Oscar 2013 In Review
Having Ellen DeGeneres back to host after a seven year
absence was nice. I think she was
amenable and friendly and kept the mood light, which makes the awards
presentation run more smoothly. Her bits
(the selfie photobomb that broke Twitter, a pizza run for the hungry audience
members) worked for the most part.
BEST DIRECTOR

Personal preference: Steve McQueen, 12 Years a Slave
As impressive as Cuaron’s efforts were, the storytelling choices made by British director Steve McQueen for 12 Years a Slave are specific and meaningful. The composition of performers in their surroundings sets the stage of the enslaved and their dreary plantation existence. I’m eager to see what McQueen does next, because the progression from Hunger to Shame to this film has shown him to be one of the great talents working today.

A tough category, with performances from Robert Redford in All Is Lost and Tom Hanks in Captain Phillips missing out, but I would have liked to see a nomination for Oscar Isaac in Inside Llewyn Davis.
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Once again, we are deprived of seeing great talents like
Steve Martin and Angela Lansbury get their career moment, thanks to the giving of
the honorary Oscars at a separate ceremony.
Showing a brief highlight reel is not enough. I want cinema history to be celebrated, not a
weak-linked celebration of heroes to show effects clips from Man of Steel and The Amazing Spider-Man.
We had an interesting outcome for the 86th Academy Awards, with Gravity winning the most awards (seven, for Director, Cinematography, Score, Editing, Visual Effects, Sound Mixing, Sound Editing), but 12 Years a Slave winning the ultimate prize, Best Picture, along with two other statuettes (Supporting Actress, Adapted Screenplay).
We had an interesting outcome for the 86th Academy Awards, with Gravity winning the most awards (seven, for Director, Cinematography, Score, Editing, Visual Effects, Sound Mixing, Sound Editing), but 12 Years a Slave winning the ultimate prize, Best Picture, along with two other statuettes (Supporting Actress, Adapted Screenplay).
This is an outcome similar to 1972 when Cabaret won eight Oscars (including Director, Actress, Supporting
Actor), but lost Best Picture to The
Godfather, which also won Actor and Adapted Screenplay. Cabaret
and now Gravity are the biggest
Oscar winners to NOT win Best Picture, with 8 and 7 Oscars, respectively.
12 Years a
Slave joins twenty other Best Picture
winners to have only claimed three or fewer Oscars in all. Some of these honored Best Picture winners
with low Oscar totals include the aforementioned The Godfather, but also Argo
(also won Adapted Screenplay, Editing), Crash
(Original Screenplay, Editing), Rocky (Director,
Editing), Midnight Cowboy (Director,
Adapted Screenplay), Casablanca (Director,
Original Screenplay), Rebecca (B&W
Cinematography), Mutiny on the Bounty (no
other wins), All Quiet on the Western
Front (Director), and the very first Best Picture winner Wings (Engineering Effects).
12 Years a
Slave is the 22nd Best Picture
to NOT win Best Director. It is also
first time since 1951 and 1952 that consecutive Best Pictures did not also win
Best Director (1951: An American in
Paris, George Stevens for A Place in
the Sun; 1952: The Greatest Show on
Earth, John Ford for The Quiet Man). Last year Argo
won Best Picture, but Ben Affleck was not nominated for Best Director (the
award went to Ang Lee for Life of Pi).
12 Years a
Slave is now the fourth Best Picture
winner focused on the issue of race in the United States, following In the Heat of the Night, Driving Miss
Daisy, and Crash. All four films also share the distinction
of winning Best Picture, but not Director. 12
Years is remarkable, however, for being told from an exclusively black
point of view; Heat and Daisy feature white co-leads, while Crash has a multi-racial ensemble.
12 Years a
Slave is also the first Best Picture
winner from a black director (British director Steve McQueen, who despite
losing the Director award, was honored as one of the film’s five
producers). Gravity director Alfonso Cuaron made history too, became the first
Latin American honored in the category.
Director David O. Russell’s 1970s crime caper American Hustle went away empty handed
despite earning 10 nominations. It tied
similar shut-outs for Gangs of New York in
2002 and True Grit in 2010 (both went
0 for 10). The biggest shut-outs are
still the 0 for 11 records set by The
Turning Point in 1977 and The Color
Purple in 1985.
There have been fifteen films in the 86 years of the Academy
Awards with at least one nominated performance in each of the four acting
categories. Russell has directed his
actors to this distinction in consecutive years, for Silver Linings Playbook and American
Hustle. But while Jennifer Lawrence
was able to win Best Actress last year for Silver
Linings, none of the four performers nominated this year for Hustle won in their four nominated
categories. American Hustle now shares that dubious distinction with My Man Godfrey (1936) and Sunset Boulevard (1950).
