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
I found all five scores inferior. Desplat
has done a number of exceptionally good scores, but Philomena is not one
of them, so I'm not gonna vote for him this year.MY PICK: I abstain.
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
I didn't vote because I regard all four
songs as utterly inferior and not worth voting for. To dignify any of them with
a vote is to suggest that they're worthy of a nomination, and they're not;
they're just bad songs. And, as for disqualifying the fifth nominee? The rules
are so petty and stupid, these people should get a life -- it's embarrassing.
They're like sub-basement, quasi-Talmudic scholars.MY PICK: I abstain.
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
I would immediately eliminate 12 Years
a Slave and Gravity. The other three would all be worthy winners -- Gatsby,
for instance, was not a good movie, but it still popped and came alive,
especially in 3D -- but I liked American Hustle the most overall so I
voted for it. It was well-done and accurate, in terms of the period, and each
set is done in a way that adds to the believability and the character of the
scene.MY PICK: American Hustle
BEST SOUND EDITING
Most of the time, who knows what was
recorded on the set, as opposed to what was added in post? I generally vote for
the movie with the best overall sound in both sound categories.MY PICK: Gravity
BEST SOUND MIXING
Even though I thought Inside Llewyn Davis was
an atrociously bad movie, the sound mixing was good. But the best sound mixing
was for Gravity, by far. It had a very clean track. MY PICK: Gravity
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Four of them are completely without
interest of any kind whatsoever on any level, and Gravity's effects, in
3D, anyway, are terrific. So this isn't even a contest.MY PICK: Gravity
BEST ANIMATED SHORT, BEST DOCUMENTARY
SHORT and BEST LIVE-ACTION SHORT
I don't watch the shorts. And, if I don't
know anybody who made one of them -- a friend or an enemy -- I just don't vote,
which was the case this year.MY PICK: I abstain.
Oscar Voter Reveals Brutally Honest Ballot # 2
(Anonymous, As
told to Scott Feinberg, Hollywood Reporter, 27 February 2014)
This is the second of five "brutally
honest" Oscar ballots shared with THR by Academy members, one of which
will post each day leading up to the Oscar ceremony on Sunday, March 2.
Needless to say, these voters' views are not necessarily endorsed by Scott
Feinberg or THR.
VOTER PROFILE: This Oscar voter is a longtime member of the
Academy's 418-member sound branch.
BEST PICTURE
12 Years a Slave impacted me the most as a moviegoer and as a
father, so it was my number one. Dallas Buyers Club also really moved me
-- just watching him change his heart. I thought Gravity was really
phenomenal. I love Captain Phillips, just like I love all Tom Hanks
movies; it was a travesty that its director wasn’t nominated. American
Hustle I liked because everyone in its ensemble did a great job. Her
was interesting, but it was a little too weird for me. Nebraska was like
watching paint dry -- it just bored me to death. Wolf of Wall Street was
just so gratuitous and offensive -- it’s supposed to be funny to watch people
get screwed over by this schmuck? I had a friend who was wiped out by Bernie
Madoff. And, finally, Willamena [Editor's note: Philomena],
which was not my cup of tea.MY PICK: (1) 12 Years a Slave; (2) Dallas Buyers Club; (3) Gravity; (4) Captain Phillips; (5) American Hustle; (6) Her; (7) Nebraska; (8) The Wolf of Wall Street; (9) Philomena
BEST DIRECTOR
[Alexander] Payne and [Martin]
Scorsese were immediately out for me. [Steve] McQueen or [David
O'] Russell would deserve to win if we were just talking about
directing actors. But [Alfonso] Cuaron got my vote because the
fact that his movie got made at all is amazing and groundbreaking. I know
people who worked on it who said he is a control freak and was all over every
aspect of it.MY PICK: Alfonso Cuaron (Gravity)
BEST ACTOR
[Christian] Bale did a great
job, but the ensemble resonated for me more than any one person. I just need
more going on than [Bruce] Dern gave me. [Leonardo] DiCaprio
was great but I got tired of the movie -- it was just way too long and
repetitive. The guy in 12 Years a Slave -- I can never pronounce his
name -- was just phenomenal. And yet I was really taken with [Matthew] McConaughey,
even though I have not really been a fan in the past. He was just ridiculously
good -- plus the weight loss and what he had to do was just unbelievable. This
was the hardest choice for me.MY PICK: Matthew McConaughey (Dallas Buyers Club)
BEST ACTRESS
My wife loved Willamina, but I
didn’t care for it. [Sandra] Bullock was good, but it was hard
for me to not see Sandra Bullock—or George Clooney. Meryl Streep
is just always fantastic; I never feel that she’s just doing the same shit. Amy
Adams did a phenomenal job, but I didn’t love the movie. [Cate] Blanchett
was bold; I don’t think you could have found any person on the planet who could
have played that role better.MY PICK: Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Jonah Hill was out from the gate for me -- I just can’t. Bradley
Cooper was good. But Jared Leto gave a crazy performance, truly
becoming this person. I thought he was flawless.MY PICK: Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
I’m not usually a big Julia Roberts
fan, but I thought she did a fantastic job -- it was really gritty and ballsy
and didn’t remind me of everything else she’s already done. Jennifer
Lawrence does a great job, but I didn’t feel like she had enough screen
time. But the 12 Years a Slave woman I just found to be so compelling;
she ripped my heart out. For me, it’s all about the impact a movie or a
character has on me.”MY PICK: Lupita Nyong'o (12 Years a Slave)
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
I went with Slave because it
resonated so much with me. I was so taken by the story and it had the biggest
impact on me.MY PICK: 12 Years a Slave
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
I liked Hustle, but I voted for the
script that I think produced the most beautiful movie, and that’s Dallas
Buyers Club.MY PICK: Dallas Buyers Club
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
I thought Frozen was amazing, and
my personal favorite was Despicable Me 2, but I didn’t see all of the
nominees, so I didn’t vote.MY PICK: I abstained.
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
I have only watched 20 Feet from
Stardom because so many people were talking about that. I’m a big music fan
and I thought it was incredible. But I don’t think I’m gonna vote because I
haven’t watched all of the nominees. We only got these movies last weekend, and
this week I’ve been slammed trying to finish a movie, so I didn’t have time to
see more.MY PICK: I abstained.
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
I haven’t watched them.MY PICK: I abstained.
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Gravity begs the question: What’s cinematography and
what’s visual effects? I talked to some cinematographer friends and they
assured me that a lot of what looks great in the film is owed to its camera
work.MY PICK: Gravity
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
I don’t think it’s fair to those nominees
to have someone voting who has no idea what they did and what their challenges
were.MY PICK: I abstained.
