Yes !
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I'd like to see his acceptance speech. :shifty:
Too soon? :unsure:unluckyluciano and PMZQ like this. -
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No shocker. He deserved it, glad he won. It is kind of sad seeing everyone in the crowd and then his parents and sister with the speech, it's a damn shame that he can't be there to get the award himself.
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I still maintain the best actor award should be renamed 'the Ledger'. He is to acting what Marino is to playing QB.
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GridIronKing34 and Pagan like this.
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What the hell was the BS with former Oscar winners standing around TALKING about roles instead of actually showing clips of their performances? The WORST idea I've ever seen or heard about. I don't give a rats *** what some writer thinks about the performance, I want to see a clip of what the actor/actress did.
I just can't get over this and how stupid it was.Clark Kent, Rocky Raccoon, SICK and 2 others like this. -
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It was then that Heath lost his way for a couple of years.....The Robe, then Ned Kelly......both obscure roles and movies that just weren't very good. In "The Robe" Heath was miscast as a Roman Catholic priest. It was directed by the same man that made A Knights Tale, and he recast almost the same cast as that movie, but AKT was a comedy, and The Robe was a serious drama.
It didn't work.
Then Heath started finding his way with, his small but wonderful role in The Lords of Dogtown and The Brothers Grimm, and then came his breathtaking performance in Brokeback Mountain.
If you want to see an nice but sad movie about drug addiction and what it can do to you, see Candy, Heath's movie he made right after Brokeback. He plays a young man in Australia that marries young, and becomes so addicted to drugs he forces his wife to turn to prostitution to feed their drug habits. Very dark and realistic look at that tragic problem.
Its such a loss as he was a tremendous talent. -
The Oscars bore the heck out of me...
They are a sham. Rourke got robbed. I stopped caring about the Oscars when Shakespeare in Love beat Saving Private Ryan...
Just a gigantic narcissistic love-fest, IMHO...texanphinatic and PMZQ like this. -
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Bull**** as always.
"The Dark Knight" AND "Iron Man" got ROBBED on "Best Visual Effects".
Someone please tell me, what were the AMAZING visual effects on "Benjamin Button"? :rolleyes:
And how on earth does DK win for "Best Sound Editing", but not "Best Sound Mixing".
Hello?
As usual, Hollydouche gets one or two "too cool for the room" movies and decides to heap way too much praise on them.Brown42000 likes this. -
I have to disagree w/ people saying Mickey got robbed. I thought he was good in The Wrestler but Sean Penn is simply a better actor, and he was really good in Milk. I enjoyed Milk more overall, and enjoyed Sean Penn in it quite a bit. I was pulling for him to win, so I was glad the Academy didnt get caught up in the idea of Mickey's comeback.
And I was glad to see Slum dog clean up and Ledger win. Supporting Actor was a loaded category this year, plenty of deserving performances but no way you cant give it to Ledger.HolliFinFan and PMZQ like this. -
The thing is since it's a matter of taste we will always complain but I find them fun and like watching them....
And honestly In a world that gave us Brando, Olivier, deniro, jimmy Stewart Anthony Hopkins... You can't argue the award should b named after ledger
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I have to agree here. Yes Ledger was a very talented actor who probably was just hitting his peak with Brokeback and The Dark Knight but he's in no way in the same class overall as the guys you mentioned above.Jt0323 likes this. -
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I know Q is gonna blast me for this :shifty:
I found the movie too cerebral. It went to far into the "inner struggles" of the characters. My thing is war is physical and mental, and because of that it is its own morality play if you just depict it the way it is. That's why I found SPR far superior, to movies like Thin Red Line and others like Platoon or Full Metal Jacket. Sometimes, I think, directors use war as a back drop to tell a different story, so that the moral quandaries of war hit home to the viewer. For me, the straight up depiction of war, where those quandaries are just played out in real time based on the given situation, has a far greater impact. -
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I think Saving Private Ryan is brutally flawed. It's opening sequence is amazing, but this is a 2 hour long movie in which the only part that is really worth last 30 minutes. The rest of it is incredibly disconnected it makes no sense that they are looking for this man, its characters are just stereotypes, and it ends up going with an easy patriotism message at the end. So yeah if it where 30 minutes long, this was the best thing of that year, but it wasn't.
Meanwhile to be honest Shakespeare in Love is quite underrated of a movie. I don't know if it was the best movie of the year (again, for me it was Thin Red Line) but it was brilliantly writen, better acted, and was a very complete movie that portrayed an era with a lot of strength and power.
That is the thing both Shakespeare and Thin Red Line are more complete movies. None of them have a moment quite as good as the beginning of Saving Private Ryan, but at the same time none of them was as full of holes in narrative as private Ryan.
If you want to complain about a best Oscar beating a movie it had no sense beating go with "Dances with Wolves" beating out "Goodfellas" -
I wasn't arguing what deserved the Oscar that year. I was happy that SIL won, in fact, its one of my favorite movies of all time. I've seen 2 things from Stoppard, SIL and Rosencrantz(sp?) & Guilderstern(sp?) Are Dead, and I'm amazed at how he weaves Shakes' material into completely original and entertaining stories.
As far as SPR, I didn't find the characters stereotypical at all. There wasn't the black guy, the Jewish guy, the angry guy, the funny guy, the redneck guy, etc. that plagues other war movies. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying they were deep completely realized characters, but I wouldn't call them stereotypes. It also makes perfect sense they are looking for Ryan, because it actually did happen. Of course Hollywood took its fair share of license, but the idea, which you're saying is pointless, did in fact happen.
I didn't think the end was as patriotic as it was about a man carrying the burden of owing a debt to a handful of men who gave their lives specifically for him.