Sunday, April 25, 2021

My Oscar ballot for 2021

PICTURE

Will win: Nomadland

Should win: Nomadland


ACTOR

Will win: Chadwick Boseman, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom

Should win: Anthony Hopkins, The Father


ACTRESS

Will win: Viola Davis, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom

Should win: Carey Mulligan, Promising Young Woman


SUPPORTING ACTOR

Will win: Daniel Kaluuya, Jesus and the Black Messiah

Should win: Paul Raci, Sound of Metal


SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Will win: Yuh-Jung Youn, Minari

Should win: Yuh-Jung Youn, Minari


ANIMATED FEATURE

Will win: Soul

Should win: Soul


CINEMATOGRAPHY

Will win: Nomadland

Should win: Nomadland


COSTUMES

Will win: Ma Rainey's Black Bottom

Should win: Ma Raieny's Black Bottom


DIRECTING

Will win: Chloe Zhao, Nomadland

Should win: Chloe Zhao, Nomadland


DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

Will win: My Octopus Teacher

Should win: Collective


DOCUMENTARY SHORT

Will Win: A Concerto is a Conversation

Should win: Collette


FILM EDITING

Will win: Sound of Metal

Should win: Nomadland


INTERNATIONAL FILM

Will win: Another Round

Should win: Better Days


MAKEUP

Will win: Ma Rainey's Black Bottom

Should win: Ma Rainey's Black Bottom


ORIGINAL SCORE

Will win: Soul

Should win: Soul


ORIGINAL SONG

Will win: Speak Now, One Night in Miami

Should win: Speak Now, One Night in Miami


PRODUCTION DESIGN

Will win: Mank

Should win: The Father


ANIMATED SHORT

Will win: If Anything Happens I Love You

Should win: If Anything Happens I Love You


LIVE ACTION SHORT

Will win: Two Distant Strangers

Should win: White Eye


SOUND

Will win: Sound of Metal

Should win: Sound of Metal


VISUAL EFFECTS

Will win: Tenet

Should win: Tenet


ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

Will win: The Father

Should win: The Father


ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

Will win: Promising Young Woman

Should win: Promising Young Woman


SISKEL & EBERT MEMORIAL CATEGORY

This year's worst nomination is Borat: Subsequent Moviefilm for Adapted Screenplay.


Thursday, April 8, 2021

My Oscar ballot

Oscar voters don't just vote for winners in categories; they rank the nominees for best to worst. Having seen all eight of this year's Oscar nominees for Best Picture, I present how I would complete that ballot. For the record, I think the first five are excellent, two are very good, and only #8 in my opinion does not deserve its nomination.

1. Nomadland: If most films are prose, this is poetry. Writer/Director/Producer/Editor/Magician Chloe Zhao has fashioned a fictional character into the very real disappearance of a Nevada town after a factory closes and uses it as an entry point into nomad culture in current day western United States. Most of the people in this movie are playing themselves, yet actors Frances McDormand and David Straithairn fit right in. The film created such a hold on me, and captures the beauty of the West while also capturing the pitfalls of the nomad culture. A truly unique experience.

2. The Father: There have been some good looks at dementia (most notably Still Alice), but this is in a different league. Director Florian Zeller adapted his own French play to place us in the mindset of a man losing touch with reality. The subtle production design and the lead actor, Anthony Hopkins, create a tension almost at the level of a horror film, except this is an everyday horror, not a fantasy one. 

3. Promising Young Woman: Writer/Director Emerald Fennell has fashioned an angry rebuke to the "boys will boys" attitude. She and lead actress Carey Mulligan walk a tightrope with righteous anger and dark comedy. They mostly pull it off -- while the final scene is emotionally correct, it does not make sense the more you think about it. That's one slight flaw. But mostly, this is the angry indictment that rape culture deserves.

4. Minari: Writer/Director Lee Isaac Chung finds a way to get lots of little details right. This story of a family pursuing the American dream, and the strain on a marriage when that dream is not coming true. This dream is trying to grow Korean vegetables in Arkansas. But that simple description does not establish how beautiful the film is, underlined by Emile Mosseri's gorgeous score, my favorite 2020 score after Soul.  

5. Sound of Metal: Has a sound design ever been so essential to a film? Director Darius Marder has delivered a film which uses its unique sound design to places us in the main character's dilemma. The rock n roll drummer played by Riz Ahmed has his hearing rapidly deteriorate and the film has many sequences where we experience that failing hearing for ourselves. It is a unique and powerful experience.

