THE PREDICTIONS!
THE CATEGORIES:
Best Motion Picture of the Year
4 Black Swan
5 The Fighter
8 Inception
7 The Kids are All Right
1 The King's Speech
2 The Social Network
10 127 Hours
3 Toy Story 3
6 True Grit
9 Winter's Bone
Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role
2 Annette Bening (The Kids are All Right)
4 Nicole Kidman (Rabbit Hole)
3 Jennifer Lawrence (Winter's Bone)
1 Natalie Portman (Black Swan)
5 Michelle Williams (Blue Valentine)
Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role
4 Javier Bardem (Biutiful)
2 Jesse Eisenberg (The Social Network)
1 Colin Firth (The King's Speech)
3 James Franco (127 Hours)
5 Jeff Bridges (True Grit)
Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role
1 Christian Bale (The Fighter)
4 John Hawkes (Winter's Bone)
5 Jeremy Renner (The Town)
3 Mark Ruffalo (The Kids are All Right)
2 Geoffrey Rush (The King's Speech)
Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role
5 Amy Adams (The Fighter)
3 Helena Bonham Carter (The King's Speech)
1 Melissa Leo (The Fighter)
2 Hailee Steinfeld (True Grit)
4 Jacki Weaver (Animal Kingdom)
Best Animated Feature Film of the Year
3 How to Train Your Dragon
2 The Illusionist
1 Toy Story 3
Best Documentary Short Subject
2 Killing in the Name
4 Poster Girl
1 Strangers No More
5 Sun Come Up
3 The Warriors of Qiugang
Best Short Film (Animated)
1 Day & Night Teddy Newton
2 The Gruffalo Jakob Schuh and Max Lang
5 Let's Pollute Geefwee Boedoe
3 The Lost Thing Shaun Tan and Andrew Ruhemann
4 Madagascar, carnet de voyage (Madagascar, a Journey Diary) Bastien Dubois
Best Short Film (Live Action)
3 The Confession Tanel Toom
4 The Crush Michael Creagh
2 God of Love Luke Matheny
5 Na Wewe Ivan Goldschmidt
1 Wish 143 Ian Barnes and Samantha Waite
Achievement in Art Direction
2 Alice in Wonderland
5 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1
4 Inception
1 The King's Speech
3 True Grit
Achievement in Cinematography
4 Black Swan (Matthew Libatique)
1 Inception (Wally Pfister)
5 The King's Speech (Danny Cohen)
3 The Social Network (Jeff Cronenweth)
2 True Grit (Roger Deakins)
Achievement in Costume Design
2 Alice in Wonderland (Colleen Atwood)
3 I Am Love (Antonella Cannarozzi)
1 The King's Speech (Jenny Beaven)
5 The Tempest (Sandy Powell)
4 True Grit (Mary Zophres)
Achievement in Directing
3 Darren Aronofsky (Black Swan)
4 David O. Russell (The Fighter)
2 Tom Hooper (The King's Speech)
1 David Fincher (The Social Network)
5 Joel and Ethan Coen (True Grit)
Best Documentary Feature
2 Exit through the Gift Shop Banksy, director (Paranoid Pictures)
4 Gasland Josh Fox, director (Gasland Productions, LLC)
1 Inside Job Charles Ferguson, director (Representational Pictures)
3 Restrepo Tim Hetherington and Sebastian Junger, directors (Outpost Films)
5 Waste Land Lucy Walker, director (Almega Projects)
Achievement in Makeup
2 Barney's Version
3 The Way Back
1 The Wolfman
Achievement in Film Editing
5 Black Swan (Andrew Weisblum)
3 The Fighter (Pamela Martin)
2 The King's Speech (Tariq Anwar)
4 127 Hours (Jon Harris)
1 The Social Network (Kirk Baxter and Angus Wall)
Best Foreign Language Film of the Year
2 Biutiful (Mexico)
4 Dogtooth (Greece)
1 In a Better World (Denmark)
3 Incendies (Canada)
5 Hors la Loi (Algeria)
Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures (Original Score)
5 How to Train Your Dragon (John Powell)
3 Inception (Hans Zimmer)
2 The King's Speech (Alexandre Desplat)
4 127 Hours (A.R. Rahman)
1 The Social Network (Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross)
Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures (Original Song)
4 "Coming Home" from Country Strong Music and Lyric by Tom Douglas, Troy Verges and Hillary Lindsey
1 "I See the Light" from Tangled Music and Lyric by Alan Menken Lyric by Glenn Slater
3 "If I Rise" from 127 Hours Music by A.R. Rahman Lyric by Dido and Rollo Armstrong
2 "We Belong Together" from Toy Story 3 Music and Lyric by Randy Newman
Achievement in Sound Editing
1 Inception
3 Toy Story 3
4 TRON: Legacy
2 True Grit
5 Unstoppable
Achievement in Sound Mixing
1 Inception
2 The King's Speech
5 Salt
3 The Social Network
4 True Grit
Achievement in Visual Effects
2 Alice in Wonderland
3 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1
5 Hereafter
1 Inception
4 Iron Man 2
Adapted Screenplay
5 127 Hours (Simon Beaufoy and Danny Boyle)
1 The Social Network (Aaron Sorkin)
2 Toy Story 3 (Michael Arndt, story by John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton and Lee Unkrich)
3 True Grit (Joel Coen and Ethan Coen)
4 Winter's Bone (Debra Granik and Anne Rossellini)
Original Screenplay
5 Another Year (Mike Leigh)
4 The Fighter (Paul Attanasio, Lewis Colich, Eric Johnson, Scott Silver and Paul Tamasy)
3 Inception (Christopher Nolan)
2 The Kids are All Right (Stuart Blumberg and Lisa Cholodenko)
1 The King's Speech (David Seidler)
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Friday, January 14, 2011
Best of 2010

FILM
1 The Social Network
2 Black Swan
3 The Kids are All Right
4 Inception
5 Animal Kingdom
6 The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
7 Toy Story 3
8 Winter’s Bone
9 True Grit
10 127 Hours
Honorable Mention: The Fighter, The King’s Speech, Greenberg, Kick-Ass, Please Give, Life During Wartime, Cyrus, Solitary Man, Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World.
