Author Topic: News Coverage February 20 to 27  (Read 30889 times)

Offline Italian_Dude

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Re: Brokeback Mountain: Milestone or movie of the moment?
« Reply #30 on: Feb 22, 2006, 08:10 PM »
Thank you very much for posting this Italian_Dude.

Very interesting!

I would bet Milestone, there was never a movie like this before.

no problem, and i agree it is a milestone!
You and me together
Through the days and nights
I don't worry 'cause
Everything's gonna be all right
People keep talking
They can say what they like
But all I know is everything's gonna be all right..

Offline hidesert

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #31 on: Feb 22, 2006, 09:43 PM »

BAFTA May Tattle on Oscars: Can 'Crash' beat 'Brokeback'?[/b]

Tom O'Neil, LA Times

The possibility of an upset in the Oscar best pic race is very real. Film critics Roger Ebert and Richard Roeper are officially predicting "Crash" will beat "Brokeback Mountain." Ebert, remember, called the "Shakespeare in Love" upset over "Saving Private Ryan," but then again, well, he also said "Moulin Rouge" would beat "A Beautiful Mind."

Over the past week I've run into about a dozen academy members who couldn't resist blabbing how they're voting, even without me asking. Curiously, I discovered the same amount of support for "Crash" and "Good Night, and Good Luck" as for "Brokeback." Plus a stray vote for "Munich." Fascinating, eh?

But that anecdotal survey is not a statistically reliable sampling. More accurate might be what we witnessed yesterday at the British Academy of Film and Television Arts Awards (BAFTA) where "Brokeback" lost five races, but nonetheless prevailed in four top categories that really count: best picture, director, screenplay and supporting actor (Jake Gyllenhaal). Rumor has it that 900 members of BAFTA also belong to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, which has 5,800 members. That's a whopping 15% overlap — quite substantial.

This is only the fifth year that the British Academy Awards were bestowed prior to their Hollywood equivalent, so it's difficult to say with authority how BAFTA tattles on the Oscar outcome. Winners usually don't line up because nominees vary significantly, but BAFTA still reveals a lot if results are studied closely. For example, "Million Dollar Baby" was released so late in Britain that it wasn't eligible at last year's BAFTAs where "The Aviator" soared off with the best picture honor.

Excluding the top races that "Baby" ended up taking at the Oscars (picture, director, actress and supporting actor), BAFTA forecast the other two correctly: actor (Jamie Foxx, "Ray") and supporting actress (Cate Blanchett, "The Aviator"). That's significant considering Blanchett was no shoo-in.

Three years ago BAFTA had, as Winston Churchill might say, its finest hour as an Oscar snitch when "The Pianist" won the British kudos for best picture and director, thus revealing secret Oscar momentum. Academy watchers sensed "The Pianist's" growing support within Hollywood, but, frankly, didn't know how seriously to take it. Obviously, BAFTA was onto something. On Oscar night "Chicago" still triumphed as best picture, but "The Pianist" pulled off upsets for director (Roman Polanski) and actor (Adrien Brody). Since it also won the screenplay award, voters suddenly had some 'splaining to do. How could "The Pianist" be hailed as the best directed, best written and best acted film, but not be best picture?

At BAFTA this year no rivals bumped off "Brokeback" in the picture and director races, so it's probably safe to assume that it's still — for now — the Oscar front-runner despite what gossips claim. Over the weekend I ran into one of them, a graying academy member, who snarled, "Have you ever looked out over the crowd at an academy screening? Let me put it this way: Those aren't people who are going to vote for 'Brokeback' for best picture, if you know what I mean. No way!" (He's voting for "Good Night, and Good Luck.")

What he meant was that the room is typically full of the balding and graying heads of straight, tough geezers who aren't the type eager to cuddle up with young gay cowboys.