Russell seems like he’s on the verge of cleaning up, after
Oscar nominations and wins for his actors in The Fighter and Silver
Linings Playbook, but I’m guessing he’ll have to really pander to voters to
finally win a Screenplay or Director Oscar for himself.
Here are my thoughts about the main categories:
BEST PICTURE
American Hustle
Captain
Phillips
Dallas Buyers
Club
Gravity
Her
Nebraska
Philomena
12 Years a Slave
The Wolf of
Wall Street
Winner: 12 Years a
Slave
“It’s time”, indeed.
An experience that truly transports the viewer into another world that
many would like to pretend either never existed or happened a long time ago, so
why dredge up this history? But the
film’s message of life enduring a system of oppression and exploitation has
power. The experience is true to this
country’s origins and deserves to see the light. I’ll share my words for the performers and
the director below, but this is a magnificent achievement.
For the most part, the competition was admirable (Captain Phillips, Gravity, Her, Nebraska,
The Wolf of Wall Street), but the Academy made the right choice here.
Director Richard Linklater reuniting with his
stars/co-writers Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy to bring us the latest depiction
of the relationship between the worldly travelers Jesse and Celine is perhaps
the most ambitious. After the “meet
cute” in Vienna for Before Sunrise (1995)
and the reunited lovers in Paris for Before
Sunset (2004), we find our couple navigating the difficulties of child
raising, custody issues, the fading romantic spark, and the potential of how
much each knows about the other to become a powder keg for a destructive war of
words. This is not the easiest of the
three films to watch, but it may be the most realistic and honest.
BEST DIRECTOR
Alfonso Cuaron, Gravity
Steve McQueen, 12
Years a Slave
David O. Russell, American
Hustle
Martin Scorsese, The
Wolf of Wall Street
Alexander Payne, Nebraska
Cuaron’s technical achievement ran away with 7 of the 10
categories (losing only Production Design, Actress, and most noticeably,
Picture). The long path to bring this
tale of survival for a lone astronaut, played by Sandra Bullock, in the cold
vacuum of space is a commendable effort.
The film itself is largely successful at giving audiences an experience
that is both exhilarating and terrifying.
Cuaron and his many collaborators, including cinematographer Emmanuel
Lubezki, achieved their goal. But truly,
these technicians and storytellers already pushed the medium forward with their
innovative science fiction dystopia Children
of Men in 2006. But of course,
Cuaron wasn’t even nominated for the film that should have won him Best
Director.
Personal preference: Steve McQueen, 12 Years a Slave
As impressive as Cuaron’s efforts were, the storytelling choices made by British director Steve McQueen for 12 Years a Slave are specific and meaningful. The composition of performers in their surroundings sets the stage of the enslaved and their dreary plantation existence. I’m eager to see what McQueen does next, because the progression from Hunger to Shame to this film has shown him to be one of the great talents working today.
The expanded Best Picture line-up allowed for a contingent
of supporters to get Her a
nomination. But Jonze was snubbed in
this category, which is a shame. His
empathetic telling of a tender relationship between two unlikely “people”
showed a creative impulse that is continuing to flourish in the years since his
auspicious debut Being John
Malkovich. At least Jonze deservedly
won the Original Screenplay award for Her.
BEST ACTOR
Christian Bale, American
Hustle
Bruce Dern, Nebraska
Leonardo DiCaprio, The
Wolf of Wall Street
Chiwetel Ejiofor, 12
Years a Slave
Matthew McConaughey, Dallas
Buyers Club
Alright, alright, alright. MConaughey’s career resuscitation
is complete. He’s made the leap from
pandering romantic comedies to more prestige work. The last two years have been kind, with
strong performances in Bernie, Magic
Mike, Killer Joe, Mud, and The Wolf
of Wall Street. But it’s the true
life performance of AIDS patient Ron Woodroof, working to bring unauthorized
pharmaceutical drugs into Texas to bring relief to the afflicted. McConaughey’s work is impressive, showing the
ravages of the disease and the bureaucratic barriers he struggles to
overcome. It’s a quality work in a
strong year of performances.
The love of movie star McConaughey and his career
transformation made all other performances fall behind. But Chiwetel Ejiofor’s performance as the
born free Solomon Northup, kidnapped and sold into slavery. We see through Northup’s eyes the stain of
this country’s founding. The emotion and
humanity in every moment of pain and suffering Northup experiences feels
necessary. His inner-strength is
conveyed by Ejiofor’s extraordinary performance.