Did not see: Another Year, Exit Through the Gift Shop, Rabbit Hole.
WORST IN FILM
Spork
Somewhere
Hot Tub Time Machine
Due Date
It’s Kind of a Funny Story
TV
1 Community
2 Mad Men
3 Louie
4 Breaking Bad
5 Treme
6 Party Down
7 Men of a Certain Age
8 30 Rock
9 Parks and Recreation
10 The League
MUSIC
1 Arcade Fire – The Suburbs
2 LCD Soundsystem – This is Happening
3 Kanye West – My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
4 Bruce Springsteen – The Promise
5 Beach House – Teen Dream
6 The Black Keys - Brothers
7 Cee Lo Green – The Lady Killer
8 The Tallest Man on Earth – The Wild Hunt
9 Das Racist - Shut Up, Dude
10 Gorillaz – Plastic Beach
Honorable Mentions:
Sleigh Bells – Treats
Yeasayer – Odd Blood
The National – High Violet
Ben Folds & Nick Hornby – Lonely Avenue
Best Single: "Rill Rill" by Sleigh Bells
Thursday, December 2, 2010
'Tiny Furniture' star has ample room for growth

At the forefront of the low-fi comedy “Tiny Furniture,” is a new brand of the recession-era female nerd, a “Juno” of the mumblecore.
Oberlin grad Lena Dunham, 24, wrote, directed and starred in her second feature, “Tiny Furniture,” in what is likely a semi-autobiographical profile of the directionless twentysomething.
Aura is 22, a college grad in a self-professed state of delirium since moving back home after four years in Ohio. She has an imperfect, flabby body with an ugly arm tattoo and an endearing neediness. Here is an example of Apatow’s common depiction of man-child syndrome as adapted for the XX chromosome. Dunham the actress has a knack for eliciting surprise chuckles from the audience, not the hearty guffaw but the zinger that’s so faint it strengthens the tone more than anything else.
Aura gets a job as a day hostess, reunites with a rebellious old schoolmate Charlotte (Jamima Kirke) and lets a platonic boyfriend Jed live with her in her mother Siri’s posh TriBeCa loft. Siri, a successful artist, sides with Aura’s bratty teenage sister Nadine (Grace Dunham, Lena’s real-life sibling) in almost every family quarrel.
As a storyteller, Dunham makes a fervent attempt to stay true to the characters and honest in its depiction of relationships. Pop culture allusions do slip into the wry, self-aware dialogue. There’s mention of YouTube and Seinfeld re-runs as well as the Codyesque line, “It’s worth a Google.”
“Tiny Furniture” has more polish than the Hollywoodized indie circle where Anna Boden, Ryan Fleck, Sam Mendes and dull conversations about Vampire Weekend went to die. Those movies have plots that movie at a glacial pace or search for life answers that never appear.
By the time the audience is content with the pacing in the third act, Aura’s life flies off the handle. She takes a progressively active role in harming each of her relationships. It’s awkward, vaguely disturbing and ultimately redeems itself as offbeat.
Celebrity comparisons are evident, a tribute to its effectiveness perhaps. Alex Karpovsky has a David Krumholtz voice, Grace Dunham has a Scarlett Johansson vibe and Laurie Simmons must derive her character’s coldness from an Anjelica Huston role. And, David Call, who plays the chef, may be a thin Tom Hardy.
In addition to a laudatory New Yorker profile, Dunham has gained residency in Apatown in response to the film. Judd Apatow is producing Dunham’s new series for HBO, tentatively titled “Girls.” Dunham’s potential as a new star transcends through all of this, and in spite of the film’s blemishes, the girl has room for growth.
Rating: 6 out of 10
Photo Credit: indiewire.com
Labels:
David Krumholtz voice,
film,
Lena Dunham,
movie reviews,
Tiny Furniture
Friday, November 12, 2010
Franco adds weight to stoner persona in boulder saga ‘127 Hours’

With “127 Hours,” Danny Boyle’s career comes full circle with a film that once again makes use of the tourniquet a la “Trainspotting.”
