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Oscars 2011 Winners List

First Posted: 02/27/11 09:01 PM ET   Updated: 05/25/11 07:35 PM ET

It was film's biggest night, and after a year of box office battles, politicking and smaller statuettes, Hollywood immortality was handed out tonight.

"The King's Speech" was crowned the Best Picture; the World War II-set drama about friendship, trust and overcoming the odds beat out nine other films, including Golden Globe winner "The Social Network". It's the first time the Academy has awarded a film about British Royalty the top slot.

"The King's Speech" star Colin Firth took home Best Actor, finishing off a remarkable sweep of the Golden Globes, BAFTAs and now, Hollywood's biggest prize for a leading man. The awards are just rewards for his portrayal of King George VI, the stuttering, reluctant World War II-era royal that had to overcome a debilitating stutter to inspire his nation as the Nazis rained bombs down on England.

"Black Swan" star Natalie Portman was awarded Best Actress, giving her every major statuette in film this year. She won the Golden Globe and Independent Spirit Award and now, with the Oscar, the sacrifice - she starved and tortured herself to get in shape for her powerful performance in the ballet psycho-thriller - was all worth it.

Christian Bale took home Best Supporting actor for his emaciated, frantic and empathetic performance in "The Fighter" wowed audiences and maybe even scared them a bit with its dead-on accuracy.

Also, pay special attention to brand new hosts James Franco and Anne Hathaway, an unusual pair that has people very, very curious as to what they'll come up with.

For all the nominees, click here. Without further ado, the winners:

Melissa Leo: Oscars 2011 Winner For Best Supporting Actress
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Here's the full list of winners:
1. Best Picture: "The King's Speech."
2. Actor: Colin Firth, "The King's Speech."
3. Actress: Natalie Portman, "Black Swan."
4. Supporting Actor: Christian Bale, "The Fighter."
5. Supporting Actress: Melissa Leo, "The Fighter."
6. Directing: Tom Hooper, "The King's Speech."
7. Foreign Language Film: "In a Better World," Denmark.
8. Adapted Screenplay: Aaron Sorkin, "The Social Network."
9. Original Screenplay: David Seidler, "The King's Speech."
10. Animated Feature Film: "Toy Story 3."
11. Art Direction: "Alice in Wonderland."
12. Cinematography: "Inception."
13. Sound Mixing: "Inception."
14. Sound Editing: "Inception."
15. Original Score: "The Social Network," Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross.
16. Original Song: "We Belong Together" from "Toy Story 3," Randy Newman.
17. Costume Design: "Alice in Wonderland."
18. Documentary Feature: "Inside Job."
19. Documentary (short subject): "Strangers No More."
20. Film Editing: "The Social Network."
21. Makeup: "The Wolfman."
22. Animated Short Film: "The Lost Thing."
23. Live Action Short Film: "God of Love."
24. Visual Effects: "Inception."

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It was film's biggest night, and after a year of box office battles, politicking and smaller statuettes, Hollywood immortality was handed out tonight. "The King's Speech" was crowned the Best Pictur...
It was film's biggest night, and after a year of box office battles, politicking and smaller statuettes, Hollywood immortality was handed out tonight. "The King's Speech" was crowned the Best Pictur...
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Wanjiru
Debatably relatable ...
05:14 PM on 03/08/2011
I liked how the Oscars ended, with all the winners coming on stage and levitating up to the heavens before our eyes.
.
12:48 AM on 03/03/2011
am thinking of buying an aquarium that already contains an oscar, but one fish in a tank is pretty boring, right.

http://tonedetox.org
01:41 AM on 03/02/2011
My oscar fish have laid loads of eggs. They have eaten some as i take it they are the "bad" eggs. Has anyone had Oscar fish that have actually successfully had the eggs.
http://tonedetox.org
jdrourke
Snark is good for the soul...
06:17 PM on 03/01/2011
You know who wasn't a winner that night? The producers of that mediocre telecast. They're lucky a few of the winners livened things up a bit...

http://jdrourke.wordpress.com/2011/03/01/emergency-memo-to-the-academy-awards-producers/
04:19 PM on 03/01/2011
I'm sorry I'm sure the King's Speech is a fine film... but this is the best that Hollywood could do?That and more awful Ashton Kutcher romantic-comedy films?! I mean haven't they've done stories about WWII ad nauseum? Aren't there some compelling films about other parts of the world, other time periods... and they actually had some compelling films like Winter's Bone. Not to mention that COMPLETE and utter 'white-out' of Hollywood-- I mean brown and black actors playing quality roles in Hollywood has become even rarer -- & it showed. It's as if they were taking their cues from the folks who do Vanity Fair's Young Hollywood issue. Too bad because they're some awesome Foreign and Independent films.
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02:15 AM on 03/01/2011
I thought Winter's Bone was an exceptional film. It should have won more than a mention.
I guess the Academy did its accolade for "the little film" last year.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SonyaInTx
Money doesn't buy class.....
12:54 AM on 03/01/2011
Potty mouth Melissa Leo.

