I promise… this will be my last Oscar post until next year

Well another Oscar season has come and gone and my obsession will soon turn 100% back to baseball…

But I still have a few thoughts about the broadcast that I unabashedly love to watch each year.

Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin did a nice job as hosts…

Steve’s line “This show is so long that Avatar now takes place in the past” was terrific.

But no matter how good they were, I’m still not seeing It’s Complicated.

Nominees… rehearse a speech!

Seriously, there is no excuse for stammering. You have had a month between the nominations announcement and the awards show.

Come up with a 30 second speech.

And don’t give me any crap that “I totally didn’t expect this, so I didn’t prepare anything.” The nanosecond you got nominated, you started holding your toothbrush as if it was an Oscar.

Prepare something and time it for 30 seconds. Costume designer Sandy Powell and composer Michael Giacchino won, said concise heart felt speeches and got off the stage. It’s not that hard. Plus if you can’t think of a speech, go to any coffee shop in Los Angeles and say “Hey! Unemployed writers. Who wants to help me write a clever speech for the Oscars?”

What the hell was up with the Best Documentary Short acceptance speech?

OK, most of you were probably going into the kitchen to get a Mr. Pibb or something during Documentary Short, but those of us who saw this award so a deliciously awkward acceptance speech.

Music by Prudence won the award and producer/director Roger Ross Williams started giving his speech. His fellow producer Elinor Beckett came onto the stage while he was in mid speech and boxed him out a la Kevin McHale in the 1986 Finals. I am not sure what the behind the scenes tension was on this film, but it is clear that nobody puts Elinor in the corner. Needless to say, the music played them off.

Colin Farrell had a lot of nerve bringing up S.W.A.T. at the Oscars!
When Farrell was giving his tribute to Jeremy Renner during the Best Actor nominations, he brought up their working together on SWAT!

Did you SEE SWAT? I did… it blows. And it is a lousy TV show adaptation of a movie.

Then again, it wasn’t any worse than The Reader.

We now live in a world with Academy Award winner Fisher Stevens!

I’m not saying he doesn’t deserve the award… I am just saying that looks odd to see in type.

Has Barbra Streisand left the stage yet?

Babs has two Oscars but I got the feeling she wanted to stay on stage with Kathryn Bigelow as long as possible. She knows the caption will read “first ever woman to win the Oscar for Best Director”… and she wanted in on that picture.

A note to Ms. Streisand: The Prince of Tides and Yentl weren’t that good!

George Clooney is the new Jack Nicholson

He’s the perpetual bachelor Oscar winner and super cool movie star…
and now he is the go to guy to cut to during the Oscar telecast.

Remember how they would always cut to Jack to see if a joke was funny or a tribute was moving?

Now (and for the next few decades) they will cut to George.

The John Hughes tribute was nice… if not for me

I was 13 when The Breakfast Club came out… and 14 when Pretty in Pink and Ferris Bueller’s Day Off came out. In other words, I am the exact right age to have the movies of John Hughes mean everything to me as an awkward teenager. Here’s the thing: they didn’t.

I never liked The Breakfast Club, thought Ferris Bueller was OK but not earth shattering and I have yet to see Sixteen Candles. I’m not saying they are bad… but I grew up on the Red Sox, Batman comics, Godzilla and movies like Star Wars, Raiders, Ghostbusters, Close Encounters, Wrath of Khan and Back to the Future. When I went to the movies, I didn’t want to see awkward teenagers whining about their life. I saw enough of that in Junior High! I wanted to ESCAPE from that!

I was rooting for Meryl Streep to win, but Sandra Bullock’s speech won me over

I love that Meryl Streep has dropped the super serious “different accent every year” pattern to her career and instead is letting her quirky character actress abilities run rampant. She made fluffy films like Devil Wears Prada and Julie and Julia infectious and her performance as the nun in last year’s Doubt could be her most underrated performance.

But Sandra Bullock was cool, sincere, funny and downright lovable in her acceptance speech… and was cool enough to pick up her Razzie in person. Nothing wrong with that.

I haven’t seen Crazy Heart, but Jeff Bridges deserves that Oscar

He should have won for The Fisher King. Or maybe Fearless. Or maybe Last Picture Show… or The Contender…
Or maybe even Big Lebowski, Tucker or TRON!

All I know it was long overdue.

While we are handing out Oscars to people who should have won one before… how’s about some love for Sigourney Weaver?

