From the monthly archives:

March 2006

United 93 Trailer and Website

by Ambrose Heron on March 25, 2006

The website for United 93 - the Paul Greengrass directed film about United Airlines Flight 93 that was formerly known as Flight 93 - seems to have gotten an extensive update, which also features a new trailer. It will be the first major motion picture to deal explicitly with the events of 9/11.

The teaser trailer was eerie and the new trailer seems to suggest that the film will be well made and sensitive. Greengrass demonstrated with both Bloody Sunday and The Bourne Supremacy that he is a director who can tackle a difficult political subject whilst also crafting an intelligent mainstream thriller. He would seem to be an excellent choice to direct this film.

In just over a month (April 28th) it will open at US cinemas (it opens in the UK on Sept 1st). Will it be accused of insensitivity to the victims? Will right wing bloggers attack it as liberal Hollywood rewriting history? Will left wing commentators accuse it of not providing enough context on the events since 9/11?

Watching the trailer is disturbing. Although the events have been covered many times in numerous news programmes and documentaries, there is something quite different about seeing it as part of a motion picture. In a strange way it feels more ‘real’ than the news images we are now so familiar with.

I’m sure that in the next few weeks there will be more discussion about this film but in the meantime do leave some comments about the trailer and any thoughts you might have about this and the other 9/11 film out this year - Oliver Stone’s World Trade Center. Is it too early for these films to come out? Or will they be sensible meditations on a recent historical event?

> United 93 Official Site
> Watch the trailer
> Official Site for World Trade Center
> The September 11 Digital Archive

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Apologies and updates…

by Ambrose Heron on March 19, 2006

Apologies for not posting over the last few days. A hectic work schedule and the oncoming effects of a cold have kept me busy. Just to prove I’ve not been too lazy, since I last wrote I’ve seen the following films:

Plus, I interviewed Brian Cox (who stars in The Ringer) and David Morrissey (who stars in Basic Instinct 2), both of which will air soon on the Mike Mendoza show on TalkSPORT.

Bizarrely, and without wanting to descend into Heat-style celebrity spotting I saw the following people in and around London this week in a non-professional capacity: 

A bizarre week all-round then.

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New X-Men 3 Trailer

by Ambrose Heron on March 7, 2006

A new X-Men 3 trailer has been released. And it actually looks pretty good.

> View the trailer at Apple
> Wikipedia entry for X-Men 3
> IMDb entry for the film

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Post-Oscar thoughts

by Ambrose Heron on March 7, 2006

So Crash won Best Picture. It seems some members of the Academy did know how to quit Brokeback Mountain after all. It’s a shame as Ang Lee’s film (along with all the other Best Picture nominees) were superior to the LA set racial drama. But just how often do the Oscars ever award the best film “Best Picture”? It is a surprisingly rare occurrence. The only one’s I can think of in recent memory were The Return of the King, American Beauty and Schindler’s List. And let’s not forget that recent Best Picture winners have included Chicago, Braveheart and Driving Miss Daisy. Maybe in the long run Brokeback Mountain will be more admired because it didn’t win, in the same way we now look back fondly at Goodfellas (beaten by Dances with Wolves in 1990) and Raging Bull (beaten by Ordinary People in 1980). But never mind.

Some other random thoughts:

  • How on earth did Memoirs of a Geisha win so many technical awards?
  • Jon Stewart was actually OK as a host despite some rocky moments of blankness from the Hollywood throng. The pre-prepared Daily Show-style segments were excellent but I think Stewart struggled to modify his style to a very different environment.
  • The whole ceremony seemed a lot better paced than in years gone by.
  • There was little sign of any tedious “This is Hollywood” dance routines. Thank God.
  • The main reason Crash won was the flood of Lionsgate DVDs
  • I think Flags of Our Fathers will win Best Picture next year.

