So I'm trying at the moment to catch up with the three reviews I missed here before carrying on to the last films I have to review from the 1950s. These are going to be brief as I watched them last August and one in particular really hasn't stuck in my memory.
But first to All About Eve a glorious film and a classic which I ashamedly hadn't watched previously. It did win the Best Picture award in 1951 but shockingly only one acting award for George Sanders' memorable performance as the bitchy journalist. The film starts with Bette Davis' Margo Channing and Celeste Holm's Karen Richards both reminciscing about the first time they met Anne Baxter's Eve Harrington as she wins an award for her acting. Karen, the wife of a scriptwriter, introduces Eve to star actress Margo who eventually hires her as an assistant despite suspicions from her current helper Birdie played with vigourr by the brilliant Thelma Ritter. As the film goes on Eve plants herself into Margo's life more with the actress now becoming paranoid it seems that Eve has now become Margo's understudy later garnering rave reviews after intentionally making Margo late for a performance. Eve then starts flirting with Sanders' Addison who thinks he's figured out but then she starts lying to him about an affair she is having with Karen's wife Lloyd. Addison finally unravels Eve's backstory and then the whole thing finally comes full circle when a girl like Eve comes to her doorstep claiming admiration for her. Everything is right about All About Eve which is evident from its fourteen nominations and only six wins. It's always obvious to wax lyrical about Baxter or Davis but for me it's Celeste Holm who holds everything together by not playing a person who is part of the showbiz set and who is genuinely taken with the young innocent Eve. This is a film that demonstrates the perils of fame and what some people will do to get ahead but is presented in a way that never alienates the audience by in the end letting the characters get their just deserts. Overall a brilliant film that deserves all the accolades it picked up at the 1951 ceremony.
The film I can't really remember is the second on the list Love is a Many Splendored Thing which stars Jennifer Jones and William Holden. As you can probably imagine from the title this is a romantic drama set in Hong Kong in the 1940s with Jones playing it bordeline racist as Han a Eurasian doctor who falls in love with Holden's reporter Mark a man who was previously married but is now separated. The two enjoy a love affair which is later tarnished by racial barriers as Han is ostracised by her Chinese community for falling in love with an American which is further complicated by the fact he was previously married. I don't want to give the plot away after that for those of you who may want to watch it but for me this was a predictable melodrama that somehow was nominated for eight awards and stopped classics like To Catch a Thief, Guys and Dolls and Rebel Without a Cause from getting a nomination. The only thing really memorable about this film is its award winning title tune and that's about it both Jones and Holden have been in better films and both should've known better.
Finally a film that I did enjoy with two Oscar nominated Best Actor performances for both Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier in The Defiant Ones. Curtis and Poitier play John and Noah respectively who are two criminals that escape from a chain gang and are stuck with each other despite their mutual loathing. As you could imagine from a film released in the late 1950s race comes into play as John has a hatred of Noah based on the colour of his skin while Noah hates John's prejudice towards him. Though over time they learn a little bit about each other and despite their differences they learn to get along for the hope of actually escaping from their lives as prisoners. The final third of the film sees them happen upon a young boy and his mother a lonely housewife who falls for John and wants to escape with him leaving Noah behind to fend for himself. But by this point in the film the two have formed an unbreakable bond and John has to make his mind up whether to be free or stick with his newfound friend. I really enjoyed The Defiant Ones, which was a film I wasn't familiar with before I watched it, as it is a tense cops and robbers film with the camera also following the police's attempts to apprehend the two escapees. In his first starring role Poitier really goes for it and becomes a star while Curtis is also brilliant in a role which shows off his gritty demeanour. The fact that this lost to the very twee Gigi just shows how wrong Oscar gets a lot of the time but I will now be listing this as one of my favourite films I've watched so far which I'm sure is some consolation to those involved, or perhaps not.
So there you go we're all up to date and hopefully they'll be more reviews to come soon.
Wednesday, 29 February 2012
Sunday, 26 February 2012
Oscars 2012: Why Billy Crystal is an awesome host
Obviously there have been a lot of controversies surrounding this year's Oscars and one in particular concerns the hosting duties which were taken over by Billy Crystal after Eddie Murphy left when producer Brett Ratner was fired. Now I know a lot of people were looking forward to hearing Murphy's opening gambit but for me the news of Crystal's hosting is brilliant seeing as last year we had the terrible James Franco and the just about bearable Anne Hathaway. In a night in which The Artist will no doubt sweep the board Crystal's brand of old-school Hollywood will be fitting with the evening's proceedings. But for those unfamiliar with Crystal's hosting style and in particular his opening song I present to you the previous eight opening numbers from the man and my commentary on each.
1990
Crystal's first stab at hosting saw him hit some nerves during his opening monologue hitting out at the academy for not nominating Bruce Beresford for directing eventual Best Picture winner Driving Miss Daisy. His opening song was very short and some films didn't get very much time to be sung about but even still we knew that there was more to come and Crystal had definitely established himself as a great Oscar host.
1991
This was the year that Billy Crystal's opening medley became the star of the show however he still was able to put in a few digs in about studio heads and Donald Trump. This year showed how adept he was at putting the names of the nominated films into popular songs and the finale where all five were put together was pure class.
To see this video in full go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x0lWrZL0EHE&feature=relmfu
1992
Once again Crystal did the old tease saying he wouldn't launch into the song before doing it and this year it was a beauty coming to a crescendo with a tribute to Barbara Streisand whose film The Prince of Tides was nominated despite her not getting a directing nod. The whole thing was sung to the Don't Rain on my Parade theme which obviously can be linked back to Babs herself. This was also the year of Crystal's infamous Silence of the Lambs parody.
To see this video in full go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCAi1744Sa0&feature=relmfu
1993
This year Crystal actually came on dragging the Oscar and then he came on and talked about how everybody want him to come on as someone from their movie. The Crying Game got a lot of jokes made about it as we all know now there was a big reveal involving a certain private area. He also ended up bringing out some props to resemble various nominees before launching into his yearly musical number. This time it ended with the infamous moment where Crystal sat on Clint Eastwood's lap while singing about his film Unforgiven to the tune of Unforgettable.
To see this video in full go to : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CF6fpn8Ts68&feature=relmfu
1997
After four years away Crystal returned and by this time was a steady pair of hands not even teasing the fact that he might go into the medley this was also the first time that Crystal announced the number of nominees for Best Picture. From his breathless sing-a-long to a Shine piano track to singing the plot of Secrets and Lies to the theme of The Brady Bunch his big finale saw him sing about Fargo to Frank Sinatra's Chicago song. This year definitely proved that Crystal still had it and that's why he was invited back the following year.
To see this video in full go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSMB4r5QmTg&feature=relmfu
1998
Predictably entering the stage on Titanic, Crystal launched almost immediately into his opening medley pausing briefly between songs mainly to get a picture taken while sitting on Jack Nicholson's lap. The two highlights for me was As Good as it Gets sung to Let's Call the Whole Thing Off and The Full Monty sung to Hello Dolly.
To see this video in full go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYR2YJhRwTU&feature=relmfu
2000
Now the highlight of his set Crystal starts by singing then goes into addressing some of the guests, including The Sixth Sense's Hayley Joel Osment currently residing in the where are they now file, before going back to sing about that film to the tune of People. For me it is his ode to Michael Caine which is the highlight here sung to the tune of Mame and includes a dig at him for making Jaws 4 but hey he did get a house out of it.
To see this video in full go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aK76GlXddyw&feature=relmfu
2004
We thought at the time this might be Crystal's last ceremony as after this the Oscars looked to edgy more contemporary hosts such as Chris Rock, Jon Stewart and Ellen however after Steve Martin co-hosted a couple of years back it was only a matter of time before Crystal returned. But eight years ago he still had it making references to Sofia Coppola putting a horse's head in Peter Jackson's bed and also singing about how long the Lord of the Rings trilogy was something we all know too well.
So what will his songs be about this year well I've got a hunch that The Tree of Life could be sung to That's Life while I think The Artist's musical number will be performed in silence but there's only one way to find out and that's to watch and remember i will be live tweeting the event so follow me @mattstvworld
1990
Crystal's first stab at hosting saw him hit some nerves during his opening monologue hitting out at the academy for not nominating Bruce Beresford for directing eventual Best Picture winner Driving Miss Daisy. His opening song was very short and some films didn't get very much time to be sung about but even still we knew that there was more to come and Crystal had definitely established himself as a great Oscar host.
1991
This was the year that Billy Crystal's opening medley became the star of the show however he still was able to put in a few digs in about studio heads and Donald Trump. This year showed how adept he was at putting the names of the nominated films into popular songs and the finale where all five were put together was pure class.
To see this video in full go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x0lWrZL0EHE&feature=relmfu
1992
Once again Crystal did the old tease saying he wouldn't launch into the song before doing it and this year it was a beauty coming to a crescendo with a tribute to Barbara Streisand whose film The Prince of Tides was nominated despite her not getting a directing nod. The whole thing was sung to the Don't Rain on my Parade theme which obviously can be linked back to Babs herself. This was also the year of Crystal's infamous Silence of the Lambs parody.
To see this video in full go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCAi1744Sa0&feature=relmfu
1993
This year Crystal actually came on dragging the Oscar and then he came on and talked about how everybody want him to come on as someone from their movie. The Crying Game got a lot of jokes made about it as we all know now there was a big reveal involving a certain private area. He also ended up bringing out some props to resemble various nominees before launching into his yearly musical number. This time it ended with the infamous moment where Crystal sat on Clint Eastwood's lap while singing about his film Unforgiven to the tune of Unforgettable.
To see this video in full go to : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CF6fpn8Ts68&feature=relmfu
1997
After four years away Crystal returned and by this time was a steady pair of hands not even teasing the fact that he might go into the medley this was also the first time that Crystal announced the number of nominees for Best Picture. From his breathless sing-a-long to a Shine piano track to singing the plot of Secrets and Lies to the theme of The Brady Bunch his big finale saw him sing about Fargo to Frank Sinatra's Chicago song. This year definitely proved that Crystal still had it and that's why he was invited back the following year.
To see this video in full go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSMB4r5QmTg&feature=relmfu
1998
Predictably entering the stage on Titanic, Crystal launched almost immediately into his opening medley pausing briefly between songs mainly to get a picture taken while sitting on Jack Nicholson's lap. The two highlights for me was As Good as it Gets sung to Let's Call the Whole Thing Off and The Full Monty sung to Hello Dolly.
To see this video in full go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYR2YJhRwTU&feature=relmfu
2000
Now the highlight of his set Crystal starts by singing then goes into addressing some of the guests, including The Sixth Sense's Hayley Joel Osment currently residing in the where are they now file, before going back to sing about that film to the tune of People. For me it is his ode to Michael Caine which is the highlight here sung to the tune of Mame and includes a dig at him for making Jaws 4 but hey he did get a house out of it.
To see this video in full go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aK76GlXddyw&feature=relmfu
2004
We thought at the time this might be Crystal's last ceremony as after this the Oscars looked to edgy more contemporary hosts such as Chris Rock, Jon Stewart and Ellen however after Steve Martin co-hosted a couple of years back it was only a matter of time before Crystal returned. But eight years ago he still had it making references to Sofia Coppola putting a horse's head in Peter Jackson's bed and also singing about how long the Lord of the Rings trilogy was something we all know too well.
So what will his songs be about this year well I've got a hunch that The Tree of Life could be sung to That's Life while I think The Artist's musical number will be performed in silence but there's only one way to find out and that's to watch and remember i will be live tweeting the event so follow me @mattstvworld
Matt's Alternate Oscars
It's Oscar Time again and obviously on Sunday night there will be much tweeting from me and then the Oscar Blog will follow soonafter but for the first time I'm presenting my films that should've been there and don't be surprised if a lot of names turn up in the same categories. Apart from in the Best Picture category I'll try and keep my comments about the nominees brief but you know what I'm like I do waffle on.
Best Picture: Drive
Not only should Drive be nominated for this year's Best Picture but there's no doubt in my mind that it should win the top prize. If you don't want to take my word for it then how about Denzel Washington's wife, who watches all the nominated films on DVD when her husband can't be bothered, she also believes this was the film of the year and should win. But why? Simply it's an exquisitely joyous piece of cinema evoking memories of times gone by while simultaneously keeping things modern. Great performances from Ryan Gosling as the mysterious Driver backed up Carey Mulligan, Albert Brooks, Ron Perlman and Bryan Cranston all add to the film as does the great soundtrack. I think you just know when you're watching a great film and when I watched Drive I felt just that.
Nominees:
Bridesmaids - To be fair Oscar has at least acknowledged comedy with The Artist but this brilliant all-female affair should be nominated for me than its excellent screenplay. The fact that this proved that women could do the gags just as well as the men meant that this was a fairly landmark piece of work and it was bloody hilarious.
Poetry - This Korean film made very few end of year lists but was a beautifully shot piece with a masterful lead performance. A film about growing old and losing part of yourself while still trying to do the right thing is set against an old lady trying her hardest to write a poem. Completely heart-breaking but at the same time strangely uplifting this film deserved to be seen by more people.
Senna - A brilliantly shot film about a man taken to soon which was brilliantly shot and engaging so much so that you wouldn't think that this was a documentary. Asif Kapadia's film about the life of Ayrton Senna took me by surprise the first time I saw it as I wasn't an F1 fan but the great trick of this film is making you see the man behind the sport. On the way to the inevitable ending there was rivalry, greed and a man who wanted to give back to the town from which he came and I personally loved every minute of it.
Shame- Steve McQueen's story of a sex addict trying to deal with his life and look after his emotionally unstable sister is a supremely artistic work by a man who has an eye for detail. Every shot is perfectly crafted giving you a look into this man's world and the way he thinks. I was totally taken aback with how much I admired this film, especially given the content, so McQueen and lead actor Michael Fassbender did a brilliant job making you see through the nudity to a study of a torn and complex individual.
The Skin I Live In - I think generally Pedro Almodovar's output has been great but this was a film that I found a lot darker than his usual Penelope Cruz starring comedy drama. This film was a thriller with both sex and violence and an intriguing lead performance from Antonio Banderas as a plastic surgeon wanting to create a new skin but being driven by revenge after an incident involving a family member. This was shocking but incredibly well put-together and written by Almodovar and his brother just a great watch that held my attention from beginning to end
Take Shelter - I watched this film very recently and am still intrigued why it wasn't nominated for any Oscars seeing as that it is an American production starring two Academy Award nominees. At its heart is a terrific performance by Michael Shannon, see below, as Curtis a man who is convinced that a disaster is on its way and is desperate to try and protect them. The great thing about this film is how director Jeff Nichols takes us inside Curtis' head so we're never sure if we're seeing his own visions or what is actually happening. This is a well written film letting the actors say a lot with saying very little and even the young actress playing Curtis' deaf daughter is fantastic. This is what modern American film-making should look like it's just a shame Oscar focuses on saccharine melodrama instead.
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy - A couple of nods for Gary Oldman and the film's script means that this has at least been given some sort of recognition. However Tomas Alfredson's big screen adaptation of John Le Carre's classic work deserved to be given a great deal more nominations that it was. This is a moody and atmospheric piece full of great supporting performances and a real feeling that you are there with Smiley as he carries out his investigations on his spying colleagues. I think a lot has been said about Oldman's performance but if others like Tom Hardy, Mark Strong and Benedict Cumberbatch weren't there to back him up then he wouldn't seem half as good. This was much more than a film just about spies and the characters really resonated once the film had finished.
Tyrannosaur - Paddy Considine's debut feature showed that the actor had learnt well from the directors he had previously acted for. It's a shame that Oscar seems to skip over British realism films as this odd romance between a drunk and a battered woman was involving and deftly crafted by Considine who kept the story simple yet involving. Two great leads in Peter Mullan doing drunk and gruff and Olivia Colman doing timid yet strong and both excel in these roles as does Eddie Marsan as Colman's violent husband. While some of the material here could be seen as clichéd Considine and his cast create something beautiful out of the hatred on display and really make you think about other people's lives and their daily grind.
We Need to Talk About Kevin - Quite a lot has been said about this film which shows how a mother's love can get over even the worst atrocities that her son commits. Tilda Swinton's harassed Eva is the star here as we see her dealing with motherhood and then with a tragedy that Kevin has caused and in each instance director Lynne Ramsay gives us reason to care for her and even the outwardly evil Kevin. This film is about whether we are truly born evil or if we are a product of our environment and how our views can change about our own families. Ramsay has a great eye and keeps the dialogue brief but effective which ultimately produced one of my favourite films of the year.
Best Director: Nicholas Winding Refn (Drive)
As well as being brilliantly acted, Drive is definitely the best directed film of the year thanks to Nicholas Winding Refn's skill at bringing out the best in his characters like he did with Bronson a few years ago. I just love how he was able to put together this crime story and romance together and guide you through the streets of L.A. and Driver's world. Winding Refn will hopefully be noticed by Oscar soon, as he has already done by BAFTA, but when he does we can all say we got there first.
