Sunday, February 24, 2013

The Oscars: Final thoughts before it kicks off

My thoughts on a few of the categories.


Best Picture

Amour
Argo
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Django Unchained
Les Miserablés
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Silver Linings Playbook
Zero Dark Thirty



Very open category. Personally, I like Silver Linings Playbook, Argo and Django Unchained for his category, although I do believe Lincoln and Les Miserablès are strong contenders. Maybe Zero Dark Thirty? Life of Pi was an entertaining movie, however I think of it more as a typical contender for the special effects-awards. Django Unchained is entertaining as hell, but it might not be a typical candidate to win Best Picture. Amour is definitely an outsider, and the fact it is nominated here definitely gives it the edge as a favorite amongst the foreign language films. Beasts of the Southern Wild would be a surprising choice, but it´s not impossible. All in all, I consider Lincoln and Les Miserablés the most typical choices from an Academy-point of view. Django Unchained would be a brave choice, considering it´s content, as would Zero Dark Thirty be. 


Best Foreign Language Film

Amour
Kon-Tiki
No
A Royal Affair
War Witch

Alicia Vilander and Mads Mikkelsen, stars of A Royal Affair


Amour is definitely the favorite, and everything else will be considered a surprise.  The danish movie A Royal Affair was very good in my opinion, with Mads Mikkelsen and Alicia Vikander great in the two leading roles. No, starring Gael García Bernal, is also an outsider. The story of how Pinochet´s dictatorship in Chile ended is intriguing and interesting. Bernal is a top actor, and the supporting cast was also impressive. Kon-Tiki, the Norwegian movie, is also an entertaining movie, showing Thor Heyerdahl´s crossing of the Pacific on a balsa wood raft. War Witch is a Canadian movie telling the story of a young girl´s life as a kid soldier in Africa. Rachel Mwanza is impressive in the lead role, but the movie suffers due to the fact that one doesn´t really get close enough to the characters. 

The Oscars 2013: Actors and Actresses

Tonight the winners of the 85th Annual Academy Awards will be announced. Having previously written about my guesses (and hopes) for the Screenplay and Director-awards, I will now focus on 4 of the other big ones. Namely the awards for best male and female lead actor/actress, and the ones for the best supporting roles.



Best Actor

Daniel Day-Lewis - Lincoln
Bradley Cooper - Silver Linings Playbook
Hugh Jackman - Les Miserables
Joaquin Phoenix - The Master
Denzel Washington - Flight


All five performances nominated were top-class, although Daniel Day-Lewis is considered the big favorite, with Joaquin Phoenix maybe the most likely candidate if the 2-time winner (My Left Foot, There Will Be Blood) is snubbed. Daniel Day-Lewis´ performance in Lincoln is basically perfect. As a member of the audience you almost find it hard to believe that Day-Lewis has never met the real Lincoln for research. His mannerism, speech and voice is supposedly spot on, a fact that doesn´t surprise anyone who´s followed the career of the 55 year-old actor. 

Joaquin Phoenix delivers a masterful performance in The Master, well helped by Philip Seymour Hoffman. Their scenes together are truly wonderful, especially their first scene together doing a "session" in the boat. Phoenix has had a short break from acting, but the 3-time Academy Awards-nominee really delivers in his "comeback". His posture, his attitude, his craziness... all very disturbing, yet intriguing. I consider Joaquin the most likely contender to Day-Lewis for the award.

Hugh Jackman is nominated for his portrayal of Jean Valjean in the classic story by Victor Hugo, Les Misérables. Tom Hooper directed the 2012-version of the story, and Jackman is impressive as the troubled man struggling to keep himself and his "daughter" safe from his past. His singing might not be good enough for a top-class stage-version of the story, but he does a very good job at it nevertheless. And his acting is top notch, although I do struggle to see how he can be considered above the previously mentioned nominees. Either way, it is a well deserved nomination for the Australian. 

Bradley Cooper is another first time nominee, for his portrayal of Pat in Silver Linings Playbook. Arguably his best performance so far in his career, Bradley delivers a great deal of humor and hurt to his character. His character struggles with a bi-polar disorder, and after a stint at a mental institution he is brought home to his parents by his mother. Determined to get well and win back his ex-wife, he challenges himself in many areas, but is continuously challenged by his illness. Great job by "the guy from Hangover", and hopefully we´ll see more of this Bradley Cooper in the years to come. His co-stars (Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro and Jacki Weaver) are also wonderful, and the chemistry between them are pretty much perfect.

