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I'm kind of bummed out in advance because I know that regardless of how well TWBB does, Jonny's gonna have a hard time winning an Oscar for that score. The Academy, despite their often philistine tastes, can often be a pretty snobby institution when it comes to recognizing outsiders. That's why it will be difficult for someone whose name will either be unrecognized, or associcated with rock and roll. There is a precedent for this, however, as David Byrne won for the score of The Last Emperor (though he did share it with two Asian composers).

The best hope for him is that TWBB is a huge frontrunner and takes a lot of awards, picking up Original Score in the process. Considering the likely competition (Charlie Wilson's War? Are you fucking kidding me? With that trailer?) it's not too far-fetched.
 
If Eminem can win for the 8 Mile soundtrack, anything can happen I guess.

Michael Clayton, Elizabeth, Atonement, No Country for Old Men, and token Indie Comedy/Drama that never wins anything will probably be the frontrunners this year (Darjeeling?)
 
Well Original Song often goes to a popular artist. It's the Score category that's a little tougher and more exclusive.

And Eminem only won because U2's song was so awful. They were riding such a wave of popularity and goodwill, that should have been theirs for the taking, but I guess the voters couldn't live with themselves giving it to such a lackluster contribution, and picked the song that was actually memorable.

Elizabeth is getting pretty mixed reviews, and it's not easy for a sequel to contend like that. Michael Clayton is likely to get a screenplay nom and a lead actor nom for Clooney. Atonement looks like a pretty safe bet, as does No Country For Old Men, which is supposedly extremely violent, but great.

Juno is poised to be the Indie breakout but I just don't see it as a BP candidate. The screenplay categories are usually where they nominate, and actually award the daring/offbeat stuff.
 
lazarus said:
Juno is poised to be the Indie breakout but I just don't see it as a BP candidate. The screenplay categories are usually where they nominate, and actually award the daring/offbeat stuff.

I bet a lot of people said the same thing about Little Miss Sunshine last year.

Personally, I don't think it was BP quality, but hey.
 
Well, the difference is that LMS had a more esteemed cast (three oscar nominees travelling in that van), and also made a shitload of money. While Juno has a few recognizable faces, I think it's going to be tough for it to become as big of a breakout hit.

You never know though.
 
No spoken words said:
Nothing will top that point in the Space Moon thread, either.

Thank you.
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Casey Affleck is supposed be be very good in it- and of course it's out Friday, not tomorrow

Boston Globe review

Here, here!
With crime thriller 'Gone Baby Gone,' Ben Affleck returns home and captures Boston in all its gritty glory

(3 1/2 stars out of 4)

By Ty Burr, Globe Staff | October 17, 2007

Welcome home, Ben Affleck - all is forgiven. Yes, even "Gigli."

In adapting Dennis Lehane's 1998 crime thriller "Gone Baby Gone," the Hollywood star has gone behind the camera and rescued his career from the water-cooler ridicule that has dogged it since the days of "Daredevil" and J.Lo. The joke's on us, it turns out; as a director, Affleck has come through with a sharp, morally ambiguous piece of pulp crackerjack.

More impressive, even unique, is the way this local boy uses Boston - the mythic, clannish Boston of writers like Lehane and the late George V. Higgins. "Gone Baby Gone" is a straight-up genre film whose plotting sometimes prompts disbelief and whose dialogue turns to agonized speechifying toward the end. Yet it's anchored throughout by an insider's knowledge of this particular street, that specific turn of phrase, this local actor cast in a key bit part. The sag of a three-decker and the sag on the faces of the people who live there.

"Mystic River" and "The Departed" may be the better movies, in other words (although in the case of "Mystic River" I'm open to argument), but "Gone Baby Gone," which opens Friday, is by far the better Boston movie.

As in "River," a missing child galvanizes the action. This time the victim is a 4-year-old girl, Amanda McCready, and her mother is anything but camera-ready. This doesn't stop NewsCenter 5 and its competition from descending like locusts on the Dorchester side street where Helene McCready (Amy Ryan) lives, the better to snap up prime-time footage of the grieving mom. Even in this early scene you can see what Affleck's getting right: The faces of the neighborhood women are shut down tighter than a storefront security gate.

Patrick Kenzie (Casey Affleck) and Angie Gennaro (Michelle Monaghan) aren't intruders, but they're still viewed with suspicion. Private investigators and lovers, the two are hired by Helene's busybody brother (Titus Welliver) and sister-in-law (Amy Madigan), who in short order inform the detectives that Social Services would have taken Amanda away long ago if anyone considered it the city's business. The cops are on the job, but Patrick and Angie know people in the neighborhood who don't talk to the police.

Reluctantly, they join the investigation; just as reluctantly, the two detectives working the case accept them. Ed Harris as Detective Remy Bressant and John Ashton ("Beverly Hills Cop" and "Midnight Run" - where has this bulldog been since then?) as his partner, Nick Poole, are more familiar crime-movie fixtures, but both actors bring a weary specificity and eyes that have seen it all.

The further everyone digs into Helene's immediate past, the more it stinks: a Haitian drug lord (Edi Gathegi), a bag of missing money, a tortured corpse in Chelsea. "Gone Baby Gone" takes place in the urban cracks where the roaches and the rats live; more than once, the characters leave a bar and you're shocked to discover it's still high afternoon.

When a city's worst impulses are hidden from sight, you have to know the terrain to find them. This is where Affleck's inner map serves him well. Would another director, one from out of town, have filmed a scene set at the Quincy quarries at the Quincy quarries? Does geography matter if you're not from around here?

