On January 10, 2013 the Academy Award nominations were announced. The two biggest snubs were in the Best Director category, and the snubees were Kathryn Bigelow and Ben Affleck. That same night the Broadcast Film Critics Awards (BFCA) hosted their awards, and wouldn't you know, Affleck won Best Director, and Argo took home Best Picture. After that win Argo won Best Picture (Drama) at the Golden Globes, Affleck took home director there too. Argo took home the Producer's Guild Award, and the following day Argo won Best Ensemble at the Screen Actor's Guild (SAG) Awards. Both guilds equivalent honors of the Best Picture. Last night Affleck did something only few others have done, won the Director's Guild of America (DGA) prize without an Oscar nomination.
With all of this support from almost every guild (namely the larger guilds) Argo is unstoppable in the Best Picture category. Affleck's snub at the Oscars is being shoved in the Academy's face. While Affleck does not have a director nomination, he is nominated as a Producer. When Argo wins Best Picture at the Oscars Affleck will stand at the podium along with George Clooney and Grant Heslov.
Yet without a director nomination, Argo will make history on several levels. As I stated above Affleck has won DGA, and is in a small company of director's who won DGA and were not nominated for Oscar. One of the of those men is his director competitor Steven Spielberg. Spielberg won the DGA for The Color Purple, but was not nominated for an Oscar. Out of Africa won Best Picture that year, and The Color Purple was the only film to win 0 out of 11 nominations. Affleck's Argo is being compared to another actor turned director's first quest towards Oscar, Ron Howard. Howard's Apollo 13 won most of the awards Argo has won, but no Howard in the Best Director category. Apollo 13 did not go on to win Best Picture, it was beat surprisingly by another actor turned director's film Braveheart. Apollo 13 did win 2 Oscars, Best Editing, and Best Sound.
Argo would be the second film in Oscar history to win without a Best Director nomination. The first was 1989's Driving Miss Daisy. Daisy had 9 nominations winning four, Picture, Lead Actress-Jessica Tandy, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Makeup. While Driving Miss Daisy had numerous acting nominations (three), Argo only has one for Alan Arkin. Argo has seven nominations at the Oscars.
What are the next awards to pay attention to? The American Cinema Editors (ACE) Awards, support from this guild would seal the win even further for me, and prove that there is hope for Argo to win this prize on Oscar night. The Writer's Guild Awards (WGA) are going to be more important than ever. While most have predicted Tony Kushner's Lincoln will win, many are switching teams with the barrage of Argo support. If Argo wins hear it has a shot to win this at the Oscars as well. The last, and probably most important precursor is the British Academy of Television and Film Awards (BAFTA). BAFTA have nominated Argo for seven awards as well. these winners may be more of a wild card, but have a lot of cross over voters between here and the Oscars. Affleck is even nominated for Best Actor here, so he has a lot of support look for him to win Director as well.
With Affleck winning all of these director prizes this makes Best Director one of the toughest categories to predict. Who will could be anyone's guess. Here is my best guess. Spielberg was snubbed by BAFTA, which was shocking to me because Lincoln still scored the most nominations.
Life of Pi appears to have a lot of support from all the technical branches, and Ang Lee is a well respected director, after all this talk of Argo, and moving forward to Director and Oscar my prediction at this moment is Ang Lee. Yet as many have cited how something can be nominated for Best Picture without a Best Director nomination makes sense, and Affleck should have been a nominee, along with the snubbed but forgotten Kathryn Bigelow.
Showing posts with label Ben Affleck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Affleck. Show all posts
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Oscars go for Lincoln and Life of Pi while Snubbing Affleck and Bigelow
Lincoln leads the nominations with 12, although Life of Pi is close behind with 11 nominations. Both Lincoln and Life of Pi have performed the most consistently throughout this award season, and this includes in the most shocking category Best Director. Spielberg, and Lee are the only two people who have consistently received nominations throughout the award season. O. Russell has only been nominated by the Broadcast Film Critics, and nowhere else. Haneke only had BAFTA, and Zeitlin appeared out of thing air, leaving the biggest snubs of the day Bigelow and Affleck in the dust.
