Showing posts with label Animal Kingdom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animal Kingdom. Show all posts

Sunday, December 12, 2010

The Adorable Jacki Weaver, Sweetie (LAFCA Winner!)

Points to our friend Glenn for pointing this out. Here's Jacki Weaver's acceptance speech at the Australian Film Awards for Animal Kingdom -- introduced by her current co-star Cate Blanchett. The speech is so adorable we are just going to pretend that it was delivered to us in America via satellite for her Los Angeles Film Critics Association triumph and NBR win.



How ya feeling about her Oscar chances, now?  

RIPE!

Related articles

Los Angeles Critics (Social Network vs. Carlos)

The Los Angeles Film Critics Association, now in their 35th year, hosted a battle between Carlos the Jackal and Mark Zuckerberg the punk. genius. billionaire. The Social Network co-founder won. But not without some concessions... including a tie.



Picture: The Social Network
[Runner up: Carlos]
Director: (tie) Olivier Assayas for Carlos and David Fincher for The Social Network
Actress: Kim Hye-Ja in Mother
[Runner up: Jennifer Lawrence in Winter's Bone]
Actor: Colin Firth in The King's Speech
[Runner up: Edgar Ramirez in Carlos]

Supporting Actress: Jacki Weaver in Animal Kingdom *check out this acceptance speech*
[Runner up: Olivia Williams in Ghost Writer]
Supporting Actor Neils Arestrup in A Prophet
[Runner up: Geoffrey Rush in The King's Speech]
Screenplay Aaron Sorkin for The Social Network
[Runner up: The King's Speech]
Cinematography Matthew Libatique for Black Swan
[Runner up: Roger Deakins for True Grit]
Music (tie) The Social Network and Alexandre Desplat The Ghost Writer
Production Design Guy Dyas for Inception
[runner up: The King's Speech]
Documentary Last Train Home
[Runner up: Exit Through the Gift Shop]
Experimental Jean Luc Godard's Film SocialismeForeign Film Carlos (France)
[Runner up: Mother (South Korea)]
Animated Film Toy Story 3
[Runner up: The Illusionist]
New Generation Lena Dunham for Tiny Furniture
Legacy of Cinema Award Serge Bromberg, Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno, and the F.W. Murnau Foundation and Fernando Pena for the restoration of MetropolisCareer Achievement Paul Mazursky


The win for Jacki Weaver is good news for that fine Australian film.  They did a good thing, sweetie. Though Animal Kingdom was the first or near-first screener out, it didn't necessarily have a strong "watch me" hook for Academy voters who hadn't been paying attention to Sundance buzz. I've said ever since January that if people watch this movie, she'll be nominated. Simple as that. But you have to get the voters to watch. This vote of confidence from Los Angelenos can't hurt.


I'm also thrilled for Last Train Home which is my choice for Best Documentary of the Year ...unless Prodigal Sons counts as this year... I get so confused. I'm totally horrified that it didn't make Oscar's finalist list. Unless of course it wasn't eligible for some reason. It's so tough to track with docs and shorts and whatnot, these eligibility requirements and windows.


Finally, it's good to see LAFCA staying true to their own impulses with all the foreign film love. This group tends to not be as beholden to Oscar frontrunners as many other critics groups are. That said, I'm still unsure about how I feel about Carlos winning film prizes. I know it was released theatrically but wasn't it made as a TV miniseries?


ONE FINAL IMPORTANT NOTE: South Korea's Mother & France's A Prophet, which both won awards today with Los Angeles critics, represent flip sides of the same Oscar coin. Both were submitted for Oscar consideration last year in the foreign film category but were not released in Los Angeles theaters in 2009 rendering them ineligible for other Oscar nominations that year. They both received theatrical releases in 2010, and because of Oscar rules on that matter, only Mother is now eligible for Oscar consideration (in all categories EXCEPT foreign film since it had its shot last year). A Prophet, having been nominated in its only eligible category last year, is not eligible for any further consideration. Make sense?
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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Five x Five

5 Funny Reads
Then fuck you, Jack Outlaw Vern on Animal Kingdom 'Australia's answer to Goodfellas'. Hilarious as always, that Vern.
Tom & Lorenzo "Kristin Chenoweth had a gayer Saturday night than we did."
The Onion "Oscar Contenders" It's all about the killer punchline.
SteveMartinToGo every so often I forget how much I love Steve Martin and then I remember while laughing. Usually I have this weird split second where I don't laugh. And then I start laughing.
Pajiba Why comic actors keep making such terrible movies. Oh, wait. This isn't funny. It's just about the funny. It's kind of sad actually.