Nominees:
Tomas Alfredson (Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy) - Like with Let The Right One in it was Alfredson's way of diverting this film away from the genre in which it should sit that made it so satisfying.
Pedro Almodovar (The Skin I Live In) - When Almodovar has a film out he should always be recognised as best director, even though he rarely is, The Skin I Live In was for me his best film in years but even in a film involving major plastic surgery you can still see all his directorial markings.
Steve McQueen (Shame) - Not all former artists can make the transition to film director so seamlessly but after Hunger it seems that McQueen has a real eye for focusing in on characters and with his first fully fictional work he gives a film all about desire whether it is wanted or not.
Lynne Ramsay (We Need to Talk About Kevin)- After years away from the director's chair, Ramsay returned with a very hard job to make this film featuring mass murder and somewhat unlikeable characters a cinematic hit and she did this and more making We Need to Talk About Kevin one of the best reviewed films of the year.
Best Actor: Michael Shannon (Take Shelter)
Take Shelter - Bad dream by teasertrailer
Michael Shannon was nominated for an Oscar three years ago for being the best thing in Sam Mendes' now forgettable domestic period piece Revolutionary Road. In Take Shelter he brings his sort of nervy looks to the forefront to play Curtis a hard-working family man with a deaf daughter who starts getting visions of a possible disaster and decides to spend all of his time and money on putting together a strong enough shelter for his family. Shannon's skill is making us wonder whether Curtis is completely bonkers or there is something more to his visions and he also gives a man who clearly loves his family and is worried about the future. I'm completely shocked that Shannon wasn't nominated in a category which sees fairly ordinary turns from Brad Pitt and George Clooney but then they have the star power that Shannon unfortunately doesn't possess.
Nominees:
Michael Fassbender (Shame) - If you can get over seeing his member multiple times in the first five minutes then you'll totally be won over by Fassbender's performance as Brandon a man with a fragile past who gets by on the thrill of sex who has to deal with his unreliable sister for me his turn bought to mind Christian Bale in American Psycho, which surely isn't a bad thing.
Brendan Gleason (The Guard) - Building on his great turn in In Bruges, Gleason once again hit the right tone between comedic and dramatic as Sergeant Gerry Boyle a small town policeman who has to deal with a large scale drug deal and forms an odd couple relationship with Don Cheadle's US Cop.
Gleason had me laughing throughout although he also handled the moments of poignancy perfectly this was certainly a role that didn't get the credit it deserved.
Ryan Gosling (Drive) - A role that wasn't showy enough for Oscar, but then I suppose you could say the same about Gary Oldman, Gosling's central performance in Drive was what tied everything together and he let his face do the talking throughout as Driver was a character with few words but a lot of intensity. I thought definitely the law of averages would see one Gosling performance be nominated but sadly this wasn't the case.
Daniel Henshall (Snowtown) - With Animal Kingdom last year Australia had a strong showing however no love seems to have been given to Snowtown in which Daniel Henshall is completely captivating as a drifter who charms all the people in a small Australian suburb before going on a killing spree convincing some of the locals to join him in bumping off people he felt deserved to die. Henshall's ability to make John Bunting seem charismatic one minute and then the next completely terrifying surely deserves recognition but this sadly wasn't the case.
Best Actress: Catherine Deneuve (Potiche)
It is shocking to me that in her lengthy career the legendary Catherine Deneuve has only been nominated for one Oscar and that her role in the brilliant comedy Potiche has completely gone unnoticed. In the film Deneuve essentially plays a trophy wife who is called to run her husband's company once he is taken ill and changes things for the better. Deneuve makes Suzanne her own and makes the screen sparkle as her diminutive frame makes its away around this factory as she brings colour to this drab institution. Deneuve's chemistry with Gerard Depardieu was also great allowing these two legends to sparkle together including a very interesting dance sequence. A combination of both great comic timing and a sprinkling of pathos made this for me one of the best roles of the year but was left out of Oscar's list presumably because it was in a foreign language, from a comedy and saw an older woman who was comfortable in her own skin.
Nominees:
Olivia Colman (Tyrannosaur) - Probably best known for her comedic roles, Olivia Colman had a great year impressing in both Tyrannosaur and The Iron Lady and it is her performance in the former that I thought was fantastic. As Hannah she shows us a woman who is desperate to get on with her everyday life despite the fact that her husband treats her horribly and eventually finds solace in her relationship with a kindly drunk. Colman's everywoman persona fit well in but we also saw her flex her acting chops in some of the film's grittier scenes.
Jeong-Hi Jun (Poetry) - Like with Deneuve it's no surprise that another older foreign lady got left out of the running because what Jeong-Hi Jun demonstrated in Poetry deserves some sort of recognition. She was able to effortlessly portray a woman who has to deal with the fact that her grandson has been involved in a gang rape while at the same time finding out she is going senile. Her small frame and timid nature completely contrast with everything that is happening to her and Jun's expressions and body language perfectly portray what this woman must be going through.
Elizabeth Olsen (Martha Marcy May Marlene) - I suppose Oscar couldn't include everybody in its list but I would've preferred to see Olsen's turn as the young girl taken in by a cult than Rooney Mara's impression of Noomi Rapace from The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Olsen's talents are evident as she is able to give us the two sides of this character the one that is receptive to the cult's charms and the other who is trying to shake off her old life and readjust to normal society. I hate to use the word star-making turn but that's exactly what this was and for me Olsen should've been this year's Jennifer Lawrence in the Best Actress category.
Tilda Swinton (We Need to Talk About Kevin) - No surprise here either with Swinton's Eva being one of the most captivating characters of cinema in 2011 as a woman who has no desire to be a mother in the first place but sticks with her role despite the fact that her son does some disgusting things. Like with all the performances featured here it's not so much about the words given as the performance as a whole and that's especially true of Swinton as the scenes which focus on Eva in the present day are almost without dialogue and she is still able to give us a full-fleshed performance which is more that I can say for some of those that are nominated for an Oscar this year.
Best Supporting Actor: Andy Serkis (Rise of the Planet of the Apes)
Rise of the Planet of the Apes Clip 2 by teasertrailer
Well I think we all know that anybody donning a motion capture suit was never going to be nominated for an Oscar but I think it's about time they did because as Caesar, Serkis was definitely the heart of Rotpota. In fact I think putting him in the supporting category is almost doing him a disservice as he has to lead so much of the action he could almost feature in the lead category. It must be such a difficult job to convey so much emotion without saying a single word but Serkis manages this as he leads the ape uprising against Brian Cox and Draco Malfoy out of Harry Potter. He is able to combine ape mannerisms with the human ones that have been bestowed upon him by his master and most of all we are able to sympathise with his plight and understand why he did what he did in the first place. Serkis is a great actor with or without the motion capture, as we saw when he played Ian Dury, but in the apes film he proved that this new technology can still produce top notch performances.
Nominees:
John Hawkes (Martha Marcy May Marlene) - To me Hawkes was better here than in Winter's Bone last year as the charismatic cult leader who is able to charm the girls in his group only to abuse them later on.
Ezra Miller (We Need to Talk About Kevin) - As the older version of Kevin, Miller is both sinister and creepy but in the final scenes he still lets us sympathise with his character.
Michael Smiley (Kill List) - Hitmen don't come any more charming than Smiley's Gal in this British horror thriller as he convinces his old mate to do one more batch of killings.
Luis Tosar (Cell 211) - Almost a list of villains here, Tosar is brilliant as the prison top dog who takes the lead during a prison break unaware that one of the supposed inmates is the institute's newest guard.
Best Supporting Actress: Sarina Farhadi (A Separation)
A Separation has done surprisingly well during this awards season with a Best Foreign Film award definitely on the cards as well as a nod in the screenplay category. However with most Iranian films director Asghar Farhadi looked close to home when casting the daughter of the warring couple in the film as his own daughter Sarina ended up getting the part. For me her role was the pivotal one in this film and she played it with a wide-eyed innocence which gave way to a better understanding of the way the world works as the film goes on. Her Termeh has to decide which of her parents to live with and her decision is seemingly based on an incident that happens during the film which is something that makes her question her trusting nature. I thought Sarina was completely natural in front of the camera and easily one of the best things about the film but as I've said before performances in films not in the English language tend to be overlooked in the acting categories.
Nominees:
Jessica Chastain (Take Shelter) - She has been nominated for The Help but for me Chastain's best performance of the year was where she played Michael Shannon's worried wife who has to take control once she realises her husband's altered mental state.
Elle Fanning (Super 8) - After wowing in Somewhere the more talented of the Fanning sisters was once again a strong presence in Super 8 as Alice the young teen who all the boys love but has got a lot of family issues.
Carey Mulligan (Shame) - For so beautifully singing her own version of New York, New York Mulligan deserves a nomination for me she captured the fragility of her character perfectly.
Shailene Woodley (The Descendants) - As George Clooney's elder daughter, Woodley has garnered a few nods but Oscar seemingly bumped her possibly because of her age which is a shame as she perfectly handled the role of a troubled teen forced to be a role model to her young sister following her mother's accident.
Best Original Screenplay: Abi Morgan and Steve McQueen (Shame)
The beauty of Shame's screenplay is to give us a central character who is seemingly unlikeable yet is able to convey a sense of humanity to the audience. There is also a lot of scenes that don't feature any dialogue yet speak volumes and the relationship between Fassbender and Mulligan's brother and sister is never fully explored so Morgan and McQueen let us make our own mind up about what has happened in the past. It is a testament to both of them that we never really think about how great these characters are and how hard it must be to write a script that features few heavy dialogue led scenes.
Nominees:
Drake Doremus and Ben York Jones (Like Crazy)- Doremus and Jones' bare bones script allowed the two lead actors to improvise to an extent but at the same time they understood how two people who start dating and then fall in love would interact with each other.
Michelangelo Frammartino (La Quattro Volte) - Though The Artist's screenplay will highlight the fact that a silent film still has a script but it is Frammartino's completely silent goat movie which still gives us a great character who is a man who interacts better with animals than he does with other people.
Ignazio Martinez De Pison and Fernanda Trueba (Chico and Rita)- The two men involved with writing this surprise animated film nominee perfectly capture the jazz scene in Cuba and give us one of the best cinematic romances of the past few years.
John Michael McDonaugh (The Guard) - Perfectly combining a cop story, a comedy and a character study McDonagh's screenplay is equally as great as his brother's work on In Bruges.
Best Adapted Screenplay: Lynne Ramsay and Rory Kinnear (We Need To Talk About Kevin)
Lionel Shriver's source novel is written as a series of letters from mother Eva to her son Kevin and through that the readers learn the backstory between the two and how Eva's life has changed since the incident that Kevin has caused. But obviously this couldn't work on the big screen so Ramsay and Kinnear had to turn this into a multi-layered screenplay and turn the content of the letters into a compelling story with equally real characters. Though the performances is what the critics have focused on I think the adaptation is equally as important for the filmic version of this popular yet hard to read novel.
Nominees:
Augustin and Pedro Almodovar (The Skin I Live In) - The Almodovar brothers have created a screenplay that keeps you guessing to the character's motives and identities until the very last word.
Hossein Amini (Drive)- It's a testament to Amini that I didn't think Drive was based on a book and the dialogue that he uses seems completely original and the characters different from anything else that has been seen this year.
Richard Ayoade (Submarine) - A film that relies heavily on its dialogue and its lead character's first person narrative is lucky to have the brilliant Ayoade adapting the source material as well directing.
Shaun Grant (Snowtown) - Grant's screenplay is based on true events and the books written around it but he still has worked hard to recreate and imagine various conversations that happened before and during the atrocious murders that the film centres on.
Best Documentary: Senna
I do think enough has been said about this film apart from the fact that it is ridiculous that it hasn't even been nominated for an Oscar as it seems like the obvious choice to win the award.
Nominees:
Bobby Fischer against the World - A film not just about chess but about a tortured individual who was addicted to his game.
The Interrupters - A great documentary that I would've chosen as the winner had Senna been nominated for an Oscar this follows a group of former gang members who now try and stop the violence in their native Chicago
Life in a Day - Kevin McDonald's ambitious project where people sent in video diaries about what happened to them on a certain July day in 2010 and from there is able to create an interesting and thought provoking film.
Project Nim - A film about an ape who didn't form a planet but that was taught to sort of behave like a human only to end up in captivity and one that wasn't played in motion capture by Andy Serkis.
Best Animated Film: Arietty
As happy as I am to see Chico and Rita nominated in this category I would love to see it sit alongside the latest Studio Ghibli outing as the team adapt The Borrowers to fit in with their own unique animated style. Here director Hiromasa Yonebayashi creates another fantasy world with brilliant characters and as you can imagine from a Ghibli film the animation is just completely beautiful. As both Spirited Away and Howl's Moving Castle got nominations I was surprised that this masterful film wasn't nominated in a category that includes Puss in Boots and Kung Fu Panda 2.
Nominees:
The Adventures of Tintin - Though this wasn't great it still is superior to some of the other nominated films and anything that features a script written by Joe Cornish and Edgar Wright deserves recognition somewhere.
My Dog Tulip - A film that's brilliant animation makes up for its uneven story this was another film that didn't make an impact on its release but if we're honouring animated films then this deserves to at least be nominated.
Best Film Not in the English Language: The Skin I Live In
I have said a lot about this already but the fact that this Spanish film hasn't even been recognised by Oscar shows a great discrepancy between the American awards and the BAFTAs in which it won this award.
Nominees:
Cell 211- A gripping and engaging prison break thriller from Spain is a lot better than most of the thrillers currently being release in Hollywood.
How I Ended This Summer - A film that relies slightly on the cabin fever that occurs with two men on a desolate station in the Arctic Ocean, this Russian movie has two great performances and a simply yet affecting screenplay.
Poetry - I've already talked about the beauty and brilliant performances in this Korean masterpiece in my list of Best Films of the year so have a read of that.
La Quattro Volte - A film coming out of Italy looking at four seasons in a small village and the reliance on goat farming it sounds like it would be completely dull but on the contrary this is one of the most compelling films that I saw throughout last year.
Quick Picks:
Cinematography: Newton Tomas Siegel (Drive)
Editing: Chris King and Greggers Sall (Senna)
Art Direction: Carlos Bodelon (The Skin I Live In)
Costume Design: Pascaline Chavanne (Potiche)
Make-Up: Victoria Down (Rise of the Planet of the Apes)
Visual Effects: Wayne Eaton (Super 8)
Sound: Mark Ulano (Super 8)
Sound Editing: Ben Burtt (Super 8)
Score: Cliff Martinez (Drive)
Original Song: Brett McKenzie - Life's a Happy Song (The Muppets)
That's my opinion so tell me what you think leave a comment below.
Best Picture: Drive
Not only should Drive be nominated for this year's Best Picture but there's no doubt in my mind that it should win the top prize. If you don't want to take my word for it then how about Denzel Washington's wife, who watches all the nominated films on DVD when her husband can't be bothered, she also believes this was the film of the year and should win. But why? Simply it's an exquisitely joyous piece of cinema evoking memories of times gone by while simultaneously keeping things modern. Great performances from Ryan Gosling as the mysterious Driver backed up Carey Mulligan, Albert Brooks, Ron Perlman and Bryan Cranston all add to the film as does the great soundtrack. I think you just know when you're watching a great film and when I watched Drive I felt just that.
Nominees:
Bridesmaids - To be fair Oscar has at least acknowledged comedy with The Artist but this brilliant all-female affair should be nominated for me than its excellent screenplay. The fact that this proved that women could do the gags just as well as the men meant that this was a fairly landmark piece of work and it was bloody hilarious.
Poetry - This Korean film made very few end of year lists but was a beautifully shot piece with a masterful lead performance. A film about growing old and losing part of yourself while still trying to do the right thing is set against an old lady trying her hardest to write a poem. Completely heart-breaking but at the same time strangely uplifting this film deserved to be seen by more people.
Senna - A brilliantly shot film about a man taken to soon which was brilliantly shot and engaging so much so that you wouldn't think that this was a documentary. Asif Kapadia's film about the life of Ayrton Senna took me by surprise the first time I saw it as I wasn't an F1 fan but the great trick of this film is making you see the man behind the sport. On the way to the inevitable ending there was rivalry, greed and a man who wanted to give back to the town from which he came and I personally loved every minute of it.
Shame- Steve McQueen's story of a sex addict trying to deal with his life and look after his emotionally unstable sister is a supremely artistic work by a man who has an eye for detail. Every shot is perfectly crafted giving you a look into this man's world and the way he thinks. I was totally taken aback with how much I admired this film, especially given the content, so McQueen and lead actor Michael Fassbender did a brilliant job making you see through the nudity to a study of a torn and complex individual.
