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The 87th Academy Awards |OT| The One That Matters

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MattyG

Banned
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Zukuu

Banned
Got 16/24 right. Not too bad. Glad Birdman won - first movie in years that wins best picture that actually deserves it. Also glad that Boyhood won nothing, apart from best supporting actress. Movie is so overrated. Fond about the fact that Whiplash got so much love.

The show itself was pretty boring, badly paced and we had announcements for announcements. They really need to compress it more.
 
I'll be blunt. They're not really reviewers there, they're comedians/entertainers. There's no half measures.

They went hard in the paint on the movie because everybody else liked it. Differing opinion, more views. They probably didn't like the movie, but they're keeping it going now because it's a good landmark moment for them, visibility wise.
Yeah, that's what happened. Their original review was just their raw thoughts, but then they went back and did all the IT TOOK 12 YEARS stuff after people started saying it was the film of the 21st century and stuff.
 

burgervan

Member
The best part of Boyhood was Patricia Arquette and Ethan Hawke. When they disappear in the last half of the movie and we're left watching a fucking black hole of charisma sleepwalk for an hour, I couldn't wait for it to end.

That first half was great though.
 
The 12 years thing is the closest thing the film has to a high-concept hook, which we all know Hollywood loves their high concept stories. Of course they're gonna build their marketing campaign around the fact that there's nothing else like it that exists.

And it didn't hook me. Plus every clip I've seen just seems dull and disconnected. I'm sure people are going to tell me that the trailers aren't indicative of the whole, but things like "Welcome to the suck," with a high-five doesn't seem like things I recall doing as a kid.
 
Had it been completely different it would've been completely different? You don't say.

take out the fake one take gimmick and also Keaton and Norton, and hired a cheaper cinematographer and replaced the music with something shitty and Birdman would've been straight up TRASH
 

Kevtones

Member
Writing Boyhood wasn't even hard when you consider the process but when you consider the fact it actually got made over 12 years without some sort of real-life crinkle it's a miracle of art.


Good art? Bad art? To me Boyhood treads the line of being a boring three hour movie for its entire runtime and never once gets boring. It's life with the urgent sense of storytelling. It's a spilling of memories that feels real enough to be called life. It's a brilliant and beautifully romantic idea that won't be matched and shouldn't.

When things fly by and finish too soon they feel real - just like life. Boyhood somehow did it, and for me it's the most organic film I've ever seen.


/all sorts of pretense
 

leadbelly

Banned
Birdman seemed like something different to me. It felt like a more experimental approach to film making. I'm quite happy to see it win.
 
Quick thoughts before bed.

Original Screenplay should've gone to GBH.
The worst comic book movie of the year won an Oscar.
It seems people already forgot Boyhood was made over 12 years.
People will have forgotten Birdman in a month.
Good surprise at all the Whiplash wins.
Oprah gifs saved the award
Nope to everything you just said!
 

DrBo42

Member
I thought GBH was more interesting and compelling for both categories. Birdman I can understand but what made the editing so great in Whiplash?

Watch a performance anywhere on youtube to see what standard camera work and editing is for music and then go back and look at Whiplash. It actually captures the performances of the musicians in a meaningful way while remaining absolutely tight and nearly perfectly paced. GBH is edited like any other Anderson film.
 

jtb

Banned
And it didn't hook me. Plus every clip I've seen just seems dull and disconnected. I'm sure people are going to tell me that the trailers aren't indicative of the whole, but things like "Welcome to the suck," with a high-five doesn't seem like things I recall doing as a kid.

Fine.

I'm just saying, everyone's holding the film... not even the marketing, but the fact that journalists were asking about the production and were interested and seemed to like the film... against it? That's nonsensical to me.

Dislike a film because you don't like it. But because it gets the "wrong kind of buzz"? who gives a shit.
 
It took 12 years to make. That's just a fact.

Yes. It was. It didn't need to be reiterated as much as it did. Regardless I'm not going to look eye to eye with people regarding the film so I'm retiring from the subject. I wanted Grand Budapest, Whiplash and Birdman to win the most awards and they did so I'm happy as a whole.
 
someone explain to me the whole "Hollywood/Oscards are masturbatory etc" i dont see it.

Movies hit us more deeply when they deal with what is relevant in our lives. The films that deal with the issues of filmmaking itself or acting get extra points because the members of the industry understand what is like in one way or another more easily than, for instance, what is like to be a physicist, and spy, or a soldier, etc.
 
The three main frontrunners for Best Picture were Birdman, Boyhood and The Grand Budapest Hotel.

Whatever else happened, can we agree that having three such comprehensively non-Oscar Bait movies jockeying for position is a good thing? Even though Birdman's about acting, it's such a offbeat, strange little movie, completely separate from what the Academy normally goes for in situations like this.

Huh? Argo really wasn't "about" making a movie or Hollywood.

Argo was the story of Hollywood coming to the rescue. It probably wouldn't have won if it wasn't.
 
Holy shit there are actually a sizeable number of people here who hated Birdman?!

I thought it was an absolute masterpiece in character study, acting, directing and editing. I would say it absolutely deserves best picture, but I can't, because I haven't seen most of the other best pic noms.

But it was brilliant. Forgotten in a month?! Get out of here. Probably the best movie to win an Oscar since No Country For Old Men.
 

A_Gorilla

Banned
Holy shit there are actually a sizeable number of people here who hated Birdman?!

I thought it was an absolute masterpiece in character study, acting, directing and editing. I would say it absolutely deserves best picture, but I can't, because I haven't seen most of the other best pic noms.