The day WINGS won the first Oscar -hey, we discussed that one!

5 News Bits of Note
Oscars.org I'm going to love this Oscar countdown stopping in on each ceremony. Wheeee
Backstage Blogstage They're going to let the Glee cast graduate in 2012. Smart move for longevity (if the phenom show can manage longevity that is.)
Bad Ass Digest Cate Blanchett will remain Galadriel (The Hobbit casting)
Artforum it's not really "news" unless you wait for it each year and I do: John Water's Top Ten List: Jackass 3D, Dogtooth and more...
Movie|Line must-read interview with Jesse Eisenberg. He's a great candid interview but saying...
It’s hard to kind of attribute any kind of personal success to [it]. I just feel that I’ve been better in other things, so the fact that there’s so much attention on this movie in some ways is a bit jarring to me. Because I wonder what will happen if I’m not involved in something as great as this... the reception is not in accordance with what I felt I produced.
 ...probably isn't the best way to secure oneself an oscar nomination.

Just sayin'.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

The Kick-Off! NBR Favors "The Social Network", Shuns "127 Hours"

God, they get us every time! The National Board of Review has haters all over the internet but despite endless attacks on their legitimacy claiming that their choices are nothing but studio banquet-table-buying driven ... we (collectively speaking) still always let them kick it off.



Sometimes we get a kick out of it. Sometimes we just get kicked in the gut. It's totally an S&M relationship. But through it all we admire the way they've maintained their enviable kick-off mythos well despite the growth of movie awards in which they can no longer shouting "first!" like monosyllabic screen-refreshing trolls. (Gotham, EFA, BIFA, Satellite and Spirit Awards nominations have already come and gone after all... though most of them are not dealing with the whole pool of Oscar hopefuls the way the NBR does.)

The NBR prizes are usually a mix of "awesome! well done" and "aren't you embarrassed to publicly state that?" ...and this year? There's arguably more "awesome!" than "wtf" this time 'round including major boosts for Another Year, Animal Kingdom and The Social Network.

BEST PICTURE
The Social Network
BEST DIRECTOR
David Fincher, The Social Network

  • Four major prizes to The Social Network undoubtedly marks this as the film to beat for Oscar. I know that people are saying "The King's Speech!" But I believe that in the end, that film's appeal will be shorter-lived. Just my hunch as to how it plays out (though I expect the Globes and the BFCA will give The King's Speech a major boost very soon) There's still nearly two months before Oscar nominations let alone the time of full stop campaigning after that. Contrary to popular belief, the NBR Best Picture prize does not doom your Oscar chances. It's not totally correlative either but so what. To each (group) their own.

BEST ACTRESS
Lesley Manville, Another Year
BEST ACTOR
Jesse Eisenberg, The Social Network (performance review)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Jacki Weaver, Animal Kingdom (performance review)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Christian Bale, The Fighter

  • Of the acting prizes the NBR favor provides a major boost for Eisenberg and Weaver who are both difficult sells for traditional Oscar choices in some ways: Eisenberg because he's young for the category and the character is abrasive, Weaver because she's in a small film from overseas. But great choices by the NBR here. May this push at least a few dozen more AMPAS members towards careful consideration of these star turns.

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Chris Sparling, Buried
  • This will have to count as the biggest shock, yes?
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Aaron Sorkin, The Social Network
FOREIGN FILM
Of Gods and Men, France
DOCUMENTARY
Waiting For Superman 
ANIMATED FEATURE
Toy Story 3


ENSEMBLE CAST
The Town
  • I enjoyed this movie alot and it's just the type that wins these "ensemble" prizes, given that it's a big cast of recognizable faces. But I prefer movies with more group interaction for these prizes -- a personal thing. This film has mostly one-on-one scenes other than what is for me the standout scene: that great accidental lunch meeting between Rebecca Hall, Jeremy Renner and Ben Affleck. Awkkkkkwward.

BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMANCE
Jennifer Lawrence, Winter's Bone
SPOTLIGHT AWARD (DIRECTORIAL DEBUT)
Sebastian Junger and Tim Hetherington Restrepo
SPECIAL FILMMAKING ACHIEVEMENT (writing, directing and producing)
Sofia Coppola, Somewhere
WILLIAM K EVERSON FILM HISTORY AWARD
Leonard Maltin
NBR FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
Fair Game, Conviction, Howl

And finally... the Lists.

Top Eleven Films (because a top ten isn't good enough for the NBR!)
(alpha order): 
Another Year
, The Fighter
, Hereafter, Inception
, The King’s Speech
, Shutter Island, 
The Social Network, 
The Town
, Toy Story 3, True Grit and 
Winter’s Bone

  • Tolda that Hereafter would be here, though it wasn't a difficult call at all. Despite the film's tepid reviews, NBR voters are ever faithful to their Eastwood. This is his 8th consecutive film to be so honored.

Top Ten Independent Films
(alpha order): 
Animal Kingdom, 
Buried
, Fish Tank, 
The Ghost Writer
, Greenberg, 
Let Me In
, Monsters
Please Give, 
Somewhere
 and Youth in Revolt
  • Another snub for Blue Valentine, which is having a rough week given the lack of Spirit Awards love, too. Either they withheld the film too long, the stupid MPAA rating scared people off or the film is just too brutal emotionally for ballot love. Shame. It's such a good movie.
Top Six Foreign Films
(alpha order): 
I Am Love, 
Incendies, 
Life Above All
, Of Gods And Men
, Soul Kitchen
 and White Material

  • The buzz on Incendies is still just a low hum but the humming is fiercely tuneful. I keep hearing words like "astounding." So perhaps it's the film to beat for Oscar's foreign film competition. Note that Biutiful did not make their list.

Top Six Documentary Films
(alpha order): 
A Film Unfinished, 
Inside Job, 
Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work, 
Restrepo
, The Tillman Story and 
Waiting For “Superman”.



BIGGEST SNUB STORY: Black Swan, 127 Hours and The Kids Are All Right, which have all been winning major attention, were completely shut out. No prizes for any of them. Other films that maybe weren't destroyed but certainly weren't boosted by today's announcement were Rabbit Hole, Blue Valentine and all of those one week qualifying releases that were hoping for last minute attention (The Way Back, Barney's Version, Biutiful, Frankie & Alice).


BIGGEST BOOSTS: The Social Network (which was a gimme anyway), but more importantly Mike Leigh's Another Year (1 prize, 1 list) and David Michôd's Animal Kingdom (1 prize, 1 list)


MOST BORING DEVELOPMENT: The endless fawning over Waiting For 'Superman'. With so many fine documentaries this year, why that one? The Lottery, on the very same topic, is more focused and convincing (though it comes without any bells and whistles), if you must reward this topic.
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Thursday, October 28, 2010

Animal Kingdom To Rack Up Awards (...In Australia)

Remember that one year (2001) when the list-happy AFI (American Film Institute) decided to compete with the Globes and the Oscars in year end prizes? No, that didn't last long. But there's another AFI, The Australian Film Institute, that has been around for a long time and is in no such danger of being a one-off. This year, they're all about the amazing family crime drama Animal Kingdom which they awarded with a record breaking 18 nominations. Sure, the film is in danger of being way overhyped for people who are coming to it late (which is just about everyone given the sorry state of international distribution for dramas of virtually any kind) but for those who can slough off the "omg" raves, I guarantee you'll think it at least an insinuating and well executed crime drama.

