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3 votes
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AFI 2022 Awards
https://www.afi.com/award/afi-awards-2022/ Movies of the year: Avatar: The Way of Water Elvis Everything Everywhere All At Once The Fabelmans Nope She Said Tár Top Gun: Maverick The Woman King...
https://www.afi.com/award/afi-awards-2022/
Movies of the year:
Avatar: The Way of Water
Elvis
Everything Everywhere All At Once
The Fabelmans
Nope
She Said
Tár
Top Gun: Maverick
The Woman King
Women Talking
AFI Special Award: The Banshees of Inisherin
TV:
Abbott Elementary
The Bear
Better Call Saul
Hacks
Mo
Pachinko
Reservation Dogs
Severance
Somebody Somewhere
The White Lotus
3 votes -
The Rock's Black Adam box office damage control is embarrassing
3 votes -
‘Top Gun: Maverick’ named Best Picture by National Board of Review
2 votes -
Disney shocker: Bob Iger returning as CEO, Bob Chapek exits
9 votes -
Golden Globes: Comedian Jerrod Carmichael set to host NBC telecast
2 votes -
Former WarnerBros executive Jason Killar on the streaming wars and the future of media
@Jason Kilar: The @WSJ asked me to write about the streaming wars and the future of media. Here is the essay + a Twitter thread which covers a few of the main points. https://t.co/BzRQIEAZMY via @WSJ
5 votes -
Chinese protesters want ‘cinema freedom.’ Hollywood should help them.
3 votes -
Box office bust: ‘Black Adam’ faces theatrical losses
2 votes -
‘Tár’ leads New York Film Critics Circle, ‘RRR’ and Keke Palmer surprise
2 votes -
Oscars 2023 will include all twenty-three categories presented live on air
5 votes -
“Everything Everywhere All At Once” wins Best Feature at the Gotham Awards
8 votes -
Will Smith understands if people don’t want to see his new film after Oscars slap: “I would absolutely respect that”
4 votes -
Albert Pyun, cult filmmaker behind ‘Cyborg,’ ‘Nemesis’ and ‘Captain America,’ dies at 69
5 votes -
Disney’s ‘Strange World’ to lose $100 million in theatrical run
3 votes -
Netflix’s ‘Glass Onion’ slays in limited release with estimated $15 million
5 votes -
‘Strange World’ is a historic bomb for Disney on a weak Thanksgiving box office weekend
8 votes -
Amazon plans to invest $1 billion a year in movies for theaters
4 votes -
Harvey Weinstein gloats from his prison cell that She Said box office bomb 'isn't a surprise'
3 votes -
2023 Independent Spirit Award nominations
These are the real nominations, not my predictions. Here’s the article about it: https://www.indiewire.com/2022/11/2023-independent-spirit-award-nominations-1234784758/ Best Feature Bones and All...