The Skin I Live In - I think generally Pedro Almodovar's output has been great but this was a film that I found a lot darker than his usual Penelope Cruz starring comedy drama. This film was a thriller with both sex and violence and an intriguing lead performance from Antonio Banderas as a plastic surgeon wanting to create a new skin but being driven by revenge after an incident involving a family member. This was shocking but incredibly well put-together and written by Almodovar and his brother just a great watch that held my attention from beginning to end
Take Shelter - I watched this film very recently and am still intrigued why it wasn't nominated for any Oscars seeing as that it is an American production starring two Academy Award nominees. At its heart is a terrific performance by Michael Shannon, see below, as Curtis a man who is convinced that a disaster is on its way and is desperate to try and protect them. The great thing about this film is how director Jeff Nichols takes us inside Curtis' head so we're never sure if we're seeing his own visions or what is actually happening. This is a well written film letting the actors say a lot with saying very little and even the young actress playing Curtis' deaf daughter is fantastic. This is what modern American film-making should look like it's just a shame Oscar focuses on saccharine melodrama instead.
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy - A couple of nods for Gary Oldman and the film's script means that this has at least been given some sort of recognition. However Tomas Alfredson's big screen adaptation of John Le Carre's classic work deserved to be given a great deal more nominations that it was. This is a moody and atmospheric piece full of great supporting performances and a real feeling that you are there with Smiley as he carries out his investigations on his spying colleagues. I think a lot has been said about Oldman's performance but if others like Tom Hardy, Mark Strong and Benedict Cumberbatch weren't there to back him up then he wouldn't seem half as good. This was much more than a film just about spies and the characters really resonated once the film had finished.
Tyrannosaur - Paddy Considine's debut feature showed that the actor had learnt well from the directors he had previously acted for. It's a shame that Oscar seems to skip over British realism films as this odd romance between a drunk and a battered woman was involving and deftly crafted by Considine who kept the story simple yet involving. Two great leads in Peter Mullan doing drunk and gruff and Olivia Colman doing timid yet strong and both excel in these roles as does Eddie Marsan as Colman's violent husband. While some of the material here could be seen as clichéd Considine and his cast create something beautiful out of the hatred on display and really make you think about other people's lives and their daily grind.
We Need to Talk About Kevin - Quite a lot has been said about this film which shows how a mother's love can get over even the worst atrocities that her son commits. Tilda Swinton's harassed Eva is the star here as we see her dealing with motherhood and then with a tragedy that Kevin has caused and in each instance director Lynne Ramsay gives us reason to care for her and even the outwardly evil Kevin. This film is about whether we are truly born evil or if we are a product of our environment and how our views can change about our own families. Ramsay has a great eye and keeps the dialogue brief but effective which ultimately produced one of my favourite films of the year.
Best Director: Nicholas Winding Refn (Drive)
As well as being brilliantly acted, Drive is definitely the best directed film of the year thanks to Nicholas Winding Refn's skill at bringing out the best in his characters like he did with Bronson a few years ago. I just love how he was able to put together this crime story and romance together and guide you through the streets of L.A. and Driver's world. Winding Refn will hopefully be noticed by Oscar soon, as he has already done by BAFTA, but when he does we can all say we got there first.
Nominees:
Tomas Alfredson (Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy) - Like with Let The Right One in it was Alfredson's way of diverting this film away from the genre in which it should sit that made it so satisfying.
Pedro Almodovar (The Skin I Live In) - When Almodovar has a film out he should always be recognised as best director, even though he rarely is, The Skin I Live In was for me his best film in years but even in a film involving major plastic surgery you can still see all his directorial markings.
Steve McQueen (Shame) - Not all former artists can make the transition to film director so seamlessly but after Hunger it seems that McQueen has a real eye for focusing in on characters and with his first fully fictional work he gives a film all about desire whether it is wanted or not.
Lynne Ramsay (We Need to Talk About Kevin)- After years away from the director's chair, Ramsay returned with a very hard job to make this film featuring mass murder and somewhat unlikeable characters a cinematic hit and she did this and more making We Need to Talk About Kevin one of the best reviewed films of the year.
Best Actor: Michael Shannon (Take Shelter)
Take Shelter - Bad dream by teasertrailer
Michael Shannon was nominated for an Oscar three years ago for being the best thing in Sam Mendes' now forgettable domestic period piece Revolutionary Road. In Take Shelter he brings his sort of nervy looks to the forefront to play Curtis a hard-working family man with a deaf daughter who starts getting visions of a possible disaster and decides to spend all of his time and money on putting together a strong enough shelter for his family. Shannon's skill is making us wonder whether Curtis is completely bonkers or there is something more to his visions and he also gives a man who clearly loves his family and is worried about the future. I'm completely shocked that Shannon wasn't nominated in a category which sees fairly ordinary turns from Brad Pitt and George Clooney but then they have the star power that Shannon unfortunately doesn't possess.
Nominees:
Michael Fassbender (Shame) - If you can get over seeing his member multiple times in the first five minutes then you'll totally be won over by Fassbender's performance as Brandon a man with a fragile past who gets by on the thrill of sex who has to deal with his unreliable sister for me his turn bought to mind Christian Bale in American Psycho, which surely isn't a bad thing.
Brendan Gleason (The Guard) - Building on his great turn in In Bruges, Gleason once again hit the right tone between comedic and dramatic as Sergeant Gerry Boyle a small town policeman who has to deal with a large scale drug deal and forms an odd couple relationship with Don Cheadle's US Cop.
Gleason had me laughing throughout although he also handled the moments of poignancy perfectly this was certainly a role that didn't get the credit it deserved.
Ryan Gosling (Drive) - A role that wasn't showy enough for Oscar, but then I suppose you could say the same about Gary Oldman, Gosling's central performance in Drive was what tied everything together and he let his face do the talking throughout as Driver was a character with few words but a lot of intensity. I thought definitely the law of averages would see one Gosling performance be nominated but sadly this wasn't the case.
Daniel Henshall (Snowtown) - With Animal Kingdom last year Australia had a strong showing however no love seems to have been given to Snowtown in which Daniel Henshall is completely captivating as a drifter who charms all the people in a small Australian suburb before going on a killing spree convincing some of the locals to join him in bumping off people he felt deserved to die. Henshall's ability to make John Bunting seem charismatic one minute and then the next completely terrifying surely deserves recognition but this sadly wasn't the case.
Best Actress: Catherine Deneuve (Potiche)
It is shocking to me that in her lengthy career the legendary Catherine Deneuve has only been nominated for one Oscar and that her role in the brilliant comedy Potiche has completely gone unnoticed. In the film Deneuve essentially plays a trophy wife who is called to run her husband's company once he is taken ill and changes things for the better. Deneuve makes Suzanne her own and makes the screen sparkle as her diminutive frame makes its away around this factory as she brings colour to this drab institution. Deneuve's chemistry with Gerard Depardieu was also great allowing these two legends to sparkle together including a very interesting dance sequence. A combination of both great comic timing and a sprinkling of pathos made this for me one of the best roles of the year but was left out of Oscar's list presumably because it was in a foreign language, from a comedy and saw an older woman who was comfortable in her own skin.
Nominees:
Olivia Colman (Tyrannosaur) - Probably best known for her comedic roles, Olivia Colman had a great year impressing in both Tyrannosaur and The Iron Lady and it is her performance in the former that I thought was fantastic. As Hannah she shows us a woman who is desperate to get on with her everyday life despite the fact that her husband treats her horribly and eventually finds solace in her relationship with a kindly drunk. Colman's everywoman persona fit well in but we also saw her flex her acting chops in some of the film's grittier scenes.
Jeong-Hi Jun (Poetry) - Like with Deneuve it's no surprise that another older foreign lady got left out of the running because what Jeong-Hi Jun demonstrated in Poetry deserves some sort of recognition. She was able to effortlessly portray a woman who has to deal with the fact that her grandson has been involved in a gang rape while at the same time finding out she is going senile. Her small frame and timid nature completely contrast with everything that is happening to her and Jun's expressions and body language perfectly portray what this woman must be going through.
Elizabeth Olsen (Martha Marcy May Marlene) - I suppose Oscar couldn't include everybody in its list but I would've preferred to see Olsen's turn as the young girl taken in by a cult than Rooney Mara's impression of Noomi Rapace from The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Olsen's talents are evident as she is able to give us the two sides of this character the one that is receptive to the cult's charms and the other who is trying to shake off her old life and readjust to normal society. I hate to use the word star-making turn but that's exactly what this was and for me Olsen should've been this year's Jennifer Lawrence in the Best Actress category.
Tilda Swinton (We Need to Talk About Kevin) - No surprise here either with Swinton's Eva being one of the most captivating characters of cinema in 2011 as a woman who has no desire to be a mother in the first place but sticks with her role despite the fact that her son does some disgusting things. Like with all the performances featured here it's not so much about the words given as the performance as a whole and that's especially true of Swinton as the scenes which focus on Eva in the present day are almost without dialogue and she is still able to give us a full-fleshed performance which is more that I can say for some of those that are nominated for an Oscar this year.
Best Supporting Actor: Andy Serkis (Rise of the Planet of the Apes)
Rise of the Planet of the Apes Clip 2 by teasertrailer
Well I think we all know that anybody donning a motion capture suit was never going to be nominated for an Oscar but I think it's about time they did because as Caesar, Serkis was definitely the heart of Rotpota. In fact I think putting him in the supporting category is almost doing him a disservice as he has to lead so much of the action he could almost feature in the lead category. It must be such a difficult job to convey so much emotion without saying a single word but Serkis manages this as he leads the ape uprising against Brian Cox and Draco Malfoy out of Harry Potter. He is able to combine ape mannerisms with the human ones that have been bestowed upon him by his master and most of all we are able to sympathise with his plight and understand why he did what he did in the first place. Serkis is a great actor with or without the motion capture, as we saw when he played Ian Dury, but in the apes film he proved that this new technology can still produce top notch performances.
Nominees:
John Hawkes (Martha Marcy May Marlene) - To me Hawkes was better here than in Winter's Bone last year as the charismatic cult leader who is able to charm the girls in his group only to abuse them later on.
Ezra Miller (We Need to Talk About Kevin) - As the older version of Kevin, Miller is both sinister and creepy but in the final scenes he still lets us sympathise with his character.
Michael Smiley (Kill List) - Hitmen don't come any more charming than Smiley's Gal in this British horror thriller as he convinces his old mate to do one more batch of killings.
Luis Tosar (Cell 211) - Almost a list of villains here, Tosar is brilliant as the prison top dog who takes the lead during a prison break unaware that one of the supposed inmates is the institute's newest guard.
Best Supporting Actress: Sarina Farhadi (A Separation)
A Separation has done surprisingly well during this awards season with a Best Foreign Film award definitely on the cards as well as a nod in the screenplay category. However with most Iranian films director Asghar Farhadi looked close to home when casting the daughter of the warring couple in the film as his own daughter Sarina ended up getting the part. For me her role was the pivotal one in this film and she played it with a wide-eyed innocence which gave way to a better understanding of the way the world works as the film goes on. Her Termeh has to decide which of her parents to live with and her decision is seemingly based on an incident that happens during the film which is something that makes her question her trusting nature. I thought Sarina was completely natural in front of the camera and easily one of the best things about the film but as I've said before performances in films not in the English language tend to be overlooked in the acting categories.
Nominees:
Jessica Chastain (Take Shelter) - She has been nominated for The Help but for me Chastain's best performance of the year was where she played Michael Shannon's worried wife who has to take control once she realises her husband's altered mental state.
Elle Fanning (Super 8) - After wowing in Somewhere the more talented of the Fanning sisters was once again a strong presence in Super 8 as Alice the young teen who all the boys love but has got a lot of family issues.
Carey Mulligan (Shame) - For so beautifully singing her own version of New York, New York Mulligan deserves a nomination for me she captured the fragility of her character perfectly.
Shailene Woodley (The Descendants) - As George Clooney's elder daughter, Woodley has garnered a few nods but Oscar seemingly bumped her possibly because of her age which is a shame as she perfectly handled the role of a troubled teen forced to be a role model to her young sister following her mother's accident.
Best Original Screenplay: Abi Morgan and Steve McQueen (Shame)
The beauty of Shame's screenplay is to give us a central character who is seemingly unlikeable yet is able to convey a sense of humanity to the audience. There is also a lot of scenes that don't feature any dialogue yet speak volumes and the relationship between Fassbender and Mulligan's brother and sister is never fully explored so Morgan and McQueen let us make our own mind up about what has happened in the past. It is a testament to both of them that we never really think about how great these characters are and how hard it must be to write a script that features few heavy dialogue led scenes.
Nominees:
Drake Doremus and Ben York Jones (Like Crazy)- Doremus and Jones' bare bones script allowed the two lead actors to improvise to an extent but at the same time they understood how two people who start dating and then fall in love would interact with each other.
Michelangelo Frammartino (La Quattro Volte) - Though The Artist's screenplay will highlight the fact that a silent film still has a script but it is Frammartino's completely silent goat movie which still gives us a great character who is a man who interacts better with animals than he does with other people.
Ignazio Martinez De Pison and Fernanda Trueba (Chico and Rita)- The two men involved with writing this surprise animated film nominee perfectly capture the jazz scene in Cuba and give us one of the best cinematic romances of the past few years.
John Michael McDonaugh (The Guard) - Perfectly combining a cop story, a comedy and a character study McDonagh's screenplay is equally as great as his brother's work on In Bruges.
Best Adapted Screenplay: Lynne Ramsay and Rory Kinnear (We Need To Talk About Kevin)
Lionel Shriver's source novel is written as a series of letters from mother Eva to her son Kevin and through that the readers learn the backstory between the two and how Eva's life has changed since the incident that Kevin has caused. But obviously this couldn't work on the big screen so Ramsay and Kinnear had to turn this into a multi-layered screenplay and turn the content of the letters into a compelling story with equally real characters. Though the performances is what the critics have focused on I think the adaptation is equally as important for the filmic version of this popular yet hard to read novel.
Nominees:
Augustin and Pedro Almodovar (The Skin I Live In) - The Almodovar brothers have created a screenplay that keeps you guessing to the character's motives and identities until the very last word.
Hossein Amini (Drive)- It's a testament to Amini that I didn't think Drive was based on a book and the dialogue that he uses seems completely original and the characters different from anything else that has been seen this year.
Richard Ayoade (Submarine) - A film that relies heavily on its dialogue and its lead character's first person narrative is lucky to have the brilliant Ayoade adapting the source material as well directing.
Shaun Grant (Snowtown) - Grant's screenplay is based on true events and the books written around it but he still has worked hard to recreate and imagine various conversations that happened before and during the atrocious murders that the film centres on.
Best Documentary: Senna
I do think enough has been said about this film apart from the fact that it is ridiculous that it hasn't even been nominated for an Oscar as it seems like the obvious choice to win the award.
Nominees:
Bobby Fischer against the World - A film not just about chess but about a tortured individual who was addicted to his game.
The Interrupters - A great documentary that I would've chosen as the winner had Senna been nominated for an Oscar this follows a group of former gang members who now try and stop the violence in their native Chicago
Life in a Day - Kevin McDonald's ambitious project where people sent in video diaries about what happened to them on a certain July day in 2010 and from there is able to create an interesting and thought provoking film.
Project Nim - A film about an ape who didn't form a planet but that was taught to sort of behave like a human only to end up in captivity and one that wasn't played in motion capture by Andy Serkis.
Best Animated Film: Arietty
As happy as I am to see Chico and Rita nominated in this category I would love to see it sit alongside the latest Studio Ghibli outing as the team adapt The Borrowers to fit in with their own unique animated style. Here director Hiromasa Yonebayashi creates another fantasy world with brilliant characters and as you can imagine from a Ghibli film the animation is just completely beautiful. As both Spirited Away and Howl's Moving Castle got nominations I was surprised that this masterful film wasn't nominated in a category that includes Puss in Boots and Kung Fu Panda 2.
Nominees:
The Adventures of Tintin - Though this wasn't great it still is superior to some of the other nominated films and anything that features a script written by Joe Cornish and Edgar Wright deserves recognition somewhere.
My Dog Tulip - A film that's brilliant animation makes up for its uneven story this was another film that didn't make an impact on its release but if we're honouring animated films then this deserves to at least be nominated.
Best Film Not in the English Language: The Skin I Live In
I have said a lot about this already but the fact that this Spanish film hasn't even been recognised by Oscar shows a great discrepancy between the American awards and the BAFTAs in which it won this award.
Nominees:
Cell 211- A gripping and engaging prison break thriller from Spain is a lot better than most of the thrillers currently being release in Hollywood.
How I Ended This Summer - A film that relies slightly on the cabin fever that occurs with two men on a desolate station in the Arctic Ocean, this Russian movie has two great performances and a simply yet affecting screenplay.
Poetry - I've already talked about the beauty and brilliant performances in this Korean masterpiece in my list of Best Films of the year so have a read of that.