He's probably right, but Oscar expert Pete Hammond adds, "Yes, I've seen those crowds at academy screenings and I can safely say that they're not representative of the full academy. Those screenings are usually dominated by retirees who have a lot of free time on their hands. The other academy members are diversified, they're younger and they're hipper." And, presumably, those unseen academy members must skip official screenings and watch nominees on DVDs because they're too busy making important films that might be nominated next year.

At BAFTA, "Crash" won best original screenplay as expected, but also demonstrated surprise strength when Thandie Newton pulled off an upset for best supporting actress. Perhaps "Crash" might have won supporting actor too, if two costars hadn't competed against each other(Matt Dillon, Don Cheadle). At least they split the vote between themselves. Poor George Clooney split the vote with himself, being nommed for both "Syriana" and "Good Night, and Good Luck." Considering how oddly the category was stacked, perhaps Jake Gyllenhaal shouldn't have looked so shocked when he won.

This means that "Crash" support is strong and it's truly the formidable foe that many Oscarologists warn about. "Good Night, and Good Luck" might be a secret giant killer too, but, if so, that was never likely to surface at BAFTA. There's no way Brits can understand what Clooney's movie means to liberal Hollywooders weary of right-wing leadership in Washington.


Offline chrissy323

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An Alternate Look at the BAFTAS
« Reply #32 on: Feb 23, 2006, 12:02 PM »
From The Times online

http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,14929-2049561,00.html


An Alternate Look at the BAFTAS

Smile... only two hours to go
JAMES CHRISTOPHER
Hollywood trumped us at the Baftas. And where was Reese? Our correspondent reveals what the contenders were really thinking

"There wasn’t even the comfort of Best Actor in a Supporting Role for Gorgeous George for his terrific part in the political thriller Syriana. This was won by Jake Gyllenhaal for Brokeback Mountain despite the fact that Gyllenhaal has more lines than Heath Ledger in the film and should have been nominated for Best Actor alongside his hunky co-star."


Well, Duh.....that's cuz Ennis didn't talk :-)   
"No More Beans"

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Offline jimmypage

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Re: An Alternate Look at the BAFTAS
« Reply #33 on: Feb 23, 2006, 12:29 PM »
This was won by Jake Gyllenhaal for Brokeback Mountain despite the fact that Gyllenhaal has more lines than Heath Ledger in the film and should have been nominated for Best Actor alongside his hunky co-star."


Well, Duh.....that's cuz Ennis didn't talk :-)   

 ;D
Yes ..it's a new rule: you have to count the lines..and of course  no mute can be a lead charachter..
( do you remember Marlee  Matlin?)

Offline ranchgal

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #34 on: Feb 23, 2006, 08:22 PM »
FYI---cnn headline news show Showbiz Tonight, which airs again later--check your local listings, I get it at 10pm Central---will have the man who bought the shirts on about mid way through the show, and he talks about how he feels about the shirts and why he bought them---and he brought them along and shows them on the show.Thursday Feb 23

Offline hidesert

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #35 on: Feb 23, 2006, 10:19 PM »

Link to video clip of CNN interview of Gustavo Santaolalla about BBM music:

http://www.emailthis.clickability.com/et/emailThis?clickMap=viewThis&etMailToID=1899773719



Offline chameau

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #36 on: Feb 23, 2006, 11:56 PM »

Link to video clip of CNN interview of Gustavo Santaolalla about BBM music:

http://www.emailthis.clickability.com/et/emailThis?clickMap=viewThis&etMailToID=1899773719




hidesert!   Thanks a load for posting this!

I want the Oscar for Gustavo!  Plize!
La dictature c'est ''ferme ta geule'', la démocratie c'est ''cause toujours''
 Jean-Louis Barrault

Offline frenchcda

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #37 on: Feb 24, 2006, 12:23 AM »
I bought the CD today and I am so afraid to open it, I truly don't want to damage any part, so I go on listening to the mp3 version I have on my HD. he is truly a genius,
« Last Edit: Feb 24, 2006, 12:34 AM by frenchcda »
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Offline chameau

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #38 on: Feb 24, 2006, 12:50 AM »
I bought the CD today and I am so afraid to open it, I truly don't want to damage any part, so I go on listening to the mp3 version I have on my HD. he is truly a genius,

Yup!  I know, the Opera Queen on this board have only one CD playing for weeks...  Some country music...

