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Posts Tagged: The Help

Oscar 2012 Winner Predictions: Adapted Screenplay

The Descendants

Conventional wisdom suggested that adaptations of the biggest bestsellers would make up much of this year's shortlist—barring, perhaps, the sourly gynecidal Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and its nightstick-in-the-naughty-hole vengeance. So it's something of a blessing that the 100-odd-page translations of Kathryn Stockett's The Help and Jonathan Safran Foer's Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, whose own wisdom is quite conventional indeed, weren't counted among those movies' recognized achievements. The best-known tome to see its adaptation make it into the final five is John le Carré's inimitable classic Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, just one reason this category boasts one of the 2012 Oscar season's finest lineups. Since politics can never be ignored, it's worth noting that Tinker Tailor has an extra edge here considering nominee Peter Straughan's wife and co-writer, Bridget O'Connor, passed away before the film hit theaters. But then again, such a sad truth may be precisely what got the unsure hopeful over the nomination hump, and a second sympathy-boosted triumph doesn't seem likely. Continue Reading »




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Oscar Winner Predictions 2012: Supporting Actress

Octavia Spencer

It's more than just a little politically chancy but still unavoidable to look at Octavia Spencer's sunny Oscar odds though the filter of co-star Viola Davis's ascendance in the Best Actress category. But if voters are capable of feeling all right with themselves for rewarding Jessica Chastain's miracle year with what most cognizant viewers recognize as one of the least distinguished of her six or seven roles last year, then we don't feel quite as bad regarding Spencer and Davis as a mutually beneficial tag team, a thematic (ahem) salt-and-pepper-shaker duo that makes audiences feel mighty proud about honoring both. If anything, it's Spencer's role as The Help's secret ingredient-wielding Minny Jackson (the maid who knows her value and thus must remind herself "no sass" even when walking up to Chastain's absurdly understanding heiress) that strikes the most direct hit upon the movie's target audience. Davis's Aibileen absorbs an unjust world's every last dribble of shit, but Minny literally excretes it and serves it up with a smirk. In the end, both women get to dress down Bryce Dallas Howard's microcosmic representation of Southern evil, but only one of them has the satisfaction of sending her gagging out of the room. Continue Reading »




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Oscar 2012 Winner Predictions: Actress

Viola Davis

At this point, being a Meryl Streep diehard who also cares about Oscar hoopla is a kind of brutal self-flagellation. Year after year, be it a silver fox in a royalty role, a can't-miss Brit in a Holocaust film, or a rom-com sweetheart awarded for years of box-office gajillions, there's always someone younger, fresher, or less-anointed to make voters feel better about passing on Streep, their near-perennial Oscar queen. This year, of course, the guilt-free alternative is Viola Davis, whose movie-carrying brilliance in The Help is fortified by the unavoidable race discussion, which, whether you pray at the church of Tate Taylor or Tavis Smiley, is all but certain to catapult her to victory. Up to now, Streep and Davis have more or less split the precursor trophies, and Streep has a fresh Kennedy Center Honor and Berlinale career kudo in her corner, but it's next to impossible to imagine Davis's snowballing awards narrative being derailed in the place where it would wring the most tears. Yes, a 2012 Best Actress win for a black woman in a maid role sends all kinds of regressive messages, but stronger yet is the voter urge to self-congratulate by coloring Oscar history, however sad the truth of the matter. Indeed, Streep had better hope she stays in her seat, for a win might make her look as monstrous as the shrew she so embodies in The Iron Lady. Continue Reading »




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Links for the Day: Detroit Loves Clint Eastwood, Amazon Stores Coming Soon, Simpsons Promote Western Culture, Hollywood's Race Issue, & More

Clint Eastwood

Why Detroit loves Clint Eastwood.

And that Eastwood ad was David Gordon Green's best work in years.

The White House responds to Virginia anti-gay adoption bill.

Press Play kicks off its Oscar-prediction coverage.

Amazon stores might invade your neighborhood.

Josh Melnick and Water Murch in conversation.

Simpsons dolls banned in Iran as "promoters of Western culture."

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Oscar 2012 Winner Predictions: Animated Feature

Rango

Putting aside the Academy's shocking diss of Steven Spielberg's The Adventures of Tintin in this category, I was with Eric here at first: "I guess we should never underestimate this branch's desire to make the category look like it deserves to exist." The branch, after all, passed up Cars 2 and Happy Feet Two, films few seem willing to go out on a limb for—and Winnie the Pooh, well, that wasn't exactly the second coming of The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. But after rallying to see the five films that made the final cut, I'm thinking that singing penguins might have actually legitimized this category.