La Quattro Volte - A film coming out of Italy looking at four seasons in a small village and the reliance on goat farming it sounds like it would be completely dull but on the contrary this is one of the most compelling films that I saw throughout last year.
Quick Picks:
Cinematography: Newton Tomas Siegel (Drive)
Editing: Chris King and Greggers Sall (Senna)
Art Direction: Carlos Bodelon (The Skin I Live In)
Costume Design: Pascaline Chavanne (Potiche)
Make-Up: Victoria Down (Rise of the Planet of the Apes)
Visual Effects: Wayne Eaton (Super 8)
Sound: Mark Ulano (Super 8)
Sound Editing: Ben Burtt (Super 8)
Score: Cliff Martinez (Drive)
Original Song: Brett McKenzie - Life's a Happy Song (The Muppets)
That's my opinion so tell me what you think leave a comment below.
Saturday, 28 January 2012
Oscars 2012 Digested
So Tuesday saw the revelation of who made it to the final hurdle and were nominated for an Academy Award there were a few surprises but most of it had been predicted as the fight between a silent movie star, a Parisian orphan, some African American maids, a British prime minister, a horse and a depressed father of two who looks a bit like George Clooney. In this blog I'll take you through all the runners and riders in the major categories
BEST PICTURE
The Artist
What it's about: A silent movie star goes into a downward spiral following the advent of sound cinema while at the same time a star is born in a young actress who started out in one of his films.
Why it's nominated: It harks back to old school cinema which would appeal to the older member of the academy but apart from that it's a charming film that more than deserves the awards it's been nominated for.
What its chances are: A favourite to sweep the board and pick up the Best Picture award and personally I do feel at this stage it can't be beaten. But a lot can change between now and the end of February.
Odds: 2/9
The Descendants
What it's about: A man living in Hawaii must bring his family together when his wife slips into a coma while at the same time trying to finalise a property deal for the land that his family have inherited.
Why it's nominated: It is the token offbeat film of the pack but one that has picked up a lot of steam thanks to star George Clooney who is good at picking up Oscar votes despite that his own film The Ides of March doesn't figure here.
What its chances are: It's basically the only film that can beat The Artist at this stage and even then it would be a massive upset, I do believe that it should be happy to have won the Best Drama award at The Golden Globes
Odds: 9/2
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
What it's about: A young boy tries to discover the meaning of a key that his father, who died during 9/11, left him before he died.
Why it's nominated: This was one of the surprise entries into the Best Picture category and one that got a rapturous applause when it was revealed to be in the mix. This is the only film I haven't seen but from the reviews I have read it isn't great and of all of these films it has the lowest IMDB rating by quite some margin. I'm guessing its here because it's good Oscar bait with its subject matter of 9/11 and its awards-friendly cast of Tom Hanks and Sandra Bullock.
What its chances are: I honestly think it should just be happy with the nomination here as this will simply be the also-ran film and will be quickly forgotten about post-awards season.
Odds: 40/1
The Help
What it's about: A young writer decides she is going to create a story based on the life of the African American maids who serve the wealthy families in her hometown.
Why it's nominated: This was the film I didn't really want to see in the list but that was mainly because I had a bet that it wouldn't be nominated and now I owe a friend a coffee. This is the token message film about not judging people just because of the colour of their skin and does contain some great performances from its predominantly female cast three of whom have picked up nominations.
What its chances are: While it has picked up a nod throughout every awards season I feel The Help's best chances are in the acting categories.
Odds: 33/1
Hugo
What it's about: A young Parisian orphan who lives at a train station tries to discover the secret behind a mechanical man he and his father were building.
Why it's nominated: Mainly because it's directed by Martin Scorsese but more than that its success is similar to that of The Artist in that they both reference the early days of cinema. In the case of Hugo it goes right back to the dawn of cinema and its French roots it also helps that it looks fantastic and as you will see I feel it will pick up a few awards.
What its chances are: Despite being nominated for the most awards this year I feel that Hugo will most likely triumphant in the awards that honour artistic merit and not in the Best Picture category.
Odds: 12/1
Midnight in Paris
What it's about: An American writer, who has accompanied his girlfriend and her family to Paris, finds himself travelling back to the city in the 1920s where he meets some of his icons and falls in love.
Why it's nominated: Again mainly for nostalgic reasons as the scenes in twenties Paris must appeal to the old guard of the academy. This is also a return to form for Oscar favourite Woody Allen whose films have often been given acting or writing nominations however this is the first Allen film to be nominated for an Oscar since Hannah and Her Sisters in 1986.
What its chances are: Again this won is here due to a strong campaign being launched on its behalf and I think while the film isn't successful maybe Allen will be elsewhere.
Odds: 33/1
Moneyball
What it's about: The manager of a baseball team who became the first person to use computer statistics to put his team together rather than taking the advice of his scouts.
Why it's nominated: Possibly due to the script written by Aaron Sorkin or possibly due to Oscar favourite Brad Pitt taking the starring role but my theory is due to its message of triumph over adversity and never giving up on your beliefs. I'm also guessing that a large number of the Academy voters are baseball fans and remember this incident when it first occurred.
What its chances are: Again this is a film that is just filling a gap in the list and I wouldn't be surprised if it was one that just about made it in.
Odds:40/1
The Tree of Life
What it's about: If I'm honest I'm really not sure but it does tell the story of a 1950s family who are rocked by the death of one of its sons and it follows another of the sons coping with the effects of this in the present day.
Why it's nominated: I don't really know as The Tree of Life was a film that the critics went crazy over but I'm yet to meet a real person who actually liked because I thought it was very pretentious and it thought it was an important movie that had to be seen by everyone. I'm guessing the combined force of director Terrence Malick, who only makes one film per decade, with stars Brad Pitt and Sean Penn was enough to get this one a nod.
What its chances are: No chance whatsoever this is the bookie's outside pick for a reason and out of all of the Best Picture nominations this is the one that is most likely to go away with absolutely nothing.
Odds: 50/1
War Horse
What it's about: A horse which is bought by a Devon farmer goes on to have a massive impact on many lives during World War I.
Why it's nominated: I feel the war setting must have something to do with it and I think members of the academy were probably charmed by it's tale of friendship and perseverance. It also helps that its director is academy favourite Steven Spielberg who is always on the campaign trail when he feels he has film that may appeal to the Oscar voters.
What its chances are: At one time this was the favourite to win Best Picture but that was before The Artist started getting honours around the festival circuits perhaps if this was released in another year it would triumph but I think it may just have to be content with some technical awards instead.
Odds:14/1
Best Actor
Nominees: Demien Bicher (A Better Life), George Clooney (The Descendants), Jean Dujardin (The Artist), Gary Oldman (Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy) and Brad Pitt (Moneyball)
Thoughts: Of the four acting categories this is definitely the strongest and the one that still has some mystery behind it. George Clooney has to be the favourite here as he's been nominated almost every year and has previously won a Supporting Actor prize but this could be the year for his Leading Actor accolade. It is too early to say that Clooney has a lock on the award as The Artist's Jean Dujardin could still take this one and for me both performances were excellent. If I were a member of the academy I would cast my vote for Oldman's subtle performance in Tinker, Tailor as I felt it was utterly mesmerising but I think that he's lucky just to be nominated and despite losing the Oscar he may win the Bafta instead. A Better Life is the least familiar of the titles on this list but Bicher gives a great turn as a Mexican illegal immigrant who is trying to give his son the life he never had. It seems then that Brad Pitt is the weak link here while I didn't mind him in Moneyball it was never a performance that I felt worthy of awards recognition.
Prediction: I wouldn't say George Clooney had it in the bag but I'm going to plump for him nonetheless.
Best Actress
Nominees: Glenn Close (Albert Nobbs), Viola Davis (The Help), Rooney Mara (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo), Meryl Streep (The Iron Lady) and Michelle Williams (My Week with Marilyn)
Thoughts: Like with Clooney, Meryl Streep is an Oscar favourite who holds the record for the most nominations in the acting categories with a previous sixteen nods however she has only ever won best actress once and that was almost thirty years ago. Though The Iron Lady has had a mixed response, I am yet to see it myself, one thing nobody has any doubt on is that Streep's performance/impression is fantastic. Streep's closest rival has to be The Help's Viola Davis, who has picked up a couple of awards so far, who again gives a strong turn as the maid who finally decides she's had enough and reveals her stories for a book told from the point of view of the staff. If Streep wasn't present I would've said that Glenn Close would've had a good chance as she both drags up and puts on an accent in the Irish-set Albert Nobbs and Michelle Williams has also appealed to the Oscar voters by inhabiting the role of Marilyn Monroe. The outside choice, and also the surprise nomination, is Rooney Mara who for me was the best thing about the English Language version of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo however I would've said that Tilda Swinton deserved the nomination more and would've been my pick to win.
Prediction: At this stage I can't see Streep being beaten.
Best Supporting Actor
Nominees: Kenneth Branagh (My Week with Marilyn), Jonah Hill (Moneyball), Nick Nolte (Warrior), Christopher Plummer (Beginners) and Max Von Sydow (Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close)
Thoughts: This is the battle of the British actors with Brangah's Laurence Olivier impression going up against Plummer's gay man who is dying of cancer. At 82 years of age it seems that Plummer would have to be the favourite playing against type as the man who has finally been allowed to come out of the closet after years of lying to his son in addition it would also be good to see Plummer awarded for his many years on the big screen so Branagh might have to wait a few more years for his award. Ironically another 82 year old, Max Von Sydow, is also nominated here but he was the surprise nominee in this category and I can't see him winning. Of the other two Frat Pack favourite Jonah Hill was, in my opinion, the best thing about Moneyball as I feel he excelled in his first drama role but won't manage to be the old guard here and as much as I liked Warrior I wasn't overly wowed by Nolte's mumbling turn as the recovering alcoholic father.
Prediction: Christopher Plummer to win.
Best Supporting Actress
Nominees: Berenice Bejo (The Artist), Jessica Chastain (The Help), Melissa McCarthy (Bridesmaids), Janet McTeer (Albert Nobbs) and Octavia Spencer (The Help)
Thoughts: This was the category that offered up no surprises when it was announced and I feel the eventual winner, Octavia Spencer, will be no surprise either. In The Help Spencer plays the feistier of the two central African American characters and dominates the screen against Viola Davis' more subtle performance. For me though I preferred Spencer's co-star, and fellow nominee, Jessica Chastain who provided the comic relief in The Help as a ditzy housewife who herself is ostracised from the town's group of society girls. I'm still not sure why Berenice Bejo is nominated in the supporting category as her performance was just as integral to The Artist as Jean Dujardin's was but maybe they thought she had better luck if she wasn't up against Meryl Streep. For me though the award should go to one of the other two nominees, I thought Janet McTeer was the best thing about Albert Nobbs as her impression of a man was more convincing than Glenn Close's while Melissa McCarthy gets the token comedy award for playing the role of Megan in Bridesmaids and proving that she was more than just the token fat girl.
Prediction: At this stage there's no beating Octavia Spencer.
Best Director
Nominees: Woody Allen (Midnight in Paris), Michel Hazanavicius (The Artist), Terrence Malick (The Tree of Life), Alexander Payne (The Descendants) and Martin Scorsese (Hugo)
Thoughts: This one really feels like an old boys club with veteran directors Allen, Malick and Scorsese all featuring within the ranks. It seems that at this stage Scorsese is the favourite to win the award which will shockingly be only his second Oscar but that's mainly because he won the Golden Globe. To be fair Hugo is Scorsese's lovechild and one of his most personal films with it being a love letter to the days of early cinema it captures perfectly his love of the first French directors. Talking of French directors it is part-French Hazanavicius who is my pick to win the award as again The Artist is his creative vision and you can just see how much direction has gone into that film. An outside bet might be Malick who the Academy will give the award to for his great body of work prior to the awful Tree of Life but I don't see either Woody Allen or Alexander Payne having any chance of a win. It could well be a split decision with The Artist taking Best Picture and Scorsese triumphing here but I don't think so.
Prediction: This is probably my biggest punt of the lot but I'm going to predict that Michel Hazanvicius wins this one.
Original and Adapted Screenplay
As I mentioned earlier Woody Allen's success might come elsewhere and I feel that he could get another Best Original Screenplay award for Midnight in Paris whose message of not dwelling in the past is a good one. Allen's biggest competition here has to be Michel Hazanvicius' script for The Artist as the film itself may sweep the board it might just get this award anyway. Original Screenplay is an interesting category as it also features the Iranian film A Separation and banking crisis drama Margin Call neither of which I would've predicted featuring here but if you're looking for an outside bet you could do a lot worse than Kristen Wiig and Paul Feig's script for the brilliantly hilarious Bridesmaids.
There are some big names in the adapted screenplay category also with George Clooney among the names that adapted The Ides of March for the big screen and last year's winner Aaron Sorkin for co-adapting Moneyball. It is also good to see Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy here as i felt the adaptation of John Le Carre's original source novel was one of the best things about the film while Hugo also had a great script even if it was outshone by the spectacular visuals. But my pick has to be former winner Alexander Payne who co-adapted Kaui Hart Hemmings' original book alongside Nat Faxon and Community's Jim Rash.
Predictions: Original Screenplay - Woody Allen (Midnight in Paris) and Adapted Screenplay - Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash (The Descendants)
Animated Film
Nominees: A Cat in Paris, Chico and Rita, Kung Fu Panda 2, Puss in Boots and Rango
Thoughts: This is the first time I can remember a Pixar film, in this case Cars 2, being eligible but not being nominated in the Animated Film category. After back-to-back wins for Ratatouille, Wall-E, Up and Toy Story 3 the animation studio fails to even make the grade falling to two films from rival studio Dreamworks. Those two films, Kung Fu Panda 2 and Puss in Boots, both opened to mix critical response but did tremendously well at the Box Office which I'm guessing is why they're here. However if a commercial success is going to win this award once again I feel it will be Rango as it has a broader appeal throughout the age ranges thanks to it's Western pastiche. But it is nice to see smaller films being given recognition while I'm not aware of French film A Cat in Paris it looks like a fairly interesting piece and I'll look forward to watching it whenever it's available over here. But by a country mile my favourite of the five is the sumptuous hand-drawn Latin American cartoon Chico and Rita which is the only nominee here to not be a film made for children and in the history of this award it is the only non-child-friendly animation to be nominated in this category..
Prediction: I am torn I feel that Chico and Rita may well win but the more logical choice is Rango which is what I feel I must plump for.
Foreign Language Film
Nominees: Bullhead (Belgium), Footnote (Israel), In Darkness (Poland), Monsieur Lazahar (Canada) and A Separation (Iran)
Thoughts: I'm not a fan of how the Oscars pick their Best Foreign Language Feature nominees as each country is only allowed to submit one film despite many countries producing more than one superior film per year. I'm going to have a moan about snubs elsewhere in this article but where is The Skin I Live In or Poetry? Both brilliant pictures not nominated here as they should be. I have to say the majority of these films are yet to be released in the UK so I haven't had a chance to see them but thankfully one of my favourite films of last year has been nominated and that is A Separation. The film throws a spotlight on the mighty Iranian film industry and is an accessible film that deals with everyday issues but within the context of Iranian society. As it has previously won a Golden Globe and is one of the only foreign films ever to get a screenplay nomination I have to say it has to be the favourite by a large margin.
Prediction: A Separation to get the deserved win.
The Best of the Rest
Don't worry I'm not going to bore you by going through all twenty four categories here, you've probably already had enough of me wittering on, but I'm just going to whizz through some of them. In a large number of the categories I can see it being a straight up duel between Hugo and The Artist with the dead certs being the former for Production Design and the latter for Original Score. I think the technical awards will be split between War Horse and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 with The Iron Lady picking up the award for make-up. In the Original Song category there are only two nominations and for me Flight of The Conchords' Bret McKenzie is a clear favourite for his song from The Muppets. Most of this year's Best Documentaries don't feature in the Best Documentary category so I'm going to say that Wim Wenders' 3D film about ballerina Pina Bausch will win the award. And don't ask me about the short film categories as I never ever am able to predict those so you'll have to sort that out on your own.
Snubs
Well most people's favourite film of last year, including mine, was Drive which failed to get a look in apart from in the prestigious Sound Editing category and I'm sorry but that wasn't a knock to all you sound editors out there. I thought at least Albert Brooks would get a Supporting Actor nod but it seems he has lost out to Max Von Sydow. The fact it is nominated for Best Film at the BAFTAs proves that we Brits are always right.
The biggest surprise in the acting categories is that Tilda Swinton's portrayal of a distraught mother in We Need to Talk About Kevin hasn't been nominated after figuring in all of the other award lists up to now. I think that is mainly because former winner Swinton has trashed the Oscars in the past so they felt justified in their decision to give her nomination to Rooney Mara.
Other actresses who were denied a place on the list include Elizabeth Olsen and Olivia Coleman whose Tyrannosaur co-star Peter Mullan also deserves a mention.
