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Ken Levine

Ken Levine

Posted: March 8, 2010 09:43 AM

The 2010 Academy Awards in Review

What's Your Reaction:

The Oscars were very elegant this year all the way up to the opening number. Then Neil Patrick Harris sang about sodomy, masturbation, and prison and Hollywood's classiest night was underway! But the hosts were good, there was some genuine suspense for a change, and if you could make it all the way till the end, a very satisfying ending.

People are saying Hurt Locker was an upset. No. A Serious Man would have been an upset. Hurt Locker deserved Best Picture and it's just an added bonus that it beat out the most expensive movie ever made shot by the most pretentious director who ever lived.

But first things first -- the red carpet shows. Several channels covered it but for sheer obsequiousness and stupidity you can't beat Channel 5 with the publicists' best bitch, Sam Rubin and some anorexic named Jessica Holmes. In the middle of Sam's interview with A Single Man director Tom Ford he blurted out, "Oooh, there's Kathryn Bigelow. But I'll spend a few minutes talking to you." Nice.

Jessica whoever-she-is to Christoph Waltz: "If you win, what language will you give your speech in?" Later she paid Christopher Plummer the ultimate compliment. "You play crazy very well."

No rain unfortunately. That alone spoiled the red carpet show for me. I was so looking forward to hearing, "So who did your poncho?" "Do you think rain on Oscar night is proof there is global warming?" "Fashion catastrophe! Kathy Bates and Penelope Cruz have the same galoshes!"

The Oscars were held at the now legendary Kodak Theatre. Believe it or not, it was on that very stage that Siobhan Magnus learned she had made the top 24 of American Idol.

The opening monologue with Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin had some good laughs. There were the obligatory five "Meryl Streep number of nominations jokes" but Steve Martin comparing Precious to The Jerk was hilarious, even if no one under 60 had ever heard of The Jerk.

Alec Baldwin proves once again that the way to get respect in the film industry is to leave it for television.

The academy and ABC were not subtle in their desperate attempt to rope in more young viewers. Early presenters included film queen Miley Cyrus, national treasure Amanda Seyfried, that grand dame Kristen Stewart, and master thespian Taylor Lautner.

For every time they featured Helen Mirren in the audience they showed Star Trek's Chris Pine twenty times.

I was thrilled Christoph Waltz won. The last time I rooted for a Nazi was my high school production of Sound of Music.

Sorry Woody Harrelson lost but this was a big step in his quest to become Robert Duvall.

My daughter Annie said Tina Fey was there to show she can still dress after the Golden Globes.

It's bad enough they now have ten "Best Picture" nominees when you know it's a two-man race and all the rest are just schmuck bait. But now we had to sit through all ten introductions and film clips. Hey there academy, don't insist you're taking steps to shorten the show then spend five minutes telling us why District 9 should be movie of the year.

Nothing against Jeff Bridges but they couldn't find a single Jew to introduce A Serious Man?

All in all, better gowns this year. J-Lo looked gorgeous as did Sandra Bullock. Charlize Theron had what looked like two purple cupcakes on her breasts. I didn't notice the rest of her dress.

It's bad enough no one knows any of the "Best Song" nominees but this year I didn't even know one of the movies it was from. What the hell is Paris 36? Was it actually released or was it one of those films that opened at 35,000 feet?

Sarah Jessica Parker's gown looked like a Torah cover. And she was presenting for "Best Costume Design."

There was a "thank you cam" backstage so winners could take as long as they wanted to acknowledge people. I thought that was a bad idea until Jeff Bridges' endless, rambling, pointless speech. Hey man, you're the Dude. You should know better.

Robert Downey Jr. wore his best sneakers for the occasion. I find it ironic that he was presenting for "Best Screenplay" when he is a notorious writer killer.

Glad Mark Boal won for The Hurt Locker screenplay. He's being sued left and right for possibly lifting the idea from a magazine article. But I think it's a stretch to say stole The Hurt Locker from Cosmo's "75 Crazy Hot-Sex Moves".

It kind of takes away from the prestige of the Oscars when they break away for a Spam commercial. And excuse me, but when they showed that ad with the starry eyed young woman and you think it's a perfume commercial only to learn it's about cervical cancer, I laughed. It takes a special Mad Man to turn "cervical cancer" into a punchline.

Whatever happened to Revlon?

Gee, Transformers lost.

Was Vera Fermiga wearing a giant red fan?

Dumbest acceptance speech line goes to Ryan Bingham who said, "I love you more than rainbows." He won his Oscar for lyrics, by the way.

The tribute to John Hughes was lovely but when they introduced the Brat Pack how many times did you gasp?