These are the real nominations, not my predictions. Here’s the article about it:
https://www.indiewire.com/2022/11/2023-independent-spirit-award-nominations-1234784758/Best Feature
Bones and All
Everything Everywhere All At Once
Our Father, the Devil
TÁR
Women Talking
Best Director
Todd Field, TÁR
Kogonda, After Yang
Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, Everything Everywhere All At Once
Sarah Polley, Women Talking
Halina Reijn, Bodies Bodies Bodies
Best First Feature
Aftersun
Emily the Criminal
The Inspection
Murina
Palm Trees and Power Lines
Best Lead Performance
Cate Blanchett - TÁR
Dale Dickey - A Love Song
Mia Goth - Pearl
Regina Hall - Honk for Jesus, Save Your Soul
Paul Mescal - Aftersun
Aubrey Plaza - Emily the Criminal
Jeremy Pope - The Inspection
Taylor Russell - Bones and All
Andrea Riseborough - To Leslie
Michelle Yeoh - Everything Everywhere All At Once
Best Supporting Performance
Jamie Lee Curtis - Everything Everywhere All At Once
Brian Tyree Henry - Causeway
Nina Hoss - TÁR
Brian d’Arcy James - The Cathedral
Ke Huy Quan - Everything Everywhere All At Once
Trevante Rhodes - Bruiser
Theo Rossi - Emily the Criminal
Mark Rylance - Bones and All
Jonathan Tucker - Palm Trees and Power Lines
Gabrielle Union - The Inspection
Breakthrough Performance
Frankie Corio - Aftersun
Gracija Filipovic - Murina
Stephanie Hsu - Everything Everywhere All At Once
Lily McInerny - Palm Trees and Power Lines
Daniel Zolghardi - Funny Pages
Best Screenplay
After Yang
Catherine Called Birdy
Everything Everywhere All At Once
TÁR
Women Talking
Best First Screenplay
Bodies Bodies Bodies
Emergency
Emily the Criminal
Fire Island
Palm Trees and Power Lines
Best Cinematography
Aftersun
Murina
Neptune Frost
Peal
TÁR
Best Editing
Aftersun
The Cathedral
Everything Everywhere All At Once
Marcel the Shell with Shoes On
TÁR
Robert Altman Award
Women Talking
Best Documentary
A House Made of Splinters
All That Breathes
All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
Midwives
Riotsville USA
Best International Film
Corsage
Joyland
Leonor Will Never Die
Return to Seol
Saint Omer
2 votes -
Looking for lessons in the ‘She Said’ box-office beatdown
4 votes -
The return of James Cameron, box office king
5 votes -
How Brendan Fraser made it all the way back
8 votes -
‘Fast X’ budget has ballooned to $340 million – Can it still turn a profit for Universal?
5 votes -
Margot Robbie says her female-led ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ movie is dead at Disney: ‘I guess they don’t want to do it’
13 votes -
Brendan Fraser won’t attend the 2023 Golden Globes: ‘My mother didn’t raise a hypocrite’
13 votes -
‘Babylon’ first reactions are all over the place: Responses for Damien Chazelle’s film range from a ‘daring Hollywood epic’ to ‘truly monstrous’
3 votes -
Final 2023 Golden Globes predictions
Golden Globe nominations come out mid-December. I don’t really see anything changing from here to the end of the year. The only movies left to premiere are Avatar and Babylon. Both of which are...
Golden Globe nominations come out mid-December. I don’t really see anything changing from here to the end of the year. The only movies left to premiere are Avatar and Babylon. Both of which are almost guaranteed to be good, at the very least. And Avatar is guaranteed to be a huge hit.
Here are my previous predictions for the Globes, and it’s crazy how much things have changed.
The Globes usually have a couple of weird choices and I don’t think many of these will end up with Oscar nominations.
But here’s where I think the winds are blowing.