Please Lord, Oscar for Gustavo, PLIZE!
La dictature c'est ''ferme ta geule'', la démocratie c'est ''cause toujours''
 Jean-Louis Barrault

Offline ennisandjack

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #39 on: Feb 24, 2006, 02:41 PM »
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsarticle.aspx?type=entertainmentNews&storyid=2006-02-24T155353Z_01_N24373423_RTRUKOC_0_US-LEISURE-OSCARS-BROKEBACK.xml&rpc=22

Brokeback" rides into popular culture
Fri Feb 24, 2006 10:54 AM ET
By Jill Serjeant

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - It began as a simple love story between two gay cowboys that movie critics wondered whether America would embrace.

But in three short months, "Brokeback Mountain" is not only an Oscar front-runner but has found its way into U.S. popular culture, inspiring parodies, jokes and cartoons across the spectrum from politics to pop music.

Seen the "Kickback Mountain" poster parody reflecting the corruption scandal sweeping the U.S. Congress? Laughed at TV comedian David Letterman's "Top 10 Signs You're a Gay Cowboy" (10."Your saddle is Versace")? Heard Willie Nelson's new recording "Cowboys are Frequently, Secretly Fond of Each Other"?

Actually seen the movie? Probably not.

"I wish I knew how to quit you" might have become the coolest phrase to throw around during a lovers' tiff but with a mere $72 million U.S. box-office, "Brokeback" is hardly a blockbuster.

"Many, many more people have told a 'Brokeback Mountain' joke than have seen the movie. It's one of those things that has really transcended itself and gotten way more attention than its box office indicates," said culture expert Robert Thompson, director of the Center for the Study of Popular Television.

As an astonished Jake Gyllenhaal said this week after winning a British Film Academy award for best supporting actor, "Who would have thought this would happen?"

In 2004, voters in 11 U.S. states backed amendments to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman, making movie industry watchers nervous about "Brokeback's" reception outside the liberal East and West coasts.

COMEDIANS CAN'T RESIST

Those outside the gay community have responded to the movie's universal love theme. But its niche in popular culture owes much to the fact that the story turns the 195Os and 60s Western -- a showcase for the manly American cowboy -- on its head.

"The idea of taking this very modern 21st century story of tender love between two cowboys and putting it into the time period of an old Western opens up the floodgates for telling jokes," said Thompson. "Comedians can't resist because we all know what a cowboy movie is and this challenges it."

Two of the shirts worn by the men in the movie sold for $100,000 on the Internet this week.

The gay activist buyer called them "the ruby slippers of our time," a reference to the most famous item worn by Judy Garland in "The Wizard of Oz."

TV's ratings hit "American Idol" got in on the act with its own "Brokenote Mountain" spoof last week.

The New Yorker magazine, whose cartoonists have had a field day with the movie's theme of forbidden love in the wilds of Wyoming, gave readers "Watch Your Back Mountain" this week. The two protagonists were accident-prone hunter and Vice President Dick Cheney and President George W. Bush.

"That poster is a template to project so many different pairings with so many different meanings. It is an image that captures the imagination but begs to be remade," said Marty Kaplan, director of the Norman Lear Center, which examines the impact of entertainment on society.

Spread quickly by the Internet and by bloggers, much of the fun at "Brokeback's" expense has been affectionate and, as such, mostly welcomed by the gay community.

Paul Levinson, professor of communication and media studies at Fordham University, said there was already a growing interest in gay relationships in mainstream heterosexual culture.

"'Brokeback' came along at the right time. It was a popular culture success waiting to happen," he said.



