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Oscar Winners 2010: See Who Took Home The Oscars

DAVID GERMAIN   03/ 8/10 06:08 AM ET   AP

Christoph Waltz Oscar

LOS ANGELES — Kathryn Bigelow played field commander to bring her raw, relentless Iraq War thriller "The Hurt Locker" to the screen.

After her film triumphed at the Academy Awards with six prizes and made her the first woman ever to win the directing Oscar, she graduated to diplomat with her deft handling of some uncomfortable personal questions from reporters after the show.

Bigelow's rivals included a man from her past – ex-husband James Cameron, whose science-fiction epic "Avatar" also was nominated for the best picture and director that she won.

Backstage, Bigelow judiciously handled reporters' queries about Cameron, who was seated right behind her at the Oscars and joined the standing ovation she received, clapping heartily and saying, "Yes, yes" after she won best director.

"Jim is very inspiring. I think he inspires filmmakers around the world, and for that, I think I can speak for all of them. We're quite grateful," Bigelow said.

Asked what she might say to Cameron about winning over him, Bigelow gave a big laugh and shrugged off the question.

"You left me speechless," Bigelow said. She and Cameron were married from 1989-91, and Cameron won best director and picture for his 1997 blockbuster "Titanic."

First-time winners took all four acting prizes: Sandra Bullock as best actress for "The Blind Side"; Jeff Bridges as best actor for "Crazy Heart"; Mo'Nique as supporting actress for "Precious: Based on the Novel `Push' by Sapphire"; and Christoph Waltz as supporting actor for "Inglourious Basterds."

Bigelow downplayed descriptions of herself as a female filmmaker throughout awards season. After the Oscars, she reiterated that sentiment but made it clear she was eager for other women to follow her lead in winning Hollywood's top filmmaking honor.

"I hope I'm the first of many, and of course, I'd love to just think of myself as a filmmaker. And I long for the day when that modifier can be a moot point," Bigelow said. "But I'm very grateful if I can inspire some young, intrepid, tenacious male or female filmmaker and have them feel that the impossible is possible, and never give up on your dream."

Bullock's win came a day after she won worst-actress for her romantic comedy flop "All About Steve" at the Razzies, a spoof of the Oscars that mocks Hollywood's low-points of the year.

The Razzie win makes Bullock the only actress to receive that dubious prize and an Oscar on the same weekend. Bullock became one of the few Razzie winners ever to collect her trophy in person, showing up at the ceremony Saturday pulling a little red wagon filled with DVDs of "All About Steve" for the audience there.

Where will she keep her Oscar and Razzie?

"They'll sit side by side on a nice little shelf somewhere. The Razzie maybe on a different shelf. Lower," said Bullock, who was a great sport throughout awards season, joking about her worst-actress Razzie nomination. "You take the good with the not-so-good."

The Oscar marks a career peak for Bridges, a beloved Hollywood veteran who had been nominated four times in the previous 38 years without winning. Describing his long career, he borrowed some lines from one of his most endearing and enduring characters, the laid-back bowler the Dude from "The Big Lebowski."

"Ups and downs. What does the Dude say? Strikes and gutters, man," Bridges said backstage. "I'm big on the Dude. I love him."

Known mainly for brazen comedy routines and roles in lowbrow films, Mo'Nique startled audiences with a dark turn as a reprehensible welfare mother in "Precious."

Asked backstage if things would change for her, Mo'Nique declared, "I am a standup comedian who won an Oscar."

Austrian-born Waltz, a veteran TV and stage actor in Europe but virtually unknown in Hollywood before Quentin Tarantino cast him in "Inglourious Basterds," reflected on his sudden Oscar celebrity.

"It's mind-boggling. It's fantastic. It's very intense," Waltz said. "And tomorrow I'll probably be sorry it's over," he said.

"The Hurt Locker" scored a victory for war-on-terror dramas, which until now had found little favor with audiences shell-shocked by nightly news coverage of the action in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The film stars Jeremy Renner as the ace leader of a bomb-disposal unit in Iraq, a man whose addiction to the adrenaline rush of war endanger his colleagues (Anthony Mackie and Brian Geraghty).

War films normally are the arena of male directors, but Bigelow has made action and stories about tough men a specialty, her films including the Keanu Reeves-Patrick Swayze thriller "Point Break" and Harrison Ford's submarine adventure "K-19: The Widowmaker."

"K-19" was a 2002 flop, and it took Bigelow years to get back in action with "The Hurt Locker," which premiered at the Venice and Toronto film festivals in September 2008.

