Saturday, 25 February 2012

My Picks for 2011 Academy Awards


2011 wasn’t the best year for movies in my opinion, and there are movies/actors who I think should be on this list but I am going to try to keep this one short and just present my choices for the 2011 winners. Mercifully for you, I am also not going to blather on about all the awards; I’ll keep it to acting, directing and the best movie. I am new to this so I don’t have the credentials to talk about cinematography, editing, sound editing and other technical aspect that goes in making a movie great.  

Best Supporting Actor

Jonah Hill
Moneyball
Kenneth Branagh
My Week with Marilyn
Nick Nolte
The Warrior
Christopher Plummer
Beginners
Max von Sydow
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

It was tough deciding which actor I think deserves the Oscar. I enjoyed Max von Sydow, and Jonah Hill’s performances but I just didn’t really feel any emotional connection with their characters. It was a battle between Nick Nolte and Christopher Plummer and I believe Christopher Plummer did a fantastic job as an elderly man coming out of the closet. Chalk one up for the True North!

Best Supporting Actress

I have to say, that I enjoyed Bridesmaids a lot more than I thought I would and Melissa McCarthy rightfully deserves a nomination for her hysterical portrayal of the bride’s sister-in-law. All the other performances were good but as it turns out it’s the poop humor that gets me in the end. I believe Octavia Spencer deserves an Oscar for her Awesome Poop pie. But all jokes aside I was very impressed by her performances and I was cheering for her all the way to the end.

Bérénice Bejo
The Artist
Jessica Chastain
The Help
Octavia Spencer
The Help
Melissa McCarthy
Bridesmaids
Janet McTeer
Albert Nobbs

Best Actor

I would like to point out that I don’t think Jean Dujardin should be on this list. Although I loved the homage to the silent film era, acting requires a lot more than just actions. If Jean Dujardain deserves recognition for his acting where he did not talk I strongly believe Andy Serkis also deserves recognition for his amazing performance as Cesar in Rise of the Apes. As a matter of fact if Serkis was nominated, he’d be the guy I’d root for to win. Personal preferences apart, I think this award belongs to George Clooney for his role as a grief-stricken husband who must deal maturely with his wife’s death and her infidelity, while juggling the role of a harried dad. You wont hear this often but ‘The Descendants’ is the stage where Clooney unravels the full range of his brilliance and the Golden statue is just reward me thinks!

George Clooney
The Descendants
Jean Dujardin
The Artist
Brad Pitt
Moneyball
Gary Oldman
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
Demián Bichir
 A Better Life

Best Actress

I didn’t think Meryl Streep’s performance was so impressive that she is sweeping all the awards, and as for Viola Davis I loved her acting but I don’t think it deserves an Oscar. I actually believe that she deserved the Oscar for ‘Doubt’; a movie in which Meryl Streep also starred. I loved both of both of them in that movie and I was rooting for them but this year both the actresses fall just a little short in my point of view. At first my heart was keen on choosing Rooney Mara for her role as a socially awkward and rebellious super detective but then I saw Glenn Close in Albert Nobbs. I have to say she deserves to win and a lot of people are overlooking her performance and picking Viola Davis. Maybe I am wrong but it feels a lot like a race and representation thing rather than that of merit.  

Viola Davis
The Help
Rooney Mara
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Meryl Streep
Iron Lady
Michelle Williams
My Week with Marilyn
Glenn Close
Albert Nobbs

Best Director

I have to say all these directors did an amazing job even Michel Hazanavicius for The Artist. I loved The Descendants, but I won’t be picking Alexander Payne for the best Director. As for Hugo I saw it when it came out on DVD last week and I heard the real appeal of the movie was the amazing use of 3D. I liked the movie but I didn’t think it was that impressive. Perhaps if I saw it in the theaters in 3D I would have a different point of view. Having said that, I believe Woody Allen deserves the Oscar for Midnight in Paris. I was skeptical of this movie as I am not a huge fan of Mr. Allen. It was different, it was well acted, and Woody used the Parisian scenery and it’s rich artistic history to near perfection. 

Terrence Malick
The Tree of Life
Alexander Payne
The Descendants
Michel Hazanavicius
The Artist
Woody Allen
Midnight in Paris
Martin Scorsese
Hugo

Best Picture

Deciding on best picture was also tough for me. My top three picks are The Descendants, War Horse and Midnight in Paris. If any of these movies win the Oscar I’d call myself a happy camper. My no-no’s here are The Artist, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, and The Tree of Life. I don’t think The Artist was such an amazing movie that it deserves an Oscar. As for Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close I don’t even know why this movie is in this list at all. I can’t help but think it’s only there because of the sensitive subject of 9/11 and I think that is just disappointing because this movie really sucks. 

As for my choice for best picture I have to go with The Descendants. It was a tough call between War Horse and The Descendants, but in the end I have to say I just enjoyed The Descendants a little more maybe because it relates to the lives of those around me in the West. 
 
The Descendants
 Jim Burke,
Jim Taylor, and Alexander Payne
The Help
 Brunson Green,
Chris Columbus, and Michael Barnathan
Moneyball
 Michael De Luca,
Rachael Horovitz, and Brad Pitt
The Tree of Life
 Dede Gardner,
Sarah Green, Grant Hill, and Bill Pohlad
War Horse
Steven Spielberg and
Kathleen Kennedy
The Artist
Thomas Langmann
Midnight in Paris
 Letty Aronson and
 Stephen Tenenbaum
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
Scott Rudin
Hugo
 Graham King and
 Martin Scorsese