Wednesday, February 27, 2013

2013 Academy Awards Recap




The Oscars are over 
The dresses are hung
The Xanax is shelved
The fat lady has sung.

Actually, there were A LOT of singers at this year’s show, and surprisingly none of them overweight…hmmm…

Ok, let's discuss.

Let’s start with Best Picture. Argo. Not a shocker. 

The love affair that Hollywood has with any film that has elements of war and with the love affair that Hollywood has with itself made this film a shoe-in for Best Picture. 

Set during the Iran Hostage Crisis in 1979, a CIA expert suggests fooling those silly Iranians by masquerading the hostages as a fake film crew from Canada in order to get them on a plane and home safe. If the film wasn’t based on a true story, I’d probably have thought the plot to be a bit lame.

Bottom line: Make a film about war and add in a part about film making itself and those 6,000 members of the Academy will predictably vote in your favor. I’d bet money that Zero Dark Thirty was a close second place.

Argo itself was fairly good, but not Best Picture material.

Daniel Day Lewis accepting his award for Best Performance by a Lead Actor


Now that that’s out of my system, let’s talk Daniel Day Lewis. What a dreamboat. His joke involving Meryl Streep was both hilarious and seemingly off-the-cuff. Though if it was rehearsed, I couldn’t be mad at him. The thing about Lincoln was that it bored me to tears, but it was still a great film. And that’s because of Daniel Day Lewis. He is one of the best actors of this time and I enjoy listening to his acceptance speeches almost as much as I enjoy watching him act. He is above all a remarkable man of his craft.

Ok, I’m back to my bitterness again. Jennifer Lawrence. Seriously I’m not happy. A half-baked romantic comedy managed to fool everyone this year into thinking that it was worth more than rom-coms of the past. And mind you, I love a good romantic comedy. I even have trouble choosing which one to reference in this tirade because there are so many that I love. But most (if not all) of them do not have a place at the Oscars. They are often trite, predicable, and unimaginative. And Silver Linings Playbook is no different.

Jennifer Lawrence plays a recent widow who falls into a friendship with Bradley Cooper’s character who is (gasp!) just returning from a mental hospital after he freaked out finding his wife with another man. That’s it. That’s the plot. Oh, and Jennifer’s character convinces Bradley’s character to help her with an upcoming dance competition that will ultimately bring the two of them together. A dance competition.

And no, I don’t think either of the parents’ characters contributed anything of value to this film so please spare me the “What about DeNiro?” or “Jacki Weaver was great!” 

Blah. They were beige. The whole film was beige.

Jennifer Lawrence's graceful fall


Aside from all of that, I do give Ms. Lawrence kudo’s for falling so gracefully up the stage that at first I thought it was on purpose. And during her speech, I just pretended she was receiving the Oscar for her role in Winter’s Bone – A much, much better performance that certainly deserved recognition over Silver Linings Playbook. This is proof that the Academy votes politically, and not based on artistic merit.  

I’ve already spoken my adoration for Beasts of the Southern Wild in a previous post so it’s no surprise that I was favoring the film and its nominations to win. I had the opportunity to watch each and every nominated film this year and I will report that Beasts of The Southern Wild held steady as my number one choice.

But I have watched too many Oscar shows to be naïve enough to think this film had a chance. Quvenzhane Wallis may be one of the most talented 9-year-olds on the planet, but she doesn’t play the Oscar game so she never stood a chance. I was really expecting Jessica Chastain to win Best Actress. She seemed to have the politics thing down and her performance was good. So it would have been a good fit both politically and artistically.

Quvenzhane Wallis on the Red Carpet
Christophe Waltz and Anne Hathaway were definites for me. Both played very affective and effective characters so I was glad for both of their wins. And I’ll excuse the fact that Anne Hathaway was only on screen for about twenty minutes in Les Miserables because it was an unbelievable twenty minutes of character acting.

And the last category that I’ll make comment of is Documentary Feature. I was pleased to see Searching for Sugarman win but I would have been ecstatic if the winner was How to Survive a Plague. In fact, this category was full of great submissions and I would recommend most of them. Invisible War was high on my list as well as 5 Broken Cameras so the good news of this Oscar Season is that this category was full of talent.



So that’s a wrap on this years show, I’ll try next year to not expect The Academy to vote with their brains – then perhaps I wont be disappointed. Until next year movie-lovers!

Here’s my official list (in a very particular order) of nominated films that are a must-watch:

1. Beasts of the Southern Wild
2. How to Survive a Plague
3. Django Unchained
4. Life of Pi
5. Flight
6. Amour
7. Hitchcock
8. The Master
9. Mirror Mirror