His tenth feature arrives on the heels of Oscar wins and takes on the true story of Aron Ralston, who in 2003 went to great lengths to survive while trapped between a rock and a rigid spot.
If watched back-to-back with “Slumdog Millionaire,” a crime-tinged romance lacquered in artificiality, the opening five minutes are bubbling with passion. Shown in a three-panel split screen, the hyperkinetic opening presents huge crowds amid global haste. Then, enter the solitary Ralston, portrayed with commanding sincerity by NYU grad student James Franco. He leaves home in the early morning to embark in a canyoneering trip through Blue John Canyon in Utah and tells no one where he’s going.
His right arm goes without circulation for five-plus days in the recesses of a cave. Within 10 minutes of running time, Ralston’s trapped under a boulder, which initially had me worried. The movie keeps the story compelling as we’re caged in with our Castaway.
Most folks going in already know how the story will unfold, but the anxiety of the situation had a boy begin to vomit in the row in front of me.
If Boyle hadn’t taken it on, the tale would have been relegated to a two-minute blip on a broadcast newscast or fodder for a short screening at the Tuttleman IMAX dome.
Franco takes his career to new heights, acting bleary-eyed and aloof with none of the stoner drollness.
His family is played by Lizzy Caplan and, in inspired casting, Treat Williams, who also worked with Franco in “Howl.” I craved more Williams screen time, but that’s not uncommon.
I had a problem with how “Into the Wild” portrayed the family as caricatures. Even poor William Hurt. “!27 Hours” employs them for the sake of brevity and atmosphere without making much of a statement.
The film is sparsely plotted with Aron’s several futile attempts at escape and a memory recall of snapshots from his life. The retrospective would be more meaningful, not only if they were longer but if the 28-year-old had lived a more remarkable life.
Boyle, arguably too anxious a filmmaker for straightforward source material like this, gets stylish when filming inside Aron’s camcorder, his bottle of water and even the water itself. These shots struck me as David Fincher’s territory, but it worked. When it comes to the few grisly moments however, the camera is stationary.
Boyle re-teamed with “Slumdog” crewmembers, his writing partner Simon Beaufoy and music composer A.R. Rahman, all of whom possess Academy Awards. Compared to back when he debuted with “Shallow Gave,” he’s working with an almost entirely new set of people.
Franco dives deep, and Boyle makes a film about courage and perseverance even if it the end product does not warrant repeated viewings.
Rating: 7.5 out of 10
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Film Review: Knight and Day
In light of the commercial failure of Knight and Day, some analysis is needed. The movie, which cost some $125 million to produce, has thus far failed to recoup even half that amount at the box office. The question: did it deserve to flop?
The film’s plot, formulaic as it is, pushes the right buttons for a summer action movie. Cruise plays Roy Miller, a rogue secret agent with apparently noble ideals. Cameron Diaz is June Havens, a civilian who’s swept up into Miller’s world by chance. The formula is so well worn that a movie released just a few weeks prior to Knight and Day – the Ashton Kutcher and Katherine Heigl bomb Killers – used it as well.
As is the case with such movies, Knight and Day leaves its identity in the hands of its stars. The leads, Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz, are two Hollywood veterans who could once be counted on to rake in the ticket sales. Their performances are predictably solid, and their time on-screen together almost sells the idea that a super spy could fall for a girl next door type after meeting her in an airport.
Audiences long ago learned the appropriate amount of suspended disbelief necessary to accept the diminutive Tom Cruise as an action hero. He’s not doing anything here that’s more difficult to swallow than, say, any of the Mission: Impossible movies. Cameron Diaz, on the other hand, is out of her element in a way the film’s writers didn’t intend. No doubt, she’s perfectly cast as a fairly sheltered middle class woman who is unaccustomed to flying bullets and international espionage.
But the film expects us to believe she owns an auto garage and is completely restoring her father’s dilapidated 1966 Pontiac GTO to give as a wedding present to her sister. It isn’t that a woman as slight as Diaz couldn’t believably get her hands dirty tinkering with muscle cars. The problem is she doesn’t sell the idea, a problem that may well lie more with the script than Diaz. Whenever she talks about the car, it’s as if she has only a passing knowledge of auto restoration. It’s unfortunate, because it turns out that Diaz’s supposed profession plays a sizable role in the movie’s plot.
Other than these minor holes in the plot, Knight and Day makes a perfectly sturdy summer popcorn flick. It’s funny at times, particularly the interactions between Cruise and Diaz, and there’s no shortage of gunfire and explosions. Why, then, did no one really care when it was released?
The most likely culprit: star power, or lack thereof. The leads certainly haven’t lost their acting edge, but this is the age of Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson. In comparison, Cruise and Diaz are most likely in the twilight of their years of drawing the 18-35 demographic based on name recognition alone. Pair that with an essentially nameless summer paint-by-numbers flick and it’s a recipe for a big disappointment.
The bottom line: expect plenty of light entertainment from Knight and Day. Expect a similarly plentiful number of empty seats in the theater.
5 out of 10
Labels:
Cameron Diaz,
film,
Knight and Day,
movie reviews,
Tom Cruise
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