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Oscar Nominations Announced; Heath Ledger Gets His, Best Picture Fails
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After much-anticipation, the nominees for 81st Academy Awards were announced today. For the most part, the list doesn’t really shine; some categories are as expected, some include surprises, and some just don’t make any sense at all.

First of all, the bright spot. After many, many months of wonder, debates, and arguments — Heath Ledger was indeed given his much-deserved Oscar nomination. Whether he’ll actually win or not is yet to be seen — he does have some very strong competition — but now that he has received the nomination, it would really be a perfect and poetic ending to an extremely sad story.

On the more negative side: the Best Picture category. Keep in mind that I haven’t seen any of these movies, so my opinions are strictly based on what I’ve heard about the various films that were thought to be in contention for a Best Picture nomination. Considering what I’ve heard, one can’t help but think that this year’s five is a little… boring. From what I’ve gathered, there were definitely other movies that could have replaced multiple nominees, so why did they not?

Continue reading for more, as well as the complete list of nominees.

The two movies in particular that have me scratching my head are Frost/Nixon and The Reader. Again, I haven’t seen these or the other movies, so they may be worthy of their spots, but it’s hard to see. When I first saw footage for Frost/Nixon, it looked like an extremely boring CNN special and I’m quite sure I may have nodded off just during the trailer. Is this movie really worthy of Best Picture, or does the Academy just nominate anything Ron Howard makes these days? On the same level, The Reader also looked incredibly boring, so why is it there? I know these movies have been nominated many times in other awards organizations, but this is the top dog here, things need to be perfectly chosen (not that they ever have been before) on this stage.

From what I’m lead to believe, movies like The Wrestler, Revolutionary Road, Doubt, and even Wall-E could have been nominated, and should be there over at least those two. Some people could surely make cases for those movies over even The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and Milk as well. The very positive element here is of course, Slumdog Millionaire, which has been tearing its way through awards ceremonies and is easily this year’s dark horse and favorite among the bunch.

Instead of going silly on you and offering my useless positive and negative opinions on the rest of the categories, I’ll just leave it at those two points and move on to the rest of the nominees!

Oh, wait… ONE more thing. Where the shit is Bruce Springsteen!?

BEST PICTURE:

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Milk
Slumdog Millionaire
The Reader
Frost/Nixon

BEST DIRECTOR:

– Danny Boyle, Slumdog Millionaire
– Gus Van Sant, Milk
– Stephen Daldry, The Reader
– Ron Howard, Frost/Nixon
– David Fincher, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

BEST ACTOR:

– Sean Penn, Milk
– Frank Langella, Frost/Nixon
– Brad Pitt, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
– Richard Jenkins, The Visitor
– Mickey Rourke, The Wrestler

BEST ACTRESS:

– Kate Winslet, The Reader
– Melissa Leo, Frozen River
– Angelina Jolie, Changeling
– Meryl Streep, Doubt
– Anne Hathaway, Rachel Getting Married

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR:

– Philip Seymour Hoffman, Doubt
– Josh Brolin, Milk
– Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight
– Michael Shannon, Revolutionary Road
– Robert Downey Jr., Tropic Thunder

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS:

– Viola Davis, Doubt
– Marisa Tomei, The Wrestler
– Taraji P. Henson, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
– Amy Adams, Doubt
РPen̩lope Cruz, Vicky Cristina Barcelona

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY:

Happy-Go-Lucky
Frozen River
Wall-E
Milk
In Bruges

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY:

The Reader
Slumdog Millionaire
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Frost/Nixon
Doubt

BEST ORIGINAL SONG:

– Peter Gabriel/Thomas Newman — Down to Earth, Wall-E
– A.R. Rahman/Maya Arulpragasam — O Saya, Slumdog Millionaire
– A.R. Rahman/Gulzar — Jai Ho, Slumdog Millionaire

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE:

– James Newton Howard, Defiance
– Alexandre Duplat, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
– Thomas Newman, Wall-E
– A.R. Rahman, Slumdog Millionaire
– Danny Elfman, Milk

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE:

Bolt
Wall-E
Kung Fu Panda

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM:

Departures
The Class
The Baader Meinhof Complex
Waltz With Bashir
Revanche

BEST ART DIRECTION:

The Duchess
The Dark Knight
Changeling
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Revolutionary Road

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY:

