Awards Tracker

All things Oscars, Emmys, Grammys and Tonys

Poll: Who will win the DGA Award?

January 28, 2011 |  5:27 pm

The movie that wins the Directors Guild of America Award usually bags best picture and director at the Oscars, of course. Many pundits believe that things may be different this year, though. While David Fincher ("The Social Network") is widely believed to be a cinch to win DGA and the Oscar too for helming, there's suddenly major buzz for "The King's Speech" in the race for best picture. If "Speech" has really been a rumbling volcano all along and we pundits just didn't take it seriously, then it might even blast through the DGA Awards with a surprise victory for Tom Hooper. Possible? Pipe in with your opinion below. The guild prize gets doled out on Saturday night.

-- Tom O'Neil

 


If I Ran the Oscars: Comedian Jon Manfrellotti takes a shot

January 28, 2011 |  4:30 pm

Manfrellotti In this interview series, we ask a host of famous free thinkers to recast the Oscars in their own image. Please direct your attention to our next presenter: actor-comedian Jon Manfrellotti, who steals scenes weekly as Manfro the bookie on TNT’s “Men of a Certain Age”:

 Now that the nominations have been released, which films and performers do you think the academy voters will pick to win the Oscars this year?

For best picture, I think it’s going to be “The Social Network.” Everybody and his brother is on a computer, so now they can go online and tell each other, “I TOLD you it was going to be ‘The Social Network’!”

They’re probably going to give best actress to Natalie Portman. She made a weird face into the camera, and had a lesbian scene, so she’ll get it. On the men’s side, it’ll be Christian Bale for supporting actor, because he lost weight, and it’ll probably be Colin Firth for “The King’s Speech.” You gotta feel bad for a king who lisps.

So if you were in charge of the academy, who would go home with Oscars this year?

Me personally, I’d give it to Jeff Bridges, because I love him. I think he’s great. I know he won last year, and he’s playing the same character but this time with an eye patch. But he still pulled it off. And Hailee Steinfeld blew me away. She was phenomenal. But man, where do you go from there? Better go right into rehab and get it over with.

Which films and performers from the past do you feel deserved the Oscar but didn’t receive one?

Glenn Close should have won for “Dangerous Liaisons.” She lost to Cher in “Moonstruck.” Come on, was Sonny stuffing the ballot? And “Raging Bull” lost to “Ordinary People.” It should have been called “Ordinary Movie.” You talk about a boring movie -– instead of anesthesia, they should show “Ordinary People” before surgery.

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How the first animated sequence in a 'Harry Potter' movie came about

January 28, 2011 |  3:30 pm

Harry Potter 2 
We asked animation director Ben Hibon to discuss the animated sequence in "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1," which picked up two Oscar nominations, one for art direction and one for visual effects. Here's what he had to say:

"This is the first animated sequence ever to appear in a Harry Potter film, so it had to be distinctive and special. It’s not animation as we might think of it today; it is a moving illustration of the story being read aloud by Hermione — the story of the Deathly Hallows. The fact that the sequence would be explaining the origin of the title made it all the more important.

"In a moment that takes our central characters to a world of ancient fables, the titular tale of the Three Brothers, found in the book ‘The Tales of Beedle the Bard,’ has an eerie undertone, reminiscent of the timeless Grimms’ fairy tales, which I found particularly relevant for us. Although they are labeled as ‘children’s tales,’ they often tell stories of dark kingdoms and sinister characters. We wanted the audience to experience the story as if through the imagination of a young child.

"The work of artist Lotte Reiniger from the 1930s was another early reference. Her silhouette-style stop-motion animations are beautifully handcrafted and captured the naïve visual tone we were after. We also looked at Asian shadow-play, which is visually striking, very intricate and yet so beautifully simple. The technique is basic, but the end result is particularly charming and engaging. There’s something so ingenious about projecting shadows onto a simple cloth.

"The shapes and motions can be very enigmatic and leave a lot of scope for invention, experimentation and interpretation. A shadow play evokes a sense of wonder and enchantment. It can take one’s imagination beyond what’s actually on the screen. What you don’t see is as important as what you see. Of course, the characters are the centerpiece of the story, a set of elongated human-like dark silhouettes.

