That’s right. The old format of this blog is done
I’ll be revamping and reinventing soon. Stay tuned
A Change Is Coming…
21 05 2010Comments : Leave a Comment »
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Sandra’s Got It…Unfortunately. 82nd Annual “Academy Awards” Predictions
7 03 2010Above, Sandra accepts her Razzie Award for Worst Actress. When she wins tonight, she’ll be the first actress in history to win film’s worst honor atop it’s most prestigious. Go figure. I couldn’t be more unenthused to discuss the impending cinemapocalypse that is about to be the 82nd Annual “Academy Awards”. So much so that I’ve decided this isn’t the real Academy Awards this year, just some other awards show playing dress up. Hence the title in quotations. If it weren’t for the ridiculous head-so-far-up-the-asshole antics of the AMPAS and subordinate organizations this year (HFPA, I’m still looking at you), 2010’s festivities might actually be tolerable. But I’m sick of even the Oscars being a “tolerable” experience. I miss the years when talent within filmmaking and passion for the craft of acting was celebrated instead of the “the industry needs you” awards given out as of late (I’m looking at you, Kate, and I will be looking at you after tonight, Sandra). In an industry celebration as widely recognized and highly respected as the AMPAS is, they might find themselves losing a lot of that warranted respect if they continue with their agenda of getting viewers over loyalty to the fans, actors, and filmmakers that hold them in such high regard.
I mean, Meryl Streep has been straight up cock blocked from an Oscar by the Academy since 1983. 12 nominations since her last win? Are you serious? That leaves only 5 years out of the past 17 that have gone without Meryl being recognized for some sort of achievement within film. And it hasn’t been a fruitful recognition once. Not fucking once. Meryl’s not a Sandra Bullock, guys. No, she’s an actual film legend. Sandra’s a temporary saving grace for society at this point in time. A hot commodity treading the line of being “old” by industry standards, yet maintaining a fanbase consisting of college students to seniors, that’s all she is. Don’t get me wrong, I get it. She’s a likable person. She brings in the bucks. But when the AMPAS of the future looks back on the history of their institution, no one is going to give two shits about Sandra Bullock and her dumb visually-impaired film. They’re going to talk about what idiots their forefathers were in not giving Merly her fucking Oscar 12 times in a row.
And don’t even get me started on what the Academy missed out on in the wide scope of things this year…need I mention The Girlfriend Experience? How about (500) Days of Summer? Or perhaps A Single Man (which only got one not-a-chance-in-hell-at-a-win nomination), the best film of last year? Of course not. Those films didn’t make $300 million at the boxoffice this summer. The general public literally has no idea what they are. But hey, we’re in the business of making money and manipulating viewers into thinking that what they already flock to see is brilliant filmmaking when in fact it’s just a studio cash cow in lipstick. Things need to change, Academy…and I mean now.
Here are my predictions for the 82nd Annual Academy Awards…
Best Picture: The Hurt Locker
Best Actress in a Leading Role: Sandra Bullock
Best Actor in a Leading Role: Jeff Bridges
Best Actress in a Supporting Role: Mo’Nique
Best Actor in a Supporting Role: Christoph Waltz
Best Director: Kathryn Bigelow
Best Screenplay (Original): Inglourious Basterds
Best Screenplay (Adapted): Up in the Air
Best Cinematography: Avatar
Best Art Direction: Avatar
Best Costume Design: The Young Victoria
Best Makeup: Star Trek
Best Original Score: Sherlock Holmes
Best Sound Mixing: Avatar
Best Sound Editing: Avatar
Best Visual Effects: Avatar
Best Foreign Language Film: The White Ribbon
Best Documentary: The Cove
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Ugh. Oscar Season.
1 03 2010Oscar season takes such a toll on me. And my lil blog
updates to come soon…film reviews, Oscar pieces, opinion pieces, general bitching pieces, amongst other essays and post ideas I’ve had. Blurg.
Until then, I leave you with an idea/image/kernel of common sense the AMPAS should most likely take note of…
BAFTA Results for Best Actress
WINNER:
Carey Mulligan for An Education (2009)
Other Nominees:
Saoirse Ronan for The Lovely Bones (2009)
Meryl Streep for Julie & Julia (2009)
Audrey Tautou for Coco avant Chanel (2009)
…you see that, bitches? IS SANDRA BULLOCK ANYWHERE NEAR THIS LIST OF WOMEN!? Exactly. Thank you, England, for giving us something else brilliant aside from La Roux.
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2010 Academy Award Nominations; Disgusted, much?