Bradley Cooper in Silver Linings Playbook

Denzel Washington has won 2 Academy Awards (Training Day, Glory) and is nominated for the 6th time this year. In Flight he plays an airline pilot who masterfully lands a flight destined for a crash-landing, saving many lives. However, he is still put under investigation due to the fact that there are rumours of him having been under the influence while doing so. Denzel Washington is no stranger to dramatic roles, and he is very believable (though not as likable as he usually is) in his role. His scenes with John Goodman are good comic relief, and his Kelly Reilly are both sad, tragic and at times tough to watch. I personally think he was better in Training Day (for which he won), and I do think the competition this year is a little too good for him to win it this year.


Best Actress

Jessica Chastain - Zero Dark Thirty
Jennifer Lawrence - Silver Linings Playbook
Emmanuelle Riva - Amour
Quvenzhane Wallis - Beasts of the Southern Wild
Naomi Watts - The Impossible

Jessica Chastain is very good in Zero Dark Thirty, but is very good enough? I doubt it. Jessica Chastain is a great actress, but I do feel she has to be considered an outsider this year. I have a feeling we´ll see her again amongst the nominees in years to come, however. Chastain reminds me of Cate Blanchett, and that is a compliment. This is her second nomination, as she was also nominated last year for her supporting role in The Help. 

Naomi Watts is also nominated for the second time, having previously been nominated for her leading role in 21 Grams. This year, she plays Maria, the wife and mother of three, in The Impossible. Definitely a great contender for the award, her performance is a powerful one. As the desperate mother looking for her two kids and husband after the tsunami strikes Thailand, she is solid from start to finish. As the tsunami strikes, she is pretty banged up, but her perseverance is second to none. To me, Watts delivers one of her best performances to date, which is saying a lot. 

Jennifer Lawrence has had a couple of great years, and is nominated for the second time in three years. Only 22 years old, Jennifer is definitely one of the brightest stars in her generation, and she is rightfully nominated for her job in Silver Linings Playbook. Her character, Tiffany, is struggling after her husbands death, with mischievous and erratic behaviour. Jennifer is both great at comedic timing, and very believable in her dramatic parts of the movie. You definitely feel for the girl, despite (or maybe because) of her craziness. A definite outsider to the award, having already won numerous awards her part in the movie (Golden Globe included). 

Quvenzhané Wallis is the youngest person ever nominated for a best actress Academy Award, and is also the first nominee ever born in the 21st century. I did love her performance in Beast of the Southern Wild. It´s a very honest portrayal of a young girl facing her fears. She plays with a certain grit about her, and is definitely one to watch in the coming years. I wouldn´t be surprised if she wins tonight, though I do think she has to be considered an outsider, as I believe the biggest favorite is...

Quvanzhané Wallis in Beasts of the Southern Wild


Emmanuelle Riva. Wow. Riva was born in 1927, two years prior to the first annual Academy Awards, and her performance in Amour is simply breathtaking. Anne and her husband live together, but after she suffers a stroke, she is left partly paralyzed and stuck in a wheel-chair. Riva is amazing, and it´s almost hard to believe that she is just acting. I wasn´t completely sold on the movie as a whole, but I do consider Riva the favorite for the award for best leading role. It would no doubt be a fully deserved gesture for the woman who actually turn 86 years today. Would be one helluva Birthday....


Best Actor in a Supporting Role

Alan Arkin - Argo
Robert De Niro - Silver Linings Playbook
Philip Seymour Hoffman - The Master
Tommy Lee Jones - Lincoln
Christoph Waltz - Django Unchained

A very open category, with strong contenders all around. Christoph Waltz is thriving under Quentin Tarantino, and his Dr. King Schulz in Django Unchained is a brilliant character. One does however see a lot of Hans Landa (Inglorious Basterds) in the role, much due to his dialogue. Nonetheless, Waltz is once again marvelous, and could just as well land his second Oscar tonight.

Robert De Niro is back! In Silver Linings Playbook we can see the De Niro we have missed for the last decade. Although his part has a lot of comedy to it, it´s in the dramatic parts of the movie De Niro really shines. The fight in the attic and his talk with Pat (Bradley Cooper) on the side of his bed is very touching and heartbreaking. More of this again, please.

Robert De Niro in Silver Linings Playbook


Philip Seymour Hoffman is brilliant in The Master. He has a certain aura, Seymour Hoffman, and it really shines through in this movie. His scenes with Phoenix is, as previously stated, pure class. As the charismatic leader of "The Cause", Philip Seymour Hoffman is probably, together with Waltz, the candidates with the most screen-time out of the nominees. And I consider him one of the big favorites, and a win would definitely not be undeserved for the 4 times nominated actor (1 win: Capote).