BEST FILM EDITING
One of my dear friends is the editor of Captain
Phillips, so how do you think I voted? I also happen to think he did a
phenomenal job.MY PICK: Captain Phillips
BEST MAKEUP & HAIRSTYLING
I voted for my favorite movie in the
category: Dallas Buyers Club.MY PICK: Dallas Buyers Club
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
I voted for Thomas Newman, who is a
dear friend and has been nominated an ungodly amount of times but has never
won. His score is the standout thing of that movie.MY PICK: Saving Mr. Banks
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
U2’s was a decent song and they’ve had a
lot of publicity. But, for me, it’s about how a song serves a movie, so I went
with the Frozen song. It’s a beautiful song and it’s the heart of that
film. I thought it was a home run.MY PICK: "Let It Go" (Frozen)
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
I know that I don’t know enough to vote
for this category.MY PICK: I abstained.
BEST SOUND EDITING
They were all really nicely done. Some are
more distinct than the others. Gravity is a very cool mix because of the
way they muted sounds to create the sense of being in space -- and it has the
best campaign. Captain Phillips is not something we’ve never heard
before -- boats, guns, underwater activity -- but it was really well done. But,
in my opinion, Lone Survivor was just better. It takes a lot of work to
bring a war movie to life.MY PICK: Lone Survivor
BEST SOUND MIXING
Lone Survivor was done incredibly well. It was really nicely
balanced, with a lot of movement and a lot of directional perspective, which
really gives you a sense of space and makes you feel as if you were that
soldier, right in the middle of it.MY PICK: Lone Survivor
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Gravity was a cinematic spectacle unlike anything that’s
ever been done before. The Hobbit? Been there, done that.MY PICK: Gravity
BEST ANIMATED SHORT
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT
BEST LIVE-ACTION SHORT
MY PICK: I abstained.BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT
BEST LIVE-ACTION SHORT
Brutally Honest Oscar Voter Ballot No. 3
(Anonymous, As
told to Scott Feinberg, Hollywood Reporter, 28 February 2014)
A member of the Academy's executives
branch talks THR's Scott Feinberg through his picks: "Gravity" is
"spiritual," I'm voting for "the 'Captain Phillips' guy"
and "Dallas Buyers" makeup succeeds in making stars "look like
they're really dying!"
BEST PICTURE
Only your top two or three really matter. My number one is Gravity. I just think it's a special movie -- and it's about something, too. You know, people criticize the screenplay, but, having seen it again, I disagree. Like most good movies, it's about the power of the human spirit. I mean, she basically didn't make her comeback until she decided that it was time to die and turned off all the knobs, and then old George came bouncing back in -- only it wasn't really George, it was her, because something in the human spirit said, "You can't quit." So I thought it was pretty spiritual. The same sort of thing applies to 12 Years a Slave, which is my number two. American Hustle is number three. And then Philomena -- it was kind of my favorite movie, but that doesn't necessarily make it the best movie. That character just had such a generous spirit, taking the good out of everything, very much like the 109-year-old woman in the documentary short. And then, after that, they're all kind of on the same level. Her and Nebraska I liked. Dallas Buyers Club was just a good, solid movie. I like Wolf of Wall Street, and I've liked it more since everyone started attacking it, because I think the attacks were really unfair. DiCaprio and Hill were amazing, but the movie was a little superficial. And then Captain Phillips.
Only your top two or three really matter. My number one is Gravity. I just think it's a special movie -- and it's about something, too. You know, people criticize the screenplay, but, having seen it again, I disagree. Like most good movies, it's about the power of the human spirit. I mean, she basically didn't make her comeback until she decided that it was time to die and turned off all the knobs, and then old George came bouncing back in -- only it wasn't really George, it was her, because something in the human spirit said, "You can't quit." So I thought it was pretty spiritual. The same sort of thing applies to 12 Years a Slave, which is my number two. American Hustle is number three. And then Philomena -- it was kind of my favorite movie, but that doesn't necessarily make it the best movie. That character just had such a generous spirit, taking the good out of everything, very much like the 109-year-old woman in the documentary short. And then, after that, they're all kind of on the same level. Her and Nebraska I liked. Dallas Buyers Club was just a good, solid movie. I like Wolf of Wall Street, and I've liked it more since everyone started attacking it, because I think the attacks were really unfair. DiCaprio and Hill were amazing, but the movie was a little superficial. And then Captain Phillips.
MY PICKS: (1) Gravity, (2) 12
Years a Slave, (3) American Hustle, (4) Philomena, (5) Her,
(6) Nebraska, (7) Dallas Buyers Club, (8) The Wolf of Wall
Street, (9) Captain Phillips
BEST DIRECTOR
[Martin] Scorsese went a little over the top on certain things, but that's kind of what he does; he doesn't really "get down." But, anyway, this wasn't a question for me. It's [Alfonso] Cuaron. [Gravity] was a massive movie, and a lot of people worked on it, but he was the boss. How do you shoot that movie? How do you direct actors without anything around them? How do you even pitch that movie? I thought it was a rare, singular achievement.
MY PICK: Alfonso Cuaron (Gravity)
BEST ACTOR
It's almost impossible to choose --
there's nobody weak in this group. For me, it came down to [Matthew] McConaughey
and "Chewy" [Chiwetel Ejiofor]. If you gave it to the actor
who had the best year, there's no question it's McConaughey, who was so good in
Mud, Wolf and now True Detective. But Chewy was so great
in his movie.
MY PICK: Chiwetel Ejiofor (12 Years a Slave)
BEST ACTRESS
Meryl Streep's entrance was the best of any of them, but I thought the movie was kind of mediocre. Amy Adams was fantastic -- she's never been not fantastic; she was fantastic in Her! -- but she and Streep were pieces of ensembles, whereas the others really stood out. Sandra Bullock carries her whole movie on her back, and her performance is particularly impressive when you see how her movie was made, but she won just a couple of years ago. [Judi] Dench is the hardest one not to vote for. But, in the end, it's Cate [Blanchett] because you just have never seen anybody do what she does in that way -- changing moods on a dime and everything -- except Vivien Leigh [in A Streetcar Named Desire], I guess. Plus I "know" that girl [the sort of woman Blanchett portrays], and she nailed it. I don't know anybody else who could have done it.
Meryl Streep's entrance was the best of any of them, but I thought the movie was kind of mediocre. Amy Adams was fantastic -- she's never been not fantastic; she was fantastic in Her! -- but she and Streep were pieces of ensembles, whereas the others really stood out. Sandra Bullock carries her whole movie on her back, and her performance is particularly impressive when you see how her movie was made, but she won just a couple of years ago. [Judi] Dench is the hardest one not to vote for. But, in the end, it's Cate [Blanchett] because you just have never seen anybody do what she does in that way -- changing moods on a dime and everything -- except Vivien Leigh [in A Streetcar Named Desire], I guess. Plus I "know" that girl [the sort of woman Blanchett portrays], and she nailed it. I don't know anybody else who could have done it.
MY PICK: Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
I'm gonna vote for the Captain Phillips
guy. They're all amazing -- with Jared Leto, who's great, my only
problem is that I just really didn't love the movie that much. But, with Captain
Phillips, there's no movie without that guy. He was completely, 100%
credible, and he stood toe-to-toe with Tom Hanks.
