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Oscar Snubs In Depth

CHRISTY LEMIRE   01/22/09 03:08 PM ET   AP

Leonardo Dicaprio

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — It's been a crowded awards season, full of lavish spectacles and gripping indies. So naturally there were some surprises and snubs among Thursday's Academy Award nominations. Among them:

_ LIGHTS OUT FOR "THE DARK KNIGHT": Yes, the Batman epic received eight nominations Thursday, tying with "Milk" for the third-highest total for any film this year (behind "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" with 13 and "Slumdog Millionaire" with 10). But momentum seemed to have been building for a best-picture nomination, as well as one for director Christopher Nolan, who's up for a Directors Guild award. It got neither. As expected, Heath Ledger earned a posthumous supporting-actor nomination for his riveting turn as the Joker, but the other nominations came in technical categories like cinematography, art direction and visual effects.

_ FINALLY HER TIME: Kate Winslet earned the sixth Oscar nomination of her young life _ she's only 33 _ but it came for best actress in "The Reader" instead of her showier portrayal of a 1950s housewife on the edge in "Revolutionary Road." It makes absolute sense. Clearly she gives a lead performance as a former Nazi concentration camp guard in "The Reader," but Winslet seemed to have been positioned as a supporting player, and she won the Golden Globe earlier this month in that category. Whatever the picture, this looks like her year; having built an impeccable career, she's long overdue.

_ ALONG THOSE LINES ... Everything about "Revolutionary Road" screamed Oscar bait. It came from esteemed source material, Richard Yates' novel about a miserable married couple in the Connecticut suburbs. It featured the much-anticipated reteaming of "Titanic" stars Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio. It boasted flawless production values under the direction of Sam Mendes, who'd previously scored big with the academy with 1999's "American Beauty." Instead, "Revolutionary Road" earned just a supporting-actor nomination for Michael Shannon, as a disturbed neighbor who serves as the voice of reason, and for art direction and costume design.

_ HOPEFULLY STILL SMILING: Sally Hawkins won a Golden Globe Award for best actress in a comedy or musical for her endearing turn as the eternally perky Poppy in "Happy-Go-Lucky." Sadly, she didn't receive an Oscar nomination. Kristin Scott Thomas' name also had been bandied about for "I've Loved You So Long," in which she plays a woman struggling to reconnect with her family after being released from prison. (The English actress gives the performance in French.) But it's lovely that longtime character actress Melissa Leo got in for the tiny "Frozen River," in which she gives an understated, realistic performance as a poor mother who resorts to immigrant smuggling.

_ THEY'RE OFF HIS LAWN: Clint Eastwood looked like a favorite in the best-actor category for "Gran Torino," in which he plays a bigoted retiree who becomes a reluctant neighborhood hero. The 78-year-old Eastwood, who also directed the film, has said he's considered making this his last appearance on screen. Although he has four Oscars for his work behind the camera, he's never won one for his acting. The absence of DiCaprio in "Revolutionary Road" is also a surprise. But as in the case of Leo in the best-actress race, it's great to see dark horse Richard Jenkins make it in here for his touching turn in "The Visitor."

_ SECOND FIDDLE A SECOND TIME: How does Michael Sheen keep getting snubbed? He's David Frost in "Frost/Nixon" opposite Frank Langella, who received a best-actor nomination as Richard Nixon. He was Tony Blair in "The Queen" opposite Helen Mirren, who won the best-actress Oscar two years ago as Queen Elizabeth II. In both films, Sheen is crucial to holding things together _ and both times, the academy has shut him out. Perhaps his acting is so subtle, it's easy to overlook and take for granted in the face of flashier starring roles.

_ A LOSS FOR THE BOSS: Amazingly, Bruce Springsteen didn't receive an original-song nomination for his melancholy title tune from "The Wrestler," which earned him a Golden Globe. Miley Cyrus also was considered a possible nominee for "I Thought I Lost You" from the animated "Bolt," which she co-wrote. And it would have been so much fun to refer to her for all of eternity as "Academy Award nominee Miley Cyrus."

