Good Morning, Oscar: November 11

Good Morning, Oscar: November 11

Published: November 11, 2009 @ 9:30 am
Print this page
By Steve Pond

In this morning’s roundup of Oscar news ‘n’ notes from around the web, the “Precious” debate is on, and Halle Berry beats Cuba Gooding for a dubious honor.

The latest print edition of The Envelope is out. It surveys the new landscape for Oscar campaigning, gives Carey Mulligan the cover, talks to supporting-actor contender Stanley Tucci and gives a boost to the candidacy of “A Serious Man” costume designer Mary Zophres. More to the point, it gets the L.A. Times 12 pages of “for your consideration” ads. 

Premiere chooses the top 10 worst post-Oscar career choices. I thought Cuba Gooding Jr. pretty much retired this particular trophy with his "Jerry Maguire"-to-"Boat Trip," etc. career path, but Premiere ranks him at only the fifth worst, behind Susan Sarandon (who went from “Dead Man Walking” to “Stepmom”), Kevin Spacey (“The Usual Suspects” to “K-PAX”), Roberto Begnini (“Life Is Beautiful” to “Pinocchio”), and the number one pick, Halle Berry (“Monsters Ball” to “Catwoman”). Personally, I’d give Halle a break and move her out of the top spot simply because that sequence gave her a magical, gutsy, classic Hollywood moment: she showed up at the Razzie Awards to accept her worst-actress honor carrying her Oscar. You go, girl.

Jeffrey Wells admits that “Precious” is a sure-fire best-picture nominee, but says that it won’t win: “’Precious’ is primarily about a film about compassion and reaching out, but mainly in the third act. Otherwise it's an exploitation film that deals in ghastly abhorrent behavior. It drags the audience down into a pit of gross squalor and story manipulation in order to score its points.” He rounds up a fair amount of anecdotal evidence and comments from like-minded sources to play up the film’s vulnerability with Oscar voters. (Hollywood Elsewhere)

Tom O’Neil also wades into the “Precious” waters, and says that attendance wasn’t great at a recent Academy screening … but voters will see it later on DVD and give it lots of nominations … like “Dreamgirls,” which didn’t get a best-picture nod … but it garnered enormous per-screen averages … like “Brokeback Mountain,” which famously lost to “Crash” … but it’ll get big support from the actors branch … and not much from the below-the-line Oscar voters … but it can still win best picture … but maybe it won’t. Got all that? His conclusion is that Oscar pundits are really smart, but he doesn’t know if “Precious” will win. (Gold Derby)

Guy Lodge responds to his In Contention colleague Kris Tapley with his own list of what’s going to win in March. They agree on most of the highest-profile awards (beginning with “Precious” for best picture) but disagree on most of the others. Lodge goes with more “Hurt Locker,” “District 9” and “Up,” less “Star Trek” and “Nine.”

Tapley, meanwhile, thinks Dion Beebe is going to win the cinematography Oscar for “Nine.” (In Contention) The Nine – The Movie blog offers

Tags: Academy Awards, Awards, Deal Central, oscars
Sign Up For First Take

Get Our Daily Email, and Receive Invitations to Our Screenings Series

Start your day with all of the news worth knowing

What's First Take?

Description

The Odds is an informed, bemused, skeptical and authoritative look at all aspects of the Academy Awards race. Steve Pond, author of the L.A. Times bestseller The Big Show, has been covering this particular circus for more than two decades, much of that time as the only reporter with full backstage and rehearsal access to the Oscar show.

Subscribe to The Odds
Most Popular
Columns
Wrap Tweets