ARTICLES AND INTERVIEWS
FILM
80th Annual ACADEMY AWARDS RESULTS | 80th Annual ACADEMY AWARDS RESULTS |
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| Written by Kindah Mardam Bey | |
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The Oscars are here. Minus the writer's strike and full of old Hollywood glamour. But who won? And the Oscar goes to...
By: Kindah Mardam Bey
No shock was Javier Bardem winning for best supporting actor, but his acceptance speech where he directly addressed his mother in Spanish was not understood by millions but it was so moving Jon Stewart said `If you are looking for the first moment of the evening, we've just seen it. ` What was shocking, even to the winner, was best supporting actress Tilda Swinton whose speech was quirky and as witty as she is always known to be. We all thought Cate Blanchett was a sure bet to win, but Swinton has deserved the award for a very long time so it was a delight to see her win. Blanchett was a two time loser for best supporting role and best actress, but since she has won already, I'm sure she was just `grateful to be nominated.` Any of the female nominees in the Best Actress category would have been a well deserved win in anyone's opinion (except Ellen Page in her own opinion, as on her Barbara Walters pre-Oscar interview she commented well beyond her years, that she didn't deserve to win) but Marion Cotillard`s speechless acceptance speech for her role as Edith Piaf had her thanking `love` at the end, as any self-respecting French woman would. Now who would want to miss that? Best Original song went to `Falling Slowly` from the film Once, that was only nominated once in the category, unlike Enchanted that was nominated three times for three songs also in this category. Male lead and singer/songwriter Glen Hansard gave a beautiful speech but Markéta Irglová lost her chance to speak in the meantime. With complete finesse, the Oscars allowed her to give her acceptance speech after the commercial. Director of winning documentary feature film Taxi To The Dark Side asked for the country (the US) to come from the dark side and back into the light. Possibly the sweetest win was for Diablo Cody for best original screenplay, in a category that rarely sees three women nominated it was a standout year, but for a woman like Cody, whose life has been as patchy as her leopard print dress, it was a great win. Cody thanked her family for loving her exactly the way she is. Daniel Day Lewis won for best actor, no surprise on that front, and he was characteristically sweet. Ethan & Joel Coen made Oscar history as the last two directors to win for a film was for West Side Story; Ethan said thank you when they won for best adapted screenplay and said he had nothing to add when they won for best director. The Best Picture, as for director and original screenplay, and supporting actor, was won by No Country For Old Men. You can read the AnEVibe review of the Best Picture Winner No Country For Old Men here .
The rest of the Winners are.....
BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTRESS
BEST
SUPPORTING ACTRESS
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
BEST ANIMATED FILM
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
BEST ANIMATED SHORT FILM
BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM "At Night""Il Supplente (The Substitute)" "Le Mozart des Pickpockets (The Mozart of Pickpockets)" "Tanghi Argentini" "The Tonto Woman" |
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The Chronicles Of Narnia: Prince Caspian 1951-2008
I can only think of one person when I think of this epic series that ignited my imagination as a child, that I saw versions of in theatre productions, that I saw on the BBC, and now on the big screen - My Auntie. It was her own love of the story that she passed onto me; perhaps just the way C.S. Lewis intended his story of Narnia to be shared...like a legend passed down to each generation. |