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BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — It's been a crowded awards season, full of lavish spectacles and gripping indies. So naturally there were some surprises and snubs among Thursday's Academy Award nominati...
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — It's been a crowded awards season, full of lavish spectacles and gripping indies. So naturally there were some surprises and snubs among Thursday's Academy Award nominati...
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10:00 PM on 01/26/2009
I will allways love Dicaprios movies if he wins and oscar or any other. The oscars help bring revenue etc but the viewers go to see what they want in anycase and Leonardo is a keeper along with Brad Pitt of our generation to name just a few long time favorites that last and continue to bring theatre goers .
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Dannydel
09:01 PM on 01/23/2009
I like Leo a lot. I still think he should have been Oscarised for 'Whats eating Gilbert Grape'. He has matured with very little fanfare and he alsways seems to be involved in positive causes. I don't really worry though. He's young, he gets the top scripts to look at and he's intelligent and artistically clued in. His day will come...
Besides, like Roger Ebert, I'd like to see Mickey Rourke make the walk...Hollywood loves a good redemption and they don't come much better than this.
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jalowe1957
Poisonous epitaphs dished out periodically.
07:41 PM on 01/23/2009
Michael Shannon in "Revolutionary Road," Viola Davis in "Doubt,"...

These are the types of supporting roles that generate Oscar recognition, puts their careers over the fence and opens up new doors and opportunities for them. Ditto Richard Jenkins and Melissa Leo for their work in leading roles that finally earned them the recognition they so richly deserved.
06:11 PM on 01/23/2009
Why isn't anyone mentioning how Cate Blanchett's performance blew Brad's out of the water? I love Brad Pitt, and I thought the movie was beautiful, but I don't see his performance as Oscar-worthy. The fact he was nominated and Cate wasn't seems fishy, IMHO.
12:22 AM on 01/24/2009
Pitt's nomination is wrong. He is uninteresting, a cigar store indian if you will. Totally agree, Blanchett is the only thing that keeps Button mildly interesting. Mendes got snubbed; his movie, while dark and difficult to watch, is a concise and captivating portrait of American life and the flaws therein. His execution is beautiful, it's unfortunate.
03:58 PM on 01/23/2009
While yes, you can argue that DiCap, Eastwood, Nolan, et al should've and could've been there, the truth is, there weren't so much "snubbed" as unlucky. As pointed out below, the whole voting system is messed up:

http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/171280
01:17 PM on 01/23/2009
Yes there were a number of snubs and maybe a few unworthy or surprising nominees got in, but the oddsmakers aren't fooled. In England, Richard Jenkins was installed as a 26/1 long-shot for Best Actor, while The Reader is a 23-to-1 shot for Best Picture.
http://www.awardsandhonors.com/news.html?id=92
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LightOn
"All the truth in the world adds up to one big lie
12:22 PM on 01/23/2009
These awards are all political and always have been...very much like the company Christmas party.

After I saw What's Eating Gilbert Grape, I was astonished at the performance of Leonardo DiCaprio. IMHO, he, on more than one occasion, has deserved the nomination and the award. This year, Body of Lies and Revolutionary Road were no exception. I actually think that his drop dead, as perfect as you can get looks are the reason so many men feel the need to discount his flawless acting.

I also think Benicio del Toro should have been nominated for Che.
08:20 AM on 01/23/2009
Why are so many people down on Leo? He steadily improves as an actor and he matures every year like the rest of us, although some may confuse becoming haggard with looking older. Leo looks healthy. He has tremendous force on the screen, I suppose you all think that is an easy thing to pull off... go try it sometime.
08:19 AM on 01/23/2009
I suppose it's possible that everyone in the Academy liked "The Dark Night" but didn't have it at the top of their lists...Or maybe they voted for other, less popular films because they figured everyone else would be voting for it. You know, vote for the sentimental favorite during the nomination process. It would be like if every Democratic voter voted for Kucinich in the primaries in an effort to give him more press, even if they were more confident in Obama's ability to win the general, because they knew everyone ELSE would be voting for Obama...
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05:31 AM on 01/23/2009
Nothing to see here, just politics as usual. And in this day and age, it seems that Hollywood likes to compete with DC in the world of politics and political drama. Controversy sells, as they say.
04:03 AM on 01/23/2009
My friend used to work as a pool boy and dog walker for rich old people in Malibu while he was in college. Some of these people were members of the Academy. But they were so old and tired that they never even watched any of the films that were mailed to them. So they'd let my friend watch the films and vote for them. One year, he voted as three different people.