2 02 2010So let me get this straight, The Blind Side getting a Best Picture nomination just a further attempt by the AMPAS to seemingly justify Sandra’s nomination and imminent win, right? I mean, no one actually believes a “film” like that is superior to much else from last year (namely A Single Man, the most worthy of the incredible films left out of the BP slot in place of The Blind Side). I’m just so disgusted right now. At least An Education and Maggie Gyllenhaal got in for major categories. Full opinion/bitchy reaction to the full list of nominees will be posted later. Ugh. (PS – WTF was my girl Grandma Hathway wearing when she announced this morning?)
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I Just Had To…
1 02 2010I know this has absolutely nothing to do with film (but it’s my blog, so shut the fuck up), but I just felt I needed to promote my Gaga even more for her ridiculously incredible performance/winning of awards/presence in general at the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards last night. She only took home 2 (lost out on album of the year to Twat Taylor Swift), but deserved soooo much more.
Basically, I love you, Gaga. Thanks for being the most amazing entertainer/visionary/performer/artist/person in the world. Love, me.
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Sign of an Early Apocalypse? I Think Yes.
25 01 2010As much as the above picture disturbs me, it doesn’t really come as a surprise. The recent whoring of itself to the masses knocks the AMPAS down a few rungs on the crediblity ladder to anyone who appreciates true cinema, and this is whoring to the fullest extent. It’s that simple. I’m sick of the “It’s her time” and “she really deserves it” bullshit because quite frankly, she doesn’t. I can’t think of any other way to put it. If it weren’t such a blatant popularity contest instead of recognition based on real talent in real films (no, I don’t consider The Blind Side a real film. Bite me.) I could see if she paid her dues and gave us years of Doubts, Out of Africas, or Kramer Vs. Kramers like Goddess Streep has, but she’s just a ticket to mainstream credibility the AMPAS has been after so heavily for the past 3 or 4 years now. The inclusion of a further 5 films on top of the usual 5 in the Best Picture category earlier last year only proves my point further (Best Picture Nominee: The Hangover just doesn’t sit well with me, I’m sorry). I mean really, shouldn’t you guys be recognizing this :
…or this:
…or this…(I know, I know, but she was fucking brilliant in The Girlfriend Experience…
…but most importantly, this:
The mistake that’s being made here (and the past several years she’s been nominated) is that Meryl Streep is being taken for granted. Plain and simple. For an institution as respected as the Academy is, to take one of the greatest and most prolific contributors to the medium it recognizes for granted is insane. In 15 years we might not have a Meryl Streep to lavish with fruitless nominations. Her Oscar count stands at 2, but in years where she actually deserves her credit a popularity award is doled out to the biggest darling of the moment (I’m looking at you, Kate Winsluet). It might be Sandra’s moment to be that darling, but eternity is where Meryl’s legacy lies, at least within the context of the industry. And to continuously ignore someone of that stature demeans the word “recognition” more than the Academy will demean itself by handing out Sandra’s Oscar this March.
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Short & Sweet – Globes Predix
17 01 2010Yeah…title is self-explanatory. Here’s my predictions for the big categories…oh, and p.s., tonight will be the indicator of whether or not Sandra Bullock actually has a shot at beating my Meryl on Oscar night. I hope to God she doesn’t win here let alone at the Oscars, but something is giving me a bad vibe. The fact that she tied with Empress Streep at the CCMA’s
Best Picture: Musical/Comedy – (500) Days of Summer
Best Picture: Drama – Up in the Air
Best Actress: Drama – Sandra Bullock (The Blind Side) – damnit, now that I’m really scoping out her competition, there’s no way in hell she’s going to lose. This is truly sickening.
Best Actress: Musical/Comedy – Meryl Streep (Julie & Julia)
Best Actor: Drama – George Clooney (Up in the Air)
Best Actor: Musical/Comedy – Daniel Day-Lewis (Nine)
Best Supporting Actress – Mo’Nique (Precious)
Best Supporting Actor – Christoph Waltz (Inglourious Basterds)
Best Director – James Cameron (Avatar)
Best Screenplay – Up in the Air
Best Animated Film – Up
Best Foreign Language Film – Broken Embraces
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“I’M JULIA CHILD!” – 2009 In Review/Personal Noms
9 01 2010 
(The most enjoyable thing from ’09? Still screaming “I’M JULIA CHILD!” well after Julie and Julia‘s trailer stopped airing)
In ridiculous contrast with last year, 2009′s first half can only be considered a cinematic bang; countless films that defied the “summer slump” and “jacked-up January” standard were released on an unsuspecting cinema elitist public. As a result, brilliant films amongst the likes of The Girlfriend Experience, Julia, Cherry Blossoms, and Two Lovers fell by the wayside as other constructions that the masses consider “films”, like Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen shot to the top of the world’s commercial cinematic standard. In addition to underappreciated masterpieces such as the aforementioned, 2009 also treated us to some uniquely innovative, playfully-different, and deliberately-conspicuous excersizes in style and content, sometimes coming from cinema vets (Lars Von Trier’s Antichrist and Sam Mendes’ Away We Go) and others spawning from what seemed to be a really intense girls’ night out resulting in a “hey, let’s writing a fucking screenplay!” moment (I’m looking at you, Diablo Cody and your shamefully-brilliant, balls-out experiment Jennifer’s Body). Hell, even Tyler Perry outgrew his “trying to please the people” filmmaking style and cranked out a good film (I Can Do Bad All By Myself). Who knew.