Anyway, here are some post-Oscar links for you to peruse:

> David Poland dissects the Oscars at The Hot Button
> Nikki Finke of Deadline Hollywood Daily posts her ‘I told you so’ piece on the Crash upset (she predicted a Crash upset quite a while ago)
> Kenneth Turan of the LA Times is pissed that Crash won
> Jeffrey Wells at Hollywood Elsewhere is upset too
> The hilarious "Gay Cowboy Montage" from last night’s show over at YouTube
> The Guardian review the night in quotes
> Kristopher Tapley at Movie City News reviews the evening
> Defamer do a roundup of the Oscar live blogs
> Jackie Finlay from BBC News on who said what backstage
> Andy Denhart of MSNBC with a slightly unfair assessment of Jon Stewart as Oscar host
> USA Today on what we never saw on TV
> Jocelyn Noveck of the AP asks if there was a Brokeback Backlash
> Roger Ebert reports from the Oscars
> David Carr on the LA aspect to the Crash win
> Lynn Elber of the AP on the TV ratings drop for the Oscar telecast
> Wikipedia’s incredibly detailed entry on what happened at the 78th Academy Awards

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The Oscar Winners in full

by Ambrose Heron on March 7, 2006

Best Picture
Crash

Best Director
Ang Lee - Brokeback Mountain

Best Actor
Philip Seymour Hoffman - Capote

Best Actress
Reese Witherspoon - Walk the Line

Best Supporting Actor
George Clooney - Syriana

Best Supporting Actress
Rachel Weisz - The Constant Gardener

Best Animated Feature Film
Wallace and Gromit in the Curse of the Were-Rabbit

Best Foreign Language Film
Tsotsi (South Africa)

Best Original Screenplay
Crash

Best Adapted Screenplay
Brokeback Mountain

Best Documentary Feature
March of the Penguins

Best Cinematography
Memoirs of a Geisha

Best Visual Effects
King Kong

Best Art Direction
Memoirs of a Geisha

Best Film Editing
Crash

Best Sound Mixing
King Kong

Sound Editing
King Kong

Best Music (Song)
It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp - Hustle and Flow

Best Music (Score)
Brokeback Mountain

Best Costume Design
Memoirs of a Geisha

Best Make-up
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

Best Short Film
Six Shooter

Best Animated Short Film
The Moon and the Son: An Imagined Conversation

Best Documentary Short Subject
A Note of Triumph: The Golden Age of Norman Corwin

Lifetime Achievement Award
Robert Altman

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The Oscars - Live

by Ambrose Heron on March 6, 2006

Times are all GMT

00.20
The red carpet stuff has started. Paul Giamatti and Tim Burton have just been interviewed. And now Heath Ledger and Michelle Williams. The ABC red carpet crew are getting through these quick.

00.31
Joel Siegel on the red carpet has just reminded ABC viewers that Philip Seymour Hoffman once promised his college room mate that he would bark if he ever won the Oscar for Best Actor. I cannot wait to see if he does.

00.58
The ceremony is about to begin. The big question has to be: how many gaw cowboy jokes is Jon Stewart going to squeeze into his opening monologue?

01.06
Amusing opening TV montage with previous Oscar presenters turning this year’s job down. I think Jon Stewart will be funny. I don’t see him doing a Letterman.

01.07
First obligatory shot of Jack Nicholson grinning with his shades on.

01.10
First Dick Cheney gag of the evening. Bjork (she of the Ostrich like dress in 2000) couldn’t be here tonight because the Vice-President shot her. Nice. 

1.20
George Clooney wins Best Supporting Actor for Syriana. The one prediction I was worried about but George came good!

1.28
King Kong wins for Best Visual Effects. And rightly so. The film is a landmark in visual SFX.

1.32
Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit wins Best Animated Feature. Nick Park and his co-director Steve Box are wearing some rather large bow ties and have just put some miniture ones on their golden statuettes.

01.42
Best Live Action Short Film has gone to Six Shooter, directed by Martin McDonagh (no, I haven’t seen it either)

01.47
Best Animated Short Film has been won by The Moon and the Son: An Imagined Conversation. Another one I have yet to see.

01.50
Memoirs of a Geisha wins it’s first technical award of the evening as it scoops Best Costume Design.

01.59
Best Makeup goes to The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

02.01
Host Jon Stewart points to the big Oscar statue behind him and asks if democracy in Hollywood would flourish if they all pulled it down.

02.35
Sorry for the delay - I needed a cup of tea. Whilst I was away Rachel Weisz won Best Supporting Actress for The Constant Gardener. Go Rachel. It is 2 out of 2 in my predictions for the main categories. The documentary awards went to A Note of Triumph: The Golden Age of Norman Corwin for Best Documentary Short Subject and March of the Penguins won Best Documentary, which saw the rather bizarre sight of French filmmakers invading the stage with toy penguins.

03.01
Best Art Direction goes to Memoirs of a Geisha (ahead of King Kong?!) whilst Brokeback Mountain gets its first Oscar of the evening as a surprised looking Gustavo Santaolalla wins Best Original Score for his evocative work on Ang Lee’s film.

