Archive for February, 2013
73rd Academy Awards
73rd Academy Awards
25th March 2001
Oscar Winners at the 73rd Academy Awards
Best Film: Gladiator
Best Director: Steven Soderbergh – Traffic
Best Actor: Russell Crowe – Gladiator
Best Actress: Julia Roberts – Erin Brockovich
Best Supporting Actor: Benicio del Toro – Traffic
Best Supporting Actress: Marcia Gay Harden – Pollock
Best Original Screenplay: Cameron Crowe – Almost Famous
Best Adapted Screenplay: Stephen Gaghan – Traffic
Best Foreign Language Film: Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon directed by Ang Lee (Taiwan)
Best Documentary Feature: Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport directed by Mark Jonathan Harris and Deborah Oppenheimer
Best Original Score: Tan Dun – Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon
Best Cinematography: Peter Pau – Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon
Best Costume Design: Janty Yates – Gladiator
Best Film Editing: Stephen Mirrione – Traffic
Best Visual Effects: Gladiator
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/73rd_Academy_Awards
72nd Academy Awards
72nd Academy Awards
26th March 2000
Oscar Winners at the 72nd Academy Awards
Best Film – American Beauty
Best Director: Sam Mendes – American Beauty
Best Actor: Kevin Spacey – American Beauty
Best Actress: Hilary Swank – Boys Don’t Cry
Best Supporting Actor: Michael Caine – The Cider House Rules
Best Supporting Actress: Angelina Jolie – Girl Interrupted
Best Original Screenplay – Alan Ball – American Beauty
Best Adapted Screenplay – John Irving – The Cider House Rules
Best Foreign Language Film – All About my Mother directed by Pedro Almodovar (Spain)
Best Documentary Feature – One Day in September directed by Arthur Cohn and Kevin Macdonald
Best Original Score – John Corigiliano – The Red Violin
Best Cinematography – Conrad L. Hall – American Beauty
Best Costume Design – Lindy Hemming – Topsy Turvy
Best Film Editing – Zach Staenberg – The Matrix
Best Visual Effects – The Matrix
Source – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/72nd_Academy_Awards
85th Academy Awards
85th Academy Awards / The Oscars
24th February 2013
Oscar Winners at the 85th Annual Academy Awards
Best Film – Argo
Best Director – Ang Lee – Life of Pi
Best Actor – Daniel Day-Lewis – Lincoln
Best Actress – Jennifer Lawrence – Silver Linings Playbook
Best Supporting Actor – Christoph Waltz – Django Unchained
Best Supporting Actress – Anne Hathaway – Les Miserables
Best Original Screenplay – Quentin Tarantino – Django Unchained
Best Adapted Screenplay – Chris Terrio – Argo
Best Foreign Language Film – Amour directed by Michael Haneke (Austria)
Best Documentary – Searching for Sugarman
Best Cinematography – Claudio Miranda – Life of Pi
Best Editing – William Goldenberg – Argo
Best Sound Editing – Per Hallberg, Karen Baker Landers – Skyfall
& Paul N. J. Ottosson – Zero Dark Thirty (tie for this Oscar).
Best Original Song – “Skyfall” by Adele – Skyfall
Best Original Score – Mychael Danna – Life of Pi
Best Costume Design – Jacqueline Durran – Anna Karenina
Best Production Design – Rick Carter, Jim Erickson – Lincoln
Source: http://www.oscars.org/
Mother Russia Explodes
A Good Day to Die Hard
Bruce Willis’s fifth attempt to resuscitate the Die Hard franchise 25 years after the original Die Hard, is very thin on plot and big on action. A Good Day to Die Hard features an explosive and riveting car chase sequence through the streets of Moscow and is perhaps the film’s only redeeming feature. The rest of the film through a very light story line attempts to reconnect Willis’s bad-ass New York cop character John MacClane with his slightly inexperienced son Jack MacClane played by Jai Courtney last seen in the Tom Cruise thriller Jack Reacher.
A Good Day to Die Hard is pure action and lacks some of the witty one liners or plot twists of the previous Die Hard films, most notably Die Hard and Die Hard 3 failing to make the most of its best asset that of the location of Moscow in Russia, the first film to be set outside the United States. A Good Day to Die Hard also does not feature a convincing villain and if the success of Skyfall is to go by, an evil villain really makes a truly successful hero.