While it pulled in $12.6 million domestically, a respectable showing for an independent film without big stars, "The Hurt Locker" is the lowest-grossing best-picture winner in this modern era of detailed box-office bookkeeping.

It took in less than one-fourth the haul of 2005 best-picture winner "Crash," itself one of the least commercially successful recipients of the top Oscar.

Along with "Avatar," the biggest modern blockbuster with $720 million domestically, the best-picture competition included the $200 million smashes "Up" and "The Blind Side" and the $100 million hits "District 9" and "Inglourious Basterds."

Like "Crash," "The Hurt Locker" was a rare film that swooped in from outside the Hollywood studios to earn the industry's highest tribute. "The Hurt Locker" was acquired by Summit Entertainment after the film played at the Toronto festival, where "Crash" also was bought by distributor Lionsgate.

Joining Bigelow to collect the best-picture Oscar were "Hurt Locker" producers Mark Boal, who also won the prize for original screenplay, and Greg Shapiro.

A fourth producer – financier Nicolas Chartier, a key money man behind the film – was barred from attending as punishment for violating awards rules by sending e-mails to Oscar voters urging them to back "The Hurt Locker" over "Avatar."

Oscar overseers said Chartier still will receive his best-picture Oscar, but at a later time.

"We haven't spoken to him yet," Shapiro said. "He sent me a very beautiful e-mail. He had a party thrown for him, and I think he's very pleased."

___

On the Net:

Academy Awards: http://www.oscars.org

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LOS ANGELES — Kathryn Bigelow played field commander to bring her raw, relentless Iraq War thriller "The Hurt Locker" to the screen. After her film triumphed at the Academy Awards with six priz...
LOS ANGELES — Kathryn Bigelow played field commander to bring her raw, relentless Iraq War thriller "The Hurt Locker" to the screen. After her film triumphed at the Academy Awards with six priz...
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frankystein12
No need to know...
12:42 AM on 03/16/2010
I don't really care about hollywood award shows since they are basically gratifying ego boosters that nominate a lot of films that shouldn't be nominated and vice verse. However, Christopher Waltz's win as best supporting actor is very well deserved indeed.
01:42 PM on 03/09/2010
Doesn't anyone think Christoph Waltz looks exactly like Iran's President in that photo? That's odd.
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stylembe
Visual artist living in San
12:42 PM on 03/09/2010
'Nine' tanked at the Oscars - Ye-Ha!,

http://stylembe.wordpress.com/2010/03/09/marcello-in-verdi/
05:25 PM on 03/08/2010
It glorifies war in Iraq. Did you expect less? It's a very easy formula.
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HHarvey
Do not feed the trolls
06:54 PM on 03/08/2010
I didn't think it glorified anything, please!
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09:25 AM on 03/09/2010
I think the emotional choreography was focused more on the whole female angle.
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02:43 PM on 03/08/2010
Sherlock Holmes? Something about costumes or sets?

A Christmas Carol? Nothing?

Those two and Avatar are the only ones I've seen.

Loved Avatar; knew it wouldn't win. The depiction of Pandora was beautiful.
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02:41 PM on 03/08/2010
It became tedious when every time "Precious" was mentioned, it had to be said as ""Precious: Based on the Novel `Push' by Sapphire".

Can you imagine if every title has to be accompanied by an attribution?
03:27 PM on 03/08/2010
Originally, the movie was simply names "Push". However, at the Canne Film Festival it was confused with another movie named "Push". Hence, the attribution for distinction's sake.
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JasonTromm
#Vote2012 for the RIGHT kind of CHANGE
01:56 PM on 03/08/2010
Hollywood is completely out of touch with middle-America. I saw exactly one of the movies that was nominated for an Academy Award this year, "Star Trek." I think the entire proceeding was Lame.
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joanevan
02:13 PM on 03/08/2010
I'm sure they care about what you think too........
03:29 PM on 03/08/2010
Exactly, Hollywood is about Holywood.
01:21 PM on 03/08/2010
I wish Bigelow had directed "District 9." Now there was one perfect gem of a movie, one of the reasons we all go to the movies, that never had a chance. If it was politically appropriate for her to get Best Director because she's female, I just wish the vehicle would have been better.
01:26 PM on 03/08/2010
Did you see The Hurt Locker? Sounds like you didn't.
01:55 PM on 03/08/2010
The only movie I missed out of the Best Picture nominees was "Precious." I did see "The Hurt Locker." I wasn't mad about the editing and it left me empty, which I understand is just personal taste, but to me it was a why bother, like "Up in the Air." Existentialism's a been there, done that. I want my movies to mean something. It can be good or bad, I'm not picky, but I do want SOMETHING.

