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[2016]
2017 OSCAR 89th Academy Awards -Filem gay (homoseksual) menang best picture Emm
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itulah dari dulu mmg x pernah tercalon langsung...pelik aku...
ntah lar...
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larrrrr morgan freeman juga ke?
mmmm..
ada sesiapa tak actor kulit hitam tercalon best actor BAFTA?
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Moonlight DVDscr dah keluar ...
baru tadi |
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nnt live pengumuman top 5
jgn lupa tag sekali
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ade..
kebanyakannye british actor
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Oscar Watch: Heading for the last roundup before nominations
Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone won Golden Globes for "La La Land." (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Glenn WhippContact Reporter
The film academy gave its members a reprieve this year, pushing back the beginning of Oscar voting so everyone had more time to go to screenings, sift through their DVDs and deeply consider what movies and performances to nominate.
Balloting ended Friday, the same week that the directors and producers guilds announced their slates and Meryl Streep delivered an awards show speech for the ages about He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named.
What does it all mean for the Academy Awards? Time for another edition of Oscar Watch, as we puzzle through the latest news and developments leading up to the academy’s revealing of its nominees on Jan. 24.
BEST PICTURE
“La La Land”
“Moonlight”
“Manchester by the Sea”
“Fences”
“Arrival”
“Lion”
“Hell or High Water”
“Hidden Figures”
“Hacksaw Ridge”
Spoiler
“Silence”
Analysis: Six movies — “La La Land,” “Manchester,” “Moonlight,” “Arrival,” “Fences” and “Lion” — earned enough guild recognition in the past few weeks to assure a nomination here.
Now the question is: How many more films will the academy select? “Hidden Figures” is the feel-good choice, sporting a popular ensemble and currently peaking at the box office. “Hacksaw” is the preferred pick among the academy members we like to call “steak eaters,” i.e. older white males, i.e. most of the membership. And “Hell or High Water” is the best movie of the trio, a thriller that weaves in pointed social commentary that speaks to the anxiety of our times.
All three could make it in — meaning there would be nine nominated movies, as was the case from 2012 to 2014. Or, possibly — and I’m not holding my breath — Martin Scorsese’s acolytes could make their presence felt by putting “Silence” in the top spot on their preferential ballots. Pundits call such placement the “passion vote,” a particularly apt term for a deeply felt film like “Silence.” Let’s just say I’m holding Hebrews 11:1 close to my heart right now.
LEAD ACTRESS
Will Annette Bening be a lead actress contender for "20th Century Women"? (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Emma Stone, “La La Land”
Natalie Portman, “Jackie”
Amy Adams, “Arrival”
Meryl Streep, “Florence Foster Jenkins”
Annette Bening, “20th Century Women”
Isabelle Huppert, “Elle”
Spoiler
Isabelle Huppert, “Elle”
Analysis: The season’s most competitive acting category forces voters to make an almost impossible choice between legends like Bening, Streep and Huppert. Streep got the jump on the competition with “Florence” opening in August. More academy voters have seen her than any other contender here, aside from Stone.
But that doesn’t always matter among actors branch voters, as they’ve recently rewarded leads from off-the-beaten-path indies — Charlotte Rampling (“45 Years”), Marion Cotillard (“Two Days, One Night”) and Emmanuelle Riva (“Amour”). Huppert is the quintessential “due” nominee. That might give her an edge, and Streep certainly won a few votes with her speech at the Golden Globes. (Rami Malek: “In a weird way, she’s our president.”) As for Bening, she’s plenty revered herself and has served on the academy’s board of governors the past several years. Did I mention this is an almost impossible choice?
LEAD ACTOR
Michael Keaton appears in "The Founder." (The Weinstein Company)
Denzel Washington, “Fences”
Casey Affleck, “Manchester by the Sea”
Ryan Gosling, “La La Land”
Viggo Mortensen, “Captain Fantastic”
Andrew Garfield, “Hacksaw Ridge”
Spoiler
Michael Keaton, “The Founder”
Analysis: This is the same group that SAG Awards voters nominated, and it’s hard to envision anything other than a repeat. Joel Edgerton for “Loving”? Too quiet. Tom Hanks for “Sully”? Too Tom Hanks. Both are deserving, but that kind of old-fashioned, understated acting usually isn’t the kind of turn that usually attracts votes. One wild card: Keaton for his chilling, unlovable, oh-so-persuasive pitchman version of Ray Kroc in “The Founder.” He’s the movie’s special sauce.