Amour and Beasts of the Southern Wild are the biggest surprises and gainers of the day, Amour received 5 nominations, and is the first foreign language film to be nominated for Best Picture since Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon. This is the only "genre" film to be nominated this year. Beasts had a lot of support as well, and managed to pull off 4 nominations including Picture, Director, Actress, and Best Adapted Screenplay. After these two films shocking me I came down to Earth and realized Silver Linings Playbook received 7 nominations, and was the first film to have nominees in all four major categories since Warren Beatty's Red in 1981, 31 years ago.
Affleck missed out on a Director nomination for Argo, but the film itself scored 7 nominations, which is pretty impressive, although without Affleck the film looks weaker, and will not win Best Picture without a Director nomination. Zero Dark Thirty was a heavy favorite with critics groups, but only managed to receive 5 nominations, and Bigelow was also snubbed, my guess is because of the torture issue. Tom Hooper was nominated at the DGA just a few days ago, and his film received the magical 8 nominations (same as Dreamgirls), but no director nomination. Django like Zero Dark had their director, Tarantino, left out in cold, and received 5 nominations.
In the acting categories the biggest snubs were John Hawkes for The Sessions, and Marion Cotillard who have consistently been nominated throughout the award show season. While these folks missed out on the party the surprise inclusions were Joaquin Phoenix after his major gaffe, Jacki Weaver, she had no major precursor nomination, and Riva, and Wallis, although I predicted Wallis. Emanuelle Riva is the oldest nominee ever, and Wallis is one of the youngest at 9. One of the other fun things is that every nominee in Supporting Actor category is a past winner, this has never happened, and will mean someone adding a second trophy to their mantel.
Beyond Affleck and Bigelow's snubs this is a solid group of nominees, and I am proud they went for a small foreign language film and a movie about a young girl who lived in the bathtub.
Best Picture
Argo
Amour
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Django Unchained
Lincoln
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Silver Linings Playbook
Zero Dark Thirty
Best Director
David O. Russell-Silver Linings Playbook
Ang Lee-Life of Pi
Steven Spielberg-Lincoln
Michael Haneke-Amour
Benh Zeitlin-Beasts of the Southern Wild
Best Actor
Daniel Day-Lewis-Lincoln
Denzel Washington-Flight
Bradley Cooper-Silver Linings Playbook
Hugh Jackman-Les Miserables
Joaquin Phoenix-The Master
Best Actress
Naomi Watts-The Impossible
Jessica Chastain-Zero Dark Thirty
Jennifer Lawrence-Silver Linings Playbook
Emanuelle Riva-Amour
Quvenzhane Wallis-Beasts of the Southern Wild
Best Supporting Actor
Christoph Waltz-Django Unchained
Phillip Seymour Hoffman-The Master
Robert DeNiro-Silver Linings Playbook
Alan Arkin-Argo
Tommy Lee Jones-Lincoln
Best Supporting Actress
Sally Field-Lincolm
Anne Hathaway-Les Miserables
Helen Hunt-The Sessions
Jacki Weaver-Silver Linings Playbook
Amy Adams-The Master
Best Adapted Screenplay
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Argo
Lincoln
Silver Linings Playbook
Life of Pi
Best Original Screenplay
Flight
Zero Dark Thirty
Django Unchained
Amour
Moonrise kingdom
Foreign Langauge Film
Amour
No
A Royal Affair
War Witch
Kon-Tiki
Best Animated Feature
Brave
Frankenweenie
ParaNorman
Pirates! Band of Misfits
Wreck-it Ralph
Best Cinematography
Anna Karenina
Django Unchained
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Skyfall
Best Costume Design
Anna Karenina
Les Miserables
Lincoln
Mirror Mirror
Snow White and the Huntsman
Best Documentary Feature
5 Broken Cameras
The Gatekeepers
How to Survive a Plague
The Invisible War
Searching for Sugar Man
Best Film Editing
Argo
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Silver Linings Playbook
Zero Dark Thirty
Makeup.Hair Styling
Hitchcock
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Miserables
Best Original Score
Anna Karenina
Argo
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Skyfall
Best Original Song
"Before my Time" from Chasing Ice
"Pi's Lullaby"from Life of Pi
"Suddenly" from Les Miserable
"Everybody Needs a Best Friend" from Ted
"Skyfall"from Skyfall
Best Production Design
Anna Karenina
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Sound Editing
Argo
Django Unchained
Life of Pi
Skyfall
Zero Dark Thirty
Sound Mixing
Argo
Les Miserables
Lincoln
Life of Pi
Skyfall
Best Visual Effects
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Life of Pi
Marvel's: The Avengers
Prometheus
Snow White and the Huntsman
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Lincoln leads BAFTA Nominations this Year, While they Leave Most Brits Behind
A couple of days ago in analyzing and predicting the British Academy of Film and Television Awards (BAFTA) there were couple of trends, they line up with Oscar pretty well, but also tend to bolster British nominees. This year broke with that pattern to some extent, although this years nominees have that traditional feel.