I just thought "District 9" was a perfect parable, and I really enjoyed the manner in which it was put together, the editing, even the grainy footage, and absolutely everything about it. I also have to say that just for the entertainment value, even "Avatar" was a better choice than "The Hurt Locker." So I take it we'll have to agree to disagree.
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Fredday
Nyak Nyak Nyak
06:20 PM on 03/08/2010
Yes I saw Hurt Locker. It was quite boring. . .let alone the glorification of a crim inal war.
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HHarvey
Do not feed the trolls
07:05 PM on 03/08/2010
If she would have directed District 9 it would have been a completely different movie and might not have done as well. Sometimes a formula comes together that works for everybody and Hurt Locker was more her style. I loved Point Break and I see some similarities in her style already. She takes one man and really focuses on that person and then has this nucleus of things happening around him.
01:21 PM on 03/08/2010
Can we please stop the whole "Bigelow only won because she's a woman" thing??? It's total bull. She's an accomplished director who's been working for 30 years, and well before there was a lot of Oscar buzz for Bigelow and the Hurt Locker, respected critics everywhere were praising the movie and her directing. It's completely sexist to say she won because she's a women. With that logic, Sophia Coppola would've won for Lost In Translation a few years ago, but up against Peter Jackson and Clint Eastwood, she didn't have a chance-- because Jackson and Eastwood were the better directors that year.

Now don't get me wrong-- I understand the Oscars are full of Academy politics, and are often, if not most times irrelevant, but Bigelow won because she did an incredible job directing a (in my opinion) great war movie, and saying that she won because she's a women is an insult to her and and insult to directors everywhere.
12:17 PM on 03/08/2010
well i would start by saying that it was a very weak year for movies. i saw almost all of the nominated films and hurt locker was far from the best movie. sandra bullock in no way deserved best actress. i thought she did a fine job in the role, but the role was not oscar worthy and no one should have won for it. bigelow's win was mostly because she was a woman and considering the movie, as i mentioned earlier, she should not have won. i have no problem with the supporting role winners, but i thought inglorious basterds as a movie was a joke.
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HHarvey
Do not feed the trolls
06:59 PM on 03/08/2010
Geesh, what do you like?
11:59 AM on 03/08/2010
the only one they got right was Christof Waltz....what a disappointment...The Hurt Locker??? really????
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omobob
left coast, usa
11:17 AM on 03/08/2010
Johnny Carson called it best one year "Welcome to the Oscars. One half hour of entertainment packed into three hours". Pricless.
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shutterbabe
Some people feel the rain. Others just get wet.
02:37 PM on 03/08/2010
I still miss Johnny Carson's hosting of the Oscar's. No one has ever done it better or with such class.
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omobob
left coast, usa
11:16 AM on 03/08/2010
Kudos to director Bigalow and Hutr Locker and the voting members of the Acedemy.
10:59 AM on 03/08/2010
Thrilled to see Avatar lost! Simply thrilled!
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ClassicalLib
12:29 PM on 03/08/2010
Hee hee! I hate movies that preach to me and Avatar was one of the preachiest movies I have seen in years. And this comes from somebody with extremely antiwar views. Just not a good movie.
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02:34 PM on 03/08/2010
It was great. Stands on its own as SciFi.

It is only "preachy" if one takes it as such.
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HHarvey
Do not feed the trolls
07:00 PM on 03/08/2010
Guess you hated Dances with Wolves too.
01:33 PM on 03/08/2010
Avatar was a movie experience. You are doing yourself a disservice if you didn't see it in 3-D.
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02:31 PM on 03/08/2010
And IMAX.

Avatar deserved an award in its own special category. Not a "movie", definitely an experience.
10:25 AM on 03/08/2010
i was shocked hurt locker even got nominated. to think a pro american movie that shows a guy who wants to go back to war despite having a wife and child. was it about an adrenaline rush or about saving fellow soldiers lives. won't see that in any matt damon movie.
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jrb35
They are completely ignorant of space-war tactics.
02:13 PM on 03/08/2010
Like Saving Pvt. Ryan?
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ClassicalLib
02:51 PM on 03/08/2010
The genius behind Hurt Locker is that the creators took one of the most devisive issues of the day and made a movie about it that speaks to people on both sides of the issue without preaching to them or vilifying anyone. Its a story that speaks to everyone. And when you take something as politically charged as war, that is very hard to do.