Offline stephan

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #40 on: Feb 24, 2006, 03:08 PM »
Thanks, ennisand jack, for posting this article. It looks like the miracle is happening, the whole world is adopting BBM culture.  ;D

Offline Tom

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http://wvgazette.com/section/Perspective/2006021825

a must read

Definitely a must read. This is the same tale told over and over in pages and posts on this Forum. What a film this is! What a joy to have been around to witness it.

thank you karind for this.

tom
Actually, "life does get better than this"

Offline stephan

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http://wvgazette.com/section/Perspective/2006021825

a must read


While reading this article, I was nervous at first, I thought there were going to be some dreadfully sad revelations. Thankfully, there weren't any. An absolute must read.

Offline frenchcda

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #43 on: Feb 24, 2006, 05:07 PM »
Two Gay Cowboys Hit a Home Run Op-Ed Columnist NYTimes ny times.com Two Gay Cowboys Hit a Home Run
 
By FRANK RICH.
 
WHAT if they held a culture war and no one fired a shot? That's the compelling tale of "Brokeback Mountain." Here is a heavily promoted American movie depicting two men having sex - the precise sex
act that was still a crime in some states until the Supreme Court struck down sodomy laws just two and
a half years ago - but there is no controversy, no Fox News tar and feathering, no roar from the religious right.
 
"Brokeback Mountain" has instead become the unlikely Oscar favorite, propelled by its bicoastal sweep
of critics' awards, by its unexpected dominance of the far less highfalutin Golden Globes and, perhaps
most of all, by the lure of a gold rush. Last weekend it opened to the highest per-screen average of any movie this year.
 
Those screens were in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco - hardly national bellwethers. But I'll rashly predict that the big Hollywood question posed on the front page of The Los Angeles Times after those stunning weekend grosses - "Can 'Brokeback Mountain' Move the Heartland?" - will be answered with a resounding yes.
 
All the signs of a runaway phenomenon are present, from an instant parody on "Saturday Night Live" to
the report that a multiplex in Plano, Tex., sold more advance tickets for the so-called "gay cowboy picture" than for "King Kong." "The culture is finding us," James Schamus, the "Brokeback Mountain" producer,
told USA Today. "Grown-up movies have never had that kind of per-screen average. You only get those numbers when you're vacuuming up enormous interest from all walks of life."
 
In the packed theater where I caught "Brokeback Mountain," the trailers included a National Guard recruitment spiel, and the audience was demographically all over the map. The culture is seeking out this movie not just because it is a powerful, four-hankie account of a doomed love affair and is beautifully acted by everyone, starting with the riveting Heath Ledger.
 
The X factor is that the film delivers a story previously untold by A- list Hollywood. It's a story America may be more than ready to hear a year after its president cynically flogged a legally superfluous (and unpassable) constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage for the sole purpose of whipping up
the basest hostilities of his electoral base.
 
By coincidence, "Brokeback Mountain," a movie that is all the more subversive for having no overt politics, is a rebuke and antidote to that sordid episode. Whether it proves a movie for the ages or as transient as "Love Story," it is a landmark in the troubled history of America's relationship to homosexuality. It brings something different to the pop culture marketplace at just the pivotal moment to catch a wave.
 
Heaven knows there has been no shortage of gay-themed entertainment in recent years. To the tedious point of ubiquity, gay characters, many of them updated reincarnations of the stereotypical fops and fussbudgets of 1930's studio comedies, are at least as well represented as other minorities in prime-time television.
 
Entertainment Weekly has tallied nine movies, including "Capote" and "Rent," with major gay characters this year. But "Brokeback Mountain," besides being more sexually candid than the norm, is not set in
urban America, is not comic or camp, and, unlike the breakout dramas "Philadelphia" and "Angels in America," is pre-AIDS.
 
Its heroes are neither midnight cowboys, drugstore cowboys nor Village People cowboys. As Annie
Proulx writes in the brilliant short story from which the movie has been adapted, the two ranch hands,
Ennis Del Mar (Mr. Ledger) and Jack Twist (Jake Gyllenhaal), are instead simply "high school dropout country boys with no prospects, brought up to hard work and privation, both rough-mannered, rough-spoken, inured to the stoic life."
 