Nope, she’s never won one.

It doesn’t seem right does it?

Maybe she should play a down on her luck country singer.

(It worked for Robert DuVall and Jeff Bridges!)

I was stunned The Hurt Locker won

I really thought Avatar was going to win right up until the end. (Hey, wasn’t Tom Hanks supposed to read all the nominees?)

So James Cameron’s hot ex wife upset the King of the World. And now all Cameron has as a consolation prize is a $700 million gross, the two biggest grossing movies of all time and 3 Oscars already on his mantle. How can he sleep at night?

OK, enough… back to baseball.

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My Oscar picks and Why I think 10 Best Picture Nominees is a Good Thing

Forgive me, Sully Baseball fans… I need to do another Oscar post.

I just watched The Blind Side. It was a sweet, flawed, well intentioned movie that should have been a made for TV movie, but is harmless. Seeing that film means I have seen all 10 Best Picture nominees before the ceremony this weekend… thus keeping my insane Oscar obsession alive.

Of course they have changed the number of Best Picture nominees from 5 to 10 this year, partly as a response to popular films like The Dark Knight and WALL-E being snubbed last year.

And it seems like one of the popular things to do in cyberspace is write about what a lousy idea 10 nominees is.

I disagree. Not to be a contrarian, but I think 10 Best Picture nominations has turned out to be a fantastic idea.

This isn’t like expanding the baseball playoffs or the NCAA tournament to allow lesser teams a shot to win it all. The Oscars are subjective and the widened Best Picture race has allowed for nominees that reflect the different tastes of viewers and have a better chance to have a film to root for.

Do you like big mongo blockbusters?
Well then you have Avatar and Up to root for.

Do you like critically acclaimed films that may have eluded blockbuster status?
Then cheer on The Hurt Locker.

Are you turned on by showcases for acclaimed directors?
The Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds and the Coen Brothers’ A Serious Man are for you.

Do you like big movie stars carrying a film?
Then I bet you loved George Clooney in Up in the Air or Sandra Bullock in The Blind Side.

Do you like movies where new comers steal the film?
I suspect you loved An Education or Precious (which was evidently based on the Novel Push by Sapphire.)

How about if you love films revolving around shrimp looking creatures trapped in South Africa?

It’s safe to say that District 9 is probably the best film revolving around shrimp looking creatures trapped in South Africa.

I think the change is a great one… and still doesn’t prevent controversy. (My favorite film of 2009 was the unnominated In the Loop… but who is keeping track?)

The Oscar show is this weekend and it is one of the highlights of my year… and I think I am the only person on the planet who never gets bored by the show and doesn’t mind how long it is.

And this year will be interesting with an ex husband and wife tandem competing for the big prize… and I think that neither James Cameron nor Kathryn Bigelow are walking away empty handed.

I think The Hurt Locker is going to win Director and Screenplay but Avatar will win picture… similar to how Traffic won Director and Screenplay in 2001 but Gladiator won the big Kahuna.

Jeff Bridges (who should have won for The Fisher King… a film where he wasn’t even nominated for) is getting his long overdue Oscar. And I am picking with my gut when I say Meryl Streep will upset Sandra Bullock.

For what it is worth, here are my picks:

BEST PICTURE – Avatar
BEST DIRECTOR – Kathryn Bigelow – The Hurt Locker
BEST ACTOR – Jeff Bridges – Crazy Heart
BEST ACTRESS – Meryl Streep – Julie and Julia
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR – Christoph Waltz – Inglourious Basterds
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS – Mo’Nique – Precious
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY – The Hurt Locker (Mark Boal)
BEST SCREENPLAY ADAPTATION – Up in the Air (Jason Reitman and Sheldon Turner)
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE – Up
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM – The White Ribbon
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY – The Hurt Locker
BEST EDITING – The Hurt Locker
BEST ART DIRECTION – Nine
BEST COSTUME DESIGN – Nine
BEST MAKE UP – Star Trek
BEST MUSIC SCORE – Avatar
BEST SONG – “The Weary Kind” Crazy Heart
BEST SOUND MIXING – The Hurt Locker
BEST SOUND EFFECTS EDITING – Avatar
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE – Food Inc
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT – China’s Unnatural Disaster
BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT – Kavi
BEST ANIMATED SHORT – French Roast
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS – Avatar

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We interrupt one of my compulsions for another…

I am obsessed with the Oscars. Every year it rivals my love for baseball…

And no I don’t get bored by the ceremony.
No I don’t think it should be abolished.