6. Judas and the Black Messiah: The story of Black Panther leader Fred Hampton is a worthy one, and I am glad it was made. My issue was the film? Hampton was 21 when he was murdered, and Bill O'Neal was 20 at the time. Daniel Kaluuya is 32, and LaKeith Stanfield is 29. While both are excellent, they are too old for these characters. For me, this is enough of a flaw to place it behind the five films above, though it is still a very good film. 

7. The Trial of Chicago 7: Has an ending scene ever been more self-defeating? Writer-Director Aaron Sorkin's script, as usual for him, is packed with great dialogue. I was already quite familiar of the trial of leaders of protests during the 1968 Democratic Convention is entertaining during its runtime. But the final scene is invented, and is tonally so wrong that it undermines the credibility of the entire film. So while I enjoy most of this film, and have re-watched it a couple of times, that last scene is a blemish that places it under all but one of the other nominees. Also, Sacha Baron Cohen is 15 years older than the man he plays, Abbie Hoffman, and fails to capture his spirit. He should not have been nominated for this performance. (I would have nominated Mark Rylance instead.)

8. Mank: This is the most disappointing film of the year. It was an exciting project: A biography of Herman Mankiewicz, who wrote Citizen Kane, directed by David Fincher, with Gary Oldman as the title character. Watching the film felt like homework. The hoped for clashes with Orson Welles over Citizen Kane are relegated to the last 15 minutes of the movie. The rest of the movie concerns blah blah blah Louis B Meyer something something William Randolph Hearst and I did not care. This is so inside baseball that it flew past me as a movie buff. The film brightens up in the scenes with Amanda Seyfried, who is very good as Hearst's mistress. This is a David Fincher film, so the technical credits are top notch and deserve most of its nominations. But too often, I was reminded of Denis Leary's six sentence recap of The Doors (1991): "I'm drunk. I'm nobody. I'm drunk. I'm famous. I'm drunk. I'm dead." Except Mank is never nobody in this film, he never becomes truly famous, and he doesn't die at the end. That leaves Mank as: "I'm drunk. I'm drunk. I'm drunk." And I'm bored.

Saturday, April 3, 2021

Tom and Jerry (2021)

The title is false advertising. The correct title would be: Some Internet Couple You Won't Care About Have a Big Wedding, There is Boring Intrigue at the Hotel for the Wedding, and Oh Yeah, Tom and Jerry Are There Too.

I will admit to not being a big Tom and Jerry fan. I was always more partial to Sylvester and Tweety myself. But they have the best moments here. My biggest laugh was the Rube Goldberg device that came out of nowhere to trap Jerry. It and all the animals in here are animated, which I think was an interesting choice that mostly worked.

The human stuff is really, really boring and takes up two thirds of the film. I really didn't care if the couple got married or not, which clearly was the intent of the film. Who cares if two spoiled brats gets married?

Chloe Grace Moretz is the human lead here, She cons her way onto the staff of a ritzy hotel just as this wedding planning starts. The details of the con are rather appalling, but we are supposed to like her because, uh, reasons. Michael Pena is the employee who is frequently her antagonist because, uh, reasons. Moretz is always a likeable presence, but that is stretched to the limit here. Not a single human character is compelling enough to justify so much of the movie's running time.

Some people will defend this movie saying, well, it's just for kids. Well there are better options for kids. A lot of them. Grade: D

2020 Theater Experience

In July 2020, I resumed going to the movies. I then stopped again as numbers rose after Halloween, and stayed away until the end of February. This is the list of the movies I saw in a theater in the second half of 2020, and the grades I would give each film (An asterisk means I saw it in a Premium format):

The Climb C+

Freaky* C-

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest A

Alita: Battle Angel* B+

V for Vendetta A-

Poltergeist B+

Come Play* C

Synchronic B+

The Kid Detective F

Leap B-

Honest Thief* B-

Yellow Rose B+

On The Basis of Sex B

Tenet* (twice) B- 

Kajillionaire C+

The Last Shift C

Akira A+

The New Mutants (twice) A-

Sonic the Hedgehog B

Words on Bathroom Walls A

The Broken Hearts Gallery C+

The Eight Hundred A

Cut Throat City C

Ammonite C

Hillbilly Elegy D+

Memories of Murder A+

On The Rocks C

Trial of the Chicago 7 A

Possessor Uncut A

Bill and Ted Face the Music B+

Inception* A+

Also, I attended the drive-ins a few times after the virus hit, and saw:

Ghostbusters A

Stripes A-

The Goonies B

Gremlins A+

Palm Springs A

Irresistible C

The Aeronauts D