While films like Skyfall and Best Exotic Marigold Hotel made the Best British Film list, I was convinced one of them would make the Best Film list. BAFTA did not ignore one of their British made films, they nominated Les Miserables in both categories.
While films like Skyfall and Best Exotic Marigold Hotel made the Best British Film list, I was convinced one of them would make the Best Film list. BAFTA did not ignore one of their British made films, they nominated Les Miserables in both categories.
The Best Director category had some shake ups as well, making the BAFTA more unique. Michael Haneke and Quentin Tarantino were nominated, replacing sure fire bet Steven Spielberg for Lincoln and shockingly the British director Tom Hooper, for Best Film nominee Les Mis! One day after the Director's Guild Awards (DGA) this shakes things up more than ever. One thing is certain Spielberg will not be ignored this year, and I am shocked he missed the cut here because the film has the most nominations with 10, but Hooper is more vulnerable than ever! Hooper not being embraced by his own statesmen is a big deal. The DGA will typically nominate a musical director, while Oscar will forget them Bill Condon for Dreamgirls, and Baz Lurhmann for Moulin Rouge are two examples of this within the last decade. Hooper got a boost yesterday, but being forgotten today is proof this category is a hard one to predict. Of the two BAFTA nominees Haneke has the biggest chance at unseating him tomorrow morning.
Haneke's nomination is proof this award group supports foreign language films more, but Oscar may follow suit this year. Haneke's films received four major nominations, the other three nominations were Best Film Not in the English Language, Emanuelle Riva in Best Leading Actress, and Best Original Screenplay. Amour could surprise tomorrow morning and earn nominations in all of these categories. Amour helped shake things up in many of these categories, and BAFTA did not totally forget the Brits in the acting categories.
Skyfall helped Judi Dench score her 14th film nomination at the BAFTA's with a Best Supporting Actress nomination for Skyfall, and while not a Brit Javier Bardem was nominated in the Supporting Actor category for Skyfall as well. Helen Mirren was the only other British acting nominee; she was nominated in the Lead Actress category for Hitchcock.
These two ladies nominations were not surprising, but there were one or two surprises in the acting categories. Ben Affleck got an acting nomination for Argo, this is his first nomination and he beat out John Hawkes whose co-star Helen Hunt received a nomination for the film. Although beyond this most of the nominees were not unexpected.
While these awards do not have a perfect line-up with the Academy Awards they are a good barometer for who will get nominations, and who will get snubbed. Here is a list of all the nominees, and after a look at sure fire BAFTA nominees, who will show up at Oscar.
