[Jesse and Jim are interrupting their conversation on the mid-season TV shows to talk about the 2009 Oscar nominations. At the end of the conversation you will be invited to send in your Oscar picks, or you can go ahead and do it now. This is part one of... probably five. There are alot of goddamn categories.]Best Documentary ShortThe Conscience of Nhem En, The Final Inch, Smile Pinki, The Witness - From the Balcony of Room 306
Jim's takeNothing like starting out discussion with an X-Factor of a category. I
really wish there was an easy way to see these before the ceremony, or
after for that matter.
My pick?
The Conscience of Nhem En. My reasoning? Of the four nominated films, it is the only one with its own Wikipedia page.
Jesse's takeRemember when we drove three hours to see a concert, but ended up watching the Oscar's instead? Good times.
We're
going to go category by category, but I need to make a couple of
overall observations that I am sure you will agree with. First: I have
not seen it, but the fact that The Reader got 5 nominations, despite
the fact that I have stubbornly never heard of it until today, only
goes to show (yet again) that the way to Oscar's heart is through his
Holocaust. Second: I heard a good joke today when somebody called these
the Oscarzzzzzz. This might be the most boring Oscars since the year
Crash "won". I have only seen one out of the 11 movies going for the
top 4 awards (picture, director, actor, actress), the whelming
Frost/Nixon. Whelming, of course, means it was not overwhelming or
underwhelming. Just whelming.
I have a hard time beating your reasoning behind picking documentary
short. I, however, am going with
The Witness - From the Balcony of Room 306,
because Oscar loves movies that have long, unwieldy names. (None of
these are about the Holocaust, right? If they are, I reserve the right
to change my vote).
Best Documentary FeatureNerakhoon, Encounters at the End of the World, The Garden, Man on Wire, Trouble the Water
Jim's takeThis category never fails to disappoint. I'm still bitter about
"Grizzly Man" getting snubbed in 2005. Now, we have the the supposed
five-best documentaries of the year, and Errol Morris's "Standard
Operating Procedure" is nowhere to be seen.
Had it been on the list, SOP would have been my personal choice as
what should win the award. I probably would have talked myself into
making it my actual pick, despite all the overwhelming evidence
pointing to Man on Wire being the heavy favorite.
Standard Operating Procedure made me look at the Abu Ghraib
prisoner abuse in an entirely new perspective. He introduces us to
those responsible for the abuses, points out the failings in the chain
of command, and, most importantly, examines the staged nature of the
Abu Ghraib photographs.
Morris equates the photos with staged family snapshots. The only
reasons the photographed abuses are taking place is so they can be
photographed. In photo after photo we see the guards alongside the
prisoners: giving a thumbs up, pointing, smiling. The photographs of
these atrocities turn into a kind of horrific vacation slideshow.
That said, my personal preference for the win is Werner Herzog's
"Encounters at the End of the World." In the film, Werner travels to
Antarctica. In his opening narration, he informs us that he is not
going to photograph "fluffy penguins," but rather to see what kind of
person is drawn to spend their life at the 'end of the world.'
Of course, Werner does bump into a penguin researcher. He asks him if
there are gay penguins, if there are deranged penguins. There's also
quite a bit of amazing underwater photography, a woman who can stuff
herself into a piece of carry-on luggage, a descendent of Aztec
royalty, and men who wear trash cans adorned with painted smiley faces
over their heads.
My pick for Best Documentary Feature is
Man on Wire. Which is a
damn shame, because it's not half the film as "Encounters at the End of
the World," and not one-tenth the film of the snubbed "Standard
Operating Procedure."
Jesse's take
The only one of these I have seen is
Man On Wire.
I declared this the
winner weeks ago, before the short lists even came out, and I'm
certainly not backing down now. I know you are disappointed about
S.O.P, but from a strictly Oscar-watching perspective (meaning who
cares about the actual quality of the film), the Iraq war has been...
well, let's just say its no Holocaust, if you know what I mean.
Best Art DirectionChangeling, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Dark Knight, The Duchess, Revolutionary Road
Jim's take
This is one of those categories they always have to explain to people. I
think it has to do with set design, right? Generally it goes to movies
that are pretty or recreate a period. Recent winners have been Return
of the King, The Aviator, Memoirs of a Geisha, Pan's Labyrinth, and
Sweeney Todd.