Motion Picture - Drama:
- The Fabelmans
- Women Talking
- Avatar: The Way of Water
- Top Gun: Maverick
- TÁR
Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy:
- Babylon
- The Banshees of Inisherin
- Everything Everywhere All At Once
- Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery
- Spirited
Director:
- Steven Spielberg - The Fabelmans
- Damien Chazelle - Babylon
- James Cameron - Avatar: The Way of Water
- Martin McDonagh - The Banshees of Inisherin
- Sarah Polley - Women Talking
Screenplay:
- The Banshees of Inisherin
- Babylon
- The Fabelmans
- Women Talking
- Everything Everywhere All At Once
Lead Actor - Drama:
- Brendan Fraser - The Whale
- Austin Butler - Elvis
- Bill Nighy - Living
- Gabriel LaBelle - The Fabelmans
- Tom Cruise - Top Gun: Maverick
Lead Actress - Drama:
- Danielle Deadwyler - Till
- Naomi Ackie - I Wanna Dance With Somebody
- Cate Blanchett - TÁR
- Michelle Williams - The Fabelmans
- Jennifer Lawrence - Causeway
Lead Actor - Musical or Comedy:
- Colin Farrell - The Banshees of Inisherin
- Diego Calva - Babylon
- Daniel Craig - Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery
- Will Ferrell - Spirited
- George Clooney - Ticket to Paradise
Lead Actress - Musical or Comedy:
- Margot Robbie - Babylon
- Michelle Yeoh - Everything Everywhere All At Once
- Julia Roberts - Ticket to Paradise
- Sandra Bullock - The Lost City
- Lesley Manville - Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris
Supporting Actor:
- Ke Huy Quan - Everything Everywhere All At Once
- Brendan Gleeson - The Banshees of Inisherin
- Brad Pitt - Babylon
- Paul Dano - The Fabelmans
- Eddie Redmayne - The Good Nurse
Supporting Actress:
- Jean Smart - Babylon
- Claire Foy - Women Talking
- Kerry Condon - The Banshees of Inisherin
- Janelle Monae - Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery
- Hong Chau - The Whale
Original Score:
- The Fabelmans
- Babylon
- Avatar: The Way of Water
- Women Talking
- Pinocchio
Original Song:
- “Hold My Hand” from Top Gun: Maverick
- “Carolina” from Where the Crawdads Sing
- “Lift Me Up” from Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
- “Ciao Papa” from Pinocchio
- “Do A Little Good" from Spirited
Animated Feature
- Pinocchio
- Turning Red
- Strange World
- My Father’s Dragon
- Puss in Boots: The Last Wish
7 votes -
Jimmy Kimmel to host the 2023 Oscars
6 votes -
The execs behind the MoviePass debacle are now facing criminal charges
6 votes -
We have officially submitted ‘Terrifier 2’ for Oscar consideration because it’s too funny not to
7 votes -
Nice guys (and gals) finish first? How likability and popularity help Oscar contenders
2 votes -
How ‘Pig’ became Nicolas Cage’s cash cow. After making fifteen indies in the span of a few years, the storied action star has recaptured the studios’ attention — raising both his profile and his quote
13 votes -
Gotham Awards: ‘Tár,’ ‘Aftersun’ lead nominees
5 votes -
James Gunn and Peter Safran named co-chairmen and CEOs of DC Studios
9 votes -
How ‘Terrifier 2’ slashed its way to box office success
4 votes -
Marvel, DC among last bastion for supersized paydays
3 votes -
Movie theaters want more from Netflix, but the streaming giant isn't ready to budge on its release model
10 votes -
What would have gotten nominated had there been ten nominees each year
Switching gears from last week’s post. After 2010, the Academy decided to switch from having a set 10 list of nominees to having a sliding scale. Meaning that each movie had to get at least a...
Switching gears from last week’s post.
After 2010, the Academy decided to switch from having a set 10 list of nominees to having a sliding scale. Meaning that each movie had to get at least a certain percentage of number one votes in order to secure a Best Picture nomination. This would lead to anywhere from 5 to 10 Best Picture nominees. But the math made it so that only 8 or 9 movies would get a Picture nomination. This was the rule until this past year (when CODA won). Why did they decide to switch to a sliding scale? No one knows for sure. Some speculate it was because indie darling The Winter’s Bone made it in over box office hit The Town. Others point to complaints from Academy member’s who couldn’t think of 10 movies to nominate.
Ever since then though, those of us into awards have wondered what would have made it in had the Oscar’s kept that set 10 line-up. Here’s what I think would have gotten in. I think some of these might be shocking to some of you.
2011:
Already in: The Artist, The Descendants, Hugo, Midnight in Paris, The Help, Moneyball, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, War Horse, and The Tree of Life
Next in line: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Other possibility: Bridesmaids
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo was nominated at the DGA, something usually reserved for movies in the top 5. It was also nominated at PGA, the combo of which usually results in a Best Picture nomination. It also ended up winning Film Editing, which are usually Picture nominees.