But no other film from 2009 was able to top the simple epic greatness of Tom Ford’s A Single Man, truly one of the best and most original films of the decade.
However, what 2009 compensated for in terms of originality, experimentation, and indie-goodness strength, it completely lacked in the department of hard-hitting Oscar bait. And yes, that means you and your beyond-embarrassing Avatar, Mr. Cameron. What promised to be one of the most inspiring and moving portraits of urban lower class life turned out to be simply an above-average romp through a ghetto populated by brilliant actors (Precious), and what looked to be one of the most unique and engaging musical films of all time ended up being a confused and over-the-top circus of big-name actors fighting for center stage (Nine). Even Hayao Miyazaki and Woody Allen, two of the most brilliant contemporary directors, fell a bit short, with their latest offerings only barely scratching the surface of what made them iconic auteurs within their respective niche in the industry.
But when it comes down to it, 2009 ended up being a merely uneven bell curve of a year, the strongpoints surprisingly coming towards the middle of the year and trailing off towards the end. Eh, whatever, I’m just here to enjoy the show after all, and the filmmakers of 2009 certainly put on their best efforts (minus you, James Cameron, Avatar still sucks). Here’s a look at my personal nominations for 2009.
I’ve Yet to See:
The Blind Side
Map of the Sounds of Tokyo
Cheri
The Young Victoria
The Messenger
The White Ribbon
The Stoning of Soraya M.
Invictus
Tokyo Sonata
It’s Complicated
Best Motion Picture of the Year (2009)
Julia
(500) Days of Summer
The Girlfriend Experience
Two Lovers
Broken Embraces
Antichrist
Precious
Inglourious Basterds
Cherry Blossoms
A Single Man
An Education
WINNER:

A Single Man - Tom Ford
Best Actress in a Leading Role
Meryl Streep as Julia Child in Julie and Julia
Sasha Grey as Chelsea/Christine Brown in The Girlfriend Experience
Carey Mulligan as Jenny in An Education
Tilda Swinton as Julia in Julia
Charlotte Gainsbourg as “She” in Antichrist
Gabourey Sidibe as Clarice “Precious” Jones in Precious
Abbie Cornish as Fanny Brawne in Bright Star
WINNER:
Sasha Grey as Chelsea/Christine Brown in The Girlfriend Experience
Best Actor in a Leading Role
Daniel Day-Lewis as Guido Contini in Nine
Joaquin Phoenix as Leonard Kraditor in Two Lovers
Viggo Mortensen as “The Father” in The Road
Colin Firth as “George” in A Single Man
George Clooney as Ryan Bingham in Up in the Air
Elmar Wepper as Rudi Angermeier in Cherry Blossoms
WINNER:
Joaquin Phoenix as Leonard Kraditor in Two Lovers
Best Actress in a Supporting Role
Mariah Carey as Mrs. Weiss in Precious
Hannelore Elsner as Trudi Angermeier in Cherry Blossoms
Julianne Moore as “Charley” in A Single Man
Mo’Nique as Mary in Precious
Sienna Miller as Caitlin MacNamara in The Edge of Love
Vinessa Shaw as Sandra Cohen in Two Lovers
Chloe Sevigny as Megan in Lying
Penelope Cruz as Lena in Broken Embraces
WINNER:
Mo’Nique as Mary in Precious
Best Actor in a Supporting Role
Anthony Mackie as SGT. JT Sanborn in The Hurt Locker
Christoph Waltz as Colonel Hans Landa in Inglourious Basterds
Peter Sarsgaard as David in An Education
Jose Luiz Gomez as Ernesto Martel in Broken Embraces
WINNER:
Christoph Waltz as Colonel Hans Landa in Inglourious Basterds
Best Screenplay (Adapted + Original)
An Education
Inglourious Basterds
Bright Star
A Single Man
The Girlfriend Experience
Up in the Air
Julia
Precious
Broken Embraces
WINNER:
Inglourious Basterds
Best Film Direction
Lee Daniels – Precious
Erick Zonca – Julia
Tom Ford – A Single Man
Quentin Tarantino – Inglourious Basterds