MY PICK: Barkhad Abdi (Captain Phillips)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
I immediately eliminated Julia Roberts;
it really wasn't my favorite movie. Sally Hawkins and June Squibb
were fantastic. Jennifer Lawrence was great, and I loved the movie, but
it never occurred to me that her part was all that determinative in the movie.
I was completely amazed by Lupita Nyong'o's performance -- she really
brought a kind of humanity to it, an intelligence to it and a sexuality to it;
she was not afraid to have that character sexualized, and that's dangerous
territory for a slave to play sexuality.
MY PICK: Lupita Nyong'o (12 Years a
Slave)
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
It's a very strong category. I was torn between 12 Years and Philomena. In the end, I think it was tougher to write the character of Philomena. They had to create a vehicle for her story -- this trip to the United States, which didn't really happen, but which works perfectly. And I don't disagree with some who have complained that with 12 Years, you lose any sense of where you are in that 12-year period; it was a very good movie, but you don't always know where you are on the journey -- and that section with Brad Pitt almost felt like it was from another movie.
It's a very strong category. I was torn between 12 Years and Philomena. In the end, I think it was tougher to write the character of Philomena. They had to create a vehicle for her story -- this trip to the United States, which didn't really happen, but which works perfectly. And I don't disagree with some who have complained that with 12 Years, you lose any sense of where you are in that 12-year period; it was a very good movie, but you don't always know where you are on the journey -- and that section with Brad Pitt almost felt like it was from another movie.
MY PICK: Philomena
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
I saw Blue Jasmine twice and I
thought it was very good and stronger than it has been given credit for in the
script department, but I don't think it holds a candle to Her and American
Hustle. I think American Hustle is more ambitious, in a certain way.
MY PICK: American Hustle
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
I don't see much of a contest here. Frozen
is intelligent, empowering and inspiring.
MY PICK: Frozen
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
I think they're all worthy and they're all
important. Dirty Wars is important, even if it was about the journalist
[Jeremy Scahill] -- who I see on [HBO's Real Time with] Bill
Maher -- as much as it was about the subject, which is not my favorite
style. I liked The Square a lot. But, for me, it comes down to Act of
Killing and Twenty Feet [from Stardom]. With Act of Killing,
you can't help but wonder, "How the f--- did he make that movie?" To
get that guy to open up emotionally? And I also thought the whole notion of the
recreation was a very interesting idea. But I just wanted to vote for Twenty
Feet. It's a very excellent movie.
MY PICK: Twenty Feet from Stardom
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
The Missing Picture was very interesting and very good, but a
little too weird. I was knocked out by The Great Beauty visually, and I
thought the character was very interesting; I didn't quite get the culture, but
I did like it. Broken Circle Breakdown was a fantastic, strange
combination of genres -- ultimately too strange. Mads Mikkelsen in The
Hunt may be the performance of the year -- it's like, "Holy
shit!" -- and that's a really fantastic movie. And, as for Omar,
that guy is a fantastic filmmaker; Paradise Now is one of my favorite
movies, and Omar is riveting all the way through -- you don't see where
it's going.
MY PICK: Omar
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
They're all very well shot. I liked Llewyn
Davis, but I don't know that the photography on that was determinative. Nebraska
in black-and-white was fantastic. Prisoners is Roger Deakins, who
has never shot a bad film in his career. But, for me, this is between Gravity
and The Grandmaster, which are so different but both amazing. I heard
that they shot The Grandmaster for three years -- the scene in the train
station in the rain alone took 40 days -- and the director sometimes didn't
even tell the cinematographer what he wanted shot, but just where to shoot it,
so he was almost a co-director, in a way. And then there's Gravity,
which is really a revolutionary film. There was such a stink about
cinematography versus visual effects last year with Life of Pi that I
decided to ask a couple of DPs about that this year, and they uniformly said
that they did not have the same reservations this year about Gravity.
So, in the end, I came down for Gravity.
MY PICK: Gravity
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
The costumes in Gatsby are pretty
amazing. Hustle's costumes really brilliant. But -- and I realize this
may be throwing away a vote -- I really think the costumes in The
Grandmaster were amazing.
MY PICK: The Grandmaster
BEST FILM EDITING
There's not really a lot of set pieces in Captain
Phillips to use for building tension, so it really falls upon the editing
to do that, and it does that well. It's old school: You take two boats and 10
guys and you turn it into an intense movie. But I'm still gonna go with Gravity
because that movie is a miracle.
MY PICK: Gravity
BEST MAKEUP & HAIRSTYLING
Look at those two in Dallas Buyers Club.
Between the androgyny of Leto and the gauntness and the disease of both of them
, they really look like they're dying! I read about how they did it and it's
mind-blowing. I saw that as an extraordinary part of the movie.
MY PICK: Dallas Buyers Club
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
They're all fine scores -- I listened to
all of them -- but Gravity stands apart. That's a big chunk of the
movie! That whole kind of mystery, eeriness and spaciousness was really
determinative.
MY PICK: Gravity
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
I liked them all. "Happy" is a
very cool song. "Let It Go" is a certain kind of song. It really
befits the movie and, as these kinds of songs go, it was very good; it's not my
favorite genre of song. I thought all the music in Her was great. I saw
the Mandela movie and I was just okay with it -- I kinda liked the Morgan
Freeman version better -- but then [that] song came on and I got all choked
up. Then I went back and I played the three finalists, for me --
"Happy," "Let It Go," "Ordinary Love" -- and the one
that I kept wanting to replay was "Ordinary Love."
MY PICK: "Ordinary Love" (Mandela: Long
Walk to Freedom)
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
You could give it to any of these movies,
but I'm gonna vote for Her because it created a world.
MY PICK: Her
BEST SOUND EDITING
BEST SOUND MIXING
I always say, "Should I really vote
on these?" I know the difference between the two categories, but I don't
know the nominees' impacts on their movies sometimes -- I mean, what was mixed
and what was edited? It's usually very difficult to know. To me, Lone
Survivor is pretty damn good in the sound department. But, you know, I'm on
the Gravity train. All that silence, all that breathing -- I assume
that's in the mixing, and then the editing is all the machinery.
MY PICK (for both): Gravity
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
I'm on the Gravity train.
MY PICK: Gravity
BEST ANIMATED SHORT
It was kind of an off-year. I wasn't
bowled over. The Disney one I saw originally in 3D and then again in 2D. For
people who didn't see it on a big screen before Frozen and are only
seeing it on a screener, it's like watching Gravity in 2D. I'm a little
unclear about what they did on that one -- what was old footage, what was new
footage -- and I'm a little apprehensive about rooting for the giant. But I
felt like I'd seen most of the others before -- the [Room with a] Broom
one I liked best of those.
MY PICK: Get a Horse!
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT
If there's one safe bet in this entire
race, it's this one. The Lady in Number 6 is one of the most amazing
movies I've ever seen in my career, partly because of the woman, but also you
just get verklempt. You want to go out and live and save the world. So that was
it for me, in a walk. CaveDigger was good but too long. Prison
Terminal, to me, didn't really rank in there. Karama was very cool.