AFI Favorites with multiple nominations

Its main competition for the coveted prizes, if you go by nomination counts, is Bright Star (different eligibility calendar over there in Australia). I haven't really covered the Australian Awards before -- we lean on Glenn for that -- but since i've seen three of their Best Picture nominees this time around (the two leaders plus the aborigine musical Bran Nue Dae), why not?

Complete nomination list -- with more Oscar adjacent & actor related comments -- after the jump.




AFI Members’ Choice Award
SAMSUNG Mobile AFI Award for Best Film
  • Animal Kingdom. Liz Watts.
  • Beneath Hill 60. Bill Leimbach.
  • Bran Nue Dae. Robyn Kershaw, Graeme Isaac.
  • Bright Star. Jan Chapman, Caroline Hewitt.
  • The Tree. Sue Taylor. Yaël Fogiel.
  • Tomorrow When The War Began. Andrew Mason, Michael Boughen.
I'm actually not sure which of these categories Australian's consider their "Best Picture" but it's mostly the same competition anyway with only the widower drama The Boys Are Back and the widow drama The Tree working Swing position. Maybe Clive Owen  &  Charlotte Gainsbourg, who star as those grieving single parents, should've just gotten married to end their suffering: The Tree is Back!  

AFI Award for Best Direction
  • Animal Kingdom. David Michôd.
  • Beneath Hill 60. Jeremy Hartley Sims.
  • Bright Star. Jane Campion.
  • The Tree. Julie Bertuccelli.
Macquarie AFI Award for Best Original Screenplay
  • Animal Kingdom. David Michôd.
  • Beneath Hill 60. David Roach.
  • Bright Star. Jane Campion.
  • Daybreakers. Peter Spierig, Michael Spierig.
It'd be nice to see Michôd fighting for a spot with Oscar in the Original Screenplay category, but even with screeners going out so early, that could be a tough sell. But still, his is an unusually taut and smart script.

Macquarie AFI Award for Best Adapted Screenplay
  • Bran Nue Dae. Reg Cribb, Rachel Perkins, Jimmy Chi.
  • The Boys Are Back. Allan Cubitt.
  • The Tree. Julie Bertuccelli.
  • Tomorrow When The War Began. Stuart Beattie.
AFI Award for Best Cinematography
  • Animal Kingdom. Adam Arkapaw.
  • Beneath Hill 60. Toby    Oliver ACS.
  • Bright Star. Greig Fraser.
  • The Waiting City. Denson Baker ACS
With apologizes to the two films here I haven't seen I'll be disappointed if Greig Fraser loses this. I'm still mortified that he collected so few nominations and wins here in America. Bright Star is jaw-droppingly beautiful. It's a shame the way it was treated in last year's Oscar race. 

AFI Award for Best Editing
  • Animal Kingdom. Luke Doolan.
  • Beneath Hill 60. Dany    Cooper ASE.
  • Bright Star. Alexandre de Franceschi ASE.
  • Tomorrow When The War Began. Marcus D’Arcy.
AFI Award for Best Sound
  • Animal Kingdom. Sam Petty, Rob Mackenzie, Philippe Decrausaz.
  • Beneath Hill 60. Liam    Egan, Alicia Slusarski, Mark Cornish, Tony Murtagh.
  • Bran Nue Dae. Andrew Neil, Steve Burgess, Peter Mills, Mario Vaccaro, Blaire Slater, David Bridie, Scott Montgomery.
  • Tomorrow When The War Began. Andrew Plain, David Lee, Gethin Creagh, Robert Sullivan.
AFI Award for Best Original Music Score
  • Animal Kingdom. Antony Partos, Sam Petty.
  • Beneath Hill 60. Cezary Skubiszewski.
  • Bran Nue Dae. Cezary   Skubiszewski, Jimmy Chi, Patrick Duttoo Bin Amat, Garry Gower, Michael Manolis Mavromatis, Stephen Pigram.
  • Bright Star. Mark Bradshaw.

Bran Nue Dae does have fun musical numbers though typically the trailer doesn't really play that up.

