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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#121 | |||
ohhhh baby
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![]() ![]() Ack, no time to read rest of thread...
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#122 | |
Kink of Swank
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Similarly, in the mob-genre - yeah, The Departed was rock-solid. And only a handful in that genre stand out as fantastic (one of them by Marty himself). I just don't think rock-solid necessarily qualifies for Best Picture. The Departed was well-crafted. Its awards for editing and screenplay were well-deserved imo. And yeah, before he dies, give the award to Scorcese for any decent thing he's nominated for. But it rankles that Best Picture went to a remake, just as I bemoan that the best actor and actress nods went to real-person immitators. There was less CREATION in these awarded films and roles, and I think that detracts from their overall greatness. BTW, the last re-make to win best picture was Ben-Hur in 1959 |
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#123 | ||
Kink of Swank
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Well, the one right there on the tower of H&H, adjacent to the Kodak Theater, featured on the Oscar broadcast, 40-feet all and a hundred feet in the air was the one blaring "I'm the King of the World!" Yeah, it's a quote from Titantic. But who can not be reminded of James Cameron's "uppity" yell from the podium upon accepting the Best Picture Oscar? It set a new level for acceptance uppity, one that will reign for generations I think ... and Mirren's was hardly a blip in comparison. Heheh, that was a subtle jab at your husband. He recently posted a reference to a live journal comment here that no one but he and I would have understood ... and I was just trying to point out in a vaguely humorous way that some of us know each other so well, we are not necessarily responding to merely what's posted when we post a reply on the LoT. Quote:
![]() I thought it was obvious that line was one of my standard exaggerations for dramatic effect. But did you not tell me you had a problem with West Bank Story because you perceived an anti-Israeli stance?? If you hadn't, my mistake ... and I apologize. (But my notes say otherwise.) |
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#124 | |||
lost in the fog
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For instance: Best Actor: * Yul Brynner -- The King and I {"The King"} * Alec Guinness -- The Bridge on the River Kwai {"Colonel Nicholson"} * Paul Scofield -- A Man for All Seasons {"Sir Thomas More"} * George C. Scott -- Patton {"General George S. Patton, Jr."} * Gene Hackman -- The French Connection {"Jimmy 'Popeye' Doyle"} * Robert De Niro -- Raging Bull {"Jake LaMotta"} * Ben Kingsley -- Gandhi {"Mahatma Gandhi"} * Daniel Day-Lewis -- My Left Foot {"Christy Brown"} * Jeremy Irons -- Reversal of Fortune {"Claus Von Bulow"} * Geoffrey Rush -- Shine {"David Helfgott"} * Adrien Brody -- The Pianist {"Wladyslaw Szpilman"} * Jamie Foxx -- Ray {"Ray Charles"} * Philip Seymour Hoffman -- Capote {"Truman Capote"} Best Actress: ACTRESS * Ingrid Bergman -- Anastasia {"The Woman"} * Susan Hayward -- I Want To Live! {"Barbara Graham"} * Anne Bancroft -- The Miracle Worker {"Annie Sullivan"} * Julie Andrews -- Mary Poppins {"Mary Poppins"} (Yes, she's a real person) * Katharine Hepburn -- The Lion in Winter {"Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine"} [NOTE: A tie. The other winner in this category was Barbra Streisand ('Funny Girl').] * Barbra Streisand -- Funny Girl {"Fanny Brice"} [NOTE: A tie. The other winner in this category was Katharine Hepburn ('The Lion in Winter').] * Sissy Spacek -- Coal Miner's Daughter {"Loretta Lynn"} * Susan Sarandon -- Dead Man Walking {"Sister Helen Prejean"} * Hilary Swank -- Boys Don't Cry {"Brandon Teena/Teena Brandon"} * Julia Roberts -- Erin Brockovich {"Erin Brockovich"} * Nicole Kidman -- The Hours {"Virginia Woolf"} * Charlize Theron -- Monster {"Aileen Wuornos"} * Reese Witherspoon -- Walk the Line {"June Carter"} * Helen Mirren -- The Queen {"The Queen"} Best Supporting Actress: * Shelley Winters -- The Diary