Green has crafted a debut as fresh, intimate, and compassionate as Lynne Ramsay’s Ratcatcher in 1999.
The peril of prescription drug use is only one red herring that Scott Z. Burns throws out.
This is a complete list of our predicted winners at the 2013 Academy Awards.
Despite the hysteria, it may not be appropriate yet to call a time of death on the decades and decades’ worth of precedent that will be shattered when Argo wins Best Picture.
Jennifer Lawrence is taking a page from Mo’Nique’s book and playing the campaign game by her own rules.
Let’s try to rid our minds of the deplorable notion that Spielberg and Lee are contending for an award that belongs to Affleck.
More than in any of the other categories it’s nominated in, the unreal fall from grace suffered by Zero Dark Thirty will be particularly palpable when it inevitably loses here.
Lotsa stuff, including our ideas of history, blowed up real good.
Perhaps “Michael Haneke” himself best elucidates the success of Amour by describing the film it could have been but no one, except possibly for us, would have wanted to see or give an Oscar to.
It’s a boon for a short to taste like a flavor of the moment contending for best picture.
The email paper trail this year’s live-action short category has left in its wake has litigation written all over it, but our expert panel [sic] managed to agree on at least a few things.
Starting tomorrow, check back daily as we predict the winner in every Oscar category.
We’re sensing that, once again, Best Picture will fall just shy of 10 nominees.
It certainly looks like Joaquin Phoenix is about to be snubbed for his work in The Master.
The one certainty of this year’s Original Screenplay field is a bit of 2010 déjà vu.
As indicated by its title, the film is super-sensitive to class divisions.
There’s no empathy in Haneke’s carefully composed frames, ruthlessly prolonged takes, and generally detached stance.
You really can’t miss the irony in the Killing Them Softly poster designs, as both of them are about as soft as a shell casing.
The annual flood of see-them-or-be-left-out titles will pummel your poor movie-buff planning like a surging tsunami.
Self-critique or self-indulgence, Holy Motors isn’t afraid to attempt everything under the sun.