AFI Award for Best Production Design
  • Animal Kingdom. Jo Ford.
  • Beneath Hill 60. Clayton Jauncey.
  • Bright Star. Janet Patterson.
  • Tomorrow When The War Began. Robert Webb, Michelle McGahey, Damien Drew, Bev Dunn.
AFI Award for Best Costume Design
  • Animal Kingdom. Cappi Ireland.
  • Beneath Hill 60. Ian Sparke, Wendy Cork.
  • Bran Nue Dae. Margot Wilson.
  • Bright Star. Janet Patterson
AFI Award for Best Lead Actor
  • Brendan Cowell. Beneath Hill 60.
  • James Frecheville. Animal Kingdom.
  • Ben Mendelsohn. Animal Kingdom.
  • Clive Owen. The Boys Are Back.
AFI Award for Best Lead Actress
  • Abbie Cornish. Bright Star.
  • Morgana Davies. The Tree.
  • Charlotte Gainsbourg. The Tree.
  • Jacki Weaver. Animal Kingdom.
I had assumed that Abbie Cornish could finally collect a trophy for Bright Star until I realized that Jacki Weaver was sharing this category. Though she is absolutely the centrifugal force in Animal Kingdom, she's not really the lead (that'd be Frecheville... and arguably Mendelsohn) and she's offscreen quite a lot and sometimes backgrounded within the scenes she is in.

AFI Award for Best Supporting Actor
  • Joel Edgerton. Animal Kingdom.
  • Guy Pearce. Animal Kingdom.
  • Kodi Smit-McPhee. Matching Jack.
  • Sullivan Stapleton. Animal Kingdom.
Tattoed and Tormented: Sullivan Stapleton in Animal Kingdom
I need to take this opportunity to thank the AFI for not nominated Geoffrey Rush who is typically so far over the top he's back down again in Bran Nue Dae. But I am surprised that they saw through his extravagant hamming given his Master Thespian rep. This is a war of cops vs. criminals from Animal Kingdom with wee Kodi as the potential beneficiary of vote splitting. My favorite of the three Kingdom men is Sullivan Stapleton as the tattooed and tightly-wound comparatively tender Craig. But not knowing anything about AFI politics or Australian favoritism, I'm assuming that Pearce is most likely to win given his stardom that he gets the film's big theme-speaking moment.

AFI Award for Best Supporting Actress
  • Julia Blake. The Boys Are Back.
  • Kerry Fox. Bright Star.
  • Deborah Mailman. Bran Nue Dae.
  • Laura Wheelwright. Animal Kingdom.
In case you're wondering, Wheelwright plays the teen girlfriend of Animal Kingdom's lead character. I'm pleased to see Fox given props for her subtle but very well modulated reactive mother role in Jane Campion's romantic biopic.

AFI INTERNATIONAL AWARD FOR BEST ACTOR
  • Simon Baker. The Mentalist, Season 2. Nine Network
  • Ryan Kwanten. True Blood, Season 3. Showcase
  • Kodi Smit-McPhee. The Road
  • Sam Worthington. Avatar

I haven't yet seen Season 3 but it's nice to see acclaim for Ryan Kwanten who is True Blood's secret weapon, if you ask me. He's just so funny. He offers up a very smart take on a very dim character. As for Kodi, I wrote extensively about The Road here.

AFI I International Award for Best Actress
  • Toni Collette. United States of Tara, Season 2. ABC1
  • Bojana Novakovic. Edge of Darkness
  • Mia Wasikowska. Alice in Wonderland
  • Naomi Watts. Mother and Child
Um. Ewwww. on the Wasikowska nomination. I think she's quite a good actress but I think she's quite ungood in that movie. Meanwhile: Go TONI!!!