SUPPORTING ACTRESS
"Fences" actress Viola Davis shows off her trophy at the Golden Globes. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Viola Davis, “Fences”
Michelle Williams, “Manchester by the Sea”
Naomie Harris, “Moonlight”
Nicole Kidman, “Lion”
Octavia Spencer, “Hidden Figures”
Spoiler
Janelle Monáe, “Hidden Figures”
Analysis: The Golden Globes gave us prime Davis, accepting her own award in an emotional speech paying tribute to her father and then eloquently introducing Streep for her career honor. Such is her popularity that she could easily have won the lead actress category had her turn been placed there.
SUPPORTING ACTOR
Dev Patel gives a boost to Sunny Pawar at the Golden Globes. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Mahershala Ali, “Moonlight”
Jeff Bridges, “Hell or High Water”
Lucas Hedges, “Manchester by the Sea”
Dev Patel, “Lion”
Hugh Grant, “Florence Foster Jenkins”
Spoiler
Michael Shannon, “Nocturnal Animals”
Analysis: Three things: 1. I’m OK with the Patel nomination, provided he brings Sunny Pawar as his guest. 2. Even though he lost the Globe to Aaron Taylor Johnson, Ali remains the overwhelming favorite here for his formidable turn in “Moonlight.” 3. Aaron Taylor Johnson? He was fine as the brutish good ol’ boy in “Nocturnal Animals.” Props to anyone who can deliver a standout scene while sitting on the toilet. But I’m still partial to Shannon’s volatile Texas lawman in the same movie. He brought the Marlboro Man archetype to life and nailed a good dozen sardonic lines of dialogue that made me laugh out loud. I’m surprised he’s not a surefire nominee. Plus: This.
DIRECTOR
Is Martin Scorsese heading for a ninth Oscar nomination as a director? (Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)
Damien Chazelle, “La La Land”
Barry Jenkins, “Moonlight”
Kenneth Lonergan, “Manchester by the Sea”
Denis Villeneuve, “Arrival”
Martin Scorsese, “Silence”
Spoiler
David Mackenzie, “Hell or High Water”
Analysis: The Directors Guild went with Chazelle, Jenkins, Lonergan, Villeneuve and, surprisingly, first-timer Garth Davis for “Lion.” But the academy’s much-smaller pool of voters rarely rubber-stamps the DGA’s choices, preferring to honor directors behind arty dramas — and/or Scorsese, an eight-time nominee. If any group of voters is going to rally around “Silence,” a passion project for Scorsese nearly three decades in the making, it’s this branch.
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i see, sbb kat tmpt i slalu donlod mvie ada komplen pasal audio x seiring ngn visual
so i ragu2 nak donlod n tgk
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martin scorcese tak bagi impak sangat tahun ni kan, ala2 terlepas pandang jah silence tu.
tapi review agak ok lah jugak kan.
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setakat ni dia jek pemenang best director oscar yg berjaya dpt review bagus (tp box office failed)
magis filem arahan ethan coen, ang lee, clint eastwood, stephen speiberg thn ni semuanya tak menjadik
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baru teringat kat coen brothers... hail caesar tu kan...awal2 tahun dah tayang.
sully tu ok jugak....tapi mungkin critics dah bosan dgn gaya directing eastwood, predictable.
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director plg failed, ang lee..
filem billy jane walks tu dikritik teruk...jarang filem ang lee dpt review rotten tomatoes bwh 50%
coen brothers tu mgkn sama gak dgn clint eastwood , gaya directing yg predictable
jd pundit tak de pun predict diorg sekali lg dpt nominasi..
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so far semalm dah download
arrival dvdscr
moonlight dvdscr
tgok ok je audio dan visual
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Sandra Bullock.
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sandra bullock kalau menang best actress utk gravity i rasa ok jer...
watak tu lebih mencabar berbanding the blind side.
the blind side tu watak beliau macam tempelan je.....tak menonjol berbanding adik nigga obese tu.
heran camna mennag best actress....best lagi beliau dlm the proposal dgn mamat deadpool tu...walaupun komedi ringan |
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bukan? smpi swipe sag, critic choice awards best actress gak mase tu
maybe the other candidate tak berapa menonjol?
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Best ActressEmma Stone has been a frontrunner since Venice Film Festival in 2016, where she won the Volpi Cup for Best Actress for her "all-singing, all-dancing turn in the musical La La Land", says the Daily Telegraph.
Annette Bening is also in the running for 20th Century Women. The 1970s drama isn't out until next month, but the actor's name has been "popping into the lists of many Oscar prognosticators" since the premiere at the New York Film Festival, says Bustle.