However the biggest mistake seems to be leaving Senna out of the list for Best Documentary when it was the best documentary by some miles and for some it was there film of the year. We have known that it hadn't made it for quite some while as it wasn't even on the long-list but once again BAFTA gets it right and at least it will win one major award during the season.
And finally there's nothing once again this year for Kevin O'Connell the sound mixer who holds the record for the most Oscar nominations without ever winning anything to be fair though he'd only worked on The Muppets this year.
Please leave your comments below about who you think will win the awards and who you think should've been nominated.
BEST PICTURE
The Artist
What it's about: A silent movie star goes into a downward spiral following the advent of sound cinema while at the same time a star is born in a young actress who started out in one of his films.
Why it's nominated: It harks back to old school cinema which would appeal to the older member of the academy but apart from that it's a charming film that more than deserves the awards it's been nominated for.
What its chances are: A favourite to sweep the board and pick up the Best Picture award and personally I do feel at this stage it can't be beaten. But a lot can change between now and the end of February.
Odds: 2/9
The Descendants
What it's about: A man living in Hawaii must bring his family together when his wife slips into a coma while at the same time trying to finalise a property deal for the land that his family have inherited.
Why it's nominated: It is the token offbeat film of the pack but one that has picked up a lot of steam thanks to star George Clooney who is good at picking up Oscar votes despite that his own film The Ides of March doesn't figure here.
What its chances are: It's basically the only film that can beat The Artist at this stage and even then it would be a massive upset, I do believe that it should be happy to have won the Best Drama award at The Golden Globes
Odds: 9/2
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
What it's about: A young boy tries to discover the meaning of a key that his father, who died during 9/11, left him before he died.
Why it's nominated: This was one of the surprise entries into the Best Picture category and one that got a rapturous applause when it was revealed to be in the mix. This is the only film I haven't seen but from the reviews I have read it isn't great and of all of these films it has the lowest IMDB rating by quite some margin. I'm guessing its here because it's good Oscar bait with its subject matter of 9/11 and its awards-friendly cast of Tom Hanks and Sandra Bullock.
What its chances are: I honestly think it should just be happy with the nomination here as this will simply be the also-ran film and will be quickly forgotten about post-awards season.
Odds: 40/1
The Help
What it's about: A young writer decides she is going to create a story based on the life of the African American maids who serve the wealthy families in her hometown.
Why it's nominated: This was the film I didn't really want to see in the list but that was mainly because I had a bet that it wouldn't be nominated and now I owe a friend a coffee. This is the token message film about not judging people just because of the colour of their skin and does contain some great performances from its predominantly female cast three of whom have picked up nominations.
What its chances are: While it has picked up a nod throughout every awards season I feel The Help's best chances are in the acting categories.
Odds: 33/1
Hugo
What it's about: A young Parisian orphan who lives at a train station tries to discover the secret behind a mechanical man he and his father were building.
Why it's nominated: Mainly because it's directed by Martin Scorsese but more than that its success is similar to that of The Artist in that they both reference the early days of cinema. In the case of Hugo it goes right back to the dawn of cinema and its French roots it also helps that it looks fantastic and as you will see I feel it will pick up a few awards.
What its chances are: Despite being nominated for the most awards this year I feel that Hugo will most likely triumphant in the awards that honour artistic merit and not in the Best Picture category.
Odds: 12/1
Midnight in Paris
What it's about: An American writer, who has accompanied his girlfriend and her family to Paris, finds himself travelling back to the city in the 1920s where he meets some of his icons and falls in love.
Why it's nominated: Again mainly for nostalgic reasons as the scenes in twenties Paris must appeal to the old guard of the academy. This is also a return to form for Oscar favourite Woody Allen whose films have often been given acting or writing nominations however this is the first Allen film to be nominated for an Oscar since Hannah and Her Sisters in 1986.
What its chances are: Again this won is here due to a strong campaign being launched on its behalf and I think while the film isn't successful maybe Allen will be elsewhere.
Odds: 33/1
Moneyball
What it's about: The manager of a baseball team who became the first person to use computer statistics to put his team together rather than taking the advice of his scouts.
Why it's nominated: Possibly due to the script written by Aaron Sorkin or possibly due to Oscar favourite Brad Pitt taking the starring role but my theory is due to its message of triumph over adversity and never giving up on your beliefs. I'm also guessing that a large number of the Academy voters are baseball fans and remember this incident when it first occurred.
What its chances are: Again this is a film that is just filling a gap in the list and I wouldn't be surprised if it was one that just about made it in.
Odds:40/1
The Tree of Life
What it's about: If I'm honest I'm really not sure but it does tell the story of a 1950s family who are rocked by the death of one of its sons and it follows another of the sons coping with the effects of this in the present day.
Why it's nominated: I don't really know as The Tree of Life was a film that the critics went crazy over but I'm yet to meet a real person who actually liked because I thought it was very pretentious and it thought it was an important movie that had to be seen by everyone. I'm guessing the combined force of director Terrence Malick, who only makes one film per decade, with stars Brad Pitt and Sean Penn was enough to get this one a nod.
What its chances are: No chance whatsoever this is the bookie's outside pick for a reason and out of all of the Best Picture nominations this is the one that is most likely to go away with absolutely nothing.
Odds: 50/1
War Horse
What it's about: A horse which is bought by a Devon farmer goes on to have a massive impact on many lives during World War I.
Why it's nominated: I feel the war setting must have something to do with it and I think members of the academy were probably charmed by it's tale of friendship and perseverance. It also helps that its director is academy favourite Steven Spielberg who is always on the campaign trail when he feels he has film that may appeal to the Oscar voters.
What its chances are: At one time this was the favourite to win Best Picture but that was before The Artist started getting honours around the festival circuits perhaps if this was released in another year it would triumph but I think it may just have to be content with some technical awards instead.
Odds:14/1
Best Actor
Nominees: Demien Bicher (A Better Life), George Clooney (The Descendants), Jean Dujardin (The Artist), Gary Oldman (Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy) and Brad Pitt (Moneyball)
Thoughts: Of the four acting categories this is definitely the strongest and the one that still has some mystery behind it. George Clooney has to be the favourite here as he's been nominated almost every year and has previously won a Supporting Actor prize but this could be the year for his Leading Actor accolade. It is too early to say that Clooney has a lock on the award as The Artist's Jean Dujardin could still take this one and for me both performances were excellent. If I were a member of the academy I would cast my vote for Oldman's subtle performance in Tinker, Tailor as I felt it was utterly mesmerising but I think that he's lucky just to be nominated and despite losing the Oscar he may win the Bafta instead. A Better Life is the least familiar of the titles on this list but Bicher gives a great turn as a Mexican illegal immigrant who is trying to give his son the life he never had. It seems then that Brad Pitt is the weak link here while I didn't mind him in Moneyball it was never a performance that I felt worthy of awards recognition.
Prediction: I wouldn't say George Clooney had it in the bag but I'm going to plump for him nonetheless.
Best Actress
Nominees: Glenn Close (Albert Nobbs), Viola Davis (The Help), Rooney Mara (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo), Meryl Streep (The Iron Lady) and Michelle Williams (My Week with Marilyn)
Thoughts: Like with Clooney, Meryl Streep is an Oscar favourite who holds the record for the most nominations in the acting categories with a previous sixteen nods however she has only ever won best actress once and that was almost thirty years ago. Though The Iron Lady has had a mixed response, I am yet to see it myself, one thing nobody has any doubt on is that Streep's performance/impression is fantastic. Streep's closest rival has to be The Help's Viola Davis, who has picked up a couple of awards so far, who again gives a strong turn as the maid who finally decides she's had enough and reveals her stories for a book told from the point of view of the staff. If Streep wasn't present I would've said that Glenn Close would've had a good chance as she both drags up and puts on an accent in the Irish-set Albert Nobbs and Michelle Williams has also appealed to the Oscar voters by inhabiting the role of Marilyn Monroe. The outside choice, and also the surprise nomination, is Rooney Mara who for me was the best thing about the English Language version of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo however I would've said that Tilda Swinton deserved the nomination more and would've been my pick to win.
Prediction: At this stage I can't see Streep being beaten.
Best Supporting Actor
Nominees: Kenneth Branagh (My Week with Marilyn), Jonah Hill (Moneyball), Nick Nolte (Warrior), Christopher Plummer (Beginners) and Max Von Sydow (Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close)
Thoughts: This is the battle of the British actors with Brangah's Laurence Olivier impression going up against Plummer's gay man who is dying of cancer. At 82 years of age it seems that Plummer would have to be the favourite playing against type as the man who has finally been allowed to come out of the closet after years of lying to his son in addition it would also be good to see Plummer awarded for his many years on the big screen so Branagh might have to wait a few more years for his award. Ironically another 82 year old, Max Von Sydow, is also nominated here but he was the surprise nominee in this category and I can't see him winning. Of the other two Frat Pack favourite Jonah Hill was, in my opinion, the best thing about Moneyball as I feel he excelled in his first drama role but won't manage to be the old guard here and as much as I liked Warrior I wasn't overly wowed by Nolte's mumbling turn as the recovering alcoholic father.
Prediction: Christopher Plummer to win.
Best Supporting Actress
Nominees: Berenice Bejo (The Artist), Jessica Chastain (The Help), Melissa McCarthy (Bridesmaids), Janet McTeer (Albert Nobbs) and Octavia Spencer (The Help)
Thoughts: This was the category that offered up no surprises when it was announced and I feel the eventual winner, Octavia Spencer, will be no surprise either. In The Help Spencer plays the feistier of the two central African American characters and dominates the screen against Viola Davis' more subtle performance. For me though I preferred Spencer's co-star, and fellow nominee, Jessica Chastain who provided the comic relief in The Help as a ditzy housewife who herself is ostracised from the town's group of society girls. I'm still not sure why Berenice Bejo is nominated in the supporting category as her performance was just as integral to The Artist as Jean Dujardin's was but maybe they thought she had better luck if she wasn't up against Meryl Streep. For me though the award should go to one of the other two nominees, I thought Janet McTeer was the best thing about Albert Nobbs as her impression of a man was more convincing than Glenn Close's while Melissa McCarthy gets the token comedy award for playing the role of Megan in Bridesmaids and proving that she was more than just the token fat girl.
Prediction: At this stage there's no beating Octavia Spencer.
Best Director
Nominees: Woody Allen (Midnight in Paris), Michel Hazanavicius (The Artist), Terrence Malick (The Tree of Life), Alexander Payne (The Descendants) and Martin Scorsese (Hugo)
Thoughts: This one really feels like an old boys club with veteran directors Allen, Malick and Scorsese all featuring within the ranks. It seems that at this stage Scorsese is the favourite to win the award which will shockingly be only his second Oscar but that's mainly because he won the Golden Globe. To be fair Hugo is Scorsese's lovechild and one of his most personal films with it being a love letter to the days of early cinema it captures perfectly his love of the first French directors. Talking of French directors it is part-French Hazanavicius who is my pick to win the award as again The Artist is his creative vision and you can just see how much direction has gone into that film. An outside bet might be Malick who the Academy will give the award to for his great body of work prior to the awful Tree of Life but I don't see either Woody Allen or Alexander Payne having any chance of a win. It could well be a split decision with The Artist taking Best Picture and Scorsese triumphing here but I don't think so.
Prediction: This is probably my biggest punt of the lot but I'm going to predict that Michel Hazanvicius wins this one.
Original and Adapted Screenplay
As I mentioned earlier Woody Allen's success might come elsewhere and I feel that he could get another Best Original Screenplay award for Midnight in Paris whose message of not dwelling in the past is a good one. Allen's biggest competition here has to be Michel Hazanvicius' script for The Artist as the film itself may sweep the board it might just get this award anyway. Original Screenplay is an interesting category as it also features the Iranian film A Separation and banking crisis drama Margin Call neither of which I would've predicted featuring here but if you're looking for an outside bet you could do a lot worse than Kristen Wiig and Paul Feig's script for the brilliantly hilarious Bridesmaids.
There are some big names in the adapted screenplay category also with George Clooney among the names that adapted The Ides of March for the big screen and last year's winner Aaron Sorkin for co-adapting Moneyball. It is also good to see Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy here as i felt the adaptation of John Le Carre's original source novel was one of the best things about the film while Hugo also had a great script even if it was outshone by the spectacular visuals. But my pick has to be former winner Alexander Payne who co-adapted Kaui Hart Hemmings' original book alongside Nat Faxon and Community's Jim Rash.
Predictions: Original Screenplay - Woody Allen (Midnight in Paris) and Adapted Screenplay - Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash (The Descendants)
Animated Film
Nominees: A Cat in Paris, Chico and Rita, Kung Fu Panda 2, Puss in Boots and Rango
Thoughts: This is the first time I can remember a Pixar film, in this case Cars 2, being eligible but not being nominated in the Animated Film category. After back-to-back wins for Ratatouille, Wall-E, Up and Toy Story 3 the animation studio fails to even make the grade falling to two films from rival studio Dreamworks. Those two films, Kung Fu Panda 2 and Puss in Boots, both opened to mix critical response but did tremendously well at the Box Office which I'm guessing is why they're here. However if a commercial success is going to win this award once again I feel it will be Rango as it has a broader appeal throughout the age ranges thanks to it's Western pastiche. But it is nice to see smaller films being given recognition while I'm not aware of French film A Cat in Paris it looks like a fairly interesting piece and I'll look forward to watching it whenever it's available over here. But by a country mile my favourite of the five is the sumptuous hand-drawn Latin American cartoon Chico and Rita which is the only nominee here to not be a film made for children and in the history of this award it is the only non-child-friendly animation to be nominated in this category..
Prediction: I am torn I feel that Chico and Rita may well win but the more logical choice is Rango which is what I feel I must plump for.
Foreign Language Film
Nominees: Bullhead (Belgium), Footnote (Israel), In Darkness (Poland), Monsieur Lazahar (Canada) and A Separation (Iran)
Thoughts: I'm not a fan of how the Oscars pick their Best Foreign Language Feature nominees as each country is only allowed to submit one film despite many countries producing more than one superior film per year. I'm going to have a moan about snubs elsewhere in this article but where is The Skin I Live In or Poetry? Both brilliant pictures not nominated here as they should be. I have to say the majority of these films are yet to be released in the UK so I haven't had a chance to see them but thankfully one of my favourite films of last year has been nominated and that is A Separation. The film throws a spotlight on the mighty Iranian film industry and is an accessible film that deals with everyday issues but within the context of Iranian society. As it has previously won a Golden Globe and is one of the only foreign films ever to get a screenplay nomination I have to say it has to be the favourite by a large margin.
Prediction: A Separation to get the deserved win.
The Best of the Rest
Don't worry I'm not going to bore you by going through all twenty four categories here, you've probably already had enough of me wittering on, but I'm just going to whizz through some of them. In a large number of the categories I can see it being a straight up duel between Hugo and The Artist with the dead certs being the former for Production Design and the latter for Original Score. I think the technical awards will be split between War Horse and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 with The Iron Lady picking up the award for make-up. In the Original Song category there are only two nominations and for me Flight of The Conchords' Bret McKenzie is a clear favourite for his song from The Muppets. Most of this year's Best Documentaries don't feature in the Best Documentary category so I'm going to say that Wim Wenders' 3D film about ballerina Pina Bausch will win the award. And don't ask me about the short film categories as I never ever am able to predict those so you'll have to sort that out on your own.
Snubs
Well most people's favourite film of last year, including mine, was Drive which failed to get a look in apart from in the prestigious Sound Editing category and I'm sorry but that wasn't a knock to all you sound editors out there. I thought at least Albert Brooks would get a Supporting Actor nod but it seems he has lost out to Max Von Sydow. The fact it is nominated for Best Film at the BAFTAs proves that we Brits are always right.
The biggest surprise in the acting categories is that Tilda Swinton's portrayal of a distraught mother in We Need to Talk About Kevin hasn't been nominated after figuring in all of the other award lists up to now. I think that is mainly because former winner Swinton has trashed the Oscars in the past so they felt justified in their decision to give her nomination to Rooney Mara.
Other actresses who were denied a place on the list include Elizabeth Olsen and Olivia Coleman whose Tyrannosaur co-star Peter Mullan also deserves a mention.
However the biggest mistake seems to be leaving Senna out of the list for Best Documentary when it was the best documentary by some miles and for some it was there film of the year. We have known that it hadn't made it for quite some while as it wasn't even on the long-list but once again BAFTA gets it right and at least it will win one major award during the season.
And finally there's nothing once again this year for Kevin O'Connell the sound mixer who holds the record for the most Oscar nominations without ever winning anything to be fair though he'd only worked on The Muppets this year.
Please leave your comments below about who you think will win the awards and who you think should've been nominated.
Sunday, 1 January 2012
Top 25 Films of 2011: The Top Ten
For those of you who missed my first blog I will just reiterate that if a film was released in 2011 but nominated for this year's Best Picture Oscar . So without further ado here are the Top Ten which again will be in alphabetical order.