And Facing Fear is an important movie and I'm glad it was nominated, but
it's just no contest. I was excited to vote for The Lady in Number 6.
MY PICK: The Lady in Number 6: Music
Saved My Life
BEST LIVE-ACTION SHORT
You had really different styles --
comedies, action movies and dramas. But, for me, there was a clear winner: the
French movie. It was far and away the best. It's beautifully revealed -- where
it comes in in the story, how it tells the story, how you find out, how the
subsidiary characters play into it and how it resolves itself. I thought it was
really elegant on a subject that has been done many times before.
MY PICK: Just Before Losing Everything
Brutally Honest Oscar Voter Ballot No. 4
(Anonymous, As
told to Scott Feinberg, Hollywood Reporter, 28 February 2014)
A member of the Academy's PR branch tells
THR: "Hustle" looks like it reused "all the sets from 'Boogie
Nights,'" best actress should've been given out in July and the only thing
that could've made Leto a safer bet is if Rayon was also Jewish.
VOTER PROFILE: This Oscar voter is a longtime member of the
Academy's 377-member public relations branch.
BEST PICTURE
I voted for Gravity and then 12 Years a Slave. Honestly, I really went back and forth thinking about it. The truth is I only watched about half of 12 Years a Slave; I couldn't take it. It made me sick to my stomach and I just thought, "OK, I know slavery was terrible, and this is an important movie and I get all that," but I was bored with how long it was taking. Frankly, if they had had the awards the week after the nominations, I would have voted for it. But when it came time to fill it out I thought, "You know, Gravity was pretty much a perfect movie experience. It had really good performances from really good movie stars, it was thrilling and emotional and I cried -- and it was only 90 minutes!" Plus I really like Alfonso Cuaron. And I remembered the experience of seeing the movie. I almost wish Gravity [meaning Warner Bros.] had not sent out screeners. The screeners cannot have helped Gravity. Anyway, then there was Captain Phillips -- I thought it was a great movie. The one that I wanted to love the most but did not was American Hustle. I loved [David O. Russell's last movie] Silver Linings Playbook -- it was one of my favorite movies of last year -- but I didn't get this one, and one minute after I got up out of my seat at the theater it had left me.
I voted for Gravity and then 12 Years a Slave. Honestly, I really went back and forth thinking about it. The truth is I only watched about half of 12 Years a Slave; I couldn't take it. It made me sick to my stomach and I just thought, "OK, I know slavery was terrible, and this is an important movie and I get all that," but I was bored with how long it was taking. Frankly, if they had had the awards the week after the nominations, I would have voted for it. But when it came time to fill it out I thought, "You know, Gravity was pretty much a perfect movie experience. It had really good performances from really good movie stars, it was thrilling and emotional and I cried -- and it was only 90 minutes!" Plus I really like Alfonso Cuaron. And I remembered the experience of seeing the movie. I almost wish Gravity [meaning Warner Bros.] had not sent out screeners. The screeners cannot have helped Gravity. Anyway, then there was Captain Phillips -- I thought it was a great movie. The one that I wanted to love the most but did not was American Hustle. I loved [David O. Russell's last movie] Silver Linings Playbook -- it was one of my favorite movies of last year -- but I didn't get this one, and one minute after I got up out of my seat at the theater it had left me.
MY PICKS: (1) Gravity, (2) 12
Years a Slave, (3) Captain Phillips, (4) The Wolf of Wall Street,
(5) Philomena, (6) American Hustle, (7) Her, (8) Dallas
Buyers Club, (9) Nebraska
BEST DIRECTOR
The first I can rule out is Alexander Payne; it's not The Descendants, for me. [Martin] Scorsese is the next to go; I didn't find it offensive, but what bothered me was how repetitive it was -- it could have been an hour shorter. Still, I think the fact that Marty is whatever he is -- around 70 -- and he made a movie like that is unbelievable. The next out is Russell. And [Steve] McQueen -- I don't know how to say this -- he never made me want to vote for him. I thought he came off as pretentious and affected and rude. I just thought, "Oh, man, I wish somebody loved me as much as you love you." It was always gonna be Cuaron. It's a directorial achievement. It's an amazing piece of directing. And it was a risk. And I like him -- he's got a really interesting body of work. He's somebody you want to do things for and with.
The first I can rule out is Alexander Payne; it's not The Descendants, for me. [Martin] Scorsese is the next to go; I didn't find it offensive, but what bothered me was how repetitive it was -- it could have been an hour shorter. Still, I think the fact that Marty is whatever he is -- around 70 -- and he made a movie like that is unbelievable. The next out is Russell. And [Steve] McQueen -- I don't know how to say this -- he never made me want to vote for him. I thought he came off as pretentious and affected and rude. I just thought, "Oh, man, I wish somebody loved me as much as you love you." It was always gonna be Cuaron. It's a directorial achievement. It's an amazing piece of directing. And it was a risk. And I like him -- he's got a really interesting body of work. He's somebody you want to do things for and with.
MY PICK: Alfonso Cuaron (Gravity)
BEST ACTOR
Bruce Dern impressed me the least -- I just think Bruce Dern is doing Bruce Dern, a cranky old man playing a cranky old man. Chiwetel Ejiofor gave an amazing performance. Christian Bale? I love him and he's consistently great, but just because he's wearing a bad hairpiece and is fat doesn't blow me away. I chose [Leonardo] DiCaprio over [Matthew] McConaughey. I thought he was a-mazing, and I think he's given a ton of amazing performances in both good and bad movies -- even in terrible movies, Leonardo DiCaprio is interesting, at the very least. To hold my interest for three hours of basically the same thing -- drugs and drinking, more drugs and drinking, I get it -- was amazing. You couldn't take your eyes off of him. And I know this sounds terrible, but I really thought, when I was watching Dallas Buyers Club, that I was watching a movie from 20 years ago -- we already gave Tom Hanks the Oscar for this [for his performance in Philadelphia]. Men who lose a lot of weight and look bad -- it's like pretty women who play ugly -- you can't lose. And I like Matthew McConaughey, and I am watching with interest how he has shifted his career, but I thought it was a little bit of an HBO movie. He's better in True Detective.
Bruce Dern impressed me the least -- I just think Bruce Dern is doing Bruce Dern, a cranky old man playing a cranky old man. Chiwetel Ejiofor gave an amazing performance. Christian Bale? I love him and he's consistently great, but just because he's wearing a bad hairpiece and is fat doesn't blow me away. I chose [Leonardo] DiCaprio over [Matthew] McConaughey. I thought he was a-mazing, and I think he's given a ton of amazing performances in both good and bad movies -- even in terrible movies, Leonardo DiCaprio is interesting, at the very least. To hold my interest for three hours of basically the same thing -- drugs and drinking, more drugs and drinking, I get it -- was amazing. You couldn't take your eyes off of him. And I know this sounds terrible, but I really thought, when I was watching Dallas Buyers Club, that I was watching a movie from 20 years ago -- we already gave Tom Hanks the Oscar for this [for his performance in Philadelphia]. Men who lose a lot of weight and look bad -- it's like pretty women who play ugly -- you can't lose. And I like Matthew McConaughey, and I am watching with interest how he has shifted his career, but I thought it was a little bit of an HBO movie. He's better in True Detective.