I love it every year.

Often I don’t agree with the results, but that’s not the point. It is one of my big nights of TV watching in the year and I ALWAYS see the big nominees.

So tomorrow morning at some ungodly hour in the morning, the Oscar nominations will be announced. And almost as nuts as the early hour will be the fact that for the first time since the 1944 ceremony (when Casablanca was award the Oscar for Best Picture of 1943) there will be 10 nominations for Best Picture.

This is partly to kick start other smaller movies box office appeal… and partly to ensure that bigger grossing fare gets a big nomination, making the elitist Oscars seem less elitist.

Of course the big winner is probably going to be Avatar, which needs a boost in the box office the way the Yankees need to add payroll.

But before the new batch of Oscar nominated films are announced, I am going to make my predictions for the nominees.

These are the films I think WILL, not the ones I think SHOULD be nominated.

Let’s list…

BEST PICTURE

Avatar
The Blind Side
Crazy Heart
District 9
(500) Days of Summer
Hurt Locker
Inglourious Basterds
Precious
A Single Man
Up in the Air

BEST DIRECTOR

Kathryn Bigelow – The Hurt Locker
Neill Blomhamp – District 9
James Cameron – Avatar
Lee Daniels – Precious
Quentin Tarantino – Inglourious Basterns

BEST ACTOR

Jeff Bridges – Crazy Heart
George Clooney – Up in the Air
Robert Downey Jr. – Sherlock Holmes
Colin Firth – A Single Man
Jeremy Renner – The Hurt Locker

BEST ACTRESS

Sandra Bullock – The Blind Side
Carey Mulligan – An Education
Helen Mirren – The Last Station
Gabourney Sidibe – Precious
Meryl Streep – Julie and Julia

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Woody Harrelson – The Messenger
Anthony Mackie – The Hurt Locker
Christopher Plummer – The Last Station
Stanley Tucci – Julie and Julia
Christoph Waltz – Inglourious Basterds

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Vera Farmiga – Up in the Air
Anna Kendrick – Up in the Air
Diane Kruger – Inglourious Basterds
Melanie Laurent – Inglourious Basterds
Mo’Nique – Precious

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Avatar
(500) Days of Summer
The Hurt Locker
Inglourious Basterds
Up

BEST SCREENPLAY ADAPTATION
Crazy Heart
An Education

Precious

A Single Man
Up in the Air

And yes because I am insane I will list out the other nominees as well.

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, Coraline, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Ponyo, Up

BEST ART DIRECTION
Avatar, District 9, Inglourious Basterds, The Lovely Bones, Nine

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
The Hurt Locker, Inglourious Basterds, The Lovely Bones, Nine, Up in the Air

BEST COSTUME DESIGN
An Education, Inglourious Basterds, Nine, The Young Victoria, Where the Wild Things Are

BEST EDITING
Avatar, (500) Days of Summer, The Hurt Locker, Inglourious Basterds, Up in the Air

BEST MAKE UP
Avatar, District 9, The Road, Star Trek, Where the Wild Things Are

BEST MUSIC SCORE
Avatar, The Informant!, Sherlock Holmes, Up, Where the Wild Things Are

BEST ORIGINAL SONG
Avatar, Brothers, Crazy Heart, Nine, Where the Wild Things Are

BEST SOUND
Avatar, The Hurt Locker, Nine, Public Enemies, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen

BEST SOUND EFFECTS EDITING
Avatar, The Hurt Locker, Star Trek, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, Up

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Avatar, District 9, Star Trek, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, 2012


I don’t know about Documentary short and feature and live action and animated short… and neither do you.

I have Avatar leading the pack with 11 nominations.
I predict that PIXAR will once again be snubbed a Best Picture nomination, this time for Up. But they’ll be the odds on favorite to pick up a statue for Animated Feature.

Clint Eastwood’s Invictus will be shut out totally.
Star Trek will be shut out of the major awards.

And yes, I predict Kevin O’Connell will get his 21 nomination for Best Sound. He’s never won.
And seeing he will be nominated for Public Enemies and not Avatar or The Hurt Locker… he’s kinda screwed.

Let’s compare these predictions with the actual nominees tomorrow morning and see how I did.

And take a look at my Oscar rants from 2005 while we are at it.

Link

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