I was torn between Ejiofor and poor Leonardo DiCaprio. He will probably never win. He needs to take my advice and produce some
Oscar bait. Winning Best Picture can get
you a statuette just as easily (see: Brad Pitt, now an Oscar winning producer
for 12 Years a Slave).
Following up last year’s Oscar nominated performance in The Master (really, should have been
Oscar winning) with a very different
role, Joaquin Phoenix shows his versatility.
Here is a man who has retreated from the world after his divorce and is very
tentative in opening himself up. The
fact that he is largely opening up to a disembodied voice puts the physical
presence of this relationship solely on Phoenix’s shoulders. He carries it admirably.
A tough category, with performances from Robert Redford in All Is Lost and Tom Hanks in Captain Phillips missing out, but I would have liked to see a nomination for Oscar Isaac in Inside Llewyn Davis.
BEST ACTRESS
Amy Adams, American
Hustle
Cate Blanchett, Blue
Jasmine
Sandra Bullock, Gravity
Judi Dench, Philomena
Meryl Streep, August:
Osage County
She is one of the great actresses. She has been due a lead statuette since 1998’s
Elizabeth. She did win a supporting Oscar for The Aviator, though her more impressive
supporting nomination was as “Bob Dylan” in I’m
Not There. It makes sense that her
path would cross with Woody Allen, and of course, her performance is remarkable. But it’s not necessarily revelatory after
nearly two decades of quality work from her.
Personal preference: Blanchett
But all things considered, Blanchett was the best performance
of the five nominees.
But a performance to highlight has to be Julie Delpy in her
signature role of Celine in Before Midnight. Few actors get the chance to develop a
character over 18 years and three films.
Watching this vibrant soul grow and interact with the love of her life
and seeing the tension and attraction grow and fade has made this one of the
great film experiments. But at the heart
of this creativity is a strong performance from a great actress.
A lot of great female performances, once again, are nowhere
to be found. Please stop nominating your
friends Sandra Bullock, Judi Dench, and Meryl Streep and make room for the
future. Greta Gerwig in Frances Ha.
Brie Larson in Short Term
12. Adele Exarchopoulos in Blue is the Warmest Color. Olga Kurylenko in To the Wonder. Berenice Bejo
in The Past.
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Barkhad Abdi, Captain
Phillips
Bradley Cooper, American
Hustle
Michael Fassbender, 12
Years a Slave
Jonah Hill, The Wolf
of Wall Street
Jared Leto, Dallas
Buyers Club
Jordan Catalano has an Oscar. I hope he and Angela are still together? Kidding of course. Leto definitely tried to make that transition
from teen heartthrob to adult dramatic actor, and results were mixed. But all you need is one great role. He provides a fine balance to McConaughey in Dallas Buyers Club.
But of the nominees, I would have chosen Fassbender’s sadistic
plantation owner. He and director Steve
McQueen have had a fruitful collaboration, going back to Hunger and the Oscar worthy but snubbed performance in Shame.
Here in 12 Years a Slave,
Fassbender is a destructive force that victimizes our main characters for his
own pleasure. Like Ralph Fiennes in Schindler’s List, Fassbender is a human
monster.
Hear me out: Spring
Breakers is an ode to youth, for better or worse (and largely worse).
Guzzling large quantities of beer on beaches and in hotel rooms is a
fairly vapid experience, but there is an artfulness in how this story is being told. And it is James Franco’s ruthless criminal
influence is one of the film’s charms.
He is having fun, and you find yourself too, in spite of yourself.
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Sally Hawkins, Blue
Jasmine
Jennifer Lawrence, American
Hustle
Lupita Nyong’o, 12
Years a Slave
Julia Roberts, August:
Osage County
June Squibb, Nebraska
Winner: Lupita Nyong’o, 12 Years a Slave
Truly one of the great film debuts. She is a strong counterpoint to Ejiofor’s
enslaved intellectual and family man, a woman who has suffered the worst
indignities of the slave system.
Personal preference: Nyong’o
Again, of the nominees, this is a no-brainer decision. And I applaud the Academy for it.
But a voice coming from a phone, introducing itself to
Joaquin Phoenix (and us) as Samantha, is the best “supporting” performance. This is arguably a co-lead with Phoenix, but
his journey and history is largely the film’s focus. The relationship formed between these
characters is largely one of discovery and self-awareness for Samantha. We feel her experiences and growth and pain,
all through her voice. Most impressive.