MY PICK: Leonardo DiCaprio (The Wolf of
Wall Street)
BEST ACTRESS
Amy Adams is great in everything she does, but this was over in July [when Blue Jasmine, which stars Cate Blanchett, was released]. As far as I'm concerned, they should have saved time on the other award shows and spared everyone else the anguish of going to millions of dinners and sitting there knowing they don't have the slightest chance of winning. I mean, the idea of getting into hair and makeup and Spanx for all of those dinners, when they're just gonna call her name off, and rightfully so, seems inhumane.
Amy Adams is great in everything she does, but this was over in July [when Blue Jasmine, which stars Cate Blanchett, was released]. As far as I'm concerned, they should have saved time on the other award shows and spared everyone else the anguish of going to millions of dinners and sitting there knowing they don't have the slightest chance of winning. I mean, the idea of getting into hair and makeup and Spanx for all of those dinners, when they're just gonna call her name off, and rightfully so, seems inhumane.
MY PICK: Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Forget about everybody except Jonah
Hill and Jared Leto. Leto gives a classic Oscar role: "I have
AIDS and I'm a drag queen." Like, it doesn't get bigger than that, in
terms of Oscar bait. He could have gotten nominated with just one of the above!
I'm trying to think if there could have been one more thing? A Jew! A Jew,
during World War II, who is sick and a transvestite -- that would have been a
trifecta. Seriously, though, there was no way he wasn't gonna get nominated ever.
As for Jonah Hill, he's absolutely hilarious. It's the definition of a
supporting performance -- he's incredibly memorable, he's very good and he is a
big thing that you take away from the movie. And it's very subtle -- the gay
thing, for instance -- but you get it. I just thought he did a great job.
MY PICK: Jonah Hill (The Wolf of Wall
Street)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
I eliminated everybody but the one from 12
Years a Slave [Lupita Nyong'o] and Jennifer Lawrence. I
didn't vote for Jennifer Lawrence, even though I thought she was very
entertaining in the movie, because (a) she just won last year, and (b) we can't
give everything to Jennifer Lawrence when she's 22 years old because Jennifer
Lawrence will be institutionalized. She will have gotten too much, too soon,
too early, and she'll lose her mind. I also didn't think she gave the better
performance. I kinda thought the parts of the two women in American Hustle
should have been reversed. As for Lupita, it's a great performance -- and she
has handled herself impeccably. She has acted like a movie star: she looks
great, she is grateful, there's no pictures of her drunk at some party. She's
played her part well and she gives an amazing performance.
MY PICK: Lupita Nyong'o (12 Years a
Slave)
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
This is an interesting category. You can't
rule out Before Midnight because Richard Linklater's a likable
guy. Wolf of Wall Street is a good adaptation, but it is three hours
long; you shouldn't be able to read the book in the same amount of time the
movie takes. That leaves 12 Years, Captain Phillips and Philomena.
I voted for Philomena only because the movie was so emotional for me and
because I thought, "Wow, to take this story and figure out how to make a
movie like this must have been quite a task." I probably would have voted
for Captain Phillips next because I know a lot of people who were
involved with that film.
MY PICK: Philomena
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
It'll go to Her because this is
where you give an award to the quirky movie that everybody wants people to know
that they appreciated. And I concur with that. I don't want anybody, though, to
come to any conclusion, when Woody Allen does not win for Blue Jasmine
-- my runner-up -- that it had anything to do with the horribleness of dragging
him through everything he's had to deal with over the last few weeks. There was
a minute there that I actually thought, "Harvey [Weinstein]
really will stop at nothing," because if Blanchett was out, Judi Dench
was the next one up. The whole thing is so suspect to me.
MY PICK: Her
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
I voted for Frozen and none of the
others were even in the discussion. Honestly, if they did not have the animated
category, Frozen would have easily gotten a best picture nomination. It
just delivered.
MY PICK: Frozen
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
I watched The Square, Twenty Feet
from Stardom and The Act of Killing. I don't know how the average
Academy member is supposed to gauge what makes a great documentary: is it
"touches on issues that are relevant to our time," or "it did
big business and has been seen by more people," or something else? I voted
for Twenty Feet from Stardom because I found it the most entertaining,
but I think The Square is the more important movie.
MY PICK: Twenty Feet from Stardom
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
I thought The Great Beauty was an
amazing movie. I liked everything about it. I really thought it was one of the
best movies of the year. It reminded me of the days of Cinema Paradiso
and those kind of movies. I thought it was great.
MY PICK: The Great Beauty
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
I thought Llewyn Davis had amazing
cinematography which stayed with me the longest of all the nominees. I don't
know what's cinematography and what's not in Gravity. And Nebraska,
to me, looked like somebody had watched Paper Moon a bunch of times and
then went and shot the movie; I appreciated it, but I've seen black-and-white
cinematography like this done before and better. It made me miss Gordon
Willis; I watched it and I thought, "Wow, I wish Gordon Willis had
been alive to shoot this." [Fortunately, Willis is still alive -- he's now
82 and living in Cape Cod.]
MY PICK: Inside Llewyn Davis
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
I voted for 12 Years a Slave
because I thought the costumes do not intrude into the movie. They're realistic
without being, "Look at me!"
MY PICK: 12 Years a Slave
BEST FILM EDITING
I voted for Captain Phillips
because I thought it was incredibly well edited. I thought it was as gripping a
movie experience as I've had. I really thought it delivered on that level. I
literally felt anxious the whole time I was watching the movie, in a good way.
And the jumpy camera did not make me sick to my stomach, which it sometimes
does. 12 Years was my runner-up.
MY PICK: Captain Phillips
BEST MAKEUP & HAIRSTYLING
I voted for Dallas Buyers Club, but
-- I want to specify -- not for Matthew McConaughey's makeup. It's AIDS, I get
it, it's bad, you lose weight and you look gaunt. But I thought the Jared Leto
stuff was amazing. He doesn't look like a girl at all in life, but I did fall
into the movie and believe him in that role. And, by the way, if he'd had bad
hair and makeup, he would not be nominated -- it's so intrinsic to his
performance. That's gonna make somebody's career.
MY PICK: Dallas Buyers Club
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
I voted for Philomena. I thought it
was a really nice score and not too over the top. I was bawling like a baby
watching that movie, but the movie didn't push on that. They could have done a
really over the top, wring-every-tear-out-of-you kind of score, but instead it
was really subtle and really good.