Bening, who plays a hippy single mother in the film, already has four Oscar nominations under her belt after losing out to Whoopi Goldberg, Natalie Portman and Hillary Swank - twice. "erhaps 20th Century Women will be the movie that finally gets her that golden statuette", says Bustle.
Other hot tips include Natalie Portman, who takes the title role in a biopic of former US first lady Jackie Kennedy; Jessica Chastain, who plays a formidable DC lobbyist in Miss Sloane, and Ruth Negga, who stars in Loving as one half of an interracial couple living in 1950s Virginia.
kesian annete bennings
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Academy unveils big changes for announcing Oscar nominations An Oscar statue is seen at the nominations announcement for the 87th Academy Awards in Beverly Hills, California on January 15, 2015.
The days of the 5:30 a.m. press conference in Beverly Hills unveiling the year’s nominees for the Oscars are over, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced Friday.
Traditionally, nominations have been announced live on television from a pre-dawn press conference at the Academy’s headquarters, but all that is changing.
Instead, the Academy will utilize already produced videos featuring Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs and notable Academy members to unveil this year’s crop of nominees during a live-stream that will be available on the Academy’s digital platforms as well as a satellite feed to local broadcasters and morning shows.
Brie Larson, Jennifer Hudson, Ken Watanabe, Jason Reitman and more will appear in the nomination videos with Isaacs.
Voting for Oscar nominations closed on Friday, and the nominees will be announced on Jan. 24. The Academy Awards, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, will be held Feb. 26.
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tahun tu i sokong gabourey sidibe filem precious.
meryl streep pun ada filem tentang chef tu kot kalau x silap
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Every Oscar Best Picture Winner Introduction
The Academy Awards are like time capsules: Each winner offers insights into the values and concerns of their era. Many of the past best picture winners are timeless classics. Others have dated badly; they may have captured their time, but times have changed and so have audience tastes. You will love some of these choices, and may hate others, but they’re all interesting. There are also links to the reviews from Variety that were published the same year as the film debuted.
Image: Courtesy of New Line/Fox Searchlight/20th Century Fox
Ordinary People
1980 Best Picture Winner
Robert Redford’s directing debut won at the National Board of Review, the N.Y. Film Critics Circle, Golden Globes, the Writers and Directors guilds, and then four Oscars, out of six nominations.
Chariots of Fire
1981 Best Picture Winner
The tale of the 1924 Olympics proved one of the biggest surprises in Oscar history, though a popular choice; most pundits had predicted it would be a showdown between Warren Beatty’s epic “Reds” and the small-scale family drama “On Golden Pond.”
Gandhi
1982 Best Picture Winner
There was a lot of competition that year, including “E.T. the ExtraTerrestrial” and “Tootsie.” But the grand-scale biopic from director Richard Attenborough was the evening’s big winner, with eight trophies.
Terms of Endearment
1983 Best Picture Winner
TV’s James L. Brooks made a splashy film debut, winning three personal awards that night (as writer, director, and producer), while Shirley MacLaine and Jack Nicholson also took home acting prizes.
Amadeus
1984 Best Picture Winner
Milos Forman’s sumptuous version of Peter Shaffer’s stage play scored eight wins out of 11 nominations.
Out of Africa
1985 Best Picture Winner
The epic romance benefited from Meryl Streep’s performance, Sydney Pollack’s direction and Kurt Luedtke’s adaptation of Isak Dinesen’s book. In all, the film won seven Oscars (though Streep was an also-ran).
(Whoopy Goldberg melepas best actress ke tangan nenek tua )
Platoon
1986 Best Picture Winner
Oliver Stone’s autobiographical film, a vivid account of his Vietnam experiences, won four Oscars, including Stone as director.
The Last Emperor
1987 Best Picture Winner
The Bernardo Bertolucci-directed biopic scored a clean sweep: Nine wins out of nine nominations, the first time that happened since “Gigi.” The winners included Vittorio Storaro for his beautiful cinematography.
Rain Man
1988 Best Picture Winner
The film, produced by Mark Johnson and directed by Barry Levinson, was basically a two-character study, with Dustin Hoffman winning as best actor; while Tom Cruise’s performance was widely admired, he was surprisingly not nominated.
Driving Miss Daisy
1989 Best Picture Winner
The film was a rarity, winning the top prize though its director (Bruce Beresford) wasn’t even nominated. Among the wins were actress Jessica Tandy and scripter Alfred Uhry, adapting his own play.
Dances With Wolves
1990 Best Picture Winner
No major studio wanted to make the film, but the Kevin Costner-directed Western proved a huge hit with audiences and earned 12 Oscar nominations, winning seven.
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