03.28
Best Sound Mixing has gone to King Kong (I had a feeling Walk the Line might have sneaked it but it’s well deserved).

Meanwhile Meryl Streep and Lily Tomlin gave a rather tortuous introduction to Robert Altman for his Lifetime Achievement Award in we learnt that he had a heart transplant a few years ago.

Best Music (Song) goes to Three 6 Mafia for "It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp" from Hustle and Flow which is annoying as I thought it would win a few days ago but changed my mind. After Eminem’s win a couple of years ago it seems the Academy is getting down with the kids when it comes to music.

03.41
Best gag of the evening so far from Jon Stewart: "For those of you keeping score at home. Three 6 Mafia - 1 Oscar. Martin Scorcese - no Oscars". 

03.45
Another technical award goes to King Kong as it wins Best Sound Editing.

Best Foreign Language Film goes to Tsotsi (South Africa) and it’s director was quite emotional. 

Best Film Editing goes to Crash and editor Hughes Winborne almost walked off the stage before remebering he had a quick speech to give.

03.47
The great (and I mean great) Philip Seymour Hoffman wins Best Actor for Capote. But he didn’t bark. Pity.

03.56
Memoirs of a Geisha wins Best Cinematography. Can someone please explain how this won over The New World and Brokeback Mountain?

04.00
Reese Witherspoon deservedly wins Best Actress for Walk the Line. She seems somewhat overwhelmed by it all. She was emotional but there was no sign of any Paltrow-style waterworks.

04.15
It’s the screenplays now. Diana Ossana and Larry McMurty win Best Adapted Screenplay for Brokeback Mountain. Highly expected but richly deserved. Larry even saluted the "culture of the book". Which was nice.

Best Original Screenplay goes to Paul Haggis and Bobby Maresco for Crash. Another highly expected win. But wasn’t Paul nervous?

04.21
Ang Lee wins Best Director for Brokeback Mountain. But we all knew he was going to didn’t we? The real question is whether Crash can sneak Best Picture…

04.24
Best Picture goes to Crash. I didn’t think it would do it but all the last minute vibes from various observers proved correct.

04.44
Well, that’s it for another year. The big stories from a British perspective were Rachel Weisz and Wallace and Gromit winning, the major story of the evening was Crash winning Best Picture. Some predicted it and they were right. One interesting aspect for Oscar geeks was the fact that a different film won in each of the six major categories. I can’t remember the last time that happened. Anyway, I’m off to bed as I’m tired and the Vanity Fair party is too far away for me to walk ;-)

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Oscar Countdown Part 4

by Ambrose Heron on March 4, 2006

Only a day to go and the Brokeback Mountain spoofs are still going strong. I’ve been tempted to change a couple of my predictions but I’m going to leave them as they are. A voice is my head keeps saying Paul Giamatti is going to win instead of George Clooney but I’m doing my best to ignore it.   

Anyway, here are some more links on the eve of the big night.

> The Angry Alien team have done a 30 second version of Brokeback Mountain with bunnies
> Jeff Wells has a sneaky feeling that Crash could cause a Best Picture upset despite being an ardent fan of Brokeback Mountain
> Jackie Finlay of BBC News speaks to Wallace and Gromit creators Nick Park and Steve Box about their Oscar expectations
> Defamer go into last minute Oscar overdrive
> The AP’s special Oscar section
> Leonard Klady with some interesting Oscar observations at Movie City News
> Predict the winners at Oscarwatch
> Truthdig interviews David Thompson on the Oscars (he’s right about Crash by the way)
> Blogpulse takes a look at the contenders for Best Actor and Best Actress
> Check the latest Oscar odds at Oddschecker
> David Carr of the New York Times makes his final Oscar predictions
> Print out a ballot courtesy of the official Oscars site

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Oscar Predictions

by Ambrose Heron on March 4, 2006

One of the interesting things about this year’s Oscar race is the high standard of the films nominated. Compared to last year, the standard is much higher. The three films that dominated last year (Million Dollar Baby, The Aviator & Ray) were good but I don’t think anyone in their right mind would declare them masterpieces (although some American critics did think the Clint Eastwood tearjerker was just that). Sideways was clearly the best film but, as so often with Oscar, suffered from the "best film rarely wins” syndrome. But this year is different. Nearly all the five nominees for Best Picture are worthy of the Oscar.