MY PICK: Philomena
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
I voted for "Let It Go" -- I loved the song and I'm certain it's gonna win. The song is such a traditional Broadway-slash-Disney animated musical song, and you haven't heard one of those like this in a while. When you have videos of small children and Marines doing sing-alongs to your sing, it's over. I get the whole Bono-Africa thing, but it's not as fun.
I voted for "Let It Go" -- I loved the song and I'm certain it's gonna win. The song is such a traditional Broadway-slash-Disney animated musical song, and you haven't heard one of those like this in a while. When you have videos of small children and Marines doing sing-alongs to your sing, it's over. I get the whole Bono-Africa thing, but it's not as fun.
MY PICK: "Let It Go" (Frozen)
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
I thought the production design was the
only worthwhile thing about the movie. Baz Luhrmann's wife is stylish --
it looked like a major job of production design. American Hustle just
looked, to me, like they went and grabbed all the sets from Boogie Nights
and put them in their movie. Or Argo -- "Oh, here's the lamp from Argo!"
Eyes of Laura Mars -- that's what it looked like. And there's no
production design in Gravity, I'm sorry -- she's in a capsule for most
of it, and I'm sure it was realistic and authentic, but that is not
"production design" to me. That's one set.
MY PICK: The Great Gatsby
BEST SOUND EDITING
BEST SOUND MIXING
I don't vote. I have no expertise in the
field, so I would be voting completely out of ignorance, and I don't like to
vote out of ignorance. What do I know about what makes a movie sound well-mixed?
MY PICK (for both): I abstain.
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
I voted for Gravity because the
whole movie is a special effect, so I thought this was a pretty easy one. The
only special effect of Lone Ranger was how they made $250 million
disappear.
MY PICK: Gravity
BEST ANIMATED SHORT
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT
BEST LIVE-ACTION SHORT
I got that coffin of a box from the
Academy [with DVDs of the shorts in it], and the discs started falling out and
I just said, "Screw it. Life's too short." I thought [sending them to
us] was a nice thing to do, though.
MY PICK: I abstain.
Brutally Honest Oscar Voter Ballot No. 5
(Anonymous, As
told to Scott Feinberg, Hollywood Reporter, 01 March 2014)
A member of the
Academy's writers branch tells THR: Amy Adams' "breasts hanging down in
every single costume was... distracting," Bruce Dern "was just
standing around with his mouth open," almost snubbed "Her" out
of "jealousy."
VOTER PROFILE: This Oscar voter is a longtime member of the
Academy's 378-member writers branch who has won an Oscar himself.
BEST PICTURE
I just listed four: Philomena, Dallas
Buyers Club, 12 Years a Slave and Her. Philomena is at
the top of my list because it's the kind of film that I approve of: it's a film
that depends on its emotional content, it's a simple film, it's a surprising
film, it depends on a good script and it just hangs in there all the way right
up until an ending that concludes the action emotionally. Dallas Buyers Club,
which I loved for the same reasons, would have had my vote had I not seen Philomena
the night before voting ended. 12 Years a Slave I ranked third only
because I felt as if I had seen that film before. And then there's Her,
which I suppose I could have ranked higher because I did enjoy it and really
felt it was a superb job of filmmaking. The others all had things that bothered
me about them. I didn't think that American Hustle held together. I did
think that Wall Street is the first time in about 15 years that Scorsese
has shown some real energy and enjoyment in filmmaking; on the other hand, I
thought it was repetitive and should have been 45 minutes shorter -- he was
throwing in every little bit of shtick. And Gravity is kind of a stunt
feature; there's no particular suspense about what's gonna happen.
MY PICKS: (1) Philomena, (2) Dallas
Buyers Club, (3) 12 Years a Slave, (4) Her
BEST DIRECTOR
As a fan of Alexander Payne's, I
was really disappointed in Nebraska. I couldn't vote for [Alfonso]
Cuaron because I didn't like the way the big male movie star [a
facetious reference to George Clooney] was used -- he seemed like a
silly character to me -- and because it's very hard for me to separate, on a
movie like that, directing from special effects. And then, in 12 Years As a
Slave [sic], there were a lot of things to coordinate and he [Steve
McQueen] did kind of a masterly job -- a masterly casting job, too!
MY PICK: Steve McQueen (12 Years a Slave)
BEST ACTOR
I've been a fan of Bruce Dern for
years, but I thought Nebraska was just a big disappointment and that he
was not nearly half as good as he was in Big Love; he was just standing
around with his mouth open most of the time. Christian Bale was good,
but the picture didn't make a lot of sense to me. Leo [DiCaprio]
totally threw himself into Wolf and he seemed to be improvising at times
-- very well -- but he was doing a role that he'd done before. I do love that
actor from 12 Years a Slave, whose name I can't pronounce; I couldn't
really fault him at all. So it came down to a choice between him and Matthew
McConaughey, whose role really captivated me -- and who really impressed me
in three different things this year.
MY PICK: Matthew McConaughey (Dallas Buyers Club)
BEST ACTRESS
I thought all along that I was gonna vote
for Sandra Bullock. Of all the movie stars stranded in a non-rescue
situation -- in other words, her, [Robert] Redford [in All Is
Lost] and Tom Hanks [in Captain Phillips] -- she was the
best, by far, and showed a fantastic range of emotion, and if she gets it I
won't be disappointed. Amy Adams was good but not her best, and the
device of having her breasts hanging down in every single costume was a little
distracting, plus the movie just didn't do it for me. Cate Blanchett?
God, she was fabulous -- except I thought the dice were stacked against the
younger sister [Sally Hawkins], and sometimes I will not vote for an
actor if the movie bothers me. Speaking of which, I didn't like the Meryl
Streep movie [August: Osage County], and it was certainly not my
favorite Meryl Streep performance. Philomena was the absolute last film
I saw before voting, and I was totally amazed because it's a movie that seemed
to be taking you in a tearjerking, soap opera direction at almost every turn,
and yet it never does; it turns away from sentimentality because her [Judi
Dench's] character isn't having any of it.
MY PICK: Judi Dench (Philomena)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
This was easy. They were all good, but Jared
Leto just did something that I'd never seen anybody do before. He played a
character who was a transvestite but is not apologetic or self-conscious at
all; he's a take-charge guy and, at the same time, he's proud of his
femininity. It's bizarre, but he certainly holds your attention.
MY PICK: Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
I liked every single one of these. Sally
Hawkins I just adore, but I thought the script sold her short and made her
into more of a caricature than she had to be. The same thing with Jennifer
Lawrence, whom I love and admire and voted for before; I didn't like the
part she was playing and I thought it was much more limited than hers was last
year. August: Osage County was just a filmed play and I didn't much like
the play or Julia Roberts' character, but I thought she was excellent. I
was tempted to vote for June Squibb, but she really just delivers a few
good lines in that. But this woman in 12 Years a Slave made an
impression that was immensely powerful -- I mean, just her face was something
new in Hollywood and something astonishing to me in that movie. So I voted for
her.