Unlike Alan Rickman (Die Hard) or Jeremy Irons (Die Hard: With a Vengeance) playing notable villains in the previous Die Hard films, this Russian mastermind Komarov played by German actor Sebastian Koch bent on robbing Chernobyl of a stockpile of uranium is entirely implausible. The only character to cast in depth of feeling is MacClane’s daughter Lucy played by Mary Elizabeth Winstead, but her part is minimal as the main focus shifts to explosive father, son male bonding enough to make Mother Russia cry as buildings, cars and half of Moscow are randomly destroyed.
Bruce Willis looks a bit old to be flying off exploding buildings and carry enough artillery to wipe out a small Caribbean nation, but then that said that is half the appeal for him appearing in such films as Red, The Expendibles 2 and the upcoming G I Joe sequel, GI Joe: Retaliation. Jai Courtney is marginally good as a CIA operative who is caught way out of his depth in a Moscow prison hostage negotiation which go completely awry.
The narrative gaps are just too great to make any real sense of what the purpose of making A Good Day to Die Hard other than milking an already average Die Hard Franchise way past its expiry date. This is baseless action, which is albeit entertaining but not deeply meaningful and should be treated as a great popcorn sequel, an inevitable money spinner that Hollywood is good at churning out despite the diminishing appeal by Willis as the main character John MacClane.
A Good Day to Die Hard is an idiots guide to making a sequel, with an obvious visual clue of MacClane leaving an American airport with a travel handbook, the Idiots Guide to Russia boarding an Aeroflot flight for Moscow. This film is only for real action fans and will definitely appeal to the male teenage target audience.
Timeline of Terror
Zero Dark Thirty
Oscar winning director Kathryn Bigelow’s brilliant yet riveting film Zero Dark Thirty is a masterful film, held together by a central performance by Jessica Chastain as CIA Intelligence Operative Maya and a superb script by Mark Boal, who also collaborated with Bigelow on the equally impressive The Hurt Locker.
This complex film opens with the flight recordings of the United 93 plane that crashed in Pennsylvania during the September 2001 US Terror attacks sparking an obsessive and frustrating hunt for the Al Qaeda mastermind Osama Bin Laden by the CIA and specifically Maya initially from the hostile environment of Pakistan then based at the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. The narrative charts a veritable timeline of terror that has characterized the first decade of the 21st century, from 9/11 to the London Transport bombings in July 2005, to the Marriott Hotel bombing in Islamabad in September 2008 to the suicide bombing at the American military base, Camp Chapman in Khost, Afghanistan in December 2009.
Zero Dark Thirty is a brilliant spy thriller and unlike Argo, is deadly serious in every respect and is grounded in much historical research and investigative journalism, noted in the detailed script by Mark Boal. As in The Hurt Locker, Bigelow once again casts her central character in a completely hostile and extremely dangerous environment and the petite Maya as the tenacious CIA operative who skilfully leads the hunt for and final execution of Al Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden, the mastermind behind many international terrorist attacks, most notably 9/11 and the 2005 London bombings.
Bigelow as a director takes on a larger canvas than in the Iraq War in The Hurt Locker and shows that the decade long hunt for America’s most wanted enemy was an international affair from Pakistan to Poland to Kuwait involving CIA black sites, detailed surveillance and lots of political wrangling.
Tradecraft
A notable narrative shift is from the film’s first half set under the Bush administration where torture, rendition and revenge were the CIA’s chief instruments of capturing Al Qaeda terrorists to the second half set after November 2008 under the Obama administration where detailed surveillance, dedication and almost positive certainty of terrorist tradecraft which ultimately lead to the riveting elimination of Osama Bin Laden at a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan in May 2011, Zero Dark Thirty is deadpan in its presentation of one nations hunt for a master terrorist and the extraordinary sacrifice and lengths these CIA operatives went to in finally achieving their goal.
Jessica Chastain performance is simply superb and has already garnered a 2013 Golden Globe Award and truly shows her talent and diversity in the role of Maya but also points to Kathryn Bigelow ability to bring out the best performance ever in her leading actors, as was the case with Jeremy Renner in The Hurt Locker. The final sequence involving the storming of the Abbottabad compound, believed to be Bin Ladin’s hideout by elite American soldiers is truly nerve-wracking cinema, shot with Bigelow’s trademark directorial detachment cut through with absolute documentary styled realism.
