Showing posts with label Adrian Brody. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adrian Brody. Show all posts

Sunday, March 2, 2025

Jealousy is a disease: Anora crowned queen of Hollywood, Sean Baker is king


To paraphrase the clip played during Mikey Madison’s Best Actress presentation: There are a lot of jealous people in Hollywood tonight who are going to have to go chill in their mansions or whatever. Unless they were involved in Sean Baker’s Anora, in which case it’s champagne and fireworks all night long.


Baker’s fractured fairy tale won five awards Sunday night at the 97th Academy Awards, including Picture, Director, Actress, Original Screenplay, and Editing. Baker, who is the sole credited writer, director, and editor on the film, in addition to being one the nominated producers, becomes the first person in Academy history to win four awards for the same film on the same night. (Bong Joon-ho might have a quibble after winning three awards and guiding Parasite to an International Feature win for South Korea, but we’re not here to split hairs or rain on anyone’s parade.)


Mikey Madison was the minor shock of the evening, winning Best Actress over front-runner Demi Moore. Madison had won the BAFTA award, so the win didn’t come out of nowhere. And by the time Baker picked up his third statue of the night, the Anora wave had grown so tall that it seemed inevitable Madison would be carried along to victory.


The only award Anora lost, going 5-for-6, was Supporting Actor, where Yura Borisov lost to season-long favorite Kieran Culkin. Borisov didn’t seem too broken up about it, as he and his wife, Anna, of nominations morning viral video fame, were all smiles and bemused shock as the little New York indie film ran roughshod over the competition.


Culkin saved his best speech for last, quipping that his wife, Jazz, had told him last year in the wake of an Emmy win she would have a fourth child with him if he ever won an Oscar. From the crowd, she wordlessly acknowledged that she had in fact made that deal. “Ye of little faith,” Culkin beamed from the Oscar stage as he held his well-deserved statue.


Adrien Brody won his second Best Actor award for leading Brady Corbet’s American epic, The Brutalist. It’s a towering performance, and Brody’s return to prominence is one of the more delightful side plots of this Oscar season. Despite being the front-runner and having given numerous speeches over the past few months, Brody didn’t quite seem to have it together in his acceptance soliloquy. It was rambling and overly long, and he got played off by the orchestra twice, exactly what Culkin was poking fun at during the SAG Awards (the one place Brody actually lost). But, we can forgive the guy for being a little befuddled during one of the biggest moments of his life.


Zoe Saldaña won Best Supporting Actress, as long predicted, and delivered an impassioned, heartfelt speech that ended by emphasizing the importance of immigrants to this nation. It was a necessary acknowledgement and one of the few outwardly political speeches of the evening.


Unsurprisingly, the peak of social commentary on the night came from Basel Adra and Yuval Abraham, the Palestinian and Israeli co-directors of Best Documentary Feature winner No Other Land. They called for human rights for all and a peaceful end to the violence in the Gaza Strip, with Abraham stating, “There is another way.” It was a beautiful moment for one of the most important movies of the year. Here’s hoping some American distributor now has the guts to get behind it and give it a proper U.S. release.


Emilia Pérez finished with two awards from its staggering 13 nominations, which is not nothing but represents a stunning fall from grace. Of the 15 films ever to garner 13 nods, two is the fewest wins of any of them. Both awards ultimately felt like recognition for Saldaña – Supporting Actress and Original Song for “El Mal,” which is Saldaña’s show-stopping number in the middle of the film. 


That Emilia Pérez could not even hold on to Best International Feature (Walter Salles’ Brazilian drama I’m Still Here prevailed) is proof of just how effective negative campaigning can be – which is not to say the film didn’t deserve the exact fate it got. It did, but it’s almost dizzying how quickly the film went from “Huh, that’s weird” front-runner to pariah, outside of Saldaña. Ultimately, though, this feels right and should allow the movie to fade into obscurity.


Note: At this point in my writing, Los Angeles was hit by a mild but not insignificant earthquake, centered in North Hollywood. Even Mother Nature had something to say about the Anora win.