Let’s take a look at each one before analysing the individual categories:

Brokeback Mountain - Ang Lee’s beautifully made drama has been the awards favourite this year and there are several reasons why. Its highly likely that the taboo breaking gay love story has helped it become an ‘issue film’ - the kind that Oscar loves - and boost its box office. But with all the media chatter of a ‘gay cowboy’ film it’s easy to forget the numerous qualities of this remarkable film: Heath Ledger’s unexpectedly brilliant performance and some strong supporting turns from Michelle Williams and Jake Gyllenhaal; Roderigo Prieto’s wonderful cinematography; Gustavo Santaolalla’s superb minimalist score; the impressive adaptation by Larry McMurty and Diana Ossana from Annie Proulx’s short story and Ang Lee’s masterful direction. The film has also penetrated pop culture to the point where it is difficult to keep up with the spoof posters and trailers circulating on the Internet.

Capote - Although a lot the attention for this film has been devoted to Philip Seymour Hoffman’s stunning central performance as Truman Capote, this depiction of the writing of In Cold Blood is a fascinating study of a writer as a literary vampire as he uses his sources to create a non-fiction masterpiece. From top to bottom, it is hard to find a fault with Bennet Miller’s film: the acting is uniformly excellent, the late 50s and early 60s are evoked remarkably well within a limited budget and the central themes of the film are a rich source for debate and reflection.

Good Night, and Good Luck - At just over 90 minutes long, George Clooney’s second film as a director maybe short but it is perfectly formed. In some ways it represents the awards season with its political edge complemented by an artful construction. David Straithern’s depiction of CBS newsman Ed Murrow is eerily good and Robert Elswit’s cinematography brilliantly evoked the creation of a 50s TV show. The story has a narrow focus that not everyone maybe familiar with but Clooney deserves a lot of credit in using his Hollywood clout (aka promising Warner Brothers Oceans Thirteen) in making a film like this.

Munich - Despite the (often unfair) criticism and controversy that surrounded Spielberg’s revenge drama, it is still a terrific piece of work - an intelligent (if largely fictionalised) examination of Israel’s revenge policy after the Munich Massacre in 1972. A few months back it looked a strong contender for multiple nominations but a succession of mistakes damaged its chances. Spielberg’s decision to not do press for the film and then give an exclusive interview to Time magazine alienated some sections of the media and when the vacuum was filled by a lot of empty but loud rants about the perceived politics of the film it was always going to be labelled as ‘problematic’ despite the largely positive reviews it got in the US (British critics were predictably sniffy about Spielberg taking on such a heavy and loaded subject). It’s nominations for Best Picture and Best Director seem to be a result of Universal’s heavy ad spending in the run up to the nominations rather than any great love for it amongst the Academy’s voters.

Crash - This intelligent but heavy-handed look at racism in LA is the only one of the five Best Picture nominations that I have some reservations about. Although parts of it are undeniably powerful, it has too many rough edges to be considered worthy of Best Picture. There are many things in it I like a great deal: Mark Isham’s atmospheric score; Matt Dillon’s performance as a racist cop; the cinematography by James Muro and Dana Gonzales. But, the way in which the central issue of race is handled is often clumsy and too dry. Characters say things as though writer-director Paul Haggis has copy and pasted them from an anti-racism leaflet. At the same time the patchwork plot is structurally impressive, so I have mixed feelings. It is a good film, but not a great one and I’d certainly place A History of Violence or Walk the Line above it. There is a certainly a feeling amongst some observers that Crash could cause a major upset and win Best Picture but I still don’t see that happening.

Two films that were overlooked for Best Picture (Walk the Line and The Constant Gardener) could also score some important wins (Reese Witherspoon and Rachel Weisz could both win in their respective categories). They are superior to Crash in many ways, but maybe they lacked the x-factor that endears a film to Oscar voters. With that in mind here are my predictions for the major categories, followed by who I think should win.

BEST PICTURE
Winner: Brokeback Mountain
What should win: Brokeback Mountain

It’s the film of the moment, and has broken through a lot of barriers since it won Best Picture at the Venice Film Festival last September. It is the clear favourite to win Best Picture although Crash has probably closed the gap in the final weeks of voting. An upset isn’t completely inconceivable but I can’t see it happening. Ang Lee’s film has dominated the awards season and I don’t see that changing on Sunday night. Let’s not forget Brokeback Mountain is also an outstanding film, marginally better than Munich, Capote and Good Night, and Good Luck.