MY PICK: Lupita Nyong'o (12 Years a
Slave)
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
This was easy. I voted for Philomena,
which did a dance of revealing all these moments without becoming a soap opera
-- you know, like when you find out that [her son] is dead, she just takes that
right in stride. It's a pretty amazing movie because the man learns a lesson
from her.
MY PICK: Philomena
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
I voted for Her. I almost didn't
vote for it out of jealousy that he [Spike Jonze] is younger than me and
writing the kind of movie that I would have liked to have written. One can
admit petty motives as long as one does not have to explain to the multitudes,
right?
MY PICK: Her
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
I liked them all about the same, so I
decided not to vote.
MY PICK: I abstain.
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
I did not have time to see all of the
nominees, so I did not vote.
MY PICK: I abstain.
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
They are all terrific movies except for
the one that everybody says is gonna win, the Italian one [The Great Beauty],
which I've seen so many times before -- it's like a poor man's La Dolce Vita.
The Hunt is very important and touching, but I felt like I've seen it
before. Omar was a bit frustrating for me. Broken Circle Brokedown
I've already recommended to a friend -- it's an imperfect movie, but it's
tremendously passionate and powerful, and imagine, a Belgian bluegrass
worshipper! The woman was really good, too; it's one of the surprises of the
movie when she starts singing, and the whole thing about the daughter was
tremendously moving, too. I did not vote for it, however. In the end, I went
for the Cambodian movie because I thought it was an incredibly original,
powerful movie about a subject that is very hard to talk about and we shouldn't
ever forget.
MY PICK: The Missing Picture
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
The ones I would have voted for weren't
nominated -- 12 Years a Slave, Her, Philomena and Dallas
Buyers Club -- so I didn't vote.
MY PICK: I abstain.
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
The costumes of 12 Years a Slave
stick out the most in my memory.
MY PICK: 12 Years a Slave
BEST FILM EDITING
I chose Dallas Buyers Club over the
others because I felt the film held together better in its pacing and because I
liked it the best of the films that were nominated.
MY PICK: Dallas Buyers Club
BEST MAKEUP & HAIRSTYLING
There was some obviously creative makeup
and hairstyling in Dallas Buyers Club, which was also the best film of
the lot.
MY PICK: Dallas Buyers Club
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
I remembered the score of Gravity
and did not remember the scores of the others, so that told me something.
MY PICK: Gravity
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
I didn't hear all of the songs.
MY PICK: I abstained.
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
I voted for Her and I was regretful
that I didn't get to vote for Her in more categories because I thought
that was a very original film.
MY PICK: Her
BEST SOUND EDITING
BEST SOUND MIXING
The sounds of Gravity enhanced my
enjoyment of it more than the other ones, which really weren't that memorable
to me.
MY PICK (for both): Gravity
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Gravity had fantastic visual effects, like the one where
she flies and bounces around inside the cockpit -- I wondered how the hell they
did that.
MY PICK: Gravity
BEST ANIMATED SHORT
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT
BEST LIVE-ACTION SHORT
I didn't see them in time to vote. I would
have voted for the one with the dying kid and the janitor [Helium]. They
were all pretty good, but I was a little disappointed in the endings of the
others, and I was touched by the little boy.
MY PICK: I abstain.
Brutally Honest Oscar Voter Ballot No. 6
(Anonymous, As
told to Scott Feinberg, Hollywood Reporter, 01 March 2014)
A member of the Academy's executives
branch tells THR: I was "won over" for McConaughey by "True
Detective," Fassbender gives "the year's great overlooked
performance" and this is the "worst selection" of foreign film
nominees in years.
VOTER PROFILE: This Oscar voter is a longtime member of the
Academy's 450-member executives branch.
BEST PICTURE
I know the Midwest and Nebraska
nailed it.
MY PICKS: (1) Nebraska, (2) American
Hustle, (3) 12 Years a Slave
BEST DIRECTOR
I don't understand how the best picture
could ever not be directed by the best director.
MY PICK: Alexander Payne (Nebraska)
BEST ACTOR
Matthew McConaughey -- wow, what an incredible year. In
addition to Dallas Buyers Club, I was really won over by True
Detective.
MY PICK: Matthew McConaughey (Dallas Buyers Club)
BEST ACTRESS
How could anyone be any better than Cate
[Blanchett]?
MY PICK: Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Jared [Leto] was amazing, but you know what was
the year's great overlooked performance? [Michael] Fassbender.
MY PICK: Michael Fassbender (12 Years a
Slave)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
In a fair world Sally Hawkins would
win this thing. She went toe to toe with Cate [Blanchett] and held her own.
MY PICK: Sally Hawkins (Blue Jasmine)
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Rick Linklater's trilogy is a singular achievement and its
scripts have a lot to do with that.
MY PICK: Before Midnight
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Woody [Allen] deserves this. He's been so great
for so long that we just take him for granted.
MY PICK: Blue Jasmine
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
I agree with everyone else, Frozen
was a very special film.
MY PICK: Frozen
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
There were a number of special
documentaries this year -- including several that weren't nominated -- but the
one that impressed me the most was The Square. That footage was so
amazing.
MY PICK: The Square
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
This was the worst selection of nominees
for this category in years. The Hunt was the best of a highly
questionable group.
MY PICK: The Hunt
[Note: This voter was only available to
discuss his selections in the aforementioned categories.]
Brutally Honest Oscar Voter Ballot No. 7
(Anonymous, As
told to Scott Feinberg, Hollywood Reporter, 01 March 2014)
A member of the Academy's executives
branch tells THR she didn't see "12 Years a Slave" because she
doesn't want "terrible stuff to keep in my head," backed June Squibb
because of age and history and found "Twenty Feet" subjects
"delightful."
This is the seventh of eight
"brutally honest" Oscar ballots shared with THR by Academy members,
one of which will post each day leading up to the Oscar ceremony on Sunday,
March 2.
VOTER PROFILE: This Oscar voter is a longtime member of the
Academy's 450-member executives branch.
BEST PICTURE
My favorites were Her, which is
about the future, and Nebraska, which is about the past. Gravity
I liked very much because I'd never seen anything like it and I just love George
Clooney -- but when she [Sandra Bullock] climbed out of the water I
thought, "This is where an alligator is gonna get her." Dallas
Buyers Club is a good movie with something important to say. I had problems
with American Hustle. The best thing in it was that scene with Robert
De Niro; I didn't find any of the characters particularly likable. The
Wolf of Wall Street? N.O. I did not like that movie. And I have not been
able to bring myself to watch 12 Years a Slave. [I pressed the member to
explain why.] Here is my problem: As you know, I am a senior. I have a lot of
stuff in my head [I believe this is a reference to death]. What I don't want is
more terrible stuff to keep in my head. I have never liked movies that have
severe violence. Yes, I saw Schindler's List, but -- Look, I've lived
long enough to know what it was like for a person to be a black person in
America. I mean, it's not anything that I'm not aware of. I may still go
and see it [the film], but I just don't want to. Is that terrible? At 5 o'clock
tonight I'm gonna watch Going My Way on TCM. That's my kind of a movie
-- even if Bing Crosby was actually a bad person. Is there one picture
this year that makes you feel better?