Bridesmaids is another possibility, having been nominated for Original Screenplay and Supporting Actress as well as getting nominated for PGA and SAG Ensemble.
2012:
Already in: Argo, Life of Pi, Lincoln, Silver Linings Playbook, D’jango Unchained, Les Mis, Zero Dark Thirty, Amour, Beasts of the Southern Wild
Next in line: Skyfall
With a nomination at PGA plus winning the BAFTA for Best British Film along with several tech nominations, considerable critical acclaim and a billion dollars, makes Skyfall an easy choice for Best Picture.
2013:
Already in: 12 Years A Slave, Gravity, American Hustle, The Wolf of Wall Street, Dallas Buyers Club, Nebraska, Captain Phillips, Her, Philomena
Next in line: Blue Jasmine
Woody Allen’s last Oscar success, getting nominations for Original Screenplay, Lead Actress, and Supporting Actress. There’s nothing else that would have made Picture, and this made PGA.
2014:
Already in: Birdman, Boyhood, The Imitation Game, The Grand Budapest Hotel, American Sniper, The Theory of Everything, Whiplash, Selma
Next in line: Foxcatcher and Interstellar
Other possibilities: Mr Turner, Nightcrawler, Gone Girl
With nominations in Director, Lead Actor, Supporting Actor, and Original Screenplay, Foxcatcher is an easy 9th place. In fact it’s odd that it missed a Best Picture nomination to begin with.
The tricky part with this year is what came in 10th. Nightcrawler and Gone Girl had similar awards trajectories including getting nominations at PGA (although Gone Girl was helped by being a box office hit). They ultimately both missed crucial nominations. Nightcrawler missed Lead Actor for Jake Gyllenhaal (in favor of Bradley Cooper in American Sniper) and Gone Girl missed a nomination in Adapted Screenplay (in favor of Inherent Vice). Interstellar recieved many technical nomintations and was a big hit with audiences, which distinguishes itself from Mr. Turner which recieved the same amount of nominations.
2015:
Already in: Spotlight, The Revenant, The Big Short, Mad Mad: Fury Road, The Martian, Room, Brooklyn, Bridge of Spies
Next in Line: Carol and Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Other Possibilties: Straight Outta Compton, Ex Machina, Sicario, Inside Out, The Hateful Eight
This was another year where the 9th place was very clear (with several technical nomiations as well as nominations in Lead Actress, Supporting Actress, and Adapted Screenplay for Carol).
But 10th place was muddy. All of these movies have their own reasons for making Picture (Original Screenplay nominations for Straight Outta Compton, Ex Machina, and Inside Out and several tech nominations for Sicario and The Hateful Eight). But I think what would have made the cut was Star Wars. It got several tech nominations, including a nomination in Film Editing which is usually only reserved for Picture nominees. As well as incredible hype, box office prowess, and pretty good reviews. Star Wars would have distinguished itself while the other more typical prestige contenders would split the vote.
2016:
Already in: Moonlight, La La Land, Manchester by the Sea, Arrival, Hacksaw Ridge, Hidden Figures, Lion, Fences, Hell or High Water
Next in line: Jackie
There wasn’t really an alternative here as PGA and WGA were busy nominating Deadpool. And movies like Nocturnal Animals and 20th Century Women severely underperformed.
Plus, Fox Searchlight was backing this film and they’re usually powerhouse campaigners.
2017:
Already in: The Shape of Water, Three Billboards, Get Out, Lady Bird, Dunkirk, Darkest Hour, The Post, Phantom Thread, Call Me By Your Name
Next in line: I, Tonya
Other possibilities: Baby Driver, Blade Runner 2049
I, Tonya got nominated for Lead and Supporting Actress and Film Editing. Baby Driver got nominated for the two sound categories and Film Editing (same nominations as Ford vs Ferrari) and Blade Runner got nominated in a lot of tech categories and won Cinematography, which are usually only Best Picture nominees.