They meet and fall in love while tending sheep in the Wyoming wilderness in 1963. That was the year of Martin Luther King Jr.'s march on Washington and Betty Friedan's
 
"Feminine Mystique," but gay Americans, and not just in Wyoming, were stranded, still waiting for the
 world to start spinning forward.
 
Over the next two decades of sporadic reunions and long separations, both Ennis and Jack get married and have children; it barely occurs to them to do otherwise. In their place and time, there is no vocabulary
to articulate their internal conflicts, no path to steer their story to a happily-ever-after Hollywood ending. Before they know it, they are, in Ms. Proulx's words, "no longer young men with all of it before them."
 
Ennis's and Jack's acute emotions - yearning, loneliness, disappointment, loss, love and, yes, lust - are affecting because they are universal. But while the screenplay, by Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana, adheres closely to the Proulx original, it even more vividly roots the movie in the rural all-American milieu, with its forlorn honky-tonks and small- town Fourth of July picnics, familiar from elegiac McMurtry works
like "The Last Picture Show."
 
More crucially, the script adds detail to Ennis's and Jack's wives
(as do Michelle Williams and Anne Hathaway, who play them) so that we can implicitly, and without any
on-screen moralizing, see the cost inflicted on entire families, not just on Ennis and Jack, when gay
people must live a lie.
 
Though "Brokeback Mountain" is not a western, it's been directed by Ang Lee with the austerity and languorous gait of a John Ford epic. These aesthetics couldn't be more country miles removed from
"The Birdcage" or "Will &Grace."
 
The audience is forced to recognize that gay people were fixtures in the red state of Wyoming (and every other corner of the country, too) long before Matthew Shepard and Mary Cheney were born.
 
Without a single polemical speech, this laconic film dramatizes homosexuality as an inherent and immutable identity, rather than some aberrant and elective "agenda"
 
concocted by conspiratorial "elites" in Chelsea, the Castro and South Beach, as anti-gay proselytizers would have it. Ennis and Jack long for a life together, not for what gay baiters pejoratively label a "lifestyle."
 
But in truth the audience doesn't have to be coerced to get it. This is where the country has been steadily moving of late. "Brokeback Mountain," a Hollywood product after all, is not leading a revolution but ratifying one, fleshing out - quite literally - what most Americans now believe.
 
It's not for nothing that the proposed constitutional ban on same-sex marriage vanished as soon as the election was over. Polls show that a large American majority support equal rights for gay couples as long as the unions aren't labeled "marriage" - and given the current swift pace of change, that reservation, too, will probably fade in the next 5 to 10 years.
 
The history of "Brokeback Mountain" as a film project in itself crystallizes how fast the climate has shifted. Mr. McMurtry and Ms. Ossana bought the screen rights to the Proulx story after it was published in The
New Yorker in 1997.
 
That was the same year the religious right declared a fatwa on Disney because Ellen DeGeneres came
out of the closet in her ABC prime-time sitcom. In the eight years it took "Brokeback Mountain" to overcome Hollywood's shilly-shallying and at last be made, the Disney boycott collapsed and Ms. DeGeneres's star rose. She's now a mainstream daytime talk-show host competing with Oprah. No one has forgotten she's a lesbian. No one cares.
 
ANOTHER startling snapshot of this progress can be found in a culture- war skirmish that unfolded just as "Brokeback Mountain" was arriving at the multiplex. The American Family Association of Tupelo, Miss., a leader in the 1997 anti-"Ellen" crusade, claimed this month that its threat of a boycott had led Ford to stop advertising its Jaguar and Land Rover lines in glossy gay magazines.
 
Last week Ford, under fire from gay civil-rights organizations and no doubt many other mainstream customers, essentially told the would-be boycotters to get lost by publicly announcing that it would not only resume its Jaguar and Land Rover ads in gay publications, but advertise other brands in them as well.
 
