this year's finished just after midnight, they didn't need any pointless musical numbers about film critics
nomadcowatbk said:this year's finished just after midnight, they didn't need any pointless musical numbers about film critics
Carmine5 said:nomadcowatbk said:this year's finished just after midnight, they didn't need any pointless musical numbers about film critics
Funny, it was just past nine PM where I was. A friend of mine in Hawaii said it was 6 PM and before dinner. No complaints here.
only1moore said:... but my picks Anne Hathaway, Jennifer Lawarence, Daniel Day-Lewis, Adele, and "Argo" did take home a statue and somehow saved what could've been a so-so program.
landtuna said:only1moore said:... but my picks Anne Hathaway, Jennifer Lawarence, Daniel Day-Lewis, Adele, and "Argo" did take home a statue and somehow saved what could've been a so-so program.
After having listened to Adele sing "Skyfall" and watching "Argo" I can only surmise that the Oscars have now degenerated into some sort of political or economic benefit for certain artists and pictures. Adele's singing is irritating beyond belief and "Argo" was carried by John Goodman and Alan Arkin - neither of whom was more than a secondary player. To say it was an ordinary film would be an overstatement. Afflect should have been awarded the Hugh O'brian "Wooden Face" award for complete incompetence in front of a camera (and for directing a piece of fiction which tried to bill itself as a true story).
I learned a long time ago to ignore Hollywood's fixation with patting itself on the back. This season exemplifies the reasons why.
BD Sullivan said:"a piece of fiction which tried to bill itself as a true story"--Please indulge us.
landtuna said:BD Sullivan said:"a piece of fiction which tried to bill itself as a true story"--Please indulge us.
The film tried selling itself as a virtual true-to-life story of the freeing of six Americans who escaped the storming of the U.S. embassy in Teheran in 1979. In fact there are many false scenes and a whole host of events left out of the movie. So much so that it is almost total fiction. Several top diplomats from both Canada and the U.S. have come out and documented the errors as has former President Jimmie Carter.
jfrancispastirchak said:They call it literary license.
landtuna said:jfrancispastirchak said:They call it literary license.
I am, of course, familiar with literary license. My main complaint against 'Argo' was not that it was true-to-life but rather that it was a very ordinary movie filled with stock Hollywood situations and, in all respects, not deserving of an Oscar nomination let alone winning one.
True, though I enjoyed the music. A lot of time was wasted.nomadcowatbk said:this year's finished just after midnight, they didn't need any pointless musical numbers about film critics
What I find fascinating is that as recently as 1972 the show actually ran under two hours (1:44). If I can be so bold as to quote myself from my blog, "The first one to top three hours was in 1957, but between 1958 and 1973 the average running time was 2:20. . . The turning point was in 1974, when the running time leapt to 3:22; it hasn't been under three hours since, and maxed out at 4:23 in 2002." Jerry Lewis, the last of six hosts in 1959, ran into a lot of trouble when that show finished early - it ran 1:50, twenty minutes early! He vamped for a few chaotic minutes before the network mercifully pulled the plug.bpatrick said:For that matter "Lincoln" focused on only one aspect of his
presidency: his efforts to get the Thirteenth Amendment,
abolishing slavery, passed. That's important and, I suppose,
all that could be worked into a movie of reasonable length,
but the source of the movie, "Team Of Rivals" by Doris Kearns
Goodwin, is chock-full of drama about the tensions among Lincoln
and his Cabinet members (especially Edwin Stanton, William H.
Seward, and Salmon P. Chase) that there's enough there for a
movie in itself.
And while the awards show apparently was shorter than in past
years (I didn't watch it), do you know that when the Oscar ceremonies
were first broadcast on radio in the '30s, they were all finished in an
hour--and the Best Picture was the first award presented?
Yeah, that was ridiculous.jfrancispastirchak said:And the fallout continues-- MSN page ran a story this morning on complaints on Michelle Obama's appearance.
Joseph_Gallant said:Since it's on a Sunday (most people don't work or go to school that day), the Academy Awards' TV coverage should begin with a Red Carpet Show at 5:30 P.M. ET, the Oscar ceremony itself beginning at 7 ET, and from the end of the show until 11 EST (approximately 15 to 30 minutes) , there can be a "post Oscars show" with backstage interviews of some of the winners.
The Motion Picture Academy will have a quandary next year: February 23rd will be the final day of the 2014 Winter Olympics.
Given that they will be in Sochi, Russia (where the closing ceremonies will start around 1 or 2 P.M. Eastern Time), the Academy may not do what they did in 2010, and have the Oscars take place a week or two after the Olympics end.
Although NBC traditionally broadcasts the Closing Ceremonies of an Olympics in prime-time (even if it is held hours earlier), should the 2014 Oscars be on February 23rd, look for NBC to air the Closing Ceremonies live in the afternoon with perhaps an edited version (along with highlights of the fortnight) for an hour or two in prime-time to avoid direct competition with the Oscars.