AFI Young Actor Award
  • Ashleigh Cummings. Tomorrow When The War Began
  • Morgana Davies. The Tree
  • James Frecheville. Animal Kingdom
  • Harrison Gilbertson. Beneath Hill 60
AFI Visual Effects Award
  • Daybreakers. Peter Spierig, Michael Spierig, Rangi Sutton, James Rogers, Randy Vellacott
  • The Tree. Dave Morley, Felix Crawshaw, Claudia Lecaros, Tim Walker
  • Tinglewood. Wil Manning
  • Tomorrow When The War Began. Chris Godfrey, Sigi Eimutis, Dave Morley, Tony Cole
AFI AWARD FOR BEST CHILDREN’S TELEVISION DRAMA
  • Dance Academy. Joanna Werner ABC
  • Dead Gorgeous. Ewan Burnett, Margot McDonald. ABC
  • Lockie Leonard. Kylie     Du Fresne. Nine Network
  • My Place. Penny Chapman. ABC
AFI AWARD FOR BEST CHILDREN’S TELEVISION ANIMATION
  • dirtgirlworld. Cate McQuillen. ABC
  • Erky Perky. Kristine Klohk, Barbara Stephen, Tracy Lenon. Seven Network
  • The Legend Of Enyo. Avrill Stark, Michael Christensen. Seven Network
AFI Award for Best Television Comedy Series
  • Lowdown. Nicole Minchin, Amanda Brotchie, Adam Zwar. ABC
  • Review With Myles Barlow, Season 2. Dean Bates. ABC
  • Wilfred II. Jenny Livingston, Tony Rogers, Adam Zwar, Jason Gann. SBS
AFI Award for Best Light Entertainment Television Series
  • The Gruen Transfer, Series 3. Andrew Denton, Anita Jacoby, Jon Casimir, Debbie Cuell. ABC1
  • Hungry Beast, Series Two. Andrew Denton, Andy Nehl. ABC1
  • MasterChef Australia. Margaret Bashfield, Judy Smart, Caroline Spencer. Network Ten
  • Talkin’ ’bout Your Generation. Peter Beck. Network Ten
AFI Award for Best Television Drama Series
  • The Circuit, Series 2. Ross Hutchens, Colin South. SBS
  • Rush, Season 3. John Edwards, Mimi Butler. Network Ten
  • Spirited. Claudia Karvan, Jacquelin Perske, John Edwards. W
  • Tangle, Season 2. John Edwards, Imogen Banks. Showcase
AFI Award for Best Telefeature, Mini Series or Short Run Series
  • A Model Daughter: The Killing Of Caroline Byrne. Karl Zwicky. Network Ten
  • Hawke. Richard Keddie. Network Ten
AFI Award for Best Direction in Television
  • Dance Academy – Episode 2, ‘Week Zero’. Jeffrey Walker. ABC
  • Hawke. Emma   Freeman. Network Ten
  • Rush, Season 3 – Episode 308, ‘Train’. Grant Brown. Network Ten
  • Tangle, Season 2 – Episode 16, ‘Lost and Found’. Emma Freeman. Showcase
AFI Award for Best Screenplay in Television
  • Hawke. Glen Dolman. Network Ten
  • Review With Myles Barlow, Season 2 – Episode 6, ‘Happiness, Escapism, Acceptance’. Trent O’Donnell, Phil Lloyd. ABC
  • Tangle, Season 2 – Episode 15, ‘Sleepwalking’. Fiona Seres. Showcase
  • Wilfred II – Episode 7, ‘Dog Star’. Jason Gann, Adam Zwar. SBS
AFI Award for Best Lead Actor in a Television Drama
  • Garry McDonald. A Model Daughter: The Killing Of Caroline Byrne. Network Ten
  • Corey McKernan. Lockie Leonard. Nine Network
  • Aaron Pedersen. The Circuit, Series 2. SBS
  • Richard Roxburgh. Hawke. Network Ten
AFI Award for Best Lead Actress in a Television Drama
  • Cheree Cassidy. Underbelly: The Golden Mile – Episode 7, ‘Full Force Gale’. Nine Network
  • Justine Clarke. Tangle, Season 2. Showcase
  • Poppy Lee Friar. Dead Gorgeous. ABC
  • Catherine McClements. Tangle, Season 2. Showcase
AFI Award for Best Guest or Supporting Actor in a Television Drama
  • Damien Garvey. Underbelly: The Golden Mile – Episode 10, ‘Hurt on Duty’.  Nine Network
  • Rhys Muldoon. Lockie Leonard – Episode 11, ‘Snake Hide Oil. Nine Network
  • John Waters. Offspring. Network Ten
  • Ben Winspear. My Place – Episode 5, ‘1968 Sofia’. ABC
AFI Award for Best Guest or Supporting Actress in a Television Drama
  • Linda Cropper. Satisfaction, Season 3 – Episode 8, ‘Not Vanilla’. Showcase
  • Sacha Horler. Hawke. Network Ten
  • Asher Keddie. Hawke. Network Ten
  • Deborah Mailman. Offspring. Network Ten
AFI Award for Best Performance in a Television Comedy
  • Paul Denny. Lowdown. ABC
  • Jason Gann. Wilfred II. SBS
  • Phil Lloyd. Review With Myles Barlow, Season 2. ABC