Animal Kingdom
And after stating my rules for the list I sort of go and break them. Australian crime drama Animal Kingdom was indeed nominated for an Oscar but as it didn't feature in the Best Picture list I've decided to include it. Another reason it's in the list is that it is a brilliant piece of work and was rightfully awarded for the brilliant supporting performance from Jacki Weaver as the sinister grandmother Smurf. Animal Kingdom is told through the eyes of 17 year old J who is forced to live with his mother's estranged family after she dies of an overdose. It becomes clear that the Cody family are a notorious crime gang led by J's monstrous Uncle Pope. The story basically comes to a head with a shocking incident about halfway through in which J has to decide whether he's on the side of the police, headed by a moustached Guy Pearce, or if he is aligned with his family. I loved everything about Animal Kingdom from the way it was filmed to the performances - Weaver in particular creating a character who accepts her sons' behaviour as long as she gets to shower them with affection. As I said earlier with Snowtown this has been a great year as far as Australian cinema is concerned and I think in particular their gritty outback scenery is a great backdrop for gripping crime dramas as has been proved multiple times in 2011.
The Artist
I think if any of us thought twelve months ago that an almost completely silent film in black and white was one of the favourites to win the Best Picture we'd have been utterly out of our minds. But that's before Michel Hazanavicius wrote and directed this fabulously charming piece of cinema which evokes memories of pre-sound cinema. Concentrating on the fictional movie star George Valentin it shows how the advent of the talkies prevented some of the stars of the silent age from advancing in their careers. As Valentin's career is on a downward spiral we see aspiring star Peppy Miller go from strength to strength after briefly meeting George in her first feature. While The Artist doesn't really have a gritty subtext it is a lovely film with stars Jean Dujardin and Berenice Bejo really clicking sharing fabulous chemistry and looking like real movie stars. Familiar faces like John Goodman and James Cromwell are great as the movie producer and loyal chauffeur respectively but the real star of the show is Uggy the Dog as Valentin's loyal companion and one that is around at the right time to save his life. Though there are touches of A Star is Born and Sunset Boulevard, The Artist is definitely its own film full of joy and humour and more importantly an arthouse film which could appeal to the masses. When modern life is so depressing its great to see a heart-warming film like this doing so well and I for one hope it gets the Best Picture award it so richly deserves.
Drive
2011 was definitely the year of Ryan Gosling from political intrigue in The Ides of March to romantic comedy in Crazy Stupid Love he seemed to conquer every genre but it was the LA-set crime film Drive that saw him give his best performance of the year. At the start of the film Gosling's unnamed driver is an emotionally detached character who simply offers five minutes of his time as a getaway driver to criminals who are after a professional. However his world is changed when he meets his neighbour Irene, played by Carey Mulligan, and her young son that things get complicated and he starts to reveal himself to have emotions even he didn't think he possessed. Drive is very reminiscent of the moody crime films of the 1960s and 1970s and has been in particular compared to Bullitt and The Driver. Gosling's getaway driver/stuntman is a great antihero character and the actor delivers an almost muted performance which develops into something great as the film goes on. Albert Brooks, an actor known for his comic work, was brilliant in the role of the crime lord who ends up becoming the driver's enemy. Drive is incredibly violent but it is never over-the-top and always within the context of the film in addition in possesses one of the year's best soundtracks which has new music which somehow feels that it is about 25 years old. A very new film with a foot in the past, Drive combines great camerawork and set pieces with a lead performance from 2011's most consistent performer.
Poetry
Now onto a great piece of cinema from South Korea with Lee Chang-Dong's story of an elderly woman who has to care for her increasingly unruly grandson while at the same time coping with the fact that she is suffering from dementia and will soon lose her memory. Yoon Jeong-hee gives a great lead performance as Yang Mija a 66 year old woman who discovers that her grandson is one of five boys who was responsible for the gang rape of a girl who later committed suicide. While the fathers of the other boys are able to pay a share of the compensation to the girl's mother, Yang Mija is not and is still torn over whether to put the matter in the hands of the authorities. To distract herself from the real world she enlists in a poetry class and struggles to write her own poem. Poetry survives thanks to the beautiful Korean scenery that Chang-Dong creates and balances it with the harsh reality of both the grandson's crime and her deteriorating health. The central message is that we all have a poem in all of us whether it be a beautiful one or one that reminds us of the harsh reality of our situation and while the film is not always easy to watch it captures the audience from beginning to end thanks to a great script and an even greater central performance.
Senna
As you can see in the first part 2011 has an excellent year for documentary films from Inside Job to Armadillo to Cave of Forgotten Dreams a number of great directors have bought films dealing with a number of subject matters. But it was Asif Kapadia's film about the life and untimely death of three time Formula One Champion Ayrton Senna. Obviously going into this film I knew how it was going to end but that's about all I knew as I'm not a big fan of motor racing, or sports in general, therefore I wasn't expecting to enjoy it very much. But Kapadia painted a picture of a complicated man, born in a deprived area of Brazil his skill at his sport meant that he could use his money to improve the area. As well as Senna's life story the film told of the inner-workings of the F1 world full of wealthy brand owners and sponsors willing to buy people's favour. Before the tragic finale the main story told was Senna's rivalry with fellow driver Alain Prost which was present on and off the track. Everything was put together perfectly from the race footage to the talking heads to the soundtrack and this was a film that wasn't just a documentary but a great story. As someone who doesn't know about Formula One I thought it explained the sport well and more than that I felt I'd got to know the man which is a testament to Kapdia's film as well as the captivating Senna himself.
A Separation
As someone who has studied Iranian film in great depth it was great to see a film like Asghar Farhadi's A Separation which depicts modern day Tehran and the stigmas attached to Iranian society. It sees a couple wanting to end their marriage after fourteen years as the wife Simin wants to leave husband Nadir as he refuses to leave Iran and his father who suffers from Alzheimer's disease. The couple argue about who their eleven year old daughter should be with, with her initially wanting to stay with her father and grandfather but her mother slowly changing her mind as the film goes on. Nadir then hires a poor woman to be his father's carer but gets annoyed when his father his left on his own and is accused of pushing her by her angry father. A Separation deals with themes of how much one's social status defines how much people believe their story it also looks at the themes of divorce in a culture as strict as the one in Iran. While Leila Hatami and Peyman Moaadi are both great in the leads it is young Sarina Farhadi as the couple's daughter who is the star of the show as a character who starts to learn that her parents aren't as innocent as she first thought. More than anything else Iranian cinema is about realism and A Separation almost feels like we are spying on a real family and the ambiguous ending lets the audience decide how the story ultimately ends and that's one of its best qualities.
The Skin I Live In
Pedro Alomodvar took a break from working with Penelope Cruz this year and the result was this tense revenge thriller about sex and passion. Antonio Banderas starred as Robert Ledgard a plastic surgeon who was working on a new form of artificial skin but who let his personal life get in the way of his work and ends up using his skills as surgeon to a devastating effect. Saying any more than that would ruin the film for anyone who is yet to see this masterpiece which was full of twists and multi-layered characters. Anyone who has seen an Almodovar film knows that they aren't just about one thing but here the main theme seems to be how we define ourselves whether it be by our profession, our relationships or our gender. Banderas is absolutely great in the lead role and it's good to see him playing something outside voicing a computer animated cat it's a very hard role to play but he does exceptionally well. Any film that features a woman in a perfected skin suit fighting with a slightly thuggish man dressed as a tiger is Okay with me and The Skin I Live In combines bizarre plotlines with believable characters and realistic motives for the extraordinary things they do. For me this is possibly Almodovar's best film since All About My Mother which I completely adore.
Super 8
Another one people are seemingly split on some people thought it was only okay or detested it but for me Super 8 was another film, along with Hugo, that rejuvenated the flagging genre of the classic family film. JJ Abrams' 1970's set movie about a group of young friends making a zombie film was essentially a love letter to the film's producer Steven Spielberg. The kids against the authorities storyline seems to have been taken straight out of E.T. while the mysterious goings on in the small town of Lilian also draws comparisons to Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Though the alien story is the film's central mystery what drew most of us to the film was the relationships between the kids namely Joel Courtney's Joe who has just lost his mother and Elle Fanning's Alice the lost fragile girl who is the object of all the boy's affections. The young actors in the film are just superb and make their film-making endeavours believable as the town members get more and more paranoid as dogs start to disappear and town members go missing. While the ending may be a bit of a letdown what comes before is so great that it doesn't really matter for me this was the best purely entertaining film that I saw at the cinema all year.
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy
Tomas Alfredson's Let the Right One In was one of my favourite films a couple of years back and now he returns with an adaptation of John Le Carre's classic cold war thriller. Gary Oldman was seemingly made to play the lead of George Smiley a sort of distant character who goes into semi-retirement but is talked out when he asked to discover which member of the MI6 team is in fact working for the Soviets. During his investigation Smiley uncovers some secrets and our initial ideas about certain characters are changed throughout the piece. What I really liked about this film was its moodiness, something Alfredson had already demonstrated in Let the Right One In, with all the smoky meeting rooms and dank exterior scenes adding to the feel of the whole thing. Oldman is brilliant in the lead role in a cast of great British male actors and Kathy Burke stand-outs for me were Tom Hardy's slightly shifty Tarr and Mark Strong's illusive Jim. Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy was a film which let its characters speak volumes without actually saying anything a film about men who have been sworn to a life of much secrecy and in some cases are wondering why. A truly spectacular piece of work and another masterpiece to prove that Alfredson is one of the best directors working today.
We Need to Talk About Kevin
I wish we could end this blog on a high but instead it's a film about the lack of connection between a mother and a child that ultimately leads to a fatal incident, that ends the blog. Some thought Lionel Shraver's original book of the same name was unfilmable but then director Lynne Ramsay came along and proved everybody wrong. The film though is really Tilda Swinton's show as she plays Eva a woman who is being persecuted for something her son has done, again I don't want to give anything away, and is living in the shadow of tragedy. Most of the film is shot in flashback as we see Kevin's birth and Eva's struggle to get on with him as he goads her while constantly favouring his father played by John C Reilly. My favourite parts of the film were probably those set in the modern day with Eva working in a trashy travel agent where the ceiling fans are blowing posters off the wall and the Christmas party is a particularly cringe-worthy affair. But I feel Ramsay has done everything right here and I did empathise with Eva throughout the film and Ezra Miller was also electrifying as the teenage Kevin. There's too much to praise her from Ramsay's direction through to Johnny Greenwood's score everything was absolutely great and I'm just hoping someone gets some recognition come awards season.
Alright that's your lot, 2011 is finished but 2012 is now upon us and if you go to http://filmsof2012.blogspot.com/ you will discover what my next project is all about. See you on the other side people.
Animal Kingdom
And after stating my rules for the list I sort of go and break them. Australian crime drama Animal Kingdom was indeed nominated for an Oscar but as it didn't feature in the Best Picture list I've decided to include it. Another reason it's in the list is that it is a brilliant piece of work and was rightfully awarded for the brilliant supporting performance from Jacki Weaver as the sinister grandmother Smurf. Animal Kingdom is told through the eyes of 17 year old J who is forced to live with his mother's estranged family after she dies of an overdose. It becomes clear that the Cody family are a notorious crime gang led by J's monstrous Uncle Pope. The story basically comes to a head with a shocking incident about halfway through in which J has to decide whether he's on the side of the police, headed by a moustached Guy Pearce, or if he is aligned with his family. I loved everything about Animal Kingdom from the way it was filmed to the performances - Weaver in particular creating a character who accepts her sons' behaviour as long as she gets to shower them with affection. As I said earlier with Snowtown this has been a great year as far as Australian cinema is concerned and I think in particular their gritty outback scenery is a great backdrop for gripping crime dramas as has been proved multiple times in 2011.
The Artist
I think if any of us thought twelve months ago that an almost completely silent film in black and white was one of the favourites to win the Best Picture we'd have been utterly out of our minds. But that's before Michel Hazanavicius wrote and directed this fabulously charming piece of cinema which evokes memories of pre-sound cinema. Concentrating on the fictional movie star George Valentin it shows how the advent of the talkies prevented some of the stars of the silent age from advancing in their careers. As Valentin's career is on a downward spiral we see aspiring star Peppy Miller go from strength to strength after briefly meeting George in her first feature. While The Artist doesn't really have a gritty subtext it is a lovely film with stars Jean Dujardin and Berenice Bejo really clicking sharing fabulous chemistry and looking like real movie stars. Familiar faces like John Goodman and James Cromwell are great as the movie producer and loyal chauffeur respectively but the real star of the show is Uggy the Dog as Valentin's loyal companion and one that is around at the right time to save his life. Though there are touches of A Star is Born and Sunset Boulevard, The Artist is definitely its own film full of joy and humour and more importantly an arthouse film which could appeal to the masses. When modern life is so depressing its great to see a heart-warming film like this doing so well and I for one hope it gets the Best Picture award it so richly deserves.
Drive
2011 was definitely the year of Ryan Gosling from political intrigue in The Ides of March to romantic comedy in Crazy Stupid Love he seemed to conquer every genre but it was the LA-set crime film Drive that saw him give his best performance of the year. At the start of the film Gosling's unnamed driver is an emotionally detached character who simply offers five minutes of his time as a getaway driver to criminals who are after a professional. However his world is changed when he meets his neighbour Irene, played by Carey Mulligan, and her young son that things get complicated and he starts to reveal himself to have emotions even he didn't think he possessed. Drive is very reminiscent of the moody crime films of the 1960s and 1970s and has been in particular compared to Bullitt and The Driver. Gosling's getaway driver/stuntman is a great antihero character and the actor delivers an almost muted performance which develops into something great as the film goes on. Albert Brooks, an actor known for his comic work, was brilliant in the role of the crime lord who ends up becoming the driver's enemy. Drive is incredibly violent but it is never over-the-top and always within the context of the film in addition in possesses one of the year's best soundtracks which has new music which somehow feels that it is about 25 years old. A very new film with a foot in the past, Drive combines great camerawork and set pieces with a lead performance from 2011's most consistent performer.
Poetry
Now onto a great piece of cinema from South Korea with Lee Chang-Dong's story of an elderly woman who has to care for her increasingly unruly grandson while at the same time coping with the fact that she is suffering from dementia and will soon lose her memory. Yoon Jeong-hee gives a great lead performance as Yang Mija a 66 year old woman who discovers that her grandson is one of five boys who was responsible for the gang rape of a girl who later committed suicide. While the fathers of the other boys are able to pay a share of the compensation to the girl's mother, Yang Mija is not and is still torn over whether to put the matter in the hands of the authorities. To distract herself from the real world she enlists in a poetry class and struggles to write her own poem. Poetry survives thanks to the beautiful Korean scenery that Chang-Dong creates and balances it with the harsh reality of both the grandson's crime and her deteriorating health. The central message is that we all have a poem in all of us whether it be a beautiful one or one that reminds us of the harsh reality of our situation and while the film is not always easy to watch it captures the audience from beginning to end thanks to a great script and an even greater central performance.
Senna
As you can see in the first part 2011 has an excellent year for documentary films from Inside Job to Armadillo to Cave of Forgotten Dreams a number of great directors have bought films dealing with a number of subject matters. But it was Asif Kapadia's film about the life and untimely death of three time Formula One Champion Ayrton Senna. Obviously going into this film I knew how it was going to end but that's about all I knew as I'm not a big fan of motor racing, or sports in general, therefore I wasn't expecting to enjoy it very much. But Kapadia painted a picture of a complicated man, born in a deprived area of Brazil his skill at his sport meant that he could use his money to improve the area. As well as Senna's life story the film told of the inner-workings of the F1 world full of wealthy brand owners and sponsors willing to buy people's favour. Before the tragic finale the main story told was Senna's rivalry with fellow driver Alain Prost which was present on and off the track. Everything was put together perfectly from the race footage to the talking heads to the soundtrack and this was a film that wasn't just a documentary but a great story. As someone who doesn't know about Formula One I thought it explained the sport well and more than that I felt I'd got to know the man which is a testament to Kapdia's film as well as the captivating Senna himself.
A Separation
As someone who has studied Iranian film in great depth it was great to see a film like Asghar Farhadi's A Separation which depicts modern day Tehran and the stigmas attached to Iranian society. It sees a couple wanting to end their marriage after fourteen years as the wife Simin wants to leave husband Nadir as he refuses to leave Iran and his father who suffers from Alzheimer's disease. The couple argue about who their eleven year old daughter should be with, with her initially wanting to stay with her father and grandfather but her mother slowly changing her mind as the film goes on. Nadir then hires a poor woman to be his father's carer but gets annoyed when his father his left on his own and is accused of pushing her by her angry father. A Separation deals with themes of how much one's social status defines how much people believe their story it also looks at the themes of divorce in a culture as strict as the one in Iran. While Leila Hatami and Peyman Moaadi are both great in the leads it is young Sarina Farhadi as the couple's daughter who is the star of the show as a character who starts to learn that her parents aren't as innocent as she first thought. More than anything else Iranian cinema is about realism and A Separation almost feels like we are spying on a real family and the ambiguous ending lets the audience decide how the story ultimately ends and that's one of its best qualities.