The Academy Awards are a big fat joke.
01:13 AM on 01/23/2009
So Clint Eastwood didn't get nominated. What, do we owe him an Oscar every time he shows up on screen, teeth clenched and eyes squinting with anger? Here's a shock...some people might finally be on to him. Not everyone thinks he's a brilliant actor and I know I'm not the only one who found overpraised, overrated films like UNFORGIVEN, THE BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY and MILLION DOLLAR BABY dull, cloying and painful to sit through. What, he gets "snubbed" and Dev Patel didn't? He's the heart and soul of SLUMDOG MILLIONAIR, which seemed to get recognized (justly) in just about every other category.
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05:29 AM on 01/23/2009
"So Clint Eastwood didn't get nominated. What, do we owe him an Oscar every time he shows up on screen, teeth clenched and eyes squinting with anger?"

I don't think you bothered to read the article before you started typing away furiously, lol. Clint has never won an Oscar for any role in any movie he has starred in. That was the point about the snub. If this is in fact his last film, this was Clint's last chance to bring home an Oscar to cap off his 40+ year career in a starring role.

He will join the ranks of other legendary actors like Peter O'Toole who also never won an Oscar for any of his starring roles, not from Lawrence of Arabia nor his awesome role in the Joan of Arc movie in more recent times. Same with Clint, who arguably starred in some of the biggest and memorable movies of all-time, often times in the lead role. Snubbed every step of the way.
01:13 PM on 01/23/2009
Just about every big-screen film that Clint Eastwood has starred in since the early 1960's, depicts him as the salty, teeth-clenched, squinty-eyed, big gun-toting lawman, devil, or whatever other hugely aggressive character. I've been a fan of Eastwood's for a long time. I like those "spaghetti westerns" from the 60's and many others through the years. I hated the Dirty Harry brand and the sex-crazed orangutan movies were not for me. These films were hugely popular, but none of them had any more depth than, say, Smokey and the Bandit, starring Burt Reynolds. So, as an actor, Eastwood is a brand...period. He is and has always been very entertaining and occasionally (i.e., Million Dollar Baby), very good. I'm not sure if I'd call this a snub. It's more like the usual -- from every angle.
01:24 PM on 01/23/2009
Peter O'Toole was brilliant in the 1982 film "My Favorite Year", playing a washed-up alcoholic actor from days gone by. But as often seen with the Oscars, light comedy is never taken as serious movie making.
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kiki1966
03:40 PM on 01/23/2009
haha! I was reading your post so quickly, I thought you wrote "eyes squirting with anger".

: )
12:44 AM on 01/23/2009
Sorry about Gran Torino - a great film, a timepiece, wrapped in a little Clint Eastwood soul.
I thought it was an excellent film. Don't know which is his best : this or Mystic River.
I thought the academy's snub was a bit callous.
11:08 PM on 01/22/2009
It's fun reading all these posts, and as a self taught person, ---I just want to " Thank The Academy".

Thank you. I mean it. Thank you soooooooooooooooooooooooomuch.

( ...As most actors ask their agents weekly " What's next?")
10:39 PM on 01/22/2009
I love Leo. Just like when Titanic came out, he was snubbed. I can't believe that Brad Pitt was consider the better actor. Pleeease! Now I understand Brad Pitt's donation to proposition 8. He knows that the gays have the power in Hollywood.
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kiki1966
03:44 PM on 01/23/2009
Leo is a better actor but your reasoning is tired.
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NewDem08
Pay attention, there's a test later
05:53 PM on 01/23/2009
Yes, to both points.

Tired, uneducated, pointless and stupid.