My pick for this year:
The Curious Case of Benjamin ButtonJesse's take Here's the thing: TCCOBB got 13 nominations, which is a huge number,
but have you found anyone that really like this movie? It certainly
hasn't been lighting up the box office as of yet, so I can't imagine it
pulling off an English Patient or Titanic-like sweep. Is anybody else
getting a whole "Hey David Fincher, sorry about the epic, unforgivable
snub we gave Zodiac last year. Are we cool now?" vibe to all the
Academy love for this one?
I'm giving this one to
The Dark Knight.
Best Supporting ActressAmy Adams (Doubt), Penelope Cruz (Vicky Christina Barcelona), Viola
Davis (Doubt), Taraji P. Henson (The Curious Case of Benjamin Button),
Marisa Tomei (The Wrestler)
Jim's takeAn interesting field. I haven't yet seen Doubt, but it certainly looks
like an actor's film. Cruz was pretty good in Vicky Christina, and I'm
just going to assume that Taraji P. Henson played Benjamin
"Backwards-Aging Forrest Gump" Button's adoptive mother in that
somewhat-eponymous film.
My personal pick, and projected winner, is
Marisa Tomei. Yes, she's
already got a statue (an OSCAR WINNER Jerry, an Oscar winner!), but did
you see The Wrestler? If the answer is no, drop what you are doing,
leave work if you have to, get in your car and go see The Wrestler.
Right. Now.
Ok, you're back? Good. Holy shit, right? Don't worry, expect 5000
words from me on the lack of Picture/Director nominations when the time
comes. But seriously, doesn't it make you listen to 'Sweet Child of
Mine' with new ears?
Tomei, quite simply, knocks her role in The Wrestler out of the
park. Maybe she was destined to be a 40-something stripper at a skeezy
New Jersey club in a parallel universe. I don't care, but give her
another Oscar.
Jesse's takeDAMMIT. I WAS TOTALLY GOING TO MAKE THAT SEINFELD REFERENCE. Fuck you,
I'm gonna make it again anyway. "An Oscar winner, Jerry, an Oscar
winner!!"
Tomei is the winner. Also
Best Supporting ActorJosh Brolin (Milk), Robert Downey Jr. (Tropic Thunder), Philip Seymour
Hoffman (Doubt), Heath Ledger (The Dark Knight), Michael Shannon
(Revolutionary Road)
Jim's take Poor Dead Heath Ledger. That's his name, now, you know. Sorry Philip
Seymour Hoffman, but I don't have a lot of DOUBT that he'll be joining
the Peter Finch "I died and all I got was this stupid Oscar" club come
next month.
I feel like I can actually offer an opinion on this category. With
the exception of Doubt, I've seen all of the nominated performances.
Michael Shannon was pretty decent in a Sam Mendes' snoozy look at
suburban malaise. (An aside, has Sam Mendes ever made a film that
wasn't about some sort of malaise?)
Brolin was pretty good in Milk, but was overshadowed by a brilliant Sean Penn performance and James Franco's mustache.
Robert Downey's turn as Australian mega-actor Kirk Lazarus in
Tropic Thunder was nothing short of amazing. He manages to poke fun at
Russell Crowe, make black face funny (again), and defend the honor of
Paul Hogan. Here's hoping that they show the "Don't go full retard"
clip during the ceremony. (Sean Penn, he went full retard once.)
Is it a cop-out to say that I'm pulling for a tie between Ledger
and Downey Jr. in this category? Seriously, it's happened before --
Barbara Streisand and Katherine Hepburn tied for Best Actress of
1968... 40 years later, we could have a repeat. How awesome would that
be? Heath's family gets all weepy and happy, and Downey gets an Oscar
for a blackface performance where he opines on the Academy's penchant
for rewarding folks who play retards -- just not FULL retards.
In reality though,
Ledger runs away with this category. Not even close.
Jesse's takeThe "dead guy wins the Oscar" rule extends beyond the acting ranks.
Back in 2003, I had The Two Towers winning for Best Cinematography.
Then, as they were announcing the category, they mentioned that Conrad
Hall, the cinematographer on Road to Perdition, had recently died.
FUCK. I knew right then I had picked wrong.
Poor Dead Heath Ledger is the winner, followed by lots of self-congratulatory applause.