But it was brilliant. Forgotten in a month?! Get out of here. Probably the best movie to win an Oscar since No Country For Old Men.

Terrible example there...
 
Yeah, that's what happened. Their original review was just their raw thoughts, but then they went back and did all the IT TOOK 12 YEARS stuff after people started saying it was the film of the 21st century and stuff.

I'm just wondering why people care. Boyhood was a small budget movie through IFC that got attention because of the unique aspect of being filmed over a long time frame, and then got more attention because a lot of people thought it was a really goddamn good movie.

I didn't get Red Letter's criticisms of it, but I also know that my tastes in movies vary all over the goddamn place, and that movie isn't everyone's cup of tea. I'm also smart enough to know that they went after it so hard because nobody else did at the time. That's not a bad thing.

The best part of Boyhood was Patricia Arquette and Ethan Hawke. When they disappear in the last half of the movie and we're left watching a fucking black hole of charisma sleepwalk for an hour, I couldn't wait for it to end.

That first half was great though.

I thought Hawke was the glue to the whole thing. His character was the one that saw the most overt changes in.

And it didn't hook me. Plus every clip I've seen just seems dull and disconnected. I'm sure people are going to tell me that the trailers aren't indicative of the whole, but things like "Welcome to the suck," with a high-five doesn't seem like things I recall doing as a kid.

Boyhood is a terrible movie to showcase through trailers/clips etc. So were the Before movies. They just don't show well.

And yes you did. Don't lie. :p
 

RS4-

Member
People mad because American Sniper didn't win.

Redmayne did an incredible job in Theory, so I'm not disappointed that Keaton didn't win.
 

JTripper

Member
Was a little bummed Boyhood wasn't shown much love. I thought it had the best chance to win stuff like Director and at least Editing.

My favorite part of the show was the musical stretch from when Glory was performed to Budapest winning for score. Glory winning and Lady Gaga's performance (with Julie Andrews appearing) in between were great moments.
 

guek

Banned
GBH was a decent flick but I seriously don't understand why Wes Anderson gets so much love. He makes quirky offbeat films and nothing but, with the same disjointed, disconnected tone in every movie. His movies are fun but also pedantic, pointless, and as far removed from real life as possible.
 
Fine.

I'm just saying, everyone's holding the film... not even the marketing, but the fact that journalists were asking about the production and were interested and seemed to like the film... against it? That's nonsensical to me.

Dislike a film because you don't like it. But because it gets the "wrong kind of buzz"? who gives a shit.

I don't dislike Boyhood. Again, I haven't seen it. I just didn't have interest in seeing it.

And yes you did. Don't lie. :p

I wasn't allowed to use that kind of language where I grew up. "Welcome" was strictly forbidden.
 

Toxi

Banned
It definitely isnt. Its the most self congratulatory of all those movies.
Fuck Argo. Such a piece of shit.

When your movie supposedly based on a real life event creates a massive plothole by taking liberties with said event (WHY DIDN'T THEY CALL THE FUCKING CONTROL TOWER IF THEY WERE ABLE TO CHASE THE PLANE), you failed.
 
Extremely happy for the Birdman win. This was the first time in a long while that the movie I was rooting for - my top movie for the entire year, in fact - was able to take home BP. Feels good.

It's a genius piece of cinema. Gorgeously shot, masterfully performed, and with a script that works as both commentary and a standalone piece. There's hardly a single element that falls short of brilliant. It's understandable that it resonated with the Academy - since it fit plenty of the classic narratives that they love in Best Picture winners(praises the integrity and importance of performing arts, redemptive arc for a fallen star). Birdman didn't win because it was the best film of the year. But the fact that it does happen to be the best film of the year, that's a very exciting side-effect.

Boyhood is ambitious. But it's not great in execution. Coltraine's a sub-par actor. The story is aimless (intentionally or not), without conflict or stakes. The story of how Boyhood was made is far more interesting than what Boyhood actually is. It's cool it was pulled off. But that doesn't elevate it to the top of the pack.
 

Speevy

Banned
Eddie Redmayne is one of the best young actors to come out of Hollywood in some time.

He was tremendous in Black Death, show-stopping in Les Miserables, and perfect in The Theory of Everything.
 

JABEE

Member
Birdman seemed like something different to me. It felt like a more experimental approach to film making. I'm quite happy to see it win.
When your "gimmick" is a crazy film style with long extended shots artfully executed over an awesome bombastic all-percussion score, I think you can call it what it is. A great film. The story was intriguing, surrealist, and entertaining.

Boyhood's "gimmick" existed completely outside the actual art of film-making. It was a run-of-the-mill coming of age story that fizzled out around 90 minutes into the film. It was shot consistently in the same boring style. It's story was "nothing matters," just like Birdman utilized those themes, except Birdman was actually interesting and daring.

Boyhood's risk and art is a business and scheduling feat wrapped around an average plot. It's a okay to good film. I don't believe it deserved to win, but that's my opinion.

People are free to disagree.
 

burgervan

Member
Eddie Redmayne is one of the best young actors to come out of Hollywood in some time.

He was tremendous in Black Death, show-stopping in Les Miserables, and perfect in The Theory of Everything.

I didn't like him in Les Miserables, but I think I was just put off by his weird face.
 
My only gripe about Boyhood was that it was....kinda fuckin long. lol Otherwise, I enjoyed the hell out of it.

I can definitely see that criticism. The Before movies are really tight, runtime wise; Boyhood was what, 2 and a half hours? A little more?
 
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