The Skin I Live In
Pedro Alomodvar took a break from working with Penelope Cruz this year and the result was this tense revenge thriller about sex and passion. Antonio Banderas starred as Robert Ledgard a plastic surgeon who was working on a new form of artificial skin but who let his personal life get in the way of his work and ends up using his skills as surgeon to a devastating effect. Saying any more than that would ruin the film for anyone who is yet to see this masterpiece which was full of twists and multi-layered characters. Anyone who has seen an Almodovar film knows that they aren't just about one thing but here the main theme seems to be how we define ourselves whether it be by our profession, our relationships or our gender. Banderas is absolutely great in the lead role and it's good to see him playing something outside voicing a computer animated cat it's a very hard role to play but he does exceptionally well. Any film that features a woman in a perfected skin suit fighting with a slightly thuggish man dressed as a tiger is Okay with me and The Skin I Live In combines bizarre plotlines with believable characters and realistic motives for the extraordinary things they do. For me this is possibly Almodovar's best film since All About My Mother which I completely adore.
Super 8
Another one people are seemingly split on some people thought it was only okay or detested it but for me Super 8 was another film, along with Hugo, that rejuvenated the flagging genre of the classic family film. JJ Abrams' 1970's set movie about a group of young friends making a zombie film was essentially a love letter to the film's producer Steven Spielberg. The kids against the authorities storyline seems to have been taken straight out of E.T. while the mysterious goings on in the small town of Lilian also draws comparisons to Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Though the alien story is the film's central mystery what drew most of us to the film was the relationships between the kids namely Joel Courtney's Joe who has just lost his mother and Elle Fanning's Alice the lost fragile girl who is the object of all the boy's affections. The young actors in the film are just superb and make their film-making endeavours believable as the town members get more and more paranoid as dogs start to disappear and town members go missing. While the ending may be a bit of a letdown what comes before is so great that it doesn't really matter for me this was the best purely entertaining film that I saw at the cinema all year.
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy
Tomas Alfredson's Let the Right One In was one of my favourite films a couple of years back and now he returns with an adaptation of John Le Carre's classic cold war thriller. Gary Oldman was seemingly made to play the lead of George Smiley a sort of distant character who goes into semi-retirement but is talked out when he asked to discover which member of the MI6 team is in fact working for the Soviets. During his investigation Smiley uncovers some secrets and our initial ideas about certain characters are changed throughout the piece. What I really liked about this film was its moodiness, something Alfredson had already demonstrated in Let the Right One In, with all the smoky meeting rooms and dank exterior scenes adding to the feel of the whole thing. Oldman is brilliant in the lead role in a cast of great British male actors and Kathy Burke stand-outs for me were Tom Hardy's slightly shifty Tarr and Mark Strong's illusive Jim. Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy was a film which let its characters speak volumes without actually saying anything a film about men who have been sworn to a life of much secrecy and in some cases are wondering why. A truly spectacular piece of work and another masterpiece to prove that Alfredson is one of the best directors working today.
We Need to Talk About Kevin
I wish we could end this blog on a high but instead it's a film about the lack of connection between a mother and a child that ultimately leads to a fatal incident, that ends the blog. Some thought Lionel Shraver's original book of the same name was unfilmable but then director Lynne Ramsay came along and proved everybody wrong. The film though is really Tilda Swinton's show as she plays Eva a woman who is being persecuted for something her son has done, again I don't want to give anything away, and is living in the shadow of tragedy. Most of the film is shot in flashback as we see Kevin's birth and Eva's struggle to get on with him as he goads her while constantly favouring his father played by John C Reilly. My favourite parts of the film were probably those set in the modern day with Eva working in a trashy travel agent where the ceiling fans are blowing posters off the wall and the Christmas party is a particularly cringe-worthy affair. But I feel Ramsay has done everything right here and I did empathise with Eva throughout the film and Ezra Miller was also electrifying as the teenage Kevin. There's too much to praise her from Ramsay's direction through to Johnny Greenwood's score everything was absolutely great and I'm just hoping someone gets some recognition come awards season.
Alright that's your lot, 2011 is finished but 2012 is now upon us and if you go to http://filmsof2012.blogspot.com/ you will discover what my next project is all about. See you on the other side people.
Top 25 Films of 2011: Numbers 25-11
OK so those who haven't got sick of me here we are again with my Top 25 films of 2011. Some notes before we get started I'm doing this in two segments (25-11 and the Top Ten) both of which will be in alphabetical order. If the film was released in 2011 but nominated for this year's Best Picture Oscar then it won't feature here so no Black Swan, 127 Hours, True Grit, The Fighter of The King's Speech on this list. So without further ado here are the films that did make the list:
13 Assassins
We kick off this year's Top 25 with one of the year's most engaging action films released this year and another engrossing Samurai film from director Takashi Miike. In this re-make of the 1963 film of the same name, Miike brings the action into full colour and assembles a great cast to take on the roles of the assassins tasked with bringing down the rule of the sadistic Lord Naritsugu whose dominant rule is oppressing the people of Japan. Although I found this incredibly talky in the early going it improved as it went on and the last hour which features the majority of the battle scenes are just spectacular. In the lead role Koji Yakusho was very good indeed but I also enjoyed Yusuke Iseya as the sort of comic relief of the piece. The film obviously draws comparisons with one of the greatest films of all time, The Seven Samurai, while its nowhere near as great as that it is still good to see films like 13 Assassins are still being made.
Arrietty
It's fair to say that this hasn't been a great year for animated films with Pixar releasing a disappointing sequel to Cars and Dreamworks giving us an only alright second instalment of the Kung Fu Panda franchise. Thankfully Studio Ghibli are still producing beautifully animated pieces for the whole family this year adapting Mary Norton's timeless tale The Borrowers and retitling it after the name of its diminutive heroine. The story of the little people who live under the floorboards seems like a perfect fit for the studio behind such family favourites as Spirited Away and Howl's Moving Castle. While Hiromasa Yonebayashi directed the piece, Hayao Miyazaki was still heavily involved co-adapting the source novel to make it fit for his style of film. The results were spectacular with the animation being predictably splendid and the story flowing nicely with a focus almost solely on Arrietty and her world as well as the obsessed Haru who is convinced of The Borrowers existence who is a great source of humour for the film. The themes of family and acceptance which run throughout a lot of Miyazaki's films are present in Arrietty and at the end of the day it is just a great hand-drawn animated film that is very uncomplicated but at the same time a great film.
Attack the Block
As a big fan of Adam and Joe I think I went into Attack the Block, the debut feature from Joe Cornish, already wanting to like it and although it's a far from perfect film it still has plenty of qualities that lands it a place in my Top 25. Instead of making this a comedy in the mould of Hot Fuzz or Shaun of the Dead this is a well-observed piece of social commentary about youths who live in council estates and their flippant nature to the world around them. When a gang of kids from the block of flats kill off an alien the rest of the race descends on the block and a war ensues between the humans and the aliens. Most of the humour within the film comes naturally as references to Fifa videogames and pay-as-you-go mobile phones make this a very British film. Though the aliens are furry creatures they are certainly still scary and Cornish isn't afraid of killing off some of his cast members. Talking of the cast there are assured performances from the majority of newcomers headed up by John Boyega as gang leader Moses while Jodie Whittaker is also great as nurse Sam someone who is mugged by the gang at the beginning of the film but is forced into helping them as the film goes on. It is rare to see a sci-fi film so intrinsically British which shows a real love and appreciation of the genre and this is certainly an assured debut for Cornish who is already making waves in Hollywood thanks to his writing on various projects.
Bridesmaids
I know this all-female comedy film divided audiences but I was in the camp who really enjoyed it and thought it was one of the funniest films of the year. Kristen Wiig, who I've always been a big fan of, wrote and takes the lead as Annie a failed baker who is asked to be maid of honour to her best friend Lilian when she announces her engagement. The film deals with themes of being stuck in a rut as Annie finds herself in a dead end job and sharing an apartment with an incestuous brother and sister pair. She also finds a rival in Lilian's new friend Helen who seemingly has the perfect life and is jealous that she may lose her old friend to a new life. What I really liked about Bridesmaids is that all of the six central characters all felt real even Melissa McCarthy who could've become the funny fat girl is afforded a scene in which she explains why she is so confident in her life. Even the love story between Annie and Chris O'Dowd's cop feels realistic and never slips into sickly sweet territory. More than anything though this is a very funny film with the scenes on the plane and at the wedding shower being my personal favourites. My only fear is that Bridesmaids will usher in a slew of new all women comedies which will be poor replicates of this brilliant original.
The Guard
For anyone who saw Martin McDonagh's In Bruges they know that probably the best thing about it was Brendan Gleeson's multi-layered performance that landed him a Golden Globe. So it seems that when McDonagh's brother John Michael was casting the lead for his second feature The Guard he had only one actor in mind to play the unorthodox policeman Boyle and once again it is Gleason's performance that is the jewel in the crown of this amiable comedy crime caper. When rumours of a drug-smuggling ring in Boyle's patch circulate Don Cheadle's FBI agent Everett comes over to lead the investigation. Boyle and Everett's double act is this year's funniest as the two clash but become friends throughout the film as they attempt to bring down the criminals who include Mark Strong's slightly psychopathic Clive Cornell. What I liked about The Guard more than anything was that it was a charming film with a protagonist who drunk, did drugs and used young prostitutes but was still completely likeable and relatable. To me Gleason was even better in The Guard than he was in In Bruges and deserves another award for playing one of 2011's most memorable characters.
Hugo
I don't think any of us expected Martin Scorsese to follow-up such dark films as The Departed and Shutter Island with a 3D kids film but that's exactly what he did with the stunning Hugo. Centring around a Parisian train station Asa Butterfield stars as Hugo a boy who is secretly controlling the station's clock and is constantly trying to avoid being caught by the station guard who sends waifs and strays off to the orphanage. What I really like about Hugo is that Scorsese instantly transports you into Hugo's world of stealing croissants from cafes and going among the various stalls throughout the station. It also offers up a history lesson about early cinema from the Lumiere brothers to George Melies and how some of the early films were received by their audiences. Mixing both humour and warmth with some well-crafted scenery and a great cast which includes Sir Ben Kingsley, Helen McCrory, Christopher Lee and Sacha Baron Cohen dressed as the policeman from 'Allo 'Allo but doing a Peter Sellers impression. More than anything else Hugo is the type of film that you don't really see any more a proper film for the whole family that has engaging story and themes about family life and redemption.
The Interrupters
The first of three documentary films on the list, The Interrupters takes you on a ride through the gang culture in Chicago and focuses on the titular group of people who are trying to protect their streets from crime and violence. The interesting thing about The Interrupters is that many of them were part of the gang culture themselves when they were younger and they then are able to use this to relate to today's youngsters. For me I was taken with Ameena Matthews the daughter of legendary gang leader Jeff Fort who takes it upon herself to console the family and friends of murdered high school student Derrrion Albert whose death made news when it was captured on camera. Another startling scene involves another of The Interrupters convincing a young offender to go back to the barbershop which he and a group of friends previously robbed and heard from his victims their shock and fear at having guns pointed at their heads. It was the realistic nature of Steve James' film that really took me and he really made you support this group of people who were trying to rid their city of its crime element in the best way they knew how.
Julia's Eyes
In 2008, The Orphanage was one of my favourite films of that year a genuinely creepy Spanish horror film starring Belen Rueda and produced by Guillermo Del Toro. Producer and star reunited this year for the equally creepy if a little more predictable horror yarn Julia's Eyes. Rueda stars as Julia a woman who is inflicted with a degenerative disease which means she will go slowly blind and the beginning of the film sees the death of her sister Sara, who has already lost her sight, at the hands of a mystery assailant who then makes it look like suicide. As Julia starts to go blind she wants to investigate the death of her sister who she rightly believed was killed despite the instance of everyone that it was just suicide. Though I worked whodunnit straight away I still enjoyed the ride and there were still a few twists that caught me unawares. The best thing about it though was the concentration on sight and how vital it is to us as our heroine's vision is thwarted throughout the film the sense of peril is heightened. Director Guillem Morales makes the most of his brilliant leading lady who is by far the best thing about this film and like The Orphanage this film does not have a very happy ending but I won't spoil it for you because I would encourage everybody to go out and watch this superb chiller.
Kill List
At the start of last year I watched Ben Wheatley's interesting debut film Down Terrace an odd family crime film which genuinely showed promise and then very recently I watched his brilliant second film Kill List which played with the genre of the crime film. Kill List is a film that can be split into three equal parts the first is very much a domestic drama about a couple with a young son trying to cope with the father's post-traumatic stress disorder following the war. The second sees the father, Neil Maskell's Jay, team up with Michael Smiley's intimidating Gal to finish off three individuals for a shadowy client. Their kill list is made up of three people who have done very wrong things usually to small children therefore the two contract killers can rightly justify their actions. The best thing about Kill List though was its final third because just as I thought I knew where it was going it turned into a horror film and evoked memories of both Rosemary's Baby and The Wicker Man. While Maskell was great playing the conflicted everyman for me Michael Smiley, best known to most people from Spaced, as the sort of big brother character who could both be charming and very sinister in equal measure. Kill List is by far not an easy watch but its combinations of three different genres and its small cast makes this a great British horror-thriller and one that I would greatly recommend.
Life in a Day
The second documentary on the list is Kevin MacDonald's very brave attempt to capture life around the planet on one day, July 24th 2010, by carefully editing together a numerous amount of the 80,000 clips posted on a YouTube channel by people from 192 nations across the globe. In the film we saw birth, marriage and coming-of-age tales we also saw the sad tale of the man who told his best friend how he really felt about her just to see her reject him. As anybody who saw Touching the Void knows, MacDonald is an assured documentary film-maker and the clever editing here perfectly captured the human spirit and all manner of emotions from different countries. Obviously MacDonald wanted to capture some big events, including the guy who was attempting to cycle the entire globe, but littered the film with smaller events such as people having breakfast, shaving, going to work and going to bed. One bit of the film that stuck with me was one of the final segments with a woman saying that nothing really major happened to her on that day and I think that's true of most of us because while some do experience big events on a regular basis most of us are just getting by. This was a film that really stuck with me and was a really massive project that definitely had a satisfying end result.
Rise of the Planet of the Apes
It has been an interesting year for blockbusters with the next chapters in the Pirates of the Caribbean and Transformers franchises being predictably crap it was the films that rebooted certain series that seemed to be better. While I did enjoy X-Men: First Class for me it was Rupert Wyatt's take on the Planet of the Apes saga that I found really engaging. Wyatt supposed that the original ape became super-intelligent due to James Franco's young scientist injecting him with a drug he was developing to combat Alzheimer's disease a condition which his father played by the brilliant John Lithgow was suffering from. Though Lithgow and Franco were both great the film was bought to life by Andy Serkis' motion-capture performance as Caesar the Ape who was really the central focus of the story. After the first half of the film explored the family unit, the second half was all about the mistreatment of apes from humans and the brilliant moment in which they finally rose up against Brian Cox and Draco Malfoy from Harry Potter. The final scenes with the battles between apes and humans were truly spectacular but this was a blockbuster that had both realistic characters and great action sequences and neither outshone the other. The only thing that ROTPOTA lacked was a decent female lead with Freida Pinto only existing to look pretty and smile occasionally but apart from that this was a great film and I'm excited to see what Wyatt does next with Caesar and the rest of his ape brethren.
Snowtown
It is fair to say that it has been a good year for Australian cinema with the Western film Red Hill almost making the list and another Australian film making the top ten here we find the gripping and harrowing Snowtown in the bottom half of the 2011 list. Snowtown focuses on the story of how charismatic drifter John Bunting charmed his way into the hearts and homes of the people of the titular Australian town only to reveal himself to be a psychopath and a serial killer. The main focus on the film is the relationship between Bunting and young Jamie Vlassakis who was in search of a father figure and was taken under the wing of the man who began a relationship with his mother. The first half of the film showed how a mass-murderer could easily become a member of a small society while the second half concentrated on the brutal killings in which Bunting and his associates hid their victim's bodies in barrels. Overall a gripping drama with a tense lead performance from Daniel Henshall as the unremorseful Bunting the man who committed one of the most famous atrocities in Australian history.