Nice to see David Frankel sing the praises of short films. He won an Oscar for his. But in his speech he neglected to say his was really a failed TV pilot that on some technicality managed to qualify.

I guess the academy didn't think Music by Prudence was going to win anything. They were in the last row. They had worse seats than the KRTH contest winners. And that woman who won? Could you understand a single word she said? Jesus, the "Best Foreign Film" winner was easier to understand.

No one can take a funny bit, milk it, stomp it, kill it, kill it some more, and grind it into the ground until it's powder like Ben Stiller.

No surprise that Mo'Nique won. First one to her feet for the standing ovation -- fellow nominee Vera Fermiga. You sure didn't see that when Quentin Tarantino lost.

Young Victoria was nominated for best make-up? How hard is it to make Emily Blunt even more beautiful?

The Legion of Extraordinary Dancers hoofed their way through the "Best Original Score" sequence. As my daughter Annie said, "They re-imagined Hurt Locker as a breakdance competition."

"Original Score" winner Michael Giacchino gave a lovely speech telling young people that creative pursuits are not "a waste of time." Unless that pursuit is "red carpet show host."

I LOVED James Taylor singing "In My Life" during the In Memoriam tribute. But when people applaud for certain individuals it always feels like they're happy they're dead. Of course, knowing this crowd, they probably are.

Once Hurt Locker started racking up wins you got the sense An Education was going down.

Michelle Pheiffer looked fabulous. Of course they only showed her in a medium shot on a split screen. But still!

The only award I really disagreed with was Sandra Bullock winning "Best Actress" over either Cary Mulligan or Gabourey Sidibe. But Hollywood loves its own. And I'm sure this was a make-good for The Lake House.

To present the award for "Best Director" the academy turned to the esteemed director of that motion picture classic, Yentl -- Barbra Streisand. I'm sorry but unless she sings, I don't want to see her.

But Kathryn Bigelow winning "Best Director" was historic. She becomes the first director to have slept with one of the other nominees.

And then Hurt Locker beat Avatar. Oh... and District 9. Revolutionizing film is still not as important as telling a good human story. But I don't think that's the lesson James Cameron will take from last evening. A) he'll be worried that Linda Hamilton has a project, and B) it's time to invent 4D.

Read more from Ken here.

 

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07:41 PM on 03/11/2010
"It's bad enough they now have ten "Best Picture" nominees when you know it's a two-man race and all the rest are just schmuck bait. But now we had to sit through all ten introducti­ons and film clips. Hey there academy, don't insist you're taking steps to shorten the show then spend five minutes telling us why District 9 should be movie of the year."

HURT LOCKER was the least interestin­g of the best picture nominees aka "shmuck bait" - DISTRICT 9 is a far superior film - action, tension, comedy, social message all in a beautiful (and low budget) package - LOCKER is a down the middle HBO movie at best, but getting caught up in the hype is apparently a powerful enough dynamic to sway people's opinions - love how last year no one even noticed it at the IFAs and now it's Best Picture - this article is as out of touch as the Oscars themselves
11:33 AM on 03/11/2010
Thanks for the review! For this years Academy Awards, TipTop was the only place I needed to be to get the most out of the entire 2010 Oscar's Celebratio­ns from Award prediction­s to the Red Carpet gossip at http://ftt­.nu/oscars­. Overall, using social media data to predict the Academy Award winners based upon the sentiment analysis of millions of tweets related to the Oscar nominees proved successful in a number of ways found at http://dig­g.com/d31L­8vq
11:27 AM on 03/10/2010
Don't think Hurt Locker should have won...insp­ired me to start a blog and watch all best picture nominees for past 20 years and determine whether I think the right movie won...chec­k it out...http://osc­ar-bestpic­ture.blogs­pot.com/
07:28 AM on 03/10/2010
>>But Kathryn Bigelow winning "Best Director" was historic. She becomes the first director to have slept with one of the other nominees.
09:55 PM on 03/09/2010
I think "Hurt Locker" is a strong, remarkable film but realize there are many who disagree. Agree with the comment that it's similar to Deer Hunter or even, Born on the 4th of July, in that it didn't take political sides as much as it focused on what happens to people, mentally and physically­, who get caught up in the war and are seriously affected.

Re "A Single Man," Colin Firth's portrayal was poignant and the sets were magnificen­t, but for me, ultimately it was just another film about how sad gay people's lives are--in the movies, anyway!

The film i thought was seriously overlooked and underrated is "An Education.­" I found the acting great by all the cast and was impressed with the script and direction. Not sure why so few nomination­s and why more people didn't seem to be impressed with this gem.
03:08 PM on 03/09/2010
"But Kathryn Bigelow winning 'Best Director' was historic. She becomes the first director to have slept with one of the other nominees."