The most delightfully animated feature in this bunch, Kung Fu Panda 2 is still at best a slab of warmed-over holiday seconds, and one whose statistical chance of winning is perhaps smaller than Demián Bichir's. Then you have Puss in Boots, another glossy trifle from the House that Shrek Built that frequently, if shamelessly, brought a smile to the face of this recently anointed cat person. A better dissertation on family than either of them is The Cat in Paris, the wafer-thin but quaint account of a young French girl who discovers that her kitty moonlights as a jewel thief's partner in crime. The film gets my personal vote by virtue of being the most unpretentious and least corporate-looking nominee in the category. Continue Reading »




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Links for the Day: SAG Winners, DGA Winners, Sundance Winners, Romney Widens Lead Over Gingrich, Madonna's New Single, & More

Easy, Betty White

The Help cleaned up and Jean Dujardin pulled an upset at last night's Screen Actors Guild awards.

In other news of The Artist's march toward Oscar, Michel Hazanavicius beat out Fincher, Allen, Scorsese, and Payne at Saturday's DGA awards.

This year's Sundance Film Festival winners have also been announced.

A look back at the film and art career of the Eiffel Tower, a 122-year-old movie star prepping for her facelift.

Matt Zoller Seitz recaps the latest episode of HBO's Luck.

Over the weekend, Mitt Romney widened his lead over Newt Gingrich.

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Sundance Film Festival 2012: For Ellen and The House I Live In

For Ellen

So Yong Kim's latest feature, For Ellen, while certainly not an abject failure, is a disappointment nevertheless, and may cause concern to all those to whom the director's 2006 debut, In Between Days, was as dear as it remains to this writer. The story concerns a no-good, conspicuously disheveled rock singer, Joby (Paul Dano), who redeems his longstanding neglect of his five-year-old daughter by bonding with her on the eve of divorcing her mom. Joby's hectic, self-centered lifestyle is rendered in a succession of predominantly shallow-focused long takes of observational persistence as daring as it is tiresome.

Kim's deliberate diluting of dramatic elements of the plot to the point of its near-obliteration, so highly effective in the case of In Between Days, yields rather emaciated results in For Ellen. The reason is that there's a barely concealed generic mechanism at play here, built upon a trite premise of a prodigal father slowly winning back the affection of a cute neglected child by means of spontaneously shared fun. Even if Kim may wince at the comparison, she's not that far from mushy Kramer vs. Kramer territory when Dano wells up at the sight of his cute lil' girl banging out a garbled version of Für Elise on her electric piano. Continue Reading »




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Oscar 2012 Nomination Predictions: Picture

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

Anyone who's invested in the preposterous hoopla of Oscarology has suffered at least one headache while poring over the Academy's explanation-resistant math. So to ensure you needn't have the Excedrin within reach, let's keep the voting blather to a minimum and focus on what seem to be the most pivotal factors in this year's top race. First of all, as was the case in the past two years, a solid, conventional roster of five movies has emerged, despite a field that welcomes additional contenders (for the headache-free unwashed, those five are The Artist, The Descendants, The Help, Hugo, and Midnight in Paris). No pundit in the game will tell you those huggable favorites aren't done deals, so best to nudge them aside and hurry along.

Adjusted rules allow anywhere from five to 10 nominees to fight it out for Best Picture, and to test the new system, the Academy held mock recounts for every race over the past decade. Results were scattered, and many years produced more than five finalists, but none were able to pack the entire slate (ergo, fewer sore thumbs like The Blind Side dirtying up the ballot, to say the least). It's conceivable, then, that this year won't go 10-wide either, and the recounts help to justify an eight-nominee total that's felt just right for weeks. There are those who'll tell you the ironclad quintet is as far as the field will go, just as there are those who'll say preferential voting isn't all that different than it's always been. But if one is to accept conventional wisdom that first-place rankings are especially crucial, and that movies have to battle especially hard to join the elite pack, then predictions come down to which films seem believable as voters' picks for 2011's tip-top. Continue Reading »




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Oscar 2012 Nomination Predictions: Actress

Glenn Close

If you want a good cross-section of Oscar habits, look no further than this year's top five candidates for Best Actress. In Michelle Williams, you have the eternally baity case of star playing star, and this time the star being played just might be history's brightest. In Tilda Swinton, you have a classic case of Academy catch-up, wherein voters nominate a brilliant talent for minor work as a means to remedy past snubs. Category fraud is exemplified by Viola Davis, whose push as a leading star is, admittedly, a falsity of the filmmakers and not of any voting body, but who should nevertheless be considered as supporting. In Glenn Close, there's you're wholly undeserving knee-jerk nominee, armed with a shameless checklist of Oscar-y draws like gender-bending, homosexuality, uglification, makeup effects, period details, decades-long commitment, and "past-due" desperation. And as for Meryl Streep, well, she's an Oscar habit in and of herself, isn't she? Continue Reading »




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Oscar 2012 Nomination Predictions: Director

