Sunday, February 22, 2009

And the winner is...


Slumdog Millionaire and its impressive eight Academy Awards including, of course, Best Picture of the year.

No real surprises tonight.  Slumdog won in 8 of the 10 prizes it was nominated for, losing only to itself in original song and The Dark Knight in sound editing (poetic justice?).

Sean Penn takes home his second best actor award and Kate Winslet got her first.  Penelope Cruz and Heath Ledger won the supporting trophies, with Ledger's parents and sister accepting the Oscar on his behalf.

I loved watching the shots of all the actors' reactions to Heath Ledger's win. I enjoyed how Danny Boyle got more excited for the other Slumdog winners than he did for himself.  Hugh Jackman did great (though am I alone in thinking everyone I've seen host recently did a good job?).  And does anyone know when Sophia Loren turned into a zombie? I was worried she was going to feast on Kate's brains.

The one upset of the night was the Japanese movie Departures beating out both Waltz with Bashir and The Class in the foreign film category.  I believe this category is so hard to predict because so few of them are seen until voting time. How else could a movie like Pan's Labyrinth two years ago, nominated six times over and winner of three Oscars, lose the prize for best foreign film? And a movie like City of God still flies completely under the radar.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Oscar Eve


It's Oscar weekend so I'll run through real quick and say what I think (or guess) will win and also what I would vote for if I was an Academy member.

Best Picture - Slumdog Millionaire will most likely win.  I loved it, but Milk would get my vote.

Best Director - Danny Boyle is the favorite here and he gets my vote too.

Best Actor - A tight race.  Mickey Rourke is right there, but I saw Sean Penn edges him (though a Frank Langella win won't completely surprise me either).  Penn gets my vote.

Best Actress - Kate Winslet is finally getting her Oscar due and I'll probably cry.  However, for this particular race my vote swung to Angelina Jolie this week after finally watching Changeling (I still have not seen Frozen River or Rachel Getting Married).

Best Supporting Actor - Heath. Ledger.

Best Supporting Actress - "They" say Penelope Cruz is the favorite in an extremely tight race with Viola Davis her closest competitor.  I'll go ahead a pick Davis to win, but her castmate Amy Adams would get my vote.

Original Screenplay - Some say Milk will win here as a consolation prize for losing Best Pic to Slumdog, but I think Wall-E takes home the prize.  Wall-E gets my vote as well.

Adapted Screenplay - I still want it clarified whether this is the best job of adaptation or the best screenplay that qualifies as adapted.  I think Benjamin Button wins for its total reimagining of Fitzgerald's 20 page short story unless Slumdog love extends to this category.  I'd vote for Slumdog.

Cinematography - Slumdog's spectacular photography of India will win as it should, though depending on the mood I was in at the time, I might for The Dark Knight.

Animated Movie - Wall-E x 2

Special Effects - Ben Button will probably win for its aging of Brad Pitt, but I'd vote for Dark Knight out of spite here.

I'll leave the rest of the categories alone as I either haven't seen enough of them, or still am not sure what they are (sound editing?)

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Changeling


Changeling definitely falls into the category of "truth is stranger than fiction," because if this wasn't based on a true story, you wouldn't buy it.
A boy is returned to his mother after a five month disappearance, but his mother doesn't recognize him.  Is this, as the police insist, because she is in shock and the ordeal has also had physical manifestations in the boy, or is the mother the victim of a corrupt LAPD looking only to keep its image shining brightly in the public's collective eyes?
The mother, Christine Collins, played by Oscar nominated Angelina Jolie continues to fight the police and their insistence that the case is closed.  Only at the beginning of her and her son's "reunion" does she question whether she might be mistaken.
John Malkovich plays a local reverend who has made it his life's mission to challenge the LAPD and takes up Mrs. Collins's cause.  I'm normally not a fan of Malkovich but he is very good here.
The film is long, but only because it continues to present you with the facts of the case as they happened nearly 80 years ago in California.  It provokes anger at several injustices, sadness for a mother's loss and impotence, and hope that patience and persistence may overcome.

It also forces me to update my top 5 movies of the year: 

1. The Dark Knight
2. Milk
3. Slumdog Millionaire
4. Changeling
5. The Visitor

Oldboy

I have to admit, I must really be missing the boat on Oldboy, because I didn't enjoy much of anything about this movie.

I found it disconnected and violent to the point of absurdity (still wondering why we watched him pulling teeth). I got bored during the fight scenes where the main character showed off the skills he learned watching TV in captivity. The almost-ending monologue by the bad guy reminds me of how in The Incredibles and Kim Possible the villains always get caught up in a huge monologue and then the heroes take advantage of their distraction and foil the evil plot.

I was disappointed by the fact that the only real female character was completely useless. There's never really explanation for why she keeps hanging around with a violent crazy person and having no personality of her own, except "Oh, we hypnotized her, too." Her lines during sex are things like "It hurts so much, but I'll endure it for you" and "I want to make you feel good." Vomit.

I guess I'm just going to have to chalk it up to not getting some angle of this movie. Clearly, I am disagreeing with the majority. I recognize some elements that make a good story, and also some sharp technical skills. But it just felt like a hollow box.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Weeds is about as addictive as an actual drug.



Four years ago, I didn't watch TV. Today, I would consider myself a devoted watcher of probably 7 shows (though one of them is sadly off the air). How did this happen?

Because of shows like Weeds, that's how. Weeds is the blackest of black comedies, a comedy about a single mom who resorts to dealing pot to pay the bills after her husband's sudden death. Her family is hilariously dysfunctional, and so are her suburban So-Cal neighborhood and neighbors.

If you are a fan of shows like Arrested Development, The Office, and awkward comedies in general, you will love this show.

Coraline



Coraline is one of the scariest "kids' movies" that I've ever seen. That said, it was very cool, and hands down the best animation I have ever seen. There's not much analysis to be done - it's just a really cool movie. I can't believe Tim Burton isn't somewhere on credits.

If this movie was a month and a half earlier in its release, it would be really tough competition for WALL-E in the Best Animated Film category.