"Their designs are reminiscent of handcrafted wooden puppets; their gestures are limited to basic articulation. The crude feel of the animation accentuates the characters’ theatrical performances, the simple outlines drawing our attention to the smallest of details — each subtle hand movement, each head motion gets interpreted as another nuance of human emotion.

"Animation is the art of smoke and mirrors, lights and shadows, and the team of artists behind this piece are true magicians."

 — Ben Hibon

Photo from Warner Bros.


Poll: Can Geoffrey Rush pull off an upset victory at SAG Awards?

January 28, 2011 |  2:30 pm

Kings-speech_rush

Nearly every pundit on the planet predicts Christian Bale ("The Fighter") will win the Screen Actors Guild Award for best supporting actor this Sunday. Out of 19 experts polled by Gold Derby, 16 pick Bale and only three opt for Geoffrey Rush ("The King's Speech").

Two of those Rush disciples include me and Tariq Khan (Fox News). Tariq is basing his forecast on an informal polling of SAG members he's been conducting vigorously in New York. He's discovering enormous support for "The King's Speech," which isn't surprising since "King" and "The Social Network" were the only two DVD screeners sent to all 98,000 guild members. How many voters went to theaters to see "The Fighter"? Quite a few, yes, but all? In past years, movies sent via DVD to all members have done very well -- like "Inglourious Basterds," which won best ensemble last year after being sent en masse to SAG members.

Rush has won three SAG Awards to date: best film actor for "Shine" (1996), best film ensemble for "Shakespeare in Love" (1998), and best TV film actor for "The Life and Death of Peter Sellers" (2004). Bale was nominated for best film ensemble for "3:10 to Yuma" (2007), but lost to the cast of "No Country for Old Men."

-- Tom O'Neil


Sundance Institute names Alfred P. Sloan prize winner

January 28, 2011 |  2:29 pm

Mike Cahill "Another Earth," directed by Mike Cahill and written by Cahill and Brit Marling, is the recipient of the 2011 Alfred P. Sloan Feature Film Prize at this year's Sundance Film Festival.

The Sundance Institute announced the news Friday afternoon.

The winners will receive a $20,000 cash award. The prize is presented to an outstanding feature film that has a theme focusing on science and technology or has a scientist, engineer or mathematician as a major character.

"Another Earth" is a sci-fi romance starring William Mapother and Brit Marling.

For more information, go to Sundance.org/festival.

 -- Susan King

Photo: William Mapother, left, and Mike Cahill, who directed and co-wrote "Another Earth." Credit: Sundance Film Festival


Poll: What will win the SAG Award for best ensemble?

January 28, 2011 |  1:30 pm

Sag-awards

Eight days ago, before "The King's Speech" won the Producers Guild of America Award and led with the most Oscar nominations, we asked you what will win that key Screen Actors Guild Award for best ensemble this Sunday. Poll results: "The Fighter" (33%), "The Social Network" (29%), "The King's Speech" (21%), "The Kids Are All Right" (8%), "Black Swan" (7%).

Now let's ask again. The SAG ensemble award is considered to be so important because it has a reputation for predicting best picture at the Oscars, but, truth be told, it's a tenuous link. Over the past 15 years, they've overlapped seven times. However, two of those occasions were hugely significant because the SAG victories foretold upsets to come at the Oscars: "Shakespeare in Love" (1998) and "Crash" (2005). At this point, "The King's Speech" is gaining such momentum that its Oscar victory as best picture wouldn't be considered an upset. Indeed, most pundits favor it to win.

According to Gold Derby's poll of 19 experts, eight predict "The Social Network" win will best ensemble, seven pick "The Fighter," four (including me) say "The King's Speech."

-- Tom O'Neil

Photo: SAG Awards


Sundance 2011: Roadside embraces 'The Future'

January 28, 2011 | 12:33 pm

Future
Indie darling Miranda July has seen her bit of surrealism, "The Future," sold to Roadside Attractions.