As thrilled as I am for the Anora crew – and I genuinely adore that film – my favorite win of the night came in Best Animated Feature, where Gints Zilbalodis and Co. triumphed with the magnificent Flow. A wordless parable about a cat at the end of the world, Flow was one of the best films of the year, one of the most beautifully animated films I have ever seen, and a testament to what a small team loaded with grand aspirations can accomplish. This is the best of what the Oscars can do, stepping outside the usual big studio box and rewarding a glorious artistic achievement.


All the whispers about the potential for a Conclave upset turned out to be nothing but black smoke up a chimney as Edward Berger’s excellent papal thriller was not anointed the new pontiff of Hollywood. Instead, it settled for a single win, with writer Peter Straughan taking home the trophy for Best Adapted screenplay. It’s a tremendous script and highly deserving of the recognition, but I still prefer Straughan’s Frank.


James Mangold’s A Complete Unknown had no such luck, going 0-for-8 and joining RaMell Ross’ Nickel Boys (0-for-2) as the only Best Picture nominees to go home empty-handed. And yet, the broadcast found ample opportunity to cut to star Timothée Chalamet, the unchallenged prince of Hollywood. Host Conan O’Brien directed several jokes his way, he was the ultimate punchline of a pretty good Adam Sandler bit, and he was in the front row, decked out in his butter yellow suit, smiling, cheering, and getting on his feet for a pair of Dune: Part Two victories (Sound, Visual Effects).


The Brutalist was the next-biggest winner of the night, with three awards. In addition to Brody’s victory, Lol Crawley won for his VistaVision cinematography, and Daniel Blumberg’s alternately booming and melancholic original score triumphed in that category. Meanwhile, fan favorite and box office behemoth Wicked won a pair of awards for Production Design and Costume Design, and Coralie Fargeat’s feminist body horror The Substance won for Makeup and Hairstyling that absolutely put the horror into the body.


If there’s a complaint to be had, it is that the Academy simply is not nominating and rewarding enough different films. Just 35 feature-length films were nominated for an Oscar this year. Down significantly from most years, which have 40-45 nominees. As for the winners, for the second year in a row, just one non-short, non-specialty feature (International, Animated, and Documentary) won an award without a Best Picture nomination – that was Culkin for A Real Pain. That does not make for a healthy Academy Awards, and the members simply must start nominating more different movies. This kind of stuff leads to elitism, exclusion, and worst of all, predictability.


I mean predictability as a general ill of the awards, not with specific regard to my personal predictions here on the site, which were tanked by a goose egg in the three shorts categories. I Am Not a Robot (Live-Action), In the Shadow of the Cypress Tree (Animated), and The Only Girl in the Orchestra (Documentary) were the shorts champions. I take solace that in my office Oscars pool, only one entrant guessed even a single shorts category correctly. Anyway, remind me never to bet against the uplifting music doc distributed by Netflix.


As for the show, it was a fun, fleet evening, despite a three-hour, 50-minute run time, and Conan O’Brien was a breath of fresh air. I love Jimmy Kimmel as host, but we needed some new blood and O’Brien was ready to draw some, almost always at his own expense first. I thought the opening monologue was excellent. The gags and bits were consistently funny, including a song about not wasting anyone’s time that was designed as a meta-way to poke fun at those complaining about the show’s length.


I’ll have more on the ceremony itself tomorrow, including asking what the heck was going on with that James Bond tribute, the loss of the Best Song performances, and the inclusion of a number of extraneous song performances that had next to nothing to do with the evening’s show. For now, long live Queen Anora and god save the king, Sean Baker, who closed his final speech of the night by holding up the Best Picture statue and declaring, “Long live independent film!” A king indeed.

Totally Accurate, 100 Percent Guaranteed 2024 Academy Awards Predictions*


This may be the hardest year to predict the Academy Award winners in recent memory. The winds of the season have blown us every which way until leaving us kind of back where we started, wondering what the heck just happened.


Anora won the Palme d’Or at Cannes way back in May 2024. It was heralded as the front-runner pretty much instantly. Then, a whole lot happened. There was an Emilia Pérez flirtation that got a little ugly. Wicked looked incredibly strong with its huge box office haul and adoring fandom. The Brutalist, almost through brute force, willed its way into major contention. Even A Complete Unknown began to look like a potential meat-and-potatoes pick.