AFI Award for Best Feature Length Documentary
  • Contact. Martin Butler, Bentley Dean. ABC1
  • Inside The Firestorm. Lucy Maclaren, Alex West. ABC
  • The Snowman. Rachel Landers, Dylan Blowen.
  • Strange Birds In Paradise – A West Papuan Story. Jamie Nicolai, John Cherry.
AFI Award for Best Documentary Under One Hour
  • A Thousand Encores: The Ballets Russes In Australia. Sharyn Prentice, Marianne Latham, Lavinia Riachi. ABC
  • Rudely Interrupted. Susie Jones, Benjamin Jones. ABC1
  • Surviving Mumbai. Andrew Ogilvie, Andrea Quesnelle. ABC
  • You Only Live Twice – The Incredibly True Story Of The Hughes Family. Ruth Cullen. ABC1
AFI Award for Best Documentary Series
  • Addicted To Money. Andrew     Ogilvie, Andrea Quesnelle. ABC
  • Disable Bodied Sailors. Karina Holden, Nick Robinson. SBS
  • Kokoda. Andrew Wiseman. ABC1
  • Liberal Rule- The Politics That Changed Australia. Nick Torrens, Frank Haines. SBS
AFI Award for Best Direction in a Documentary
  • A Thousand Encores: The Ballets Russes In Australia. Amanda Chang. ABC
  • Contact. Martin Butler, Bentley Dean. ABC1
  • Inside The Firestorm. Jacob Hickey. ABC
  • Strange Birds In Paradise – A West Papuan Story. Charlie Hill-Smith.
AFI Award for Best Cinematography in a Documentary
  • Disable Bodied Sailors – Episode 3. Nick Robinson. SBS
  • Miracles - Episode 1, ‘Miracle in the Storm’. Tony Oliver ACS. ABC1
  • Strange Birds In Paradise – A West Papuan Story. Angus Kemp.
  • Surviving Mumbai. Jim Frater. ABC
AFI Award for Best Editing in a Documentary
  • A Thousand Encores: The Ballets Russes In Australia. Karin Steininger. ABC
  • Contact. Tania  Nehme. ABC1
  • Inside The Firestorm. Steven    Robinson. ABC
  • Surviving Mumbai. David Fosdick. ABC
AFI Award for Best Sound in a Documentary
  • A Thousand Encores: The Ballets Russes In Australia. Brett Aplin, Andrew McGrath, Erin McKimm. ABC
  • Inside The Firestorm. Jock Healy, Tristan Meredith. ABC
  • Kokoda – Episode 1, ‘The Invasion’. David Bridie, Chris Goodes, Ian Grant, Patrick Slater. ABC1
  • Strange Birds In Paradise – A West Papuan Story. Mik la Vage, Doron Kipen, David Bridie.
AFI Award for Best Short Animation
  • The Lost Thing. Sophie Byrne, Andrew Ruhemann, Shaun Tan.
  • Zero. Christopher Kezelos, Christine Kezelos.
AFI Award for Best Short Fiction Film
  • Deeper Than Yesterday. Ariel Kleiman, Benjamin Gilovitz, Sarah Cyngler, Anna Kojevnikov.
  • The Kiss. Sonya Humphrey, Ashlee Page.
  • The Love Song Of Iskra Prufrock. Lucy Gaffy, Lyn Norfor.
  • Suburbia. Antonio Oreña-Barlin, Richard Halsted.
AFI Award for Best Screenplay in a Short Film.
  • A Parachute Falling In Siberia. Sarah Shaw, Ian Meadows.
  • Deeper Than Yesterday. Ariel Kleiman.
  • Glenn Owen Dodds. Trent Dalton.
  • The Kiss. Ashlee Page
I know the Film Experience has plentiful Australian readers -- i can see the stats, don't hide! --  so let us know: How did the AFI do this year? As for the rest of you, do you think Jacki Weaver is going to pull off that Supporting Actress Slot with the American Academy? And do you share the love of Kwanten on True Blood and Collette as Tara?