Surefire nominees tomorrow:
BEST FILM
- ARGO Grant Heslov, Ben Affleck, George Clooney
- LES MISÉRABLES Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Debra Hayward, Cameron Mackintosh
- LIFE OF PI Gil Netter, Ang Lee, David Womark
- LINCOLN Steven Spielberg, Kathleen Kennedy
- ZERO DARK THIRTY Mark Boal, Kathryn Bigelow, Megan Ellison
OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM
- ANNA KARENINA Joe Wright, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Paul Webster, Tom Stoppard
- THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL John Madden, Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin, Ol Parker
- LES MISÉRABLES Tom Hooper, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Debra Hayward, Cameron Mackintosh, William Nicholson, Alain Boublil, Claude-Michel Schönberg, Herbert Kretzmer
- SEVEN PSYCHOPATHS Martin McDonagh, Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin
- SKYFALL Sam Mendes, Michael G. Wilson, Barbara Broccoli, Neal Purvis, Robert Wade, John Logan
OUTSTANDING DEBUT BY A BRITISH WRITER, DIRECTOR OR PRODUCER
- BART LAYTON (Director), DIMITRI DOGANIS (Producer) The Imposter
- DAVID MORRIS (Director), JACQUI MORRIS (Director/Producer) McCullin
- DEXTER FLETCHER (Director/Writer), DANNY KING (Writer) Wild Bill
- JAMES BOBIN (Director) The Muppets
- TINA GHARAVI (Director/Writer) I Am Nasrine
FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
- AMOUR Michael Haneke, Margaret Ménégoz
- HEADHUNTERS Morten Tyldum, Marianne Gray, Asle Vatn
- THE HUNT Thomas Vinterberg, Sisse Graum Jørgensen, Morten Kaufmann
- RUST AND BONE Jacques Audiard, Pascal Caucheteux
- UNTOUCHABLE Eric Toledano, Olivier Nakache, Nicolas Duval Adassovsky, Yann Zenou, Laurent Zeitoun
DOCUMENTARY
- THE IMPOSTER Bart Layton, Dimitri Doganis
- MARLEY Kevin Macdonald, Steve Bing, Charles Steel
- McCULLIN David Morris, Jacqui Morris
- SEARCHING FOR SUGAR MAN Malik Bendjelloul, Simon Chinn
- WEST OF MEMPHIS Amy Berg
ANIMATED FILM
- BRAVE Mark Andrews, Brenda Chapman
- FRANKENWEENIE Tim Burton
- PARANORMAN Sam Fell, Chris Butler
DIRECTOR
- AMOUR Michael Haneke
- ARGO Ben Affleck
- DJANGO UNCHAINED Quentin Tarantino
- LIFE OF PI Ang Lee
- ZERO DARK THIRTY Kathryn Bigelow
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
- AMOUR Michael Haneke
- DJANGO UNCHAINED Quentin Tarantino
- THE MASTER Paul Thomas Anderson
- MOONRISE KINGDOM Wes Anderson, Roman Coppola
- ZERO DARK THIRTY Mark Boal
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
- ARGO Chris Terrio
- BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD Lucy Alibar, Benh Zeitlin
- LIFE OF PI David Magee
- LINCOLN Tony Kushner
- SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK David O. Russell
LEADING ACTOR
- BEN AFFLECK Argo
- BRADLEY COOPER Silver Linings Playbook
- DANIEL DAY-LEWIS Lincoln
- HUGH JACKMAN Les Misérables
- JOAQUIN PHOENIX The Master
LEADING ACTRESS
- EMMANUELLE RIVA Amour
- HELEN MIRREN Hitchcock
- JENNIFER LAWRENCE Silver Linings Playbook
- JESSICA CHASTAIN Zero Dark Thirty
- MARION COTILLARD Rust and Bone
SUPPORTING ACTOR
- ALAN ARKIN Argo
- CHRISTOPH WALTZ Django Unchained
- JAVIER BARDEM Skyfall
- PHILIP SEYMOUR HOFFMAN The Master
- TOMMY LEE JONES Lincoln
SUPPORTING ACTRESS
- AMY ADAMS The Master
- ANNE HATHAWAY Les Misérables
