Awards season predictions, reviews, good bets - walking through the year to determine the true unpoliticised best.
Thursday, 27 November 2008
Screener watch: The Visitor
Recommended.
Thursday, 20 November 2008
Best Animated Feature: the lowdown
As we all now know 14 films have been submitted for consideration for Best Animated Feature at this season's Oscars. These include the big boys: Pixar's WALL-E, DWA's Kung Fu Panda and Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, Disney's Bolt, Fox/Blue Sky's Horton Hears A Who; Universal's Tales Of Despereaux; independent titles: Delgo, Fly Me To The Moon, Igor, Dragon Hunters; and foreign titles: Waltz With Bashir (Isr-Ger-Fr), $9.99 (Aus/Isr - but English language), and The Sky Crawlers and Sword Of The Stranger (both Japanese). For the BAFTAs Persepolis (Fra) will qualify, but Bolt, Delgo, Dragon Hunters and the foreign offerings except Waltz With Bashir won't.
WALL-E - (http://adisney.go.com/disneyvideos/animatedfilms/wall-e/flash_site.html?deeplink=Video) Quite simply one of the most beautiful animated films ever made. It's good enough for a Best Picture nom potentially, although i think the status of having a separate animated category will keep it out. From the ingenius Keaton-esque almost silent comedy first 45 minutes to the slightly more general audience friendly and not as good, but still great, second half WALL-E delivers on every level. One of the greatest animated characters ever created, not just in the artistry but in the heart, voice and personality. The scenery in the first half is so astonishing it is hard to believe you are watching animation and consultant Roger Deakins' influence is evident. A wonderful film that thoroughly deserves to win this category. Pixar continues to set the bar ever higher!
Kung Fu Panda - (http://www.kungfupanda.com/) It is a shame DWA choose to deliver their best film since the original Shrek in the same year as Waltz With Bashir and WALL-E, they just don't stand a chance, and that genuinely is a shame. Panda is not only hugely entertaining - far funnier and more consistently enjoyable than probably any of the studio's previous efforts - but it also showcases some extraordinary animation - the chop-stick battle between Po and his master is stunning. A very good effort, well worth watching and hard not to enjoy. It should, and i am sure will, bag a nomination but the competition is just too stiff this year.
Bolt - (http://www.apple.com/trailers/disney/bolt/trailer.html?t=med) Disney goes the DreamWorks route: voice talent names above the poster, blatant kiddie humour grabs in a film that opens domestic this week but won't make Bafta this year due to a Feb half-term launch. Looks cute and reasonably funny but don't expect it to be considered a great and with Disney behind Pixar's WALL-E they have their nom in the bag for that. That said, i haven't seen it so who can say for sure... right?!
Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa - (http://www.apple.com/trailers/dreamworks/madagascar2/large3.html) A surprisingly decent sequel to a film i hated, this looks better (the animation is fantastic on the scenery etc, although the ugly character design from part 1 doesn't quite gel with the upgrade on everything else!) and is much funnier. It is still inconsistent though. The central characters just aren't that funny or likeable. Sacha Baron Cohen is great and the Penguins once again provide a lot of laughs but this is not a great film, certainly not on a par with the Panda, and it is a sequel which won't help it. DWA have their nom in the bag with Kung Fu Panda so this one will miss out.
Waltz With Bashir - (http://www.sonyclassics.com/waltzwithbashir/trailer.html) Wow! This film is stunning. I've reviewed it on here so i won't repeat everything but i expected a worthy, but hard to love film like Persepolis and got a gripping, entertaining, roller-coaster or humour and horror. This film could and would win Best Animated Film in almost any year, but against WALL-E? I can't see it. That said in a way i hope it does. I love WALL-E but Pixar has the acclaim already and i wish more people than will would see this fantastic film. I can't recommend it more. A nomination is assured if there's any justice in the world.
The Tale Of Despereaux - (http://www.apple.com/trailers/universal/thetaleofdespereaux/) Could be painfully cutesy and naff, could be a new American Tail. The animation looks good and it different in style from the others on offer. The trailer has its moments without being remarkable. The only one i haven't seen that i feel i need to just in case.