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Actressing, Swag, Oscar Updates

Heads up: I interviewed Juliette Lewis (!) a few days ago and that piece will hit on Thursday. In November... TILDA. Stay tuned. The fall film season always brings fresh golden excitement to The Film Experience.

Speaking of pick-me-ups...

This T to your left, is my favorite piece of swag for precursor season thus far. They passed some law that bloggers are supposed to tell you what gifts they get, right? It's really not complicated in my case. I get what other members of certain critics groups get (I'm a member of the BFCA): some screeners, the occassional film book, random infrequent goodies such as this. It's a little hard to see but basically it's a Jacki Weaver (Animal Kingdom) bust with her sure-to-become classic line "You've done some bad things, sweetie." scrawled under her face.

The Supporting Actress Race is, as you've presumably surmised (being the smarty that you are) unpredictable at the moment. Almost everyone who people think might be in the running is an uncertainty.

The obstacles to certainty
  • Helena Bonham Carter (The King's Speech) AMPAS has resisted all but one of her worthy perfs. And even that one time (The Wings of the Dove) when she absolutely deserved the actual win, she lost.
  • Dianne Wiest (Rabbit Hole) has a small film emerging in the annual December glut.
  • Miranda Richardson (Made in Dagenham) is fun but the role is kind of easy, if you will. If they're in the mood to hand her a career acknowledgement, it's a go but otherwise...
  • Jacki Weaver (Animal Kingdom). Hollywood doesn't know her and might not see her film.
  • Hailee Steinfeld (True Grit). The actors branch is, for whatever reason, semi-resistant to Coen Bros pictures.
  • Melissa Leo & Amy Adams (The Fighter) are in the same film that few have yet seen.

  • Sissy Spacek (Get Low) is in a film where the men get almost all the attention.
  • Barbra Hershey & Mila Kunis (Black Swan) are in a film that might be too outre for the acting branch and one in which the lead actress is hogging all the attention anyway. Weirder still: though Hershey and Portman are the ones with the nominatable roles, Kunis is the only one to win anything thus far (Venice by way of Quentin Tarantino).
  • Kristin Scott Thomas (Nowhere Boy) has the Bonham Carter problem, doesn't she?
  • Saoirse Ronan (The Way Back) has a small film with a huge cast in the annual December glut.
  • Rosamund Pike (Barney's Version & Made in Dagenham) is quite a good actress but she never seems to generate buzz. Incidentally, she gets two of the very best moments in Made in Dagenham but still people aren't talking about her and you only hear "Miranda & Sally".
  • Dale Dickey (Winter's Bone) is in a small film where the lead actress hogs the attention.
  • Marion Cotillard (Inception) is in a movie that's not exactly an "actor's movie"
  • Loretta, Whoopi, Janet, Kerry, Thandie, Phylicia, Anika, Macy, etc... (For Colored Girls) They have the internal competition problem times infinity. For any traction whatsoever one or two of them will have to steal the entire show.
And so on and so on. DISCUSS.

Incidentally, at least one film writer wants Annette Bening to move to supporting for The Kids Are All Right. While it's true that she could probably win the category with ease were she to be nominated there, I doubt the Academy would buy the classification. For one thing, she's top billed, which has not been the case in other instances where they've demoted a co-lead to supporting. And they don't always buy the ridiculous re-classifications, anyway. I mean, trying to sell The Bening as supporting Julianne Moore would as foolish as trying to sell the idea that Jamie Foxx was supporting Tom Cruise in Collat--- oh f***, never mind.


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