Ultimately, though, Sean Baker won the DGA and the WGA, and the film won the Producers Guild award on a preferential ballot. Only one film in history has failed to convert those three wins into a Best Picture triumph. That was Brokeback Mountain, which famously lost to SAG ensemble champion Crash. And, wouldn’t you know it: This year’s SAG ensemble champ is the greatest threat to Anora.


That would be Conclave, which if we’re being honest, is the kind of movie built in a lab to win the SAG ensemble prize. It did, however, also score big with the BAFTAs, a potential indicator of strong international support, which has been a major factor in recent Oscar years (see: Parasite). 


Do I think Conclave has done enough to catch up? No, I don’t, particularly because director Edward Berger missed out on a Director nomination. I say Anora goes 2-for-2 in those top categories, but if The Brutalist director Brady Corbet sneaks up and takes Director, look out for a Conclave shocker.


In the acting races, while the supporting categories have been locked up for months, as tends to happen, the leading categories are shockingly close. While Mikey Madison would be the deserving winner and did surprise at BAFTA (remember when Olivia Colman won for The Favourite at BAFTA, suggesting she would beat Glenn Close to the Oscar), I think the Demi Moore narrative is too strong. She will win Best Actress.


Over in Best Actor, Adrian Brody dominated the entire season right up until Timothée Chalamet’s name was called at the SAG Awards and he went on to give one of the great awards speeches of our time. SAG usually means strength, but I don’t see Brody’s monumental work in the bold but flawed The Brutalist getting passed up. The third option is that they split the vote and a surprise third nominee comes right up through the middle. Interestingly, most theorize this is how Brody won his first Oscar for The Pianist in 2002, benefitting from split love for Jack Nicholson and Daniel Day-Lewis.


There is a ton of fun to be had in the below-the-line categories, as well, and I will post longer dives into those after this piece goes up. Apologies for not getting to everything this year, but it’s been a helluva time and I do my best. I look forward to dissecting the winners with you all after the big show.


*As mentioned, hard year to predict, so I’m going to say I feel more confident than ever in my 100 percent guarantee. I see no misses below.


Best Picture

Will win: Anora

Should win: Nickel Boys


Director

Will win: Sean Baker for Anora

Should win: Sean Baker for Anora


Actress

Will win: Demi Moore for The Substance

Should win: Mikey Madison for Anora


Actor

Will win: Adrian Brody for The Brutalist

Should win: Colman Domingo for Sing Sing


Supporting Actress

Will win: Zoe Saldana for Emilia Pérez

Should win: Ariana Grande for Wicked


Supporting Actor

Will win: Kieran Culkin for A Real Pain

Should win: Kieran Culkin for A Real Pain


Original Screenplay

Will win: A Real Pain

Should win: A Real Pain


Adapted Screenplay

Will win: Conclave

Should win: Nickel Boys


Cinematography

Will win: The Brutalist

Should win: Nosferatu


Editing

Will win: Anora

Should win: Conclave


Production Design

Will win: Wicked

Should win: Nosferatu


Costume Design

Will win: Wicked

Should win: Wicked


Makeup and Hairstyling

Will win: The Substance

Should win: A Different Man


Visual Effects

Will win: Dune: Part Two

Should win: Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes


Sound

Will win: Dune: Part Two

Should win: Dune: Part Two


Original Score

Will win: The Brutalist

Should win: Conclave


Original Song

Will win: “El Mal” from Emilia Pérez

Should win: “El Mal” from Emilia Pérez


Documentary Feature

Will win: No Other Land

Should win: No Other Land


Animated Feature

Will win: Flow

Should win: Flow


International Feature

Will win: Emilia Pérez

Should win: The Seed of the Sacred Fig


Documentary Short

Will win: I Am Ready, Warden

Should win: Incident


Animated Short

Will win: Wander to Wonder

Should win: Wander to Wonder


Live-Action Short

Will win: A Lien

Should win: A Lien

Friday, March 20, 2015

Now Watch This: The Brothers Bloom




By Sean Patrick Leydon
Contributor

The Brothers Bloom may not sound familiar to you. That’s okay. Nobody I’ve investigated has admitted to seeing it either. The fact is: It is the second feature film written and directed by Rian Johnson, the same guy who did Brick and Looper. He was also recently announced as the writer-director for Star Wars Episodes VIII and IX.