Delgo - (http://www.delgo.com/flash_site.html) I can't comment too far as i haven't seen this but look at the trailer and you'll see how awful it looks. Not a hope.
Sword Of The Stranger - (http://www.stranja.jp/) Looks quite exciting (see 9th red tab on left side of site for very slow-loading trailer) but necessarily better than so many other animated films that come out of Japan, and with two Japanese qualifies i can't see this standing out.
Dr Seuss' Horton Hears A Who - (http://www.hortonmovie.com/) A fun but inconsistent film that passes the time enjoyably enough but doesn't leave you wanting to watch it again. There is also nothing special about the animation. Blue Sky won't be worrying Pixar and DWA at the Oscars with this effort.
Wednesday, 19 November 2008
Latest screening: Milk
Latest Screening: Che, Part One
Latest screenings: Waltz With Bashir, The Wave (Die Welle)
Oscar Documentary short list
The 15 films are:
At the Death House Door
The Betrayal (Nerakhoon)
Blessed Is The Match: The Life And Death Of Hannah Senesh
Encounters At The End Of The World
Fuel
The Garden
Glass: A Portrait Of Philip In Twelve Parts
I.O.U.S.A.
In A Dream
Made In America
Man On Wire
Pray the Devil Back To Hell
Standard Operating Procedure
They Killed Sister Dorothy
Trouble The Water
Can't make much of a comment here as the only one i've seen is Man On Wire - which is excellent, and amazingly compelling (especially given there is no recorded footage of the wire-walk at the centre of the story!)
The British Academy doesn't have a documentary section so am unlikely to see many if any more of these. I saw Taxi To The Dark Side earlier this year which was also superb - it won the Oscar last year.
On a related note: saw Religulous last week. Hilarious if you happen to be an aetheist, which i am, and no doubt deeply offensive otherwise. Kind of poorly made and very cheap looking to be honest and it makes Michael Moore look even-handed. Very much only one to see if you are pre-disposed to the subject and want a cheap laugh.
Tuesday, 18 November 2008
Coming soon:
My take on Milk and Che, Part One
A run down at the Animated contenders including Waltz With Bashir, Madagascar 2, Kung Fu Panda, WALL-E, Igor
A look at a couple of Bafta foreign language contenders
Friday, 14 November 2008
Latest screening: Dean Spanley
Thursday, 13 November 2008
Trailer: Up
http://www.apple.com/trailers/disney/up/trailer_large.html
Trailer: Crossing Over
http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/1809837407/video/10646018
Latest screening: Slumdog Millionaire
The winds seem to be suggesting Slumdog Millionaire could be a best picture contender this year and i have to agree. It is not that it is necessarily a film you watch thinking, "this is great, i must vote for it", nor just it entirely avoid cliche and predictability but it is a satisifying, well made watch and in this particular year that may be enough.
Danny Boyle, Simon Beaufoy and everyone involved has crafted an elegant, hard to dislike film. Can you find fault in it? Sure. But it lingers in the mind and scenes come back to disturb you, to make you laugh, to lift your spirit.
Where it stands such a good chance it that the film is one of the few this year where the film as 'package' is strong as opposed to one aspect. Most of the film's currently clamouring for awards voters' attentions (Doubt and Frost/Nixon - and i hear Milk - being prime examples) are cases where the performances are strong but not necessarily the film. Films that in most years would not see picture noms, just acting ones, are suddenly in contention. Slumdog Millionaire stands out because while Dev Patel and all the actors here are excellent it is not the performances that stand out, it is the film itself. It is uplifting but it gets (perhaps slightly eyebrow-raisingly melodramatically) there through a rollercoaster of shocks, laughs, violence and joy.
Added to this the fact that Fox Searchlight, the true masters of securing the "smaller indie slot" best picture nomination (Sideways, Little Miss Sunshine being just two recent examples) have the domestic rights.