No need for cursing. Cursing means you don't have better language to get your point across.
11:32 PM on 02/28/2011
"The King's Speech" was a contrived period piece that might have been considered great during the Merchant Ivory period of the early 90s. It felt dated (not in an historical way, but cinematically). The academy needs an overhaul. It's turning into Pin the Tail on the Donkey. The academy voters just respond to buzz and I doubt any of them know what superior editing, or sound mixing is. And I certainly don't believe they've seen all the documentaries or foreign films. It's quickly going down the same path as the irrelevant grammys.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
12:28 AM on 03/01/2011
i don't think you have any idea how the academy works.
10:27 PM on 02/28/2011
Sorry, Jennifer Lawrence. Hell of a good young actress.
10:21 PM on 02/28/2011
Fk the Academy...
Every time you can kiss up to the Brits you do. "Winter's Bone" got nothing.
This was an amazing American work. Debra Granik, Michelle Lawrence, John Hawkes: one of them deserved something.

Oh yeah, and what about Michelle Williams for "Blue Valentine"?

" B..B..B..But they aren't British"..... Fk you.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
12:28 AM on 03/01/2011
it was nominated for best film of the year.

that's hardly nothing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
andthatsnotall
This is karma & yes she is...
10:39 AM on 03/01/2011
Well, let's not for the Australians, too. I am tired of so many plum roles going to Brits and Aussies so they can pretend to be Americans in the movies. Excuse me? I mean, come on! We have tons of talent in the U.S. but these folks come over here and oooh! a foreign accent! Let's hire them!

I love many of these actors. Colin Firth will always be Mr Darcy to me. Helena Bonham Carter, Geofrey Rush, Helen Mirren, Anthony Hopkins, Russell Crowe - all fabulous actors and I wish them well. But I wonder what fabulous actors Americans would have to admire if we were not so prone to hire folks with English accents first?

And, just for the record in case anyone gives a damn, Please send Russell Brand back to England and make him stay there. I cannot stand that man.
08:02 PM on 02/28/2011
Give me a break, HP. This movie only won as the choices were so bland. As far as I'm concerned, every monarchy in the world should be overthrown. BTW: Churchill was the one who was calling out the Nazis in the 1930s - it wasn't the ROYAL family and Chamberlain.
09:09 PM on 02/28/2011
Here's a thought - some felt it was a work of art and deserved to win.
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06:10 PM on 02/28/2011
The never-ending bourgeois BS ends with, you got it, another British monarchy heroic bio-pic. English language movie making is seriously degraded but with a little luck some worthwhile stories still exist to be told. How about Sacco and Vanzetti instead of those pompous Brits.
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Waterlooboy
Alba gu Bràth
06:31 PM on 02/28/2011
I wouldn't throw around the bourgeois word too much. People will think you're a commie. As for Sacco and Vanzetti. Might make a good movie, if it doesn't take the pro anarchist view.
05:35 PM on 02/28/2011
Woo-hoo!! A trade show with Hollywood elitist liberals, er, uh, I mean, progressives, giving each other funny little statues for spouting socialist garbage on The Big Screen. THE EXPENDABLES should have won Best Picture.
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Grokenspiel
I grok, therefore I spiel
06:08 PM on 02/28/2011
Yeah, truth has a well-known liberal bias, right?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cye
09:10 PM on 02/28/2011
Yeah, they need to get rid of the liberal bias. Perhaps they should have awarded an Oscar to Glenn Beck for best actor. How about Fox News for best sound editing?
04:59 PM on 02/28/2011
"Also, pay special attention to brand new hosts James Franco and Anne Hathaway, an unusual pair that has people very, very curious as to what they'll come up with." We pulled that one straight off the wire, didn't we? I think repeating the word "very" added just the right emphasis while alluding to a subconscious effort to predict "The King's Speech" the big winner. Nice.