However, I, Tonya had a lot going for it. Including the lack of genre bias (as opposed to Baby Driver and Blade Runner), and a Supporting Actress win for Allison Janney.
2018:
Already in: Green Book, Roma, The Favourite, Blackkklansman, Bohemian Rhapsody, A Star is Born, Vice, Black Panther
Next in line: If Beale Street Could Talk and Cold War
Other possibilities: First Man, Mary Poppins Returns
Beale Street is an easy 9th, having been nominated for Adapted Screenplay and Original Score, and having won Supporting Actress.
10th could go a couple of ways. Cold War was nominated for Director and Cinematography (as well as International). It had great critical reception, won an award at Cannes, and Amazon ended up prioritizing it after Beauitful Boy kind of flopped.
First Man bombed at the box office and severely underperformed with nominations. Missing things that were supposedly locks, including Cinematography, Film Editing, Adapted Screenplay, and Supporting Actress and even missing Original Score in which it was supposedly the front-runner (which is what led to Black Panther winning). Even then it got a few noms and maybe could have limped it’s way to the 10th spot.
Mary Poppins Returns ended up underperforming throughout the season. But unlike First Man, Mary Poppins Returns was a box office hit, and only missed one nomination (Lead Actress). There’s definitely an argument to be made that this was 10th, and I think it would come quite close to making it.
2019:
Already in: Parasite, 1917, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, The Irishman, Joker, Jojo Rabbit, Marriage Story, Little Women, Ford vs Ferrari
Next in line: Knives Out
Other possibility: The Two Popes.
Knives Out got nomianted at PGA and was nominated for Original Screenplay. It was also a box office hit at a time when the Oscar’s were moving towards nominating more of those.
The Two Popes was nominated for Lead Actor, Supporting Actor, and Adapted Screenplay. But, Netflix struggles with more than two movies at a time (as we’ve seen in recent years with them missing Picture with Tick Tick Boom and Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom). And Knives Out had more passion.
2020: Already in: Nomadland, The Trial of the Chicago 7, Minari, Promising Young Woman, Mank, Sound of Metal, The Father, Judas and the Black Messiah
Next in line: Borat Subsequent Moviefilm and News of the World
Other possibilities: Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, One Night in Miami
Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, while critically liked, had incredibly low audience scores. It ended up missing a crucial Adapted Screenaply nomination. One Night in Miami was really weak throughout the season and Amazon ended up switching all their resources to Sound of Metal. So I don’t think either of these films would make the Picture line-up at the end of the day.
Borat got nominated for Adapted Screenplay (over Ma Rainey) and Supporitng Actress. It was also nominated at PGA and won the Comedy Globe. Maria Bakalova was also the runner-up in Supporting Actress. Borat was a big hit, everyone was talking about it, and it hit the zeitgeist in a way that few streaming films do. It was such a strong reflection of the COVID era, I can’t imagine it misses Picture at the end of the day.
News of the World had a lot of below-the-line support. And while it didn’t have a lot of passion, it was better liked than Ma Rainey and One Night in Miami, at least by audiences. It scratched a crowd-pleasing oscar bait itch that not many films did during this time.
And that’s it.
3 votes -
What would have been nominated for Best Picture if there were five nominees each year
The academy expanded the line-up after snubbing The Dark Knight in Picture in favor of Oscar bait The Reader. They received so much backlash that they reverted to nominating 10 nominees each year,...
The academy expanded the line-up after snubbing The Dark Knight in Picture in favor of Oscar bait The Reader. They received so much backlash that they reverted to nominating 10 nominees each year, something that hadn’t been done since the 40s.
While there are now multiple Best Picture nominees each year, each year there are a designated “Top 5.” As in the films that would have made the cut pre-expansion. Here’s a list of possible Top 5 movies, there’s a lot of argument about which movie was which but this is generally what is accepted/kind of what I think.