Johnson is a playful artist, unafraid to set a drugged-out film noir in a high school and almost singularly capable of making time travel cool again via mafia hitmen. He mixes genres in ways mere mortals could never conceive, then uses those familiar tropes to flesh out the layers of meaning that create interesting, multi-faceted characters.

All of these aspects of Johnson’s work are brought to life in The Brothers Bloom, a highly stylized film that tells the story of the brothers Bloom (Adrian Brody) and Stephen (Mark Ruffalo), con men since childhood. The narrator tells you directly: “If one [story] bears a bookmark in the confidence man’s tome, it would be that of Penelope and the Brothers Bloom.”

There is an openness to the tall tales within the film, a constant awareness of the nigh impossibility of the acts, which lends a childlike sweetness to the story. Many scenes are cut using sketches from Stephen’s storyboard for the job. It's like reading a picture book about fabled honorable thieves written for the coolest kid ever. Because of this, admittedly, some scenes are slightly telegraphed, but like pointing out the flaws in our favorite childhood tales, over-examining the simple noir plot points distracts from the fun to be had by suspending your disbelief and giving yourself over to Johnson’s story.

When you accept what you are watching and let yourself be taken along for the ride, you get to enjoy watching clever people use their minds to hack the planet. Stephen and Bloom are masters of the human psyche, using clothes, settings, accents, and fear but mostly their words to get what they want.
They are our protagonists, and we love them. We don’t mind that they spin wonderful lies to rob their marks blind. As my mother would say, this is not the type of movie the nuns would let you watch. Stephen argues that ignorance is bliss for their marks, and there is a darkness in his rationalization, and in that darkness, we realize that The Brothers Bloom is something more than just a childish fable.

This darkness is not singular within Johnson’s work. Brick is full of murder, paranoia, depression, lust, and greed, while Looper doubles down on the greed and adds hate, suicide, and loneliness. There is a recurring theme of characters involved is shady goings on yet still trying to make things right. Johnson tells stories about criminals and heroes – often indistinguishable – who work at cross purposes to the world around them. He takes us to places defined by the grayness of their morality and filled with people struggling to define what honor means for them.

I watched Johnson’s first film, Brick, a million times as a teen and the (original) Star Wars trilogy about as much in my childhood. The marriage of Star Wars and Johnson represents a freakish collision of the varied tastes I’ve spent my life developing. I’m wary of one of my favorite directors being given so much power but extremely excited to see what he does with it.

Think about Han Solo. He rules. Everyone watching Star Wars: A New Hope for the first time knew Han Solo ruled when he appeared on screen. Here was a badass smuggler with a laser pistol on his hip and a yeti for a companion, and he reluctantly accepts a noble quest because, what the hell, there’s money in it. He is a perfect Johnson-type hero: morally ambiguous but with deeply hidden notions of what’s right and what’s wrong.

Most of the characters in the Star Wars canon take a while to understand. Growing pains abound. Not so for Han Solo. He’s seen the whole universe, and he’s guarded because he knows it can crush anything with its indiscriminate wrath. I predict Johnson’s Star Wars entries will be full of mysterious, Solo-esque characters, eking out meager existences on the margins of their worlds and hiding the ghosts and demons within them from their friends and enemies alike.

These secret dark places in the minds of the characters Johnson creates are among the many reasons I’m excited for Star Wars Episodes VIII and IX. Add to that the fact that Johnson filmed Brick with donations from his family and friends and shot it at a high school while classes were in session. That film blew my brain apart, and I know I’m not the only one. Just imagine what he could do with the financial weight of Disney behind him – and hopefully the creative latitude to see his vision through to the big screen.

Johnson has been a director to watch right from the beginning of his career. While not as widely available as they should be, his films are out there waiting to be discovered. I watched The Brothers Bloom on DVD because, of course, I own it because Rian Johnson is my favorite. You, however, can and should watch this on whatever streamy tablet/computer/phone you like because it is currently screening somewhere in the vast cosmos of Netflix Instantwatch. You should do that. Go watch this children’s book of a film noir, then dream about lightsabers after.

Sean Patrick Leydon is a photographer, artist, and contributor to Last Cinema Standing. You can check out more of his work at nonotthought.blogspot.com.