BEST DIRECTOR
Who will win: Ang Lee for Brokeback Mountain
Who should win: Ang Lee

A foregone conclusion. I simply cannot see anything other than an Ang Lee win. He has already won the DGA award – a reliable indicator of who wins the golden statuette.


BEST ACTOR
Who will win: Philip Seymour Hoffman for Capote
Who should win: Philip Seymour Hoffman

Early on in the race I thought Heath Ledger would emerge as favourite but I think Philip Seymour Hoffman has this one in the bag. His performance is outstanding and arguably the most ‘showy’ of all the 5 nominated which probably means it stuck in the minds of voters more than the others.


BEST ACTRESS
Who will win: Reese Witherspoon for Walk the Line
Who should win: Reese Witherspoon

The main rival here for Witherspoon is Felicity Huffman for her excellent portrayal of a pre-op transsexual in Transamerica. But Witherspoon is the strong favourite - she won at the Golden Globes and the SAGs and gives a dazzling performance in the Johnny Cash biopic as June Carter Cash. Judi Dench (Mrs. Henderson Presents), Keira Knightley (Pride & Prejudice) and Charlize Theron (North Country) are not in the race.

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Who will win: George Clooney for Syriana (just)
Who should win: George Clooney

The hardest category to predict. Paul Giamatti (Cinderella Man) is neck and neck with George. Giamatti was stupidly overlooked last year for his brilliant performance in Sideways and maybe he’s getting the sympathy vote here. That said Cinderella Man suffered by being released in the summer and bombing at the box office and I have a feeling Clooney is going to get rewarded for his Oscar worthy work in both Syriana and Good Night, and Good Luck. There is a theory that Matt Dillon (Crash) could benefit from a split vote. Even Jake Gyllenhaal (Brokeback Mountain) could figure after his BAFTA win but I still think Clooney has to be the favourite. But only just.

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Who will win: Rachel Weisz for The Constant Gardener (just)
Who should win: Rachel Weisz

I felt for a long time that this was a two horse race between Rachel Weisz (The Constant Gardener) and Michelle Williams (Brokeback Mountain). My gut feeling is for Rachel Weisz. But there are two others who could win. I have a nagging feeling Catherine Keener could sneak a win for her small but perfect turn in Capote, whilst Amy Adams (Junebug) could be a good outside bet. Frances McDormand looks out of it, although she was fine in North Country. I’m still not 100% on this but my gut feeling is for Weisz. She didn’t win at the BAFTAs but for some reason was nominated in the Best Actress category there. But in the Best Supporting category I think Weisz should win.

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
What will win: Crash by Paul Haggis and Bobby Moresco
What should win: Good Night, and Good Luck by George Clooney and Grant Heslov

A tough call, but Crash has to be the favourite here. It might not get Best Picture but it ticks all the boxes for a screenplay award: it addresses a contemporary issue on LA’s doorstep; there are a lot of juicy moral lessons in it and there are moments of great power. However, if there is an upset Good Night, and Good Luck, shouldn’t be completely ruled out.

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
What will win: Brokeback Mountain by Diana Ossana and Larry McMurty
What should win: The Constant Gardener by Jeffrey Caine

Another tough one to call. I’m split between Brokeback Mountain and The Constant Gardener. Both are terrific screenplays but I think Diana Ossana and Larry McMurty will win, especially if Brokeback Mountain starts cleaning up although Jeffrey Caine’s adaptation of The Constant Gardener is perhaps the (slightly) greater achievement.

OTHER PREDICTIONS

Best Animated Feature
Wallace & Gromit in The Curse of the Were-Rabbit

Best Documentary
March of the Penguins

Best Cinematography
Memoirs of a Geisha (although Brokeback Mountain and Good Night, and Good Luck would be more worthy winners)

Best Score
Brokeback Mountain

Best Song
"Travelin Thru" from Transamerica.

Best Editing
Crash

Sound Editing
King Kong

Visual Effects
King Kong

Sound Mixing
Walk the Line

What do you think? Your comments are always welcome.

> The Offical Oscars site
> Wikipedia with all the nominations
> IMDb Special Section for this year’s Oscars
> Oddschecker with all the latest Oscar odds
> The Stinkers and The Razzies - ‘Alternative’ Oscars celebrating the worst films of 2005

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