2009: The Hurt Locker, Avatar, Inglorious Basterds, Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire, Up in the Air
All 5 movies were nominated for Director. 4 of the 5 were nominated for Film Editing (another mark of a top 5 film) and all except Avatar were nominated for Acting and Screenplay. Avatar got nominated in almost all the technical categories.
2010: The King’s Speech, The Social Network, The Fighter, Black Swan, True Grit
Barely misses the cut: Inception
Inception, unfortunately, undeperformed with nominations missing both Directing and Film Editing, and was never in contention for acting nominations. It misses in favor of True Grit which was a late-breaker and over-performed in nominations.
2011: The Artist, The Descendants, Hugo, Midnight in Paris, The Help
Barely misses: Moneyball
The Help arguably underperformed with nominations but it was such a big hit that I’d imagine it would still make Best Picture.
2012: Argo, Lincoln, Life of Pi, Silver Linings Playbook, D’jango Unchained
Misses: Zero Dark Thirty, Les Miserables
Zero Dark Thirty started dying out throughout the season, and Les Mis was more of a British thing. D’jango had a lot of passion and ended up becoming the front-runner in Original Screenplay and Supporting Actor.
2013: 12 Years A Slave, Gravity, American Hustle, The Wolf of Wall Street, Dallas Buyers Club
Misses: Nebraska, Captain Phillips
Dallas Buyers Club over-performed and got nominated for Film Editing and Original Screenplay when it wasn’t expected to.
2014: Birdman, Boyhood, The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation Game, American Sniper
Misses: The Theory of Everything
Similar thing with Les Mis where Theory of Everything was more of a British thing.
2015: Spotlight, The Revenant, The Big Short, Mad Max: Fury Road, The Martian
Misses: Room
The Martian missed director but it had more nominations and it was a hit at the box office. Although Room probably was pretty close.
2016: Moonlight, La La Land, Manchester by the Sea, Arrival, Hacksaw Ridge
Misses: Hidden Figures
Hidden Figures maybe would have made the line-up considering it was such a big hit. But Hacksaw won too much stuff and Mel Gibson had a strong comeback narrative. Gross.
2017: The Shape of Water, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, Dunkirk, Get Out, Lady Bird
There is no real alternative to these five.
2018: Green Book, Roma, The Favourite, Blackkklansman, Bohemian Rhapsody
Misses: Vice, A Star is Born
Bohemian Rhapsody was a phenomenon and won four Oscars. It would have gotten a Best Picture nomination easily.
2019: Parasite, 1917, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, The Irishman, Joker
Jojo Rabbit was close. But four of these got 10 nominations and Parasite won Best Picture.
2020: Nomadland, The Trial of the Chicago 7, Promising Young Woman, Minari, Mank
Misses: The Father
2021: The Power of the Dog, Belfast, Dune, West Side Story, King Richard
Misses: Licorice Pizza
At the time of nominations CODA would not have made the cut. It is the first Best Picture winner to be bottom 5.
5 votes -
'Black Adam' was originally rated R by MPAA
6 votes -
Terrifier 2 is making people v-vo-vomit in the theaters
4 votes -
Bill Murray faces avalanche of new accusations
18 votes -
Brendan Fraser on his "comeback" in 'The Whale' and defying Hollywood's obesity prejudices
3 votes -
‘Bros’ director, producer open up about “confusing” opening weekend and the fierce debate it sparked
8 votes -
‘Where The Crawdads Sing’ hits high note at domestic box office with $90M
4 votes -
Hollywood says farewell to Chinese investment bonanza
9 votes -
Why did Billy Eichner’s ‘Bros’ bomb at the box office? Straight people aren’t entirely to blame
12 votes -
Moral clauses: Why a red scare tactic revived in the #MeToo era could lead to a fight with the guilds
3 votes -
The visual effects crisis
4 votes