The writing in the movie wasn't perfect. And you can tell the probably had to cut a shit ton of stuff too.
But I am pretty sure I've had worse conversations about women and sex when I was a kid. Far worse actually. Maybe I need to watch again but I never thought the alcoholic step dad got in the way of the film either.
I think Boyhood was probably the 3rd or 4th best film out of the nominees, but I thought it got across what it set out to do. And it had me thinking about my upbringing right after i saw it. Thought it was a cool project and can't wait to see what Links does next. Anyway, I really don't get the hate.
I would say the movie parodies certain acting tropes and stereotypes, but I wouldn't call Birdman itself a satire.
I found Birdman really really annoying on first watch, and thought its message about art and commerce was pretty unoriginal and self-indulgent.
I'd argue that Carrell shouldn't have made it in, either, given the competition. His performance is 90% the nose.
Cass spelled out what I meant clearly. If I wanted to say you should get out, then I would have said you should get out. Don't be a fucking dick.
As for point about bad filmmaking. I don't see it. The movie conveyed its themes effectively. I got it. Plenty of others got it no problem.
For the first 20-30 minutes I was with you.
I thought it was going to be a very funny, extremely self aware movie about aging actors trying to prove their self worth through artistic endeavors and realizing that it's all hogwash and we would all have a good laugh at them in the process.
But at some point the movie turned on a dime and stopped being that. Probably the over-the-top scene with him and his daughter screaming about whether or not the play was important. It wasn't played for laughs anymore and it started descending into a mess of a movie that totally lost me.
Was it trying to be a deep commentary on the meaningless of life and the futileness of such endeavors, or was it a self aware take-down of those kinds of plays? In the end I had to a settle on the former because the back half took itself far too seriously.
I think Redmayne strongly deserved the Oscar.
It's obviously a bit of an Oscar baity role, and the sort of thing that always wins Oscars.. but it doesn't mean the performance was any less difficult, and I thought he did a fantastic job of selling the transformation, and made you like the character even when he could only communicate through the eyes and rough facial expressions.
It's one of those.. is it Oscar bait? yes
Was it still a fantastic very hard to pull off performance? Yes.
So, I'm fine with it. The real shame was Felicty Jones was overlooked because I thought her performance was fantastic. The sort of nuanced performance that she gave rarely gets accolades, but she was a very believable character and I could feel her pain throughout without having to do much in the way of screaming and throwing things.
I'm an anti-biopic person in general (Oh god, King's Speech has an Oscar), but generally felt theory of everything really was a well constructed movie told from her point of view that sort of steered clear of the paint by numbers approach.
Don't think it should have won best picture, but it was a very well made movie that dealt with personal struggle and room for religion in a scientific world smartly.
Oh god, why would you want to rewatch the whole thing.Is there a wesbite where i can legally rewatch the whole show online?
Much as people here like to shit on it, I think The Hurt Locker's impact on the public consciousness and its relevance only grows more and more with each year -- partly because, as more troops have come home, the weight of the war on their minds and ability to cope is becoming clearer and allowing more vets to talk about.
Not that the Hurt Locker is really facilitating that change itself, just that it helped shine a light on it. I mean really, everything people are praising American Sniper for, was already done and done much better in Bigelow's film.
Return of the King?
Has there ever been a worst host?
Just a bit of an OT question, who designed the nominee slides for this year's ceremony?
Why are the Oscar's hosts always so bad?
^Birdman won because it's a movie about acting and actors make up a majority of the Academy.
I liked Birdman, and I liked Argo, and I liked The Artist. But each of their wins is extremely transparent.
^Birdman won because it's a movie about acting and actors make up a majority of the Academy.
I liked Birdman, and I liked Argo, and I liked The Artist. But each of their wins is extremely transparent.
The writing is terrible. If the host can't improv and think on their feet, they're doomed to bad readings of worse material.
^Birdman won because it's a movie about acting and actors make up a majority of the Academy.
I liked Birdman, and I liked Argo, and I liked The Artist. But each of their wins is extremely transparent.
I think Redmayne strongly deserved the Oscar.
Ah, thanks for the clarification.Actors don't make up a majority. They're the largest branch, but still only make up about 1/6th of the total Academy.
But will Redmayne be able to defend his title next year with his Jupiter Ascending performance?
Much as people here like to shit on it, I think The Hurt Locker's impact on the public consciousness and its relevance only grows more and more with each year -- partly because, as more troops have come home, the weight of the war on their minds and ability to cope is becoming clearer and allowing more vets to talk about.
Not that the Hurt Locker is really facilitating that change itself, just that it helped shine a light on it. I mean really, everything people are praising American Sniper for, was already done and done much better in Bigelow's film.
Why are the Oscar's hosts always so bad?
^Birdman won because it's a movie about acting and actors make up a majority of the Academy.
I liked Birdman, and I liked Argo, and I liked The Artist. But each of their wins is extremely transparent.
It was pretty bad, terrible writing. Another thing though is that, more than ever, the audience is so uptight. I know, surprise surprise, Hollywood is full of oversensitive people who can't laugh at themselves or anything else even remotely controversial, but it feels like its worse than ever. It's like they just sit there and murmur and gasp anytime anyone dares to say anything a little out of line. The show is more and more of a drag to watch, and I think it makes hosting nearly impossible since the audience basically gives you nothing.
I want to say, people should see Timbuktu, a wonderful film.
Harsh but very artistic, beautiful fotography and music.
yeah! people being stoned to death is funny! I couldn't stop laughing
And quite funny. Great film, should have won.