Source Code
Another interesting film which could be given the tag of blockbuster was the second film from Moon director and son of David Bowie, Duncan Jones. Source Code was a time-bending film starring Jake Gyllenhaal as a wounded soldier who is enlisted to try out a new military endeavour whose aim is to track down terrorists before they strike and arrest them before they are able to carry out any mass killings of civilians. In this case it was a bomb on a train and Gyllenhaal's Colter has to prevent the
bomb from going off something he isn't succesful with on multiple occassions meaning we see the same scene over and over again. What Jones' film is great at though is making this scene different every time as Colter falls for the attractive Christina the love interest of Sean Fentress the man who Colter has taken the body of. As well as the interesting story there are great performances from Gyllenhaal, Vera Farmiga, Michelle Monaghan and a slightly creepy Jeffrey Wright as the Source Code inventor. While it isn't as inventive as Moon it's good to see an intelligent blockbuster with plenty of excitement and twists as well as a cute little romantic edge and some interesting themes about what it means to exist and how we as humans can find redemption. I have to say though I'm still puzzled about that whole end scene.
Submarine
We end this half with two films from debut directors who are better known as actors firstly The IT Crowd's Richard Ayoade who helmed the likeable coming-of-age film Submarine. Set in the Welsh city of Swansea it follows Craig Roberts' teenage oddball seeking the love of kooky pretty classmate Jordana. For me the film perfectly captured the awkwardness of teenage affection and having to deal with both love and heartache in equal measure. Some found the character of Oliver quite annoying but personally I found him fairly endearing and his first person narrative was very well-handled. I think that Ayoade's direction perfectly suited this quirky little tale and the subplot involving Craig's mum, played by Sally Hawkins, being tempted by an ex-boyfriend was also fairly amusing. Submarine could be put into the same category as other films with strange adolescent males such as Rushmore or Harold and Maude and while it's not a patch on either of these I can definitely say that it is the best Welsh film of the year and Paddy Considine's arrogant psychic is a work of utter genius.
Tyrannosaur
Talking of Considine his directorial debut is the final film on the list and again it isn't the easiest watch but it is a great study of the human condition. Peter Mullan puts in another assured performance as Joseph a drunk and a widower who is often getting into fights and alienates most of those around him. He forms an odd bond with charity shop worker Hannah played by the fantastic Olivia Colman who herself is the victim of abuse at the hands of her paranoid husband. With scenes of extreme violence, animal cruelty and rape, Tyrannosaur was never going to be hailed as the feel-good film of the year but what it is is the latest in a long line of great British realist films. I can't praise Colman's performance enough as the frightened and abused Hannah she owns most of the film but that's not taking anything away from the brilliant Mullan. Like with the other performers turned directors on this list it is clear that Considine is a student of the craft of film-making and displays his knowledge in full force in this gripping and compelling film.
Next time we'll get onto the Top Ten films of 2011.
13 Assassins
We kick off this year's Top 25 with one of the year's most engaging action films released this year and another engrossing Samurai film from director Takashi Miike. In this re-make of the 1963 film of the same name, Miike brings the action into full colour and assembles a great cast to take on the roles of the assassins tasked with bringing down the rule of the sadistic Lord Naritsugu whose dominant rule is oppressing the people of Japan. Although I found this incredibly talky in the early going it improved as it went on and the last hour which features the majority of the battle scenes are just spectacular. In the lead role Koji Yakusho was very good indeed but I also enjoyed Yusuke Iseya as the sort of comic relief of the piece. The film obviously draws comparisons with one of the greatest films of all time, The Seven Samurai, while its nowhere near as great as that it is still good to see films like 13 Assassins are still being made.
Arrietty
It's fair to say that this hasn't been a great year for animated films with Pixar releasing a disappointing sequel to Cars and Dreamworks giving us an only alright second instalment of the Kung Fu Panda franchise. Thankfully Studio Ghibli are still producing beautifully animated pieces for the whole family this year adapting Mary Norton's timeless tale The Borrowers and retitling it after the name of its diminutive heroine. The story of the little people who live under the floorboards seems like a perfect fit for the studio behind such family favourites as Spirited Away and Howl's Moving Castle. While Hiromasa Yonebayashi directed the piece, Hayao Miyazaki was still heavily involved co-adapting the source novel to make it fit for his style of film. The results were spectacular with the animation being predictably splendid and the story flowing nicely with a focus almost solely on Arrietty and her world as well as the obsessed Haru who is convinced of The Borrowers existence who is a great source of humour for the film. The themes of family and acceptance which run throughout a lot of Miyazaki's films are present in Arrietty and at the end of the day it is just a great hand-drawn animated film that is very uncomplicated but at the same time a great film.
Attack the Block
As a big fan of Adam and Joe I think I went into Attack the Block, the debut feature from Joe Cornish, already wanting to like it and although it's a far from perfect film it still has plenty of qualities that lands it a place in my Top 25. Instead of making this a comedy in the mould of Hot Fuzz or Shaun of the Dead this is a well-observed piece of social commentary about youths who live in council estates and their flippant nature to the world around them. When a gang of kids from the block of flats kill off an alien the rest of the race descends on the block and a war ensues between the humans and the aliens. Most of the humour within the film comes naturally as references to Fifa videogames and pay-as-you-go mobile phones make this a very British film. Though the aliens are furry creatures they are certainly still scary and Cornish isn't afraid of killing off some of his cast members. Talking of the cast there are assured performances from the majority of newcomers headed up by John Boyega as gang leader Moses while Jodie Whittaker is also great as nurse Sam someone who is mugged by the gang at the beginning of the film but is forced into helping them as the film goes on. It is rare to see a sci-fi film so intrinsically British which shows a real love and appreciation of the genre and this is certainly an assured debut for Cornish who is already making waves in Hollywood thanks to his writing on various projects.
Bridesmaids
I know this all-female comedy film divided audiences but I was in the camp who really enjoyed it and thought it was one of the funniest films of the year. Kristen Wiig, who I've always been a big fan of, wrote and takes the lead as Annie a failed baker who is asked to be maid of honour to her best friend Lilian when she announces her engagement. The film deals with themes of being stuck in a rut as Annie finds herself in a dead end job and sharing an apartment with an incestuous brother and sister pair. She also finds a rival in Lilian's new friend Helen who seemingly has the perfect life and is jealous that she may lose her old friend to a new life. What I really liked about Bridesmaids is that all of the six central characters all felt real even Melissa McCarthy who could've become the funny fat girl is afforded a scene in which she explains why she is so confident in her life. Even the love story between Annie and Chris O'Dowd's cop feels realistic and never slips into sickly sweet territory. More than anything though this is a very funny film with the scenes on the plane and at the wedding shower being my personal favourites. My only fear is that Bridesmaids will usher in a slew of new all women comedies which will be poor replicates of this brilliant original.
The Guard
For anyone who saw Martin McDonagh's In Bruges they know that probably the best thing about it was Brendan Gleeson's multi-layered performance that landed him a Golden Globe. So it seems that when McDonagh's brother John Michael was casting the lead for his second feature The Guard he had only one actor in mind to play the unorthodox policeman Boyle and once again it is Gleason's performance that is the jewel in the crown of this amiable comedy crime caper. When rumours of a drug-smuggling ring in Boyle's patch circulate Don Cheadle's FBI agent Everett comes over to lead the investigation. Boyle and Everett's double act is this year's funniest as the two clash but become friends throughout the film as they attempt to bring down the criminals who include Mark Strong's slightly psychopathic Clive Cornell. What I liked about The Guard more than anything was that it was a charming film with a protagonist who drunk, did drugs and used young prostitutes but was still completely likeable and relatable. To me Gleason was even better in The Guard than he was in In Bruges and deserves another award for playing one of 2011's most memorable characters.
Hugo
I don't think any of us expected Martin Scorsese to follow-up such dark films as The Departed and Shutter Island with a 3D kids film but that's exactly what he did with the stunning Hugo. Centring around a Parisian train station Asa Butterfield stars as Hugo a boy who is secretly controlling the station's clock and is constantly trying to avoid being caught by the station guard who sends waifs and strays off to the orphanage. What I really like about Hugo is that Scorsese instantly transports you into Hugo's world of stealing croissants from cafes and going among the various stalls throughout the station. It also offers up a history lesson about early cinema from the Lumiere brothers to George Melies and how some of the early films were received by their audiences. Mixing both humour and warmth with some well-crafted scenery and a great cast which includes Sir Ben Kingsley, Helen McCrory, Christopher Lee and Sacha Baron Cohen dressed as the policeman from 'Allo 'Allo but doing a Peter Sellers impression. More than anything else Hugo is the type of film that you don't really see any more a proper film for the whole family that has engaging story and themes about family life and redemption.
The Interrupters
The first of three documentary films on the list, The Interrupters takes you on a ride through the gang culture in Chicago and focuses on the titular group of people who are trying to protect their streets from crime and violence. The interesting thing about The Interrupters is that many of them were part of the gang culture themselves when they were younger and they then are able to use this to relate to today's youngsters. For me I was taken with Ameena Matthews the daughter of legendary gang leader Jeff Fort who takes it upon herself to console the family and friends of murdered high school student Derrrion Albert whose death made news when it was captured on camera. Another startling scene involves another of The Interrupters convincing a young offender to go back to the barbershop which he and a group of friends previously robbed and heard from his victims their shock and fear at having guns pointed at their heads. It was the realistic nature of Steve James' film that really took me and he really made you support this group of people who were trying to rid their city of its crime element in the best way they knew how.
Julia's Eyes
In 2008, The Orphanage was one of my favourite films of that year a genuinely creepy Spanish horror film starring Belen Rueda and produced by Guillermo Del Toro. Producer and star reunited this year for the equally creepy if a little more predictable horror yarn Julia's Eyes. Rueda stars as Julia a woman who is inflicted with a degenerative disease which means she will go slowly blind and the beginning of the film sees the death of her sister Sara, who has already lost her sight, at the hands of a mystery assailant who then makes it look like suicide. As Julia starts to go blind she wants to investigate the death of her sister who she rightly believed was killed despite the instance of everyone that it was just suicide. Though I worked whodunnit straight away I still enjoyed the ride and there were still a few twists that caught me unawares. The best thing about it though was the concentration on sight and how vital it is to us as our heroine's vision is thwarted throughout the film the sense of peril is heightened. Director Guillem Morales makes the most of his brilliant leading lady who is by far the best thing about this film and like The Orphanage this film does not have a very happy ending but I won't spoil it for you because I would encourage everybody to go out and watch this superb chiller.
Kill List
At the start of last year I watched Ben Wheatley's interesting debut film Down Terrace an odd family crime film which genuinely showed promise and then very recently I watched his brilliant second film Kill List which played with the genre of the crime film. Kill List is a film that can be split into three equal parts the first is very much a domestic drama about a couple with a young son trying to cope with the father's post-traumatic stress disorder following the war. The second sees the father, Neil Maskell's Jay, team up with Michael Smiley's intimidating Gal to finish off three individuals for a shadowy client. Their kill list is made up of three people who have done very wrong things usually to small children therefore the two contract killers can rightly justify their actions. The best thing about Kill List though was its final third because just as I thought I knew where it was going it turned into a horror film and evoked memories of both Rosemary's Baby and The Wicker Man. While Maskell was great playing the conflicted everyman for me Michael Smiley, best known to most people from Spaced, as the sort of big brother character who could both be charming and very sinister in equal measure. Kill List is by far not an easy watch but its combinations of three different genres and its small cast makes this a great British horror-thriller and one that I would greatly recommend.
Life in a Day
The second documentary on the list is Kevin MacDonald's very brave attempt to capture life around the planet on one day, July 24th 2010, by carefully editing together a numerous amount of the 80,000 clips posted on a YouTube channel by people from 192 nations across the globe. In the film we saw birth, marriage and coming-of-age tales we also saw the sad tale of the man who told his best friend how he really felt about her just to see her reject him. As anybody who saw Touching the Void knows, MacDonald is an assured documentary film-maker and the clever editing here perfectly captured the human spirit and all manner of emotions from different countries. Obviously MacDonald wanted to capture some big events, including the guy who was attempting to cycle the entire globe, but littered the film with smaller events such as people having breakfast, shaving, going to work and going to bed. One bit of the film that stuck with me was one of the final segments with a woman saying that nothing really major happened to her on that day and I think that's true of most of us because while some do experience big events on a regular basis most of us are just getting by. This was a film that really stuck with me and was a really massive project that definitely had a satisfying end result.
Rise of the Planet of the Apes
It has been an interesting year for blockbusters with the next chapters in the Pirates of the Caribbean and Transformers franchises being predictably crap it was the films that rebooted certain series that seemed to be better. While I did enjoy X-Men: First Class for me it was Rupert Wyatt's take on the Planet of the Apes saga that I found really engaging. Wyatt supposed that the original ape became super-intelligent due to James Franco's young scientist injecting him with a drug he was developing to combat Alzheimer's disease a condition which his father played by the brilliant John Lithgow was suffering from. Though Lithgow and Franco were both great the film was bought to life by Andy Serkis' motion-capture performance as Caesar the Ape who was really the central focus of the story. After the first half of the film explored the family unit, the second half was all about the mistreatment of apes from humans and the brilliant moment in which they finally rose up against Brian Cox and Draco Malfoy from Harry Potter. The final scenes with the battles between apes and humans were truly spectacular but this was a blockbuster that had both realistic characters and great action sequences and neither outshone the other. The only thing that ROTPOTA lacked was a decent female lead with Freida Pinto only existing to look pretty and smile occasionally but apart from that this was a great film and I'm excited to see what Wyatt does next with Caesar and the rest of his ape brethren.
Snowtown
It is fair to say that it has been a good year for Australian cinema with the Western film Red Hill almost making the list and another Australian film making the top ten here we find the gripping and harrowing Snowtown in the bottom half of the 2011 list. Snowtown focuses on the story of how charismatic drifter John Bunting charmed his way into the hearts and homes of the people of the titular Australian town only to reveal himself to be a psychopath and a serial killer. The main focus on the film is the relationship between Bunting and young Jamie Vlassakis who was in search of a father figure and was taken under the wing of the man who began a relationship with his mother. The first half of the film showed how a mass-murderer could easily become a member of a small society while the second half concentrated on the brutal killings in which Bunting and his associates hid their victim's bodies in barrels. Overall a gripping drama with a tense lead performance from Daniel Henshall as the unremorseful Bunting the man who committed one of the most famous atrocities in Australian history.
Source Code
Another interesting film which could be given the tag of blockbuster was the second film from Moon director and son of David Bowie, Duncan Jones. Source Code was a time-bending film starring Jake Gyllenhaal as a wounded soldier who is enlisted to try out a new military endeavour whose aim is to track down terrorists before they strike and arrest them before they are able to carry out any mass killings of civilians. In this case it was a bomb on a train and Gyllenhaal's Colter has to prevent the
bomb from going off something he isn't succesful with on multiple occassions meaning we see the same scene over and over again. What Jones' film is great at though is making this scene different every time as Colter falls for the attractive Christina the love interest of Sean Fentress the man who Colter has taken the body of. As well as the interesting story there are great performances from Gyllenhaal, Vera Farmiga, Michelle Monaghan and a slightly creepy Jeffrey Wright as the Source Code inventor. While it isn't as inventive as Moon it's good to see an intelligent blockbuster with plenty of excitement and twists as well as a cute little romantic edge and some interesting themes about what it means to exist and how we as humans can find redemption. I have to say though I'm still puzzled about that whole end scene.
Submarine
We end this half with two films from debut directors who are better known as actors firstly The IT Crowd's Richard Ayoade who helmed the likeable coming-of-age film Submarine. Set in the Welsh city of Swansea it follows Craig Roberts' teenage oddball seeking the love of kooky pretty classmate Jordana. For me the film perfectly captured the awkwardness of teenage affection and having to deal with both love and heartache in equal measure. Some found the character of Oliver quite annoying but personally I found him fairly endearing and his first person narrative was very well-handled. I think that Ayoade's direction perfectly suited this quirky little tale and the subplot involving Craig's mum, played by Sally Hawkins, being tempted by an ex-boyfriend was also fairly amusing. Submarine could be put into the same category as other films with strange adolescent males such as Rushmore or Harold and Maude and while it's not a patch on either of these I can definitely say that it is the best Welsh film of the year and Paddy Considine's arrogant psychic is a work of utter genius.
Tyrannosaur
Talking of Considine his directorial debut is the final film on the list and again it isn't the easiest watch but it is a great study of the human condition. Peter Mullan puts in another assured performance as Joseph a drunk and a widower who is often getting into fights and alienates most of those around him. He forms an odd bond with charity shop worker Hannah played by the fantastic Olivia Colman who herself is the victim of abuse at the hands of her paranoid husband. With scenes of extreme violence, animal cruelty and rape, Tyrannosaur was never going to be hailed as the feel-good film of the year but what it is is the latest in a long line of great British realist films. I can't praise Colman's performance enough as the frightened and abused Hannah she owns most of the film but that's not taking anything away from the brilliant Mullan. Like with the other performers turned directors on this list it is clear that Considine is a student of the craft of film-making and displays his knowledge in full force in this gripping and compelling film.
Next time we'll get onto the Top Ten films of 2011.
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