Alan Arkin is an amazing actor, and in Argo he is pure class as Lester Siegel. His scenes with John Goodman are at times hilarious, and you can´t help but love Arkin´s character in the movie. I do however think that his chances are a bit slim due to his screen time. Arkin has four nominations to his name, and his only win so far was in 2007 for Little Miss Sunshine.

Tommy Lee Jones is a one-time winner and four-time nominee at the Academy Awards. In Lincoln he plays Thaddeus Stevens, and he does a great job playing the politician hoping to better the slaves of the African-Americans. His scenes at the hearings are some of the highlights of the movies. 


Best Actress in a Supporting Role

Amy Adams - The Master
Sally Field - Lincoln
Anne Hathaway - Les Miserablés
Helen Hunt - The Sessions
Jacki Weaver - Silver Linings Playbook


Helen Hunt strikes me as the odd one out in this category. She was good, no doubt, but was she really that good? The Sessions was a good movie, with a stellar perfomance by John Hawkes, but I do think Helen Hunt will have to be content with being amongst the nominees tonight. 

Amy Adams, however, strikes me as one of the big favorites in this category. She is scary in The Master, as the wife of Philip Seymour Hoffman´s character. Her character seems to be in total control of her husband, as shown in a quite disturbing scene with him in the toilet. Amy Adams is a wonderful actress, and maybe four times is lucky for her? She has previously been nominated for her supporting roles in The Fighter, Doubt (also co-starring Philip Seymour Hoffman) and Junebug. 

Sally Field was determined to land the role in Lincoln as Abraham Lincoln´s wife, Mary Todd. She got it, and with her track-record at the Oscars, she is setup for a win. She has won both of the times she has previously been nominated. However, I wasn´t completely convinced by her portrayal, though I won´t argue a nomination can´t be defended. 

Jacki Weaver was amazing in Silver Linings Playbook. I really loved her part, and her facial expressions speaks volumes in a couple of the scenes. Especially in the dance-sequence, she really gives a lot to the scene only by her quirky smile. She also shows off her comic talent in a few of the scenes, especially when talking to Robert De Niro and Jennifer Lawrence. I´d love to see her win it, although I do think she might have to be content with the nomination. 

Anne Hathaway is nominated for the second time, this time for her portrayal of Fantine in Les Miserablés. Critics say that she is overacting, but I think she does a great job, and that her acting is spot on for the character she is playing. Her song-talent has been showed off at the Oscars before (while Hugh Jackman was hosting), and she really holds her own in the movie. She didn´t have too much screen time, but no doubt she won the nomination for the scene where she performs "I Dreamed a Dream".

I consider Amy Adams and Anne Hathaway as the favorites, with Jacki Weaver an outsider. 


Only hours to go now. Enjoy the Oscars, and feel free to leave your thoughts in the comments section.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Oscar Thoughts: Screenplay and Director

With the Academy Awards only about two weeks away, here are some of my thoughts on a few of the nominees. In this post I´ll focus on three of awards, namely the following:

Best Director

Steven Spielberg - Lincoln
David O. Russell - Silver Linings Playbook
Ang Lee - Life of Pi
Benh Zeitlin - Beasts of the Southern Wild
Michael Haneke - Amour



Best Adapted Screenplay

Argo - Chris Terrio
Beasts of the Southern Wild - Lucy Altibar & Benh Zeitlin
Life of Pi - David Magee
Lincoln - Tony Kushner
Silver Linings Playbook - David O. Russell


Best Original Screenplay


Amour - Michael Haneke
Django Unchained - Quentin Tarantino
Moonrise Kingdom - Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola
Zero Dark Thirty - Mark Boal
Flight - John Gatins

Best Director

This years nominees for Best Director are for the most part very well-known names in the movie-industry. Steven Spielberg, one feels, has been around since the real Abraham Lincoln was the President of the U.S., and both Michael Haneke and Ang Lee have been household names for a long time. David O. Russell has also been producing and directing since the 90´s, but before his critically acclaimed The Fighter (Oscar-nominated in 2011) he´s probably best known for Three Kings (1999).
Benh Zeitlin however, has never directed a feature film before, and his Beasts of the Southern Wild is an outsider for this years 85th annual Academy Awards.


What do I think? Speaking of the directors, I´ll say that for me Ang Lee, Spielberg and Zeitlin are the favorites. I had high hopes for Amour, but I was left disappointed overall by the movie. It had its moments, but this was not Haneke´s best work (however, Emmanuelle Riva made the movie one to watch anyway). The story has potential, but to me too much emphasis was put on making half the scenes twice as long as they needed to be for the point to be made.