Awards chances: A very good film that may not have been a best picture contender in many year's but may have found itself in the right place at the right time this year, where the overall 'package' really stands out. Expect Best Picture, maybe Best Director, Best Screenplay and Best Cinematography nominations.
Wednesday, 12 November 2008
Oscar predictions: The 1st attempt
Latest screening: Doubt
I have no doubt that Doubt will feature heavily come the awards nominations. While the film itself may be a long shot - it is another of this year's seemingly unending set of solid films with incredible performances - the four leads are uniformly excellent.
The film manages to avoid the trappings of its stage origins well, a particular surprise given that director John Patrick Shanley is both writer of the screenplay and of the original play, and hasn't directed a film since the painful Joe Versus the Volcano (the Hanks/Ryan collaboration most people conveniently forget!) This may largely be due to typically stunning cinematography by Roger Deakins (presumably the film that prevented his working with the Coens on Burn After Reading). It is an intimate film as necessitated by the play construct though and that is perhaps why the film does not resonate like the performances do.
Much will, and already has, been made of Meryl Streep's performance and rightly so but Philip Seymour Hoffman, Amy Adams and, in a single but memorable split-scene Viola Davis, all bring their A-game and match her. There is a feeling in Hollywood right now that Streep will take best actress and it would be no bad thing were she to, but i suspect not. Streep, like Hoffman, is typically excellent here but there are other performances this year as good (see my first predictions later today) and this feels like a nomination not a win. Personally for my the performance that really resonated was Adams.
Awards chances: Expect to see Streep and Adams get nominations with possible spots for Hoffman (although with best actor so strongly contested this year i suspect not) and maybe Davis who, despite very limited screen time, makes an impression and supporting actresses worth nominating currently seem few and far between. The screenplay if also likely in the adapted category and Deakins may well find himself short-listed once again. The film is more in doubt, though it is not a strong year so it could do. Director i'd be very surprised.
Tuesday, 11 November 2008
Great news for adult UK cinemagoers
No more putting up with parents too lazy or cheap to get a baby-sitter dragging their kids bored and confused 5 year-olds to 12As. No more teenagers tittering through 15s. The chance to see Pixar films without screaming, crying, whinging children.
Yeh!
Let's hope Cineworld, Odeon etc follow suit.
Full story on the Beeb: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7713781.stm
Latest screenings (UK wkd openers): W., Pride & Glory, Easy Virtue
Best of the week: W.
Oliver Stone has returned to form with W. - his best film since Nixon. Stone attempts to fairly even handed in his treatment of Dub-ya, which has annoyed many critics who were out for blood, but he can't avoid a few swipes that are the film's biggest problem. Making Bush look stupid by using this own sayings is fine and accurate, but two or three moments, including the use of the song Robin Hood are overdone and smack of the film the left-wing hoped he'd make and the right-wing thought he'd make. He can't have it both ways and they feel out of place in this film. As does Thandie Newton's sketch-show gurning as Condoleeza Rice. She is hilarious but it's too much really.
Brolin though is excellent. You feel sorry for his W. while at the same time seeing the figure of ridicule we love to mock. Brolin has been gaining more and more momentum in the past few years and this is a stunning turn. No matter how good or bad those acting around him (and most are very good for one reason or another) Brolin is so good that by the second half you just feel like you're watching footage of the 43rd president. It's spooky.
Awards chances: Brolin should get a nomination and it'll be interesting to see if should he get a supporting nod for Milk whether this will happen. He should, but the Milk nod may be seen as a good excuse to avoid the hot potato that W. will no doubt be in awards season. A Bafta nom for him seems more certain. The film may be too soon for much Oscar attention beyong Brolin but Stone is a two time Best Director winner and this is the best film he's made in a decade and it comes in a poor year (so far) for Best Picture certainties so i wouldn't rule it out. Personally i suspect come Jan 22 we won't be seeing key noms for this one outside of Brolin.