Lars Von Trier – Antichrist
Pedro Almodovar – Broken Embraces
Marc Webb - (500) Days of Summer
Lone Scherfig – An Education
WINNER:
Quentin Tarantino – Inglourious Basterds
Best Art Direction
District 9
Antichrist
Up
The Road
Avatar
Nine
Inglourious Basterds
WINNER:
Inglourious Basterds
Best Cinematography
Antichrist
The Limits of Control
A Single Man
Nine
Cherry Blossoms
Julia
The Edge of Love
Broken Embraces
WINNER:
Antichrist
Best Film Editing
(500) Days of Summer
Julia
Broken Embraces
A Single Man
The Girlfriend Experience
Up
Inglourious Basterds
Up in the Air
Paranormal Activity
WINNER:
Paranormal Activity
Best Sound (Mixing + Editing)
Nine
Terminator: Salvation
Avatar
Up
Drag Me to Hell
The Hurt Locker
District 9
Antichrist
Inglourious Basterds
WINNER:
Avatar
Best Visual Effects
Avatar
Where the Wild Things Are
District 9
WINNER:
District 9
Best Costume Design
Where the Wild Things Are
Nine
(500) Days of Summer
Inglourious Basterds
The Edge of Love
A Single Man
An Education
WINNER:
Nine
Best Original Song
“Iou Bacio…Tu Baci” by The Noisettes for Nine
“Smoke Without Fire” by Duffy for An Education
“All is Love” by Karen O. and the Kids for Where the Wild Things Are
“Quando Quando Quando” by Fergie (feat. will.i.am) for Nine
“Cinema Italiano” by Kate Hudson for Nine
WINNER:
“Smoke Without Fire” by Duffy for An Education
Best Makeup/Hair
Jennifer’s Body
Nine
Inglourious Basterds
Drag Me to Hell
The Edge of Love
A Single Man
WINNER:
Nine
Total Nominations: 99
A Single Man – 9
Inglourious Basterds – 9
Nine – 9
An Education – 7
Broken Embraces – 7
Julia – 6
Antichrist – 6
Precious – 6
The Edge of Love – 4
Cherry Blossoms – 4
The Girlfriend Experience – 4
(500) Days of Summer – 4
Two Lovers – 3
Up in the Air – 3
Where the Wild Things Are – 3
Avatar – 3
District 9 - 3
Up – 3
The Road – 2
The Hurt Locker – 2
Drag Me to Hell – 2
Bright Star – 2
Jennifer’s Body – 1
The Limits of Control – 1
Paranormal Activity – 1
Lying – 1
Julie and Julia – 1
Terminator: Salvation – 1
Total Wins: 15
Inglourious Basterds – 4
The Girlfriend Experience – 2
Nine – 2
A Single Man – 1
An Education – 1
Two Lovers – 1
Precious – 1
Antichrist – 1
Paranormal Activity – 1
Avatar – 1
District 9 – 1
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Brittany Murphy Dies of Cardiac Arrest
20 12 2009It pains me so much to have to type this, but according to The Huffington Post and TMZ, brilliant and vivacious comedic actress Brittany Murphy, 32, died of cardiac arrest last night.
No further details were given on the actress’ death other than her collapse and subsequent failed revival. Murphy was and will live on through her work as one of the most unique and charismatic comedic actresses of this generation. Each role she played was accompanied with her characteristically-charming demeanor and flair for the comedic art reminiscent of Lucille Ball and, dare I say it, Marilyn Monroe. Murphy leaves behind a diverse and fulfilling career in film, ranging from her short-but-sweet portrayal of a small-town beauty queen hopeful in Drop Dead Gorgeous to much deeper and girthy roles like those in Uptown Girls, Girl Interrupted, 8 Mile, and The Dead Girl (of which the subject matter becomes that much more eerie as of this news). Murphy’s career entertained and, more importantly, brought a much-needed smile to countless faces across the world. Whether she was flashing her blinding smile, flipping her gorgeous blonde hair, or simply gazing at us with those beautiful doe-like eyes of hers (of course accompanied by that infectious laugh), Brittany Murphy never stopped putting on a show.
You will be dearly, dearly missed, Ms. Murphy. Rest in peace.
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