The
nominations for the 87th Academy Awards were announced this morning;
ringing in the homestretch of the 2014 cinematic year. Here are the good, bad,
and glorious points of discussion:
THE GOOD
-All 24
categories were announced this morning, a welcome change from previous years
where only the major categories were announced during the telecast, and then
“go to blah blah website to see the rest”. ALL the categories and the people
who made the movies happen should get their due time.
-This is the
least number of films nominated for Best Picture (eight) since the Academy
expanded the category to a maximum of ten entries in 2011. It is satisfying to
know that they weren’t trying to fill a quota by jamming in one or two more
films.
-Bennett
Miller’s FOXCATCHER was nominated for major categories such as Best Actor,
Supporting Actor, Director, and Screenplay…but did not get a Best Picture nod.
It seems odd, but many writers, including this Blogger, felt that the best
aspect about the film was the acting…which is tied closely to the writing and
directing. It’s one of those rare cases where the excellent pieces do not add
up to the sum total, and the Academy saw right through that.
-Peter
Jackson’s third chapter of THE HOBBIT trilogy earned just one nomination; Best
Sound Editing. This nomination gave Jackson’s six Middle-Earth movies a grand
total of 37 nominations; the most for any film-series in history.
THE BAD
-It may be
tempting to gripe about Meryl Streep getting nominated again, but this may instead
point towards an overall weak year for the Supporting Actress category. If not
Streep, who then?
-Christopher
Nolan’s INTERSTELLAR picked up nominations for Best Sound Editing and Mixing. A
head-scratcher because the sound-mix in that cosmic-voyaging film had the
bizarre artistic choice of the music drowning out the dialogue.
-Clint Eastwood did not get a Best Director nomination, despite his AMERICAN SNIPER gaining six nominations in major categories.
-Tim
Burton’s BIG EYES, his best film in years, was shut out.
-The
animated film THE LEGO MOVIE, one of the best-reviewed of the year, did not get
a nod for Best Animated Feature.
THE GLORIOUS
-Let’s hear
it for the small independent films! J.K. Simmons of LAW AND ORDER and State
Farm commercial fame was nominated for his performance in the indie flick
WHIPLASH, and Marion Cotillard received a nod for her even-smaller flick TWO
DAYS ONE NIGHT; a film that she did not campaign for a nomination.
-Wes
Anderson received his first Best Director nomination for his fantastic THE
GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL, which picked up eight others, including Best Picture.
-Fan-favorites
Michael Keaton picked up his first career acting nomination, and Edward Norton
picked up his third…for their work in BIRDMAN.
-It all
comes down to the movies, and the right films got the lion’s share of the
nominations; BIRDMAN (9), THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL (9), THE IMITATION GAME (8),
AMERICAN SNIPER (6), and BOYHOOD (6). The leaders of the 2014 pack are right where they
belong; up front and in the spotlight.
*
The Oscars
will be awarded February 22nd.
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