- HELEN HUNT The Sessions
- JUDI DENCH Skyfall
- SALLY FIELD Lincoln
- ANNA KARENINA Dario Marianelli
- ARGO Alexandre Desplat
- LIFE OF PI Mychael Danna
- LINCOLN John Williams
- SKYFALL Thomas Newman
CINEMATOGRAPHY
- ANNA KARENINA Seamus McGarvey
- LES MISÉRABLES Danny Cohen
- LIFE OF PI Claudio Miranda
- LINCOLN Janusz Kaminski
- SKYFALL Roger Deakins
EDITING
- ARGO William Goldenberg
- DJANGO UNCHAINED Fred Raskin
- LIFE OF PI Tim Squyres
- SKYFALL Stuart Baird
- ZERO DARK THIRTY Dylan Tichenor, William Goldenberg
PRODUCTION DESIGN
- ANNA KARENINA Sarah Greenwood, Katie Spencer
- LES MISÉRABLES Eve Stewart, Anna Lynch-Robinson
- LIFE OF PI David Gropman, Anna Pinnock
- LINCOLN Rick Carter, Jim Erickson
- SKYFALL Dennis Gassner, Anna Pinnock
COSTUME DESIGN
- ANNA KARENINA Jacqueline Durran
- GREAT EXPECTATIONS Beatrix Aruna Pasztor
- LES MISÉRABLES Paco Delgado
- LINCOLN Joanna Johnston
- SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN Colleen Atwood
MAKE UP & HAIR
- ANNA KARENINA Ivana Primorac
- HITCHCOCK Julie Hewett, Martin Samuel, Howard Berger
- THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY Peter Swords King, Richard Taylor, Rick Findlater
- LES MISÉRABLES Lisa Westcott
- LINCOLN Lois Burwell, Kay Georgiou
SOUND
- DJANGO UNCHAINED Mark Ulano, Michael Minkler, Tony Lamberti, Wylie Stateman
- THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY Tony Johnson, Christopher Boyes, Michael Hedges, Michael Semanick, Brent Burge, Chris Ward
- LES MISÉRABLES Simon Hayes, Andy Nelson, Mark Paterson, Jonathan Allen, Lee Walpole, John Warhurst
- LIFE OF PI Drew Kunin, Eugene Gearty, Philip Stockton, Ron Bartlett, D. M. Hemphill
- SKYFALL Stuart Wilson, Scott Millan, Greg P. Russell, Per Hallberg, Karen Baker Landers
SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS
- THE DARK KNIGHT RISES Paul Franklin, Chris Corbould, Peter Bebb, Andrew Lockley
- THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY Joe Letteri, Eric Saindon, David Clayton, R. Christopher White
- LIFE OF PI Bill Westenhofer, Guillaume Rocheron, Erik-Jan De Boer
- MARVEL AVENGERS ASSEMBLE Nominees TBC
- PROMETHEUS Richard Stammers, Charley Henley, Trevor Wood, Paul Butterworth
SHORT ANIMATION
- HERE TO FALL Kris Kelly, Evelyn McGrath
- I’M FINE THANKS Eamonn O’Neill
- THE MAKING OF LONGBIRD Will Anderson, Ainslie Henderson
SHORT FILM
- THE CURSE Fyzal Boulifa, Gavin Humphries
- GOOD NIGHT Muriel d’Ansembourg, Eva Sigurdardottir
- SWIMMER Lynne Ramsay, Peter Carlton, Diarmid Scrimshaw
- TUMULT Johnny Barrington, Rhianna Andrews
- THE VOORMAN PROBLEM Mark Gill, Baldwin Li
THE EE RISING STAR AWARD (voted for by the public)
- ELIZABETH OLSEN
- ANDREA RISEBOROUGH
- SURAJ SHARMA
- JUNO TEMPLE
- ALICIA VIKANDER
Surefire Oscar Nominees
Best Picture-All of them!
Best Director-Affleck, Bigelow, and Lee
Best Actor-Cooper, Jackman, Day-Lewis
Best Actress-Lawrence, Chastain, and Cotillard
Best Supporting Actress-Field, Hathaway Hunt
Best Supporting Actor-Arkin, Seymour Hoffman, and Lee Jones
Of the rest of the nominees many have them have a strong chance, but these awards never line up right away, so prepare to pick a few changes for tomorrow morning, my predictions are coming later today!
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