Terrence Malick

The directing race has boiled down to nine names, four of which you can pretty safely etch into stone. Michel Hazanavicius, whose surname becomes quite easy to spell after constant repetition, is your frontrunner, as both he and his film seem rather insurmountable at this point. Martin Scorsese is next in line for the prize, boosted by a victory at the Golden Globes and the bonus of being Martin Scorsese (if the Academy wanted to split picture and director for one big cine-stalgia duet, the Hugo helmer would surely be sitting pretty). Alexander Payne will hear his name called for The Descendants, a movie that should be snagging more love for its makers than for its blandly reliable star. And Woody Allen, Oscar Hall of Famer and all-around oxymoronic humanist misanthrope, is a shoo-in for his adorable, CliffsNotes time machine, Midnight in Paris. Continue Reading »




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Oscar 2012 Nomination Predictions: Adapted Screenplay

The Help

It's both unfair and too easy to shake out predictions for this category based on what is most likely to appeal to the Kindle Fire set. But with Harvey Weinstein's apparent disinterest in backing his own Coriolanus for anything taking out the only viable candidate in Olde English, this category is left without its usually stuffy literary pedigree. So be it. The plot points of Peter Straughan and Bridget O'Connor's adaptation of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy are complicated and abstract enough to count as an organizational form of iambic pentameter. Though any Oscar voter who hasn't read John le Carré's book is likely to come away from the movie with more questions than answers, the script's economy (by necessity, mostly) won't be ignored. Similarly, the efforts of Aaron Sorkin and Steven Zaillian (both previous winners) to make baseball statisticians' math-jizzing sound as clever as the pentateuch of Saint Benjamin Hecht will be regarded by fellow writers as the screenwriters' equivalent of striking paydirt with a Tumblr blog showcasing stock photos of smiling women eating salad. Continue Reading »




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Oscar 2012 Nomination Predictions: Supporting Actress

Jessica Chastain

Which performance will land Jessica Chastain her first Oscar nomination? Heading into awards season, that was the biggest question surrounding the Supporting Actress race, and with The Help having certainly surged ahead of films like The Tree of Life and Take Shelter, the question seems all but answered. Still, one could justifiably go to bat for each of the six supporting turns Chastain delivered last year. For instance, the otherwise mediocre spy thriller The Debt, an ensemble piece, unwittingly became a Chastain showcase, as the red-headed natural towered above everything around her while proving her wide range. Continue Reading »




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Oscar 2012 Nomination Predictions: Score

Drive

All this talk about Meryl Streep and very few are editorializing much on when the Academy will give John Williams an award just for being America's most Kennedy Center Honor-ific film composer. He's been trophied more often and more recently, but it's still been a pretty long stretch since 1993. Both Williams and Steven Spielberg have been laying low since the latest Indiana Jones movie blew up in everyone's face, but they've returned in tandem and it's hard to see how the Academy's music branch will be able to a) resist, and b) choose one over the other. So expect them to have their cake and eat it too, citing both the traditional Wagnerian triumphalism of War Horse (which, up until the last two weeks, seemed a frontrunner for double-digit nods) and the more varied, synth-assisted, Prokofiev-tinged themes from The Adventures of Tintin. Continue Reading »




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Oscar 2012 Nomination Predictions: Costume Design

Captain America: The First Avenger

While one hopes that those nominating for Costume Design will be keen to acknowledge the subtle ways that clothes complement character, like the vision obstruction caused by the bonnets in Kelly Reichardt's Meek's Cutoff or the dirtiness of the period duds in Bertrand Tavernier's The Princess of Montpensier, history has certainly shown that pomp and spectacle win the day. And if your pomp and spectacle are housed in a castle setting, all the better. So look for Anonymous, the year's flashiest bit of dolled-up royalty, to handily nab a slot here, if not the win. (There's plenty of precedent for this, as The Duchess, another frilly film with minimal Oscar traction, took the trophy three years back, and Shakespeare in Love, which also showcased Elizabeth I in all her lavishly collared regalia, nabbed it in 1999). Continue Reading »




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Oscar Prospects: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

[Editor's Note: Oscar Prospects is your weekly analysis of an awards contender and how it's likely to fare come Oscar nomination morning. The column is comprehensive, so beware of spoilers.]

Even the T-shirts are meticulously placed in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, like the one with the Nine Inch Nails logo that cutely nods to composer Trent Reznor, or the one that reads, "Fuck You You Fucking Fuck," and was probably given precise holes and tears by David Fincher himself. Fincher has certainly grown to be quite peerless when it comes to presenting the oxymoronic aesthetic of polished grunge, and his latest marries that look with the themes of techie alienation, investigative obsession, and cold, impossible love that have run through recent works like The Social Network, Zodiac, and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. The craftsmanship of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is as indicative of Fincher's formal gifts as anything he's created, and, so as not to disappoint the critics who've always chided his films for being chilly, he's even rigorously considered the story's climate, taking many opportunities to hurl snow at the screen for good, cheeky measure. All that unignorable, masterly exactitude is going to net a lot of enthusiasm for this film in the Academy's technical branches. Whether the enthusiasm will go much further than that is another story. Continue Reading »




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