It's the company's third acquisition of the Sundance Film Festival, after co-acquisitions for Kevin Spacey's Wall Street drama "Margin Call" (with Lionsgate) and James Marsh's science-tinged doc "Project Nim" (with HBO).

The company, which last year bought "Winter's Bone" in Park City, Utah, plans to release the movie later in 2011. United Talent Agency represented the filmmakers in the sale.

July's film, her first since her breakout "Me and You and Everyone We Know" six years ago, alternates between the perspectives of an ownerless cat and the 30-something couple prepared to adopt her. July stars opposite Hamish Linklater; the film also dabbles in science-fiction and time-bending genres.

Also on Friday, Focus Features acquired rights to "Pariah," Dee Rees' debut that opened the festival.

--Steven Zeitchik in Park City, Utah

twitter.com/ZeitchikLAT

Photo: Miranda July and Hamish Linklater in 'The Future.'  Credit: Sundance Film Festival


The secrets of 'Black Swan' visual effects -- How did they do it?

January 28, 2011 | 11:39 am

In Darren Aronofsky’s psychological thriller “Black Swan,” an increasingly imbalanced ballerina, Nina Sayers (Natalie Portman), struggles to break free of her inhibitions. Cast as the lead in a production of “Swan Lake,” Nina perfectly embodies the purity and reserve of the white swan but falls well short of finding the aggressive sexuality and passion of its counterpart, the black swan. She is pushed ever harder by the company director to let loose, to go beyond the technical aspects of the dance and find the emotional resonance of the darker character. Yet, through weeks of rehearsals, she never captures it. The night of the show, as Nina’s mental state grows ever shakier, she suddenly breaks free to transform, quite literally, into the stunning and seductive black swan as Tchaikovsky’s score thunders around her.

-- Elena Howe 


Sundance 2011: IFC, Sony Pictures Worldwide find 'Salvation'

January 27, 2011 |  8:35 pm

Brosn
Another day, another major deal at the Sundance Film Festival.

IFC and Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquistions Group have teamed up to acquire North American rights to "Salvation Boulevard," George Ratliff's comedic story about the magnetic pastor of a megachurch pastor (Pierce Brosnan) who gets himself into a host of trouble. Greg Kinnear co-stars as a congregant who gets caught up in the shenanigans.

It's the first buy of the festival for the Sony division and the third for IFC. The company previously picked up another spiritually themed film, Patrick Wilson-starrer "The Ledge," about a standoff between an atheist and a fundamentalist, as well as Ewan McGregor's science fiction-romance "Perfect Sense."

Ratliff previously came to the festival with the literary thriller "Joshua," which sold for nearly $4 million at Sundance in 2007 but underperformed at the box office.

The news follows a pair of other theatrical acqusitions: Lionsgate acquired Lee Tamahori's Uday Hussein drama "The Devil's Double" and Roadside Attractions picked up theatrical rights to James Marsh's science-experiment doc "Project Nim," after HBO previously acquired television rights.

--Steven Zeitchik

twitter.com/ZeitchikLAT

Photo: A still from 'Salvation Boulevard.' Credit: Sundance Film Festival


Is Cher to blame for Diane Warren's Oscar snub?

January 27, 2011 |  5:38 pm

Cher burlesque

Why isn't  "You Haven't Seen the Last of Me" -- Diane Warren's song from "Burlesque" –- nominated for an Academy Award? It recently won the Golden Globe, so it's shocking that it's absent from the Oscars' list.

The song's crooner, Cher, expressed outrage at first, tweeting to her fans: "We didn't get a nomination 4 best song ! That sucks ! Diane's song is so beautiful ! It's hard to understand how u win."

After pondering the snub further, Cher tweeted more thoughts: "The Golden Globe 4 BEST SONG & not even get nominated by the OSCARS? Oh well it is what it is ,,,, the sun is still shining !"

Then Cher made a surprising suggestion: "Maybe she would have had a better chance if someone else was singing it ?!! IT JUST CANT B HER SONG."

Why would Cher blame herself? Maybe because she just got nominated for a Razzie Award for her campy musical turn in "Burlesque."

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