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06

Dec

Oscar Watch Continues

Will Clooney get an Oscar nod? That’s still “up in the air,” but the NBR loves him.

By This Girl’s Jezza

The National Board of Review has spoken, and once again, I’m scratching my head.

Though I have nothing but love for the NBR for bestowing Best Actress honors on three of my favorite performances of the ’00s (Annette Benning in Being Julia, Julie Christie in Away From Her, and Anne Hathaway in Rachel Getting Married), the group loves to play favorites.

Remember last year when the NBR deemed Clint Eastwood (on his way to an Oscar snub) Best Actor for Gran Torino? This year, he won Best Director for a movie (Invictus) whose bad buzz is growing louder by the moment. Now it’s on the verge of deafening. The Best Actor tie betweenInvictus star Morgan Freeman (blame the Clint factor) and Up In The Air’s George Clooney is no surprise either. They love George almost as much as they worship Clint.

Where things get a little confusing is in the Best Picture citations. The NBR have three: Best Film (Up In The Air), Top Ten Films and Top Independent Films. That some of the Top Ten Film candidates are independent films isn’t what confounds me most. Neither is the fact thatStar Trek made the former cut.

What has my jaw still lying on the floor is that out of 21 films cited, not one of them was Precious: Based On The Novel “Push” By Sapphire. And it’s not like they skipped the movie for fear that it might be too hard to watch: Gabourey Sidibe won Best Breakthrough Performance By An Actress. Consider her Oscar nod a fairly sure thing.

Equally head-scratching: Woody Harrelson (above, left) as Best Supporting Actor for The Messenger. His name has been popping up on quite a few predictions lists, and I’m beginning to suspect that a comeback might be in full swing, especially considering that every NBR Best Supporting Actor of the ’00s has received an invitation to the Oscars as a nominee.

Best Actress winner Carey Mulligan (An Education) is nearly an Oscar lock, too. Excepting 1990, when Oscar poison Mia Farrow took the prize for Alice, every NBR Best Actress of the last 20 years has scored an Oscar nod. And not all of them (Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis, tied in 1992 for Thelma & Louise, Miranda Richardson for Tom & Viv, Janet McTeer for Tumbleweeds and Fernanda Montenegro for Central Station) have been so obvious.

Here’s what my friend and fellow Oscar watcher Mara had to say about the NBR picks:

“Of course I saw the National Board of Review awards! (Tis the season, after all.) As I told you in October, Up In The Air is completely worthy and is definitely the frontrunner. And that girl Anna Kendrick [the NBR’s pick for Best Supporting Actress, the category where it has the weakest track record, by the way] was a breakthrough comic performance.

“But I’m telling you… buzz on Invictus is not good. In the elevator yesterday in the Sony screening room, two guys were talking about how disappointed they were (“It’s just a straightforward movie.”) If Clint’s name weren’t attached, nobody would be talking about it! I still think Jeff Bridges will beat them both [George Clooney and Morgan Freeman].

“I don’t even know what to say about Woody [Harrelson]. Is it 1996? What is The Messenger??!

“P.S. I saw Sherlock Holmes. It’s exactly what you think it is. Which means it’s fine. But Robert Downey is like Mark Wahlberg — aging well, could watch him in anything.”

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25

Sep

2010 Oscar Watch: Tis the Season to Start Speculating

nine photo

By ThisOscarGirl

Soooo glad that summer is finally over. Now the real season of joy is upon us. (Though i’m still disgruntled by those extra five nominees in the best picture category. So wrong). Here are the first of my many thoughts to come on Oscars 2010:


* Precious is the movie to beat. if Oprah can help get a president elected, she can get a movie a best picture oscar. The buzz on this is out of control. and Mo’nique’s nomination is a sure thing. Dare i even say she’s a frontrunner to win?

Up In the Air will also be one of the big boys. Clooney needs more than a best supporting actor oscar (for a movie nobody even saw or liked mind you). He’ll get it for this very sympathetic character.

* Meryl Streep. Can someone please give this woman a third oscar already? If Hilary Swank beats her to it for Amelia I will eat this computer. it just can’t happen…right?!!! Meryl has It’s Complicated late in the year, which will remind people about Julie & Julia. (Though, confession: The Complicated trailer is not. good.)

* Matt Damon won’t get the nom for The Informant. But the Clint Eastwood name is as good as gold. literally. And people are still sore about the Gran Torino snub. 

* What to make of Nine? That cast is just too good to be true. And Daniel Day Lewis totally classes up the joint. Sophia Loren and Judi Dench seem to be the obvious picks here, though. Unless the academy has flashy movie musical fatigue …

* Saw The Hurt Locker and liked it … but it’s overrated. and kind of one-note. Wonder if it will get support for PC reasons. 

* Richard Kind? Really? However, he is tight with Clooney. That can only help.

* Too bad Scorcese’s Shutter Island got pushed back to February 2010. That would have made things a lot more intriguing. 

* Remember when people floated the idea of Adam Sandler getting a nomination for Funny People?!! Now’s THAT’s funny.

That’s all I got for now. Obviously, we’re only at the starting gate of a marathon so much more later!

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