MY PICKS: (1) Her, (2) Nebraska, (3) Gravity, (4) Dallas Buyers Club
MY PICKS: (1) Her, (2) Nebraska, (3) Gravity, (4) Dallas Buyers Club
BEST DIRECTOR
I just loved that movie [Nebraska].
MY PICK: Alexander Payne
MY PICK: Alexander Payne
BEST ACTOR
I didn't like Leonardo [DiCaprio]'s
or [Christian] Bale's movie. I liked Matthew McConaughey and
I think he's gonna win because he plays a guy who becomes a different guy from
the guy he is when you begin to know him. But I was very impressed with Bruce
Dern and I'm happy for him.
MY PICK: Bruce Dern (Nebraska)
MY PICK: Bruce Dern (Nebraska)
BEST ACTRESS
I thought Sandra Bullock did a good
job, but Cate Blanchett was on a level of her own.
MY PICK: Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine)
MY PICK: Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
The only one I really liked was Jared
Leto.
MY PICK: Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club)
MY PICK: Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
I think June Squibb's performance
was wonderful. It's such a complicated character to play -- a woman who seems a
shrew and the worst wife in the world, but then you realize she was married to
a man who's an alcoholic and not the best husband in the world, but she really loves
him. Her life didn't turn out the way she wanted it to, so she got more bitter.
And the fact that she is 80 [actually 84] and was, of course, Electra in Gypsy,
only makes me want her to win more. I think Jennifer Lawrence will
probably win, though; she's absolutely wonderful in the movie. August: Osage
County was a bad play and a bad movie, so no Julia Roberts.
MY PICK: June Squibb (Nebraska)
MY PICK: June Squibb (Nebraska)
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
I don't think The Wolf of Wall Street
is a good screenplay. Philomena I liked.
MY PICK: Philomena
MY PICK: Philomena
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
I actually read all of the screenplays and
Her is clearly the best. I liked Nebraska, but that had more to
do with the actors than the script. I didn't really like the way they told the
story in American Hustle.
MY PICK: Her
MY PICK: Her
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
I did not see all of the nominees.
MY PICK: I abstain.
MY PICK: I abstain.
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
20 Feet From Stardom has been well publicized and I liked it
very much. Those women featured in the film are delightful. I wish it had focused
more on Phil Spector, though, who was the worst person in the world and
should have been in jail long before he got there. My friends tell me The
Square is one of the best documentaries that they ever saw, but I haven't
had a chance to see it.
MY PICK: 20 Feet From Stardom
MY PICK: 20 Feet From Stardom
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
I saw all five. I like Omar. I also like The Great Beauty a lot, but a lot of my friends who vote walked out on it because they felt it was boring. But I think The Hunt is brilliant; it is about how easily we, in society today, believe lies.
MY PICK: The Hunt
I saw all five. I like Omar. I also like The Great Beauty a lot, but a lot of my friends who vote walked out on it because they felt it was boring. But I think The Hunt is brilliant; it is about how easily we, in society today, believe lies.
MY PICK: The Hunt
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
I don't vote for this category because
what do I know about songs? The Mandela song could win because it offers
a good liberal philosophy of the world. The Frozen song will
probably win. I saw Pharrell [Williams] on the Grammys and I
thought he was very clever. And I wouldn't mind seeing Her win something
-- is Her gonna win anything?
MY PICK: I abstain.
MY PICK: I abstain.
[Note: This voter was only available to
discuss her selections in the aforementioned categories.]
Brutally Honest Oscar Voter Ballot No. 8
(Anonymous, As
told to Scott Feinberg, Hollywood Reporter, 02 March 2014)
A member of the Academy's directors branch
tells THR that he thought "Gravity" was "an amazing
accomplishment," Sandra Bullock literally "talked me into voting for
her" and he voted for "Happy," by Pharrell, "because it's
such a happy song."
This is the eighth of eight "brutally
honest" Oscar ballots shared with THR by Academy members, one of which
will post each day leading up to the Oscar ceremony on Sunday, March 2. (Also
available for you to review: the first [2], the second [3], the third [4], the fourth [5], the fifth [6], the sixth [7] and the seventh [8].) Beware of spoilers. And remember:
these voters' views are not necessarily endorsed by Scott Feinberg or THR.
VOTER PROFILE: This Oscar voter is a member of the Academy's 377-member directors branch.
BEST PICTURE
American Hustle is my favorite movie of the year, but I voted for
Gravity because it's an amazing accomplishment. The script is not a
masterpiece -- neither was Titanic's -- but the beauty of its message
becomes crystal clear upon a second viewing. It's about the overall experience
of rebirth.MY PICKS: (1) Gravity, (2) American Hustle, (3) Captain Phillips
BEST DIRECTOR
[Alfonso] Cuaron is the
biggest lock so far, and for a reason.MY PICK: Alfonso Cuaron (Gravity)
BEST ACTOR
When is the last time someone had a year
like he [Matthew McConaughey] had?MY PICK: Matthew McConaughey (Dallas Buyers Club)
BEST ACTRESS
I had been leaning toward Amy Adams,
but at a Q&A Sandra Bullock more or less talked me into voting for
her -- just hearing her talk about her process on the film and how she created
an entire backstory for her character. She's a charmer.MY PICK: Sandra Bullock (Gravity)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
I didn't know he [Jared Leto] had
it in him.MY PICK: Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
I found her [Lupita Nyong'o] to be
incredibly impressive.MY PICK: Lupita Nyong'o (12 Years a Slave)
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
I thought it [the script of Captain
Phillips] was really well done.MY PICK: Captain Phillips
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
I enjoyed everything about it.MY PICK: American Hustle
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
Frozen was clearly the best.MY PICK: Frozen
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
It [The Square] is a pretty
remarkable historical document.MY PICK: The Square
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
I think The Hunt is a really
impressive film all-around. I did not like The Broken Circle Breakdown
-- movies with actual child endangerment are upsetting. And I did not see The
Great Beauty.MY PICK: The Hunt
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
I voted for "Happy" because it's
just such a happy song. "Let It Go" is just such an obvious song,
with nothing particularly great about it.MY PICK: "Happy" (Despicable Me 2)
BEST SOUND EDITING
I was impressed by how gripping it [Captain
Phillips] was and I think the sound deserves some of the credit for that.MY PICK: Captain Phillips
BEST SOUND MIXING
Gravity doesn't deserve this one because none of those
sounds were recorded on the set.MY PICK: Captain Phillips
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
A complete no-brainer.MY PICK: Gravity
BEST ANIMATED SHORT
I saw it [Get a Horse!] when I saw Frozen
and I found it charming.MY PICK: Get a Horse!
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT
What an amazing story. People are eating
it up.MY PICK: The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life
BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT
[Helium] was the most bearable of
the five.MY PICK: Helium
[Note: This voter was only available to
discuss his selections in the aforementioned categories.]
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