Saturday, March 18, 2023

Living


Although nominated for the Academy Award for Adapted Screenplay (
Kazuo Ishiguro) and Actor (Bill Nighy), this quiet masterpiece got lost in the sea of Oscar season’s front runners of original storytelling (Banshees of Inisherin, Triangle of Sadness) and dynamic visuals (Everything Everywhere All at Once, Elvis, All Quiet on the Western Front). 

However, hats off to this film— it is absolutely worth streaming at home. I may be overstating it just a bit, but Living has the power to be a life changer.

It’s a timeless story, as evidenced by its origins. The film was adapted by Nobel Prize winner Kazuo Ishiguro from the 1952 Japanese film Ikiru (To Live). Ikiru itself was inspired by Tolstoy's 1886 novella The Death of Ivan Ilyich.


In this version, the brilliant Bill Nighy (Love Actually) is a buttoned-up bureaucrat at a Public Works Department in 1950s London. You know, the kind that kicks petitions around different departments in the building and files anything that looks like a hassle in towering stacks of paperwork. His nickname at work is “Zombie.”

Faced with some interesting news, he alters his approach to life and work — looking towards the wildly different ways of a local bohemian and a wide-eyed new hire. No surprise, it’s a movie about transformation and about the power of one man doing one small thing. I won't share details here, but I found the final act profound.

Whether or not this story shakes you to the core (like me) or simply reminds you of an agreeable life lesson, it’s a powerful hour and 42 minutes.

In a nutshell: It’s a classic tale of confronting one’s life and finding new clarity with a second chapter, led by the underrated Bill Nighy. Keep the Kleenex nearby.

Award potential:
This film was nominated for Oscar’s Best Adapted Screenplay and Actor. Deservingly so. Nighy’s less-is-more performance will shock those who know him as Billy Mack from Love Actually. 
Nobel Prize-winning novelist Sir Kazuo Ishiguro’s script should have been a contender. 

Not nominated, which is almost a crime, were cinematographer Jamie D. Ramsay, Sandy Powell and her costumes plus Helen Scott’s production design — each gorgeously recreating 1950s London.

Where to find: Available to stream on VOD.

The Ten Buck Review: Worth ten bucks.

Thursday, March 9, 2023

Everything stat-tastic to win your Oscars pool all at once

Win your Oscars pool with this stat-tastic help

It's another unique year for Oscars so we’re gonna need some math to help your Oscar office pool. Here's everything everywhere which way on how to win:

Win the Best Director category

Go with whoever won the Director’s Guild of America award. Those winners have matched in 63 of 74 years. Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert (the Dans) won for Everything Everywhere All At Once and are your best bet for Oscar night too.

Win the Best Foreign Feature Film category

This year, only one film is nominated for both this category and Best Picture. And the Oscar goes to Germany's All Quiet on the Western Front.

Win the Best Animated Feature Film category

12 out of 16 PGA-winning animated films also won the Animated Feature Academy Award. No lie, Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio is going to win.

Win the Best Music (Original Score) category

With 53 nominations, John Williams could become the oldest competitive winner this year for The Fabelmans. Son Lux is the opposite - the youthful newcomer for Everything Everywhere All At Once. Babylon has its supporters but only once in the past 19 years has this oscar gone to a film not nominated for Best Picture (Hateful Eight, 2015). This award most often (past 8 out of 10 years) aligns with the BAFTA Award for Best Film Music, which honored All Quiet on the Western Front's fusion of classical and avant-garde sensibilities. 

Win the Best Visual Effects category

Since the VES Awards launched in 2002, the winner of its top film category has gone on to score the Best Visual Effects Oscar in 11 of the past 20 years. The Oscar goes to its winner, king of the world, Avatar: The Way of Water. This is the safest bet of the night

Win the Best Actor/Actress/Supporting Actor/Supporting Actress categories

The SAG voters are all actors and are the largest block of voters for the Academy Awards. They are a more diverse group, yet their picks align with Oscar more than any other. Last year, all the SAG winners repeated at the Oscars. This means Brendan Fraser, Michelle Yeoh, Jamie Lee Curtis and Ke Huy Quan should polish their speeches now. 

In the closest acting race I remember, I expect a few of these to change. The Academy clearly loves Elvis more than Whale, so I predict Austin Butler to be the most likely one to shake up the SAG theory a bit and Angela Basset has her supporters too. Your call!

Win the Best Adapted Screenplay category

The USC Scripter Awards has accurately predicted this category for 9 of the last 13 years, but it has nominated Pinocchio, Living, She Said and Women Talking. Top Gun: Maverick's nomination was withdrawn. Living is a wild card (with good reason) but the top contenders are All Quiet on the Western Front and Women Talking. The math, and the wish to see a woman screenwriter such as Sarah Polley win,  says Women for the win.

Win the Best Original Screenplay category

It's a tight race between two highly-original films — Banshees of Inisherin and the film that could sweep every major award of the night. The respected Writers Guild (WGA) is the closest guide and they chose Everything Everywhere All At Once.


Win the Best Music (Original Song) category

There’s not a lot of math for this category, just remember that all members (not just musicians) vote in this category. The spirited Naatu Naatu from RRR has an edge, literally, over Lady Gaga and Rhianna's pop ballads. It's song was more central to its movie while the other songs played over credits.

Win the Best Sound category

War films usually win here so All Quiet on the Western Front checks all the boxes. But does military-based Top Gun: Maverick count for that math? Let's go with Cinema Audio Society (CAS) Sound Mixing Award-winner, and loud ear-ringing Top Gun: Maverick. Everyone wants to see this film win something.

Win the Best Editing category


Throughout history, this award always has a Sound nomination too. The ACE EDDIE Awards rewarded Top Gun: Maverick. The math is in its favor, however, sorry Tom, I think an Everything sweep is underway and editing is its strongest point. 

Win the Best Cinematography category

The cinematographer's award (ASC) is a good one to watch —those specialists rewarded the artistry of Elvis, thank you very much. On the Oscar ballot, only the film name is noted — so Elvis' Many Waler, the first possible female to win this award— is less of a factor when voting. However, the Academy membership is bigger and broader than ASC's cinematography crowd. It's a little more like The British Film Academy Film Awards (BAFTA) which chose All Quiet on the Western Front. The Oscar goes to...All Quiet on the Western Front.

Win the Best Production Design category

This award, the 2012-renamed “Best Art Direction" award, doesn’t usually match Best Picture (Just 4 times since 