As far as I can tell, the only blowhard in the country to turn up on television to declare culture war on "Brokeback Mountain" also has an affiliation with the American Family Association. By contrast, as Salon reported last week, other family- values ayatollahs have made a conscious decision to ignore the movie, lest they drum up ticket sales by turning it into a SpongeBob SquarePants cause c�l�bre.
 
Robert Knight of Concerned Women for America imagined that the film might just go away if he and his peers stayed mum. Audiences "don't want to see two guys going at it," he told Salon. "It's that simple."
 
So he might wish. The truth is that the millions of moviegoers soon to swoon over the star-crossed gay cowboys of "Brokeback Mountain" can probably put up with the sight of "two guys going at it." It's the all
too American tragedy of what happens to these men afterward that neither our hearts nor consciences
can so easily shake.
       what is a belief if not a lack of knowing


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Offline Tom

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #44 on: Feb 24, 2006, 05:20 PM »
Thank you so much for these posts...I'm never gonna see these articles over here in Scotland.

This is what I am loving about all of this , I have preconceived ideas of how homophobic Mid West USA is from articles I have read over here about Matthew Shepard and such.  When I first heard about BBM all the movie mags and papers over here were saying that it was not going to be shown in Southern and Mid Western States. Now I'm reading that people are demanding it be shown and are booking tickets weeks in advance.

It is so refreshing to see these articles and long may you continue to post them for all of us over here>

Tom
« Last Edit: Feb 24, 2006, 07:06 PM by tombul »
Actually, "life does get better than this"

Offline chameau

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #45 on: Feb 24, 2006, 05:57 PM »
frenchcda!  Your the man!  Thanks for posting this great article.

Hugs!
La dictature c'est ''ferme ta geule'', la démocratie c'est ''cause toujours''
 Jean-Louis Barrault

Offline ethan

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #46 on: Feb 24, 2006, 06:33 PM »
Quote
It's the all too American tragedy of what happens to these men afterward that neither our hearts nor consciences
can so easily shake.

Indeed. Thanks, frenchcda for posting this.
Remembering Pierre (chameau) 1960-2015, a "Capricorn bro and crazy Frog Uncle from the North Pole." You are missed

Offline Italian_Dude

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #47 on: Feb 24, 2006, 09:03 PM »
If brokeback mountain does not win best picture, i will seriously have somekind of breakdown..

if it doesnt win i will start an uproar!!!
You and me together
Through the days and nights
I don't worry 'cause
Everything's gonna be all right
People keep talking
They can say what they like
But all I know is everything's gonna be all right..

Offline hidesert

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #48 on: Feb 24, 2006, 09:39 PM »

Link to video clip of CNN interview of Gustavo Santaolalla about BBM music:

http://www.emailthis.clickability.com/et/emailThis?clickMap=viewThis&etMailToID=1899773719

hidesert!   Thanks a load for posting this!

I want the Oscar for Gustavo!  Plize! 

Me too Cham.   Gustavo deserves the recognition. 

WalMart is selling the BBM CD and it will be interesting to see if they sell the DVD when it's released.  WalMart panders so much to the religious right that it wouldn't surprise me if they refuse to sell it.


Offline hidesert

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #49 on: Feb 24, 2006, 10:07 PM »
Is Secret Homophobia Fueling a Possible 'Crash' Upset?[/b]

Tom O'Neil, LA Times    2/24/2006

Something weird is going on among Oscar voters — and it's also going unspoken. "Crash" and "Good Night, and Good Luck" have their passionate supporters who gush with their honest love of those best picture nominees, but most non-"Brokeback" votes I hear from Oscar voters are really anti-"Brokeback."

Scads of academy members fume to me when they tattle on how they're inking their ballots, "I'm not voting for 'Brokeback'!" Then they calm down a bit and add, "I'm voting for (fill in the blank)" and give a positive reason to justify their decision for picking an alternative. In most cases I hear contrary votes for "Crash," but there's also surprising strength for "Good Night, and Good Luck." So far I've heard equal numbers of votes for "Brokeback" as "Crash," with "Good Night" not far behind. The best picture race is really thisclose.