It does. The Boston in this movie coheres as a town deeply lived-in, with roots so deep and so tangled they can surface miles away - in a quiet suburb, perhaps. Yet those connections are all that make sense of the place, especially since no one's talking. Lehane knows the class and ethnic divisions that balkanize the Hub, and Affleck captures them in a neighborhood kid's vulgar taunt or the flat, cold-fish stare of Helene's friend Dottie (the remarkable Jill Quigg, late of Southie's Old Colony housing projects).

That authenticity goes a long way to making "Gone Baby Gone" work when the plot twists start curling beyond the pale. Even the accents are unobtrusively dead-on for the most part; the way Ryan unprintably describes a smell in a certain apartment should win her an award from the South Boston Citizen's Association. The actress's larger triumph lies in letting us see damaged maternal love hiding beneath the skin of a hateful woman. This is the stuff supporting actress Oscars are made of.

Affleck's not certain what to do about race, though - he is from these parts, isn't he? - and white characters in the book have been cast with black actors (Gathegi, Morgan Freeman as a police captain) in ways that don't feel entirely organic to the tale. Yes, we're a more modern, cosmopolitan city than Lehane and "The Departed" indicate; no, Southie is not now nor ever has been all mook. And, yes, we're still chained to our ghosts. When the great Boston movie is finally made, it will deal with class and race and the past, and no one here will want to see it.

That said, "Gone Baby Gone" gets tantalizingly close. I'd never stopped to consider Casey Affleck as a movie star before, but under his big brother's tutelage, he blooms as a leading man of richly watchable savvy and intelligence. Purists will kick, since this Patrick Kenzie is nothing like the hero of Lehane's four novels: young rather than touched by middle age, slender instead of bulked up, a bit of a yuppie.

The Patrick of the books rumbles like a flatbed truck down Dot Ave. and doesn't let anyone pass; the actor plays the character as a wary diplomat, able to play smooth or rough as circumstances dictate. (Monaghan, unfortunately, is given little to do but look distressed; the book's tough cookie is turned into a limp biscotti.)

Above all, Patrick is a neighborhood kid who grew up and out, who lives among the clan but has his eyes fixed on the horizon. He dresses well; he reads books and people. It's the specific plague of this city to not trust native sons who are "better than they should be," and nothing brings the wrath of a townie down faster than perceived superiority in another person. "I remember you from high school," Dottie tells Patrick before dropping the hammer. "You're still conceited."

You think the director knows something about this? Being "from here" is both a scar and a badge of honor, and you don't throw it over for preppie shirts or Hollywood superstardom without paying a price. It's a complicated thing, this Boston tug-of-war between belonging and ambition, and "Gone Baby Gone" worries at it like a metaphorical bone. "You must think you're more from here than me," the New Orleans-born Bressant tells the hero. "But I been living here more than you been alive. So who's right?"

Who's right: The question hangs over the movie like a curse. In its final scenes, after most of the bodies have been cleaned up, "Gone Baby Gone" expands its line of inquiry into a painful moral dilemma that pokes the bruise of class one last time. Is being part of a family, a neighborhood, a city worth the scars they can leave? The answering's easy. It's what you do with the answers that's hard.
 
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BTW, that's TOTALLY an uncredited Matt Damon at about 1:20, the second line convinced me ("We can protect your identity--completely"). And there's a half-in-shadow face that looks like him in Good Shepherd-era.

Cool.
 
lazarus said:
BTW, that's TOTALLY an uncredited Matt Damon at about 1:20, the second line convinced me ("We can protect your identity--completely"). And there's a half-in-shadow face that looks like him in Good Shepherd-era.

Cool.

Thought that was him.

That movie looks pretty cool, might end up seeing it; plus it's got Tim Roth.
 
Zooey + Jim Carrey = (Me - $8.50)


Zooey Deschanel will star opposite Jim Carrey in "Yes Man" for Warner Bros. and Village Roadshow says The Hollywood Reporter.

Based on British author Danny Wallace's memoir, the story follows a man (Carrey) who decides to change his life by saying yes to everything that comes his way, leading him on a series of unexpected comedic adventures that turn his life upside down.

Deschanel plays the romantic female lead, a woman Carrey meets on his journeys. Bradley Cooper already has been cast as Carrey's best friend. Peyton Reed ("Bring It On," "Down with Love") is directing.


source: http://www.darkhorizons.com/news07/071022o.php




EDITED TO ADD GRATUITOUS PHOTO :drool:


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I've convinced several friends of mine to drive with me from south Jersey up to NYC the day after Christmas to see this movie.

Best day of the year am confirmed.
 
No spoken words said:
No Country for Old Men opens this Friday, goes wide 11/21. Cannot fucking wait.

:drool:

I'm definitely seeing Darjeeling this Wednesday; hopefully No Country for Old Men will open here on Friday, but it probably won't.
 
I do not think No Country for Old Men will open here next weekend, but, YLB, but maybe I'll be pleasantly surprised. That's one thing I miss about LA.

Work has caused me to miss too many movies lately....Dajeerling, Eastern Promises, 3:10 to Yuma, Lust, Caution, the Doc about the Astronauts, etc. I refuse to miss No Country or There Will Be Blood.

Am about to watch Apocalypse Now Redux on DVD. Have never seen this version of the film; looking forward to it.
 
Um. I guess I forgot how awesome Apocalypse was. Forget might be the wrong word. It just had been some time since I'd watched it. Good fucking lord, what an amazing film.
 
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