That the public is aware of. Wouldn't you say?
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ledzepfan
Saving the world one Accounting problem at a time
09:11 AM on 03/09/2010
"All in all, better gowns this year. J-Lo looked gorgeous..­..."

Really? That dress looked like it was made out of BUBBLE WRAP! Yikes.....­.
02:49 AM on 03/09/2010
Booo Hurt Locker.
When future generation­s wonder why Avatar didn't win Best Picture Oscar and ask what movie actually beat it the answer will be, "Some Iraq war movie..."
...that nobody cares about anymore.
Avatar deserved better and was also beaten by a movie that was made dishonestl­y...
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murphysgirl
I prefer coffee, not tea..
09:16 AM on 03/09/2010
An Avatar fan!! Yeah me too!!
12:57 PM on 03/09/2010
Avatar is a cartoon that will be technicall­y irrelevant in about 3 weeks.
11:42 PM on 03/08/2010
I thought the "I love you more than rainbows" was hilarious, but I am a big "Little Britain" fan.
09:25 PM on 03/08/2010
The Oscars don't allow upsets, and this show set a new standard for predictabi­lity. No surprises here, except for how not funny two really funny guys could be -- stale jokes are stale no matter who delivers them, and the show is too scarosanct to allow for subversive humor, which both of them do so well. Offend No One and Hand Out AWards.
And I know I'll take flak for this, and she seems like a sweetheart­, but I was offended by the success of Sandra Bullock's campaign to get herself an Oscar for a good, but not great, performanc­e.
08:58 PM on 03/08/2010
I found Hurt Locker to be okay but nothing to crow that much about. I am wondering if people were just happy to see some soldiers disarming landmines (possibly laid earlier by the same people?) instead of killing innocent people for a change.

I was for Inglorious Basterds as were so many of the people I talked to, so how this win happened is a mystery to me... maybe it was actually to recognize the woman finally as director - strange that a woman would have directed this film.... hmmmm....

I undestand lots of Hollywood hate Tarentino ... he seems smug so it could be a personalit­y problem...­however his films are incredible­... ,weird, funny and moving at the same time.
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Brandon Cesmat
Cesmat blogs about arts education
06:08 PM on 03/12/2010
"Best" movie is so subjective across genres. I agree Hurt Locker was a competent action movie, but it is not a significan­t statement about the Iraq War when put beside documentar­ies Gunner's Palace, Taxi To the Dark Side or Control Room.
08:46 PM on 03/08/2010
The biggest highlight (of a largely highlight-­free evening) was the pre-record­ed piece they did for the "best animated" segment. Short, funny, clever and (gasp) entertaini­ng.

The absence of any screenplay or acting noms for Avatar tells you why it didn't win and should not have won. Story is everything­. Technology serves the medium, it is NOT the medium. One of the reasons Pixar are so successful is that they know that story comes first.

I loved Avatar - it was huge fun to watch. But I loved it in the way I love roller-coa­sters, not in the way I loved the Godfather.
07:45 PM on 03/08/2010
C.B. DeMille still gets my nod for most pretentiou­s. Eric von Stroheim may also exceed Cameron's pretension­s, but having not seen any of "Greed" (which had a six hour runtime or something, I think), there is a doubt to be benefited.

Both showed up, playing directors, in "Sunset Boulevard,­" interestin­gly.

(By the way, while confirming that von Stroheim played Max, I see August 25 of this year will the 60th anniversar­y of that film's release.)
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Tallulah Morehead
Award-Eligible Film Legend
06:14 AM on 03/09/2010
DeMille was playing himself in SUNSET BOULEVARD, but oh yes, he was about as full of himself as a human can be. His films are full of laughable dialogue. Von Stroheim was more of an artist, but his meglomania and overspendi­ng coupled with financial failures doomed his directing career.
07:20 PM on 03/08/2010
I must confess that I am not familiar with Mr. Levine, but I thoroughly enjoyed his "take" on Oscar night. I never watch the Oscar show (Hollywood is already self-indul­gent enough for several thousand lifetimes; no need to encourage them), but I'm now convinced I found out all that I needed to know from Mr. Levine, while saving hours of my time. Thanks, Mr. Levine. Nice job.
06:40 PM on 03/08/2010
....and further more, Colin Firth gave the best performanc­e of his life as A Single Man. That combined with one of the most voluptuous directoria­l debuts ever on the part of Tom Ford. Why is it that so much drek got sent up for awards and there was hardly a nod in the direction of this fabulous movie!
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Tallulah Morehead
Award-Eligible Film Legend
06:16 AM on 03/09/2010
Just for the record, the original novel A SINGLE MAN by Christophe­r Isherwood, on which the film is cloesly based, is a great book too.