It's the fury that voters express when mentioning "Brokeback" that's so odd and suspicious. In some cases I believe they're people who think the film is overrated. Or they're just weary of gay cowboy jokes. But in the majority of cases I suspect it's something else and something bad that they feel they can't utter out loud, so they're holding it in. You can see it on their faces.

Could it be secret homophobia? Perhaps. The academy is comprised mostly of straight white guys with white hair who know it's intolerable to bash gays in lavender-friendly, liberal Hollywood. But I really don't think it's that in any large way. Instead, I think it's the same frustration non-Jews feel when there's a glut of Holocaust films leading the Oscar pack in Jewish-friendly Hollywood. They want to exclaim, "Enough already with the Holocaust films!" This time I suspect many straight Hollywooders — who are totally cool with gay people in general — are fighting the urge to shriek, "Enough already with the gay persecution films!"

This Oscar year there really is a glut of them and, if I'm right in my predictions, we'll see the all-gay Oscars on March 5 with victories in the top categories by "Brokeback Mountain," "Capote" and "Transamerica."

How widespread is this anti-"Brokeback" tide? It's hard to say because it's mostly unspoken, but it's very real and it makes predicting the best picture race a crapshoot. It's quite possible that we could see another one of those best picture/director splits that used to be so rare, but are now commonplace with "Chicago," "Shakespeare in Love" and "Gladiator" winning best picture while the director laurels went to, respectively, Roman Polanski ("The Pianist"), Steven Spielberg ("Saving Private Ryan") and Steven Soderbergh ("Traffic"). Whatever happens this year, it's clear that Ang Lee has the best director trophy in the bag.

In the end, I believe "Brokeback" will win because there's a clear voting pattern in the top category recently: academy members want to be on the winning team. Front-runners tend to win even when there's a growing surge against them. Backlash against "The English Patient" was so widespread that "Seinfeld" did a whole episode about it, but it still won. Even though "A Beautiful Mind" was under attack on all fronts a few years ago, it nonetheless prevailed. "Chicago" pulled off its best picture victory even though late-breaking momentum for "The Pianist" was so strong that it won the top prizes for director, actor and screenplay. That bodes well for the gay cowboys remaining tall in the saddle on Oscar night.


Offline hidesert

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #50 on: Feb 24, 2006, 10:18 PM »
The LA Times "Oscar Guru" Tom O'Neil makes his predictions:

Complete Oscars Predix: 'Brokeback' Will Win Five[/b]

LA Times   2/24/2006

No more lollygagging. 'Tis time to stick out our Oscar necks, my fellow award seers. Here are the categories I believe will be claimed by the triumphant pix. It's a crying kudos shame that two of the finest films of 2005 didn't get nommed for best picture, but at least "King Kong" and "Memoirs of a Geisha" will be multiple champs in other categories while two movies that did make the cut, "Good Night, and Good Luck" and "Munich," will probably be shut out.

"BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN"
[Best] Picture
[Best] Director
[Best] Adapted Screenplay
[Best] Musical Score
[Best] Cinematography


"CRASH"
Original Screenplay
Film Editing

"KING KONG"
Sound Editing
Sound Mixing
Visual Effects

"MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA"
Art Direction
Costume Design

"CAPOTE"
Philip Seymour Hoffman, Best Actor

"TRANSAMERICA"
Felicity Huffman, Best Actress

"SYRIANA"
George Clooney, Supporting Actor

"THE CONSTANT GARDENER"
Rachel Weisz, Supporting Actress

"TSOTSI"
Foreign Language Film

"WALLACE & GROMIT IN THE CURSE OF THE WERE-RABBIT"
Animated Feature

"HUSTLE & FLOW"
Song ("It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp")

"CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE"
Makeup

"MARCH OF THE PENGUINS"
Documentary Feature

"GOD SLEEPS IN RWANDA"
Documentary Short

"THE MOON AND THE SON"
Animated Short

"SIX SHOOTER"
Short Film, Live Action

 
« Last Edit: Feb 25, 2006, 12:51 AM by hidesert »

Offline chameau

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #51 on: Feb 24, 2006, 10:51 PM »
At least Gustavo would make it.