He'll never win for this, but if he is nommed for W. as Best Actor and Supporting Actor for Milk then expect to see Brolin walk away with the supporting trophy - especially only a year after he was the central glue to, but most ignored part of come awards season, of last year's Best Picture winner No Country For Old Men. I'm seeing Milk next week and confirm my thoughts on this then.
Pride & Glory - Much better than it has any right to be, this cop thriller is as predictable as it looks and offers little new to the genre, but it is efficiently made by director Gavin O'Connor and his team and raises its game with uniformly strong supporting performances.
It is odd that of all the performances the weak link is Edward Norton, not because he's bad (is he even capable of being so) but because he's sleep-walking through his performance. But Farrell tries valiantly to inject a depth to his character that the script has not provided, Noah Emmerich and Jennifer Ehle shine throughout and Jon Voight shows just how good he can be. A scene with Voight drunk at a family dinner is a masterclass in how to play drunk realistically - if you were told be sank a few shooters ahead of the take you'd believe it.
Awards chances: Not a chance. The film is solid entertainment but unremarkable and has no awards traction at all. Still, it's leagues better than the excrable Righteous Kill!
Easy Virtue - A funny and entertaining adaptation of the more serious Noel Coward play, but it suffers from pendulum swings in tone. Kristin Scott Thomas does her cold and calculating best, Colin Firth is fine if unremarkable and Jessica Biel shows a lightness and skill she hasn't previously displayed. Biel should certainly continue to show people what she is capable of in choices like this and The Illusionist, things we could never have guessed from watching the likes of Blade Trinity and Texas Chainsaw Massacre. But Ben Barnes is terrible. Yet another in a long line of good looking wooden young British actors, much like Orlando Bloom or Keira Knightley - not that it hurt their careers.
The script can't balance the humour with the more serious elements retained from the play and it struggles to not fall into a peaks and troughs pattern of enjoyment and boredom.
Awards chances: As always with this type of film costume and production design and related technicals are possible - especially with the period film friendly BAFTA. But there is nothing here in script, film or acting of particular note. Scott Thomas is the best here but she's just playing the cold and witty role she always does and shouldn't get attention here which could distract from her assured (for BAFTA at least) Best Actress nom turn in I've Loved You So Long. I'm surprised awards screenings are going on, but like i said BAFTA is period film friendly so that might explain it.
It you want to see how UK audiences voted with their wallets on opeing weekend:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/filmblog/2008/nov/10/2
Friday, 7 November 2008
Latest screening: Changeling
New trailers: Tale of Despereaux, UK version of Che
http://movies.yahoo.com/holiday-movies/Tale-Of-Despereaux/1809420569/trailers/164
Second up with have a Cannes best actor winner Benicio Del Toro throwing his hat into the best actor ring with Che. Del Toro of course won his supporting actor Oscar in a Soderbergh film but it is worth noting that no Cannes actor or actress winner has gone on to win the Oscar since Holly Hunter for The Piano in 1993! And the last two Americans to win best actor at Cannes (Tommy Lee Jones in 2005 for Three Burials, and Sean Penn in 1997 for She's So Lovely) weren't even nominated at the Oscars (shame for Jones).
But this could be the fourth political nom (alongside Langella's Nixon, Penn's Harvey Milk and Brolin's Bush) that can count each other out and help Mickey Rourke's Randy "The Ram" Robinson to be the first wrestling Oscar winner. Go Ram go!
http://download.wire9.com/substance/che_trailer/che_trailer_850k.mov
Wednesday, 5 November 2008
It's good to share: Iron Sky
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4KEueJnsu80
Now it isn't just in the movies...
Monday, 3 November 2008
Will it be Winslet vs Winslet?
The Reader trailer is up and it looks good: http://www.apple.com/trailers/weinstein/thereader/
Winslet is superb in Revolutionary Road and seems sure of a nomination for that. Could she go head-to-head with herself? Seems more than possible off the evidence of this.
For that matter Fiennes is always good and the best thing about The Duchess so perhaps he might fight for two noms too.