Christoph Waltz, the multilingual Austrian actor whose portrayal of a playfully sadistic Nazi energized the Second World War revenge fantasy Inglourious Basterds, won the best supporting-actor award. Waltz, who was front-runner for the award since the movie premiered at the Cannes Film Festival last May, praised the “unorthodox methods of navigation” of director Quentin Tarantino, for bringing the good ship Inglourious Basterds safely into port “with flying colours.”
The Hurt Locker-Avatar faceoff was complicated by controversy. First, one of Hurt Locker’s producers, Nicholas Chartier, was denied admission to the ceremony for breaking one of the academy rules against denigrating an opponent: He sent out e-mails to a group of voters asking them to vote for his movie rather than Avatar. Then, just before the voting deadline, an
3 comments:
Simon,
A big, big upset. Probably bigger than the upset of Crash over then favorite Brokeback Mountain. I have never seen Crash, I think it has something to do with drug trafficking, but I'm not a big fan of Brokeback Mountain either. I have not seen any of the nominated movies, so I can't really say if one movie is deserving over the other. Let's just say academy members are not ready for any futuristic, effects-laden, computer-generated, fantasy movie. Who even remembers Annie Hall as Best Picture, which beat the now classic Star Wars by George Lucas? Time will be the best judge of all, not the 3000 or so Academy members who vote for the awards. If we were to vote now, which of these pictures would win: Rocky or Taxi Driver, In the Heat of the Night or The Graduate and Bonnie and Clyde, Around the World in 80 Days or The Ten Commandments, The Greatest Show on Earth or High Noon, Ordinary People or Raging Bull. The first listed won the OSCAR. But the losers have become classics.
I totally agree with you Rod! Share the same sentiments.
Rod,
Napanood ko yung CRASH, pero hindi yung BROKEBACK. Doon na ako sa classics vs doon sa Oscar winners.
Auggie
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