The Reader
Slumdog Millionaire
Changeling
The Dark Knight
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

BEST COSTUME DESIGN:

Australia
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Revolutionary Road
Milk
The Duchess

BEST FEATURE DOCUMENTARY:

Encounters at the End of the World
Man on a Wire
The Betrayal
Trouble the Water
The Garden

BEST SHORT DOCUMENTARY:

The Final Inch
The Conscience of Nhem En
Smile Pinki
The Witness – From the Balcony of Room 306

BEST EDITING:

Frost/Nixon
Milk
The Dark Knight
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Slumdog Millionaire

BEST MAKEUP:

Hellboy II: The Golden Army
The Dark Knight
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

BEST ANIMATED SHORT:

Oktapodi
Presto
La Maison en Petits Cubes
This Way Up
Lavatory — Lovestory

BEST LIVE-ACTION SHORT:

Manon on the Asphalt
The Pig
New Boy
Auf der Strecke (On the Line)
Spielzeugland (Toyland)

BEST SOUND EDITING:

Iron Man
Slumdog Millionaire
Wanted
Wall-E
The Dark Knight

BEST SOUND MIXING:

Wall-E
Slumdog Millionaire
Wanted
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS:

The Dark Knight
Iron Man
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

The 81st Academy Awards will air on February 22, 2009.

6 Comments »

  1. no dark knight for best picture? that’s terrible!

    Comment by hasty — January 23, 2009 @ 4:19 am

  2. Frost/Nixon was a masterful political thriller that really did take a somewhat bland piece of history and made it really compelling. That accomplishment deserves recognition and I’m glad the Academy rewarded it with nominations. And I don’t know what you meant by “does the Academy just nominate anything Ron Howard makes these days?” Prior to Frost/Nixon, the only film to receive an Oscar nomination (and win) was A Beautiful Mind.

    The Reader, in my opinion, was the surprise Best Picture nomination of the category but I’m not entirely shocked by its inclusion. With a Golden Globe and BAFTA nomination, it definitely is looked upon as one of the best films of the year. So when the Academy failed to give The Dark Knight its due because of whatever reason, The Reader slipped in filling the holes in Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay that TDK left.

    It was obvious that The Curious Case of Benjamin Button would tally the most nominations and because of that it’s a very strong contender to win Best Picture from the extremely successful Slumdog Millionaire. And Milk still has an outside shot.

    The movies you mentioned (The Wrestler, Revolutionary Road, Doubt, and WALL-E) were all certainly very good/great films that had a shot for a Best Picture nomination. Of course, the Academy will NEVER nominate an animated film for Best Picture since they have their own Best Animated Feature category (so Beauty and the Beast will be the only animated film to ever get a Best Picture nod). WALL-E, in my opinion, was the best film of the year and it was easily the best reviewed film of the year by critics… but that doesn’t translate into Oscar success.

    As for Revolutionary Road, I was extremely moved by the power of the film. It was a true display of great acting by Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio. It’s a shame it didn’t get more recognition, but 2008 produced a lot of great films and therefore some must be left out. The same goes for The Wrestler and Doubt. It’s interesting how Doubt received four acting nominations but not a Best Director or Best Picture nod (I wonder how many times that has happened?).

    And I agree with you… why wasn’t Bruce Springsteen’s song in The Wrestler nominated? What the hell could’ve happened there?

    Anyway… great post!

    Comment by Rob — January 23, 2009 @ 4:56 am

  3. What the hell??? whats with all this high brow artsy fartsy attitude of these loosers? TDK outshines any movie made this year! it is almost insulting that those trashy movies got nominated in the first place.

    The whole thing is a total farce, fans should turn up and riot!

    Comment by JustinSane — January 23, 2009 @ 8:18 am

  4. er last year sorry…wow its 2009.. lol.

    Comment by JustinSane — January 23, 2009 @ 8:19 am

  5. I know this year wasn’t as good as last, but seriously Robert Downey Jr., Tropic Thunder?

    That movie was so bad I turned myself over to the feds for illegally downloading it, they simply asked if I watched it, and since I had that was punishment enough.

    Comment by mo — January 23, 2009 @ 12:44 pm

  6. Too bad for The Dark Knight. I was expecting at least a nomination for Best Picture. Oscars are lame.

    Comment by Wort — January 24, 2009 @ 8:08 am

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