Lincoln is, to me, a more challenging film to direct then Amour, and Spielberg does an excellent job. Where Haneke relies on the challenges of capturing the audience with scenes from within one apartment, Spielberg has the disadvantage/advantage of a much more varied scenery in telling his story. Some of the scenes are beautiful, as one of the scenes showing Lincoln riding a horse through the battlefields in the aftermath of the civil war. Ang Lee did a brilliant job making Life of Pi, and even though I wasn´t completely sold on the movie itself, the directing was masterful. That CGI-tiger was cute as hell! The scenes with rough weather was also made very believable for the most part.


When it comes to Zeitlin´s Beasts of the Southern Wild, it´s impossible not to give the guy credit for directing a film with the cast he did. We´re talking about actors of very little or no experience at all, and they all did an amazing job. A lot has been said about 9-year old Quvenzhané Wallis, (and I´ll get back to that when I´ll discuss other categories in a later post), but I really enjoyed the other cast-members as well. A lot of great scenes, and a very beautiful movie, despite a few aspects that I didn´t really love (giant hogs...). David O. Russell did a great job on Silver Linings Playbook as well, though I feel this is more the kind of movie that can win for Screenplay, not director.

Trailers for the movies:

Amour



Lincoln



Life of Pi



Silver Linings Playbook



Beasts of the Southern Wild






Best Adapted Screenplay

The five nominees for Best adapted screenplay are all strong contenders, with Silver Linings Playbook, Argo, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Life of Pi and Lincoln all seeming like movies that could win. David O. Russell wrote the screenplay for Silver Linings Playbook, a movie I´ve watched three times already, and I think he does a brilliant job with the timing of the humour in the movie. To me this movie and Beasts of the Southern Wild, co-written by the director Bein Zeitlin and Lucy Alibar, stands out as the two "roses" of the bunch. 


Life of Pi is wonderfully adapted to screenplay by David Magee, and let´s face it... making that story "filmable" was never going to be an easy thing to do. But if Ang Lee managed to do it (and he did), the assist for that goal should definitely go to David Magee. Now for the two movies based on real life events, Argo (written by Chris Terrio) and Lincoln (written by Tony Kushner). While the former is a sharp, to-the-point screenplay on the plan to save hostages life in a very hostile Iran in the 70s, the latter takes on the period of Lincoln´s presidency related to the abolishment of slavery. I think Argo might be a favorite here, and I personally wouldn´t cringe if Argo or Silver Linings Playbook won the award. I´d say Argo and Beasts of the Southern Wild might be the two nominees I probably think will win it, though.



Argo




Best Original Screenplay

As I´ve said earlier, Amour (Michael Haneke wrote the screenplay as well)  didn´t really impress me much. I won´t say that maybe it was due to high expectations. It just wasn´t a great movie, I thought. The theme of the movie is interesting, but I didn´t feel the story was that great... and at times, not very believable either. Flight, written by John Gatins,  gave us a Denzel Washington doing what he does best. Act his ass off. And he was great. Again. It also brought us another memorable performance by the ridicilously cool John Goodman. The story is also intriguing, and it has it´s twists and turns (cue Family Guy scene with Stewie talking about Brian´s novel). The opening 30 minutes is actually amazing. I loved it. I truly did. It´s an outsider, but I do think it will fall short of one of the movies I consider the favorite nominees, namely Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino) and Zero Dark Thirty (Mark Boal). 


Django Unchained is about as Tarantino as you can get. The dialogue, the scenery, the characters. I´ll never forget the scene where the blood of a man gunned down on a horse hits those white flowers. It reminded me of the fighting-scene in the snow in Kill Bill Vol. 1. And it is beautiful. Zero Dark Thirty has received a lot of criticism for it´s torture scenes, but the screenplay is nevertheless still probably one of the better of the nominees. Still, I´d go Django Unchained in this category. 



The last nominee, Moonrise Kingdom written by Wes Anderson and Roman Coppola, is a cute movie, and very classic Wes Anderson. However, I find the movie in its whole a bit... too much Anderson. It all gets a bit... meeh. Had the Oscars gone all Golden Globe and put the movie as a "Comedy or Musical", then maybe, but I wouldn´t hold this screenplay over any of the other nominees.. Don´t get me wrong. I did enjoy the movie, but I still think Wes Anderson tries a little bit to much to create cheesy, funny shit. And too much cheese is never good. Never. 



Moonrise Kingdom


Flight


Django Unchained


Zero Dark Thirty