Category: Oscar Nominee

Brubaker (1980)

In this based on a true story, Robert Redford is the new warden of an Arkansas prison, trying to reform it from the years of entrenched corruption and abuse within its walls. Unfortunately he has to contend with trustys, guards, politicians, and local businessmen who are all too happy to reap the benefits of the system as it is. Prison films are almost universally depressing to watch, especially when compared to the horrifying conditions prisoners still face. It never seems to get better. At least this had Yaphet Kotto and a small bit for Morgan Freeman as prisoners.

Oscar Nomination: Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen

10 (1979) – Rewatch

Dudley Moore is in a relationship with Julie Andrews, but upon seeing the beautiful Bo Derek in her wedding gown he wants her instead. It’s another late film in the Blake Edwards’s catalog where the main character is a middle-aged male having a midlife crisis and treats women solely as objects for his own desire. He’s unable to deal with the fact that the woman herself has no issue with having sexual flings. I guess we’re supposed to ignore the reasons why Edwards is writing films about a husband cheating on his actual wife. The braids on Derek are iconic though and made me miss the days when I would braid my own hair in tiny braids.

Oscar Nominations: Best Music, Original Song; Best Music, Original Score

Ruggles of Red Gap (1935)

In this fish out of water tale, Charles Laughton is a gentleman’s gentleman whose gentleman loses him in a poker game to a bunch of nouveau riche Americans. Laughton’s Ruggles finds himself spirited away to rural Washington where he unwittingly finds himself a local celebrity and embracing American ideas of freedom and self-determination. It’s a sweet tale where Laughton really sells the loosening of his prescribed British service role to finding his own way in the world.  Best Picture Nomination

Oscar Nomination: Best Picture

Mon Oncle (1958)

While I didn’t find this quite as delightful as PlayTime or Trafic, there are still some wonderful visuals in this Tati outing. Monsieur Hulot’s nephew prefers spending time with his playful uncle rather than with his upwardly mobile parents in their ultra modern home. The house provides plenty of gags: a fish fountain that’s only turned on for the right kind of guests, large round upstairs windows that look like eyes, uncomfortable furniture constantly needing to be moved to the various zones, and garden paths that follow no logical direction. The film isn’t just stuck in the modern either, there is plenty to be experience in Hulot’s unimproved neighborhood and at the plastics factory where his sister’s husband gets him a job. I actually watched both the English and German versions of the film and discovered that the dialogue falls to the wayside when you don’t have to pay attention to subtitles and the film becomes just visual. It results in two very different experiences.

Oscar Win: Best Foreign Language Film

Cleopatra (1963)

It’s no surprise that this brought on the end of the Golden Age of Hollywood. Everything about it is overblown: the sets, the cast, the costumes, the run-time, everything. With two parts split between Cleopatra’s relationships with Julius Caesar and Mark Antony, the story just goes on and on. Edited down to an hour or two shorter and it might have held my attention better. Elizabeth Taylor is truly a beautiful woman, but she was terribly miscast in the role of Cleopatra. She lacks gravitas, cunningness, and sexiness. There’s at least the feeling of building an alliance between Taylor and Rex Harrison’s Caesar; the relationship between Richard Burton’s Mark Antony is lackluster. There must have been some love flames between them in production, but they are not seen on screen. Obviously there was no expense sparred in the visuals. Cleopatra’s arrival in Rome is a live-action version of Aladdin’s Prince Ali scene. Despite that money spent in costumes (there is one ridiculous scene where without hesitation Taylor changes between three different outfits and Burton between two), many of Taylor’s look like the same exact style just in an array of candy colors. But I did love the sets. They are lavish and beautiful, truly sights to behold. There are so many little details to be seen: wigs, clothing racks, and umpteen baths. It’s also great to see the various cast in smaller roles: Hume Cronyn, Roddy McDowell, Martin Landau and even Carroll O’Connor as a Senator.  Best Picture Nomination

Oscar Wins: Best Cinematography, Color; Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Color; Best Costume Design, Color; Best Effects, Special Visual Effects

Oscar Nominations: Best Picture; Best Actor in a Leading Role; Best Sound; Best Film Editing; Best Music, Score – Substantially Original

I Am Love (2009)

For such a beautifully shot film, it didn’t leave me feeling much warmth. Tilda Swinton looks out of place as the preppy-looking Russian-born matriarch of a wealthy Italian family. The entire family is stuck in their prescribed roles. That is until love manages to snap at least a couple of them out of the ennui. For Tilda, that’s having an affair with her son’s friend, a chef. The last acts particularly veer on the melodramatic in eye-rolling ways, but throughout it is still a beautiful film from the settings to the costumes to the food.

Oscar Nomination: Best Achievement in Costume Design

Farewell, My Lovely (1975)

I had forgotten that this was based on the same story as Murder My Sweet until about halfway through though it definitely explained why it felt so familiar. As with the other film, this film noir about Moose Malloy who after being released from prison hires Philip Marlowe to find his old girlfriend Velma has a few too many moving parts that makes it unnecessarily convoluted. Robert Mitchum makes a good Marlowe. At his age, he brings a grizzled, cynical world-weariness to the character, though that makes him a poor match for Charlotte Rampling’s charms. I also find the 1970s realism less well-suited for the story.  Noir

Oscar Nomination: Best Actress in a Supporting Role

Prometheus (2012)

An odd prequel to the Alien series, this film has the cool aesthetic of those films but doesn’t quite feel as if it fits narratively with the others. Noomi Rapace and Logan Marshall-Green are an archeologist couple who discover a star map that they believe will lead them to humanity’s predecessors. Soon they and a motley group of scientists and other crew members are on a ship to the far corners of the universe. Anyone who has seen any of the other films knows this is a bad idea. Noomi is given the main job of having her ass kicked and kicking ass in return and Michael Fassbender plays a convincing android trying his best to pass as human. There’s a whole lot in the movie that makes no sense and bits that are left unfinished that it’s not even worth delving very far into.  SciFi

Oscar Nomination: Best Achievement in Visual Effects

Detective Story (1951)

A surprisingly dark look at a day in a 1950s police precinct, Kirk Douglas leads the cast as an angry detective who has yet dealt with the psychological damage caused by his criminal father, seeing things and people as either all good or all bad. The cases start out fairly light, shoplifters and petty robberies, but the main story involving an illegal abortionist quickly brings the narrative and all those connected to it into a downward spiral of destruction. The acting is solid, but everyone is overshadowed by the brutish nature of Douglas’s character.  Noir

Oscar Nominations: Best Actress in a Leading Role; Best Actress in a Supporting Role; Best Director; Best Writing, Screenplay

Free Guy (2021)

I really was on the fence about watching this from the moment I was aware of its existence. Ryan Reynolds is an NPC in what is essentially Grand Theft Auto Online. The first part of the movie has a fun time establishing the game’s world and Ryan’s place in it. Then the narrative is pulled out of the game and we’re subjected to inane real-life characters and a nonsensical storyline and a barrage of every IP Disney owns and I forgot that there was any good parts in anything ever.

Oscar Nomination: Best Achievement in Visual Effects

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