Zero Dark Thirty has a great supporting cast including Jason Clarke as the CIA torturer Dan, Kyle Chandler as CIA Pakistan operations chief Joseph Bradley along with Mark Strong, Jennifer Ehle and James Gandolfini, but it is really Chastain’s obsessive portrayal of CIA Operative Maya, a woman battling to gain respect in a male dominated espionage arena, that shows her true talent. The pace of Zero Dark Thirty is fast and yet measured enough to show the time involved assisted by an original score by Alexandre Desplat and with cutting edge sound editing, the audience is immediately immersed in a deeply fascinating portrait of America’s covert hunt for that nation’s Enemy Number One. Highly Recommended and definitely Oscar worthy.
Slave to the Rhythm
Django Unchained
Director: Quentin Tarantino
Cast: Jamie Foxx, Christoph Waltz, Don Johnson, Leonardo DiCaprio, Jonah Hill, Bruce Dern, Kerry Washington, Robert Carradine, Samuel L. Jackson, Walton Goggins, James Russo
Django Unchained can be compared to a three act Southern Opera and whilst Tarantino’s distinctive style comes through, his real intention is to invert the Cowboy myth so associated with the American Wild West, channeling spaghetti Western Sergio Leone films and tackling a very prickly subject of slavery prior to the American Civil War without much sensitivity.
Django Unchained, loosely based on the 1966 Sergio Corbucci Western Django, starts off in Texas in 1858, two years before the outbreak of the American Civil War and features the eloquent and unorthodox Dr King Schultz played with superb panache by Christoph Waltz, who won a Oscar for Best Supporting Actor for 2009’s Inglourious Basterds who frees Django from a chain gang as he needs him to identify three brothers which have a mortal bounty on their heads. Jamie Foxx (Collateral, Ray) is wonderfully cast as Django and throughout the two and a half hour film really displays his range as an actor complimenting the always competent Waltz as the German speaking bounty hunter.
Together Schultz and Django go in search of Django’s entrapped and estranged wife, oddly named Broomhilda, as she was bought as a slave by German immigrants. Broomhilda is now the possession of sadistic cotton plantation owner Calvin Candie, played with flourish by Leonardo di Caprio whose Mississippi plantation aptly named Candieland provides the final act in an utterly bizarre and bloody showdown between Django, Schultz and Candie.
For sheer originality, Tarantino’s films are always enjoyable and never dull, but like Inglourious Basterds and his most famous film Pulp Fiction, along with profanity there is a serious dose of vicious bloodshed. Django Unchained lacks some of the brilliance of the first two films, but the startling sound effects, outlandish scenes and revisionist plot is enough to make Django Unchained Oscar worthy especially the two central performances by Waltz and Foxx. Two criticisms’ of the film is the overuse of racist profanity which the plot revolves around especially being set in the Slave trade of the Deep South and also the film’s considerable length.
Django Unchained has some startling scenes but one got the sense that because of Tarantino’s previous successes, Harvey Weinstein has given Tarantino free reign. Free reign on the subject of the America’s Deep South from Texas to Mississippi and their sanctioning of slavery as a form of economically binding both master and slaves into a hideous socio-geograhic relationship of brutal proportions demonstrated in the cotton and tobacco plantations below the Mason-Dixon line.
Django Unchained has a fantastic musical score and soundtrack along with brilliant sound effects and sound editing especially noticeable in the showdown at Candieland. Tarantino’s old favourite Samuel L. Jackson (Pulp Fiction) is wonderfully cast as Calvin Candie’s butler Stephen and look out for Don Johnson as Big Daddy and of course the versatile Kerry Washington (The Last King of Scotland) who undergoes all sorts of torture as enslaved Broomhilda, Django’s estranged wife. Watch out for a brief appearance by Jonah Hill (Moneyball) as part of inadequate group of Ku Klux Klan members.
Warning this film is not for sensitive viewers and Django Unchained could be Tarantino’s most controversial film to date especially as he recasts the mythical American cowboy as a sharp shooting freed slave from Texas. Yet Quentin Tarantino won the 2013 Golden Globe and BAFTA Awards for Best Original Screenplay for Django Unchained so his talent is definitely acknowledged in both America and Britain.