of Anne Frank {"Mrs. Van Daan"} * Patty Duke -- The Miracle Worker {"Helen Keller"} * Estelle Parsons -- Bonnie and Clyde {"Blanche Barrow"} * Vanessa Redgrave -- Julia {"Julia"} * Maureen Stapleton -- Reds {"Emma Goldman"} * Brenda Fricker -- My Left Foot {"Mrs. Brown"} * Judi Dench -- Shakespeare in Love {"Queen Elizabeth I"} * Marcia Gay Harden -- Pollock {"Lee Krasner"} * Jennifer Connelly -- A Beautiful Mind {"Alicia Nash"} * Cate Blanchett -- The Aviator {"Katharine Hepburn"} Best Supporting Actor: * Joseph Schildkraut -- The Life of Emile Zola {"Captain Alfred Dreyfus"} * Walter Brennan -- The Westerner {"Judge Roy Bean"} * Edmund Gwenn -- Miracle on 34th Street {"Kris Kringle"} (Yes, I believe) * Anthony Quinn -- Viva Zapata! {"Eufemio Zapata"} * Anthony Quinn -- Lust for Life {"Paul Gauguin"} * Jason Robards -- All the President's Men {"Ben Bradlee"} * Jason Robards -- Julia {"Dashiell Hammett"} * Martin Landau -- Ed Wood {"Bela Lugosi"} * Jim Broadbent -- Iris {"John Bayley"} Of course, not all of the above may stand the test of time as being Oscar worthy, but playing a real person in screen is not a new thing. There are some stellar performances in this bunch if you ask me (and you didn't). ![]() Quote:
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#125 | |
You broke your Ramadar!
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1961: ![]() 1968: 1997: ![]() 2002: ![]() Maybe if Nicholson had a song or two...
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#126 |
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I have a problem with actors portraying someone who's either still alive or I've seen actual film/tape of, for example JFK or Queen Elizabeth. If they're portraying an actual person, but someone I'm not familair with say Erin Brockavich or Henry VIII then it doesn't bother me as much because I don't have a reference point.
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#127 |
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I think there is a distinction to be made between a remake and two movies using the same source material. Sure, it is a fuzzy line but I think one of some distinction.
James Cameron's Titanic was made without really any input from the earlier filmed versions of the story. It is hard to argue that a filmed version of Shakespeare (that is faithful to the play) would be a remake of another faithfully filmed version. 2002's Chicago is a filming of Bob Fosse's book not so much the original Watkins version (which is what Ginger Rogers' is based on ultimately being a remake of the 1927 silent film; the original play was not a musical). The Departed is most certainly a remake. A Night to Remember is most certainly not. Then things get fuzzier for the others. |
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#128 |
Kink of Swank
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#129 |
You broke your Ramadar!
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Fuzzy is exactly my point. If one is going to argue that less "creation... detracts from overall greatness," then many of the Best Picture winners since 1959 (the arbitrary year we're talking about) have been based on stories created before the film. Not including the ones I mentioned above, you still have:
1962 - biopic (Lawrence of Arabia) 1963 - novel adaptation (Tom Jones) 1964 - stage musical (My Fair Lady) 1965 - stage musical (The Sound of Music) 1966 - stage play (A Man For All Seasons) 1967 - novel adaptation (In The Heat of the Night) 1969 - novel adaptation (Midnight Cowboy) 1970 - biopic (Patton) 1971 - non-fiction book (fictionalized) (The French Connection) 1972 - novel adaptation (The Godfather) 1973 - non-fiction book (fictionalized) (The Sting) 1975 - novel adaptation (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest) etc etc.
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#130 |
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I don't remember if I posted it here. A breakdown of the overrepresentation of "mimicry" roles in the recent acting nominations? Something like 40% over the last four years have gone to portrayals of real people where in the previous five years it was more like 20%.
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