No actor award will break my heart.  :-\
La dictature c'est ''ferme ta geule'', la démocratie c'est ''cause toujours''
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Offline ethan

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #52 on: Feb 24, 2006, 11:17 PM »
At least Gustavo would make it.

No actor award will break my heart.  :-\

Same here.
Remembering Pierre (chameau) 1960-2015, a "Capricorn bro and crazy Frog Uncle from the North Pole." You are missed

Offline frenchcda

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #53 on: Feb 25, 2006, 12:14 AM »
News Flash

Ennisjack.com has obtained a photo that reveals otherwise


    http://www.ennisjack.com/index.php?topic=1371.60#msg26686


 ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

The Oscar of our Hearts

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Offline hidesert

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #54 on: Feb 25, 2006, 12:49 AM »
At least Gustavo would make it.

No actor award will break my heart.  :-\   


Yeah, wish they could win all of the acting nominations, but it's a long shot.  Another prediction list that I read had George Clooney winning "Best Original Screenplay" and Jake Gyllenhaal winning "Best Supporting Actor".  Not a bad scenario.

But 5 wins (O'Neil's Predix) out of 8 nominations wouldn't be shabby. 

     

Offline chameau

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #55 on: Feb 25, 2006, 01:08 AM »
At least Gustavo would make it.

No actor award will break my heart.  :-   


Yeah, wish they could win all of the acting nominations, but it's a long shot.  Another prediction list that I read had George Clooney winning "Best Original Screenplay" and Jake Gyllenhaal winning "Best Supporting Actor".  Not a bad scenario.

But 5 wins (O'Neil's Predix) out of 8 nominations wouldn't be shabby. 

     

Lets try to be realistic here:

Best Film  :-[
Best director (keep weapons away from me if Ang don't get it)
Best adaptated Screenplay (same as above)
Best music score (John Williams votes are splited in 2 nominations, Go Gustavo!)
Michelle, Heath, Jake?  At least one plize!  :P
La dictature c'est ''ferme ta geule'', la démocratie c'est ''cause toujours''
 Jean-Louis Barrault

Offline glacier1

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #56 on: Feb 25, 2006, 04:39 PM »
I scanned some pages of this week's Entertainment Weekly re: Oscar predictions.  Click the thumbnails for larger images.




I realized that I, as a writer, was having the rarest film trip: my story was not mangled but enlarged into huge and gripping imagery that rattled minds and squeezed hearts.....Annie Proulx.

Offline ethan

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #57 on: Feb 25, 2006, 04:47 PM »
Thanks for posting the predictions, glacier1. Let's hope for the best.
Remembering Pierre (chameau) 1960-2015, a "Capricorn bro and crazy Frog Uncle from the North Pole." You are missed

Offline stephan

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #58 on: Feb 25, 2006, 05:53 PM »
Two Gay Cowboys Hit a Home Run Op-Ed Columnist NYTimes ny times.com Two Gay Cowboys Hit a Home Run
 
By FRANK RICH.
 
WHAT if they held a culture war and no one fired a shot? That's the compelling tale of "Brokeback Mountain."
(...)

Thanks for posting this terrific article, frenchcda.

Offline Badarsila

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Re: News Coverage February 20 to 27
« Reply #59 on: Feb 25, 2006, 10:11 PM »
PHS wins best actor??  :o  Bleh... :P ::) only Heath deserves to win best actor, period!! :-*
"Oh Mortals, What is Love that binds beyond Life on Earth? To all Corners in a Pair we fly, Braving Summer and Winter by and by, Union is Bliss: Parting is Woe! Agony is Boundless for a Lovelorn Soul! Sweetheart, give me word..Trails of Clouds drifting foward..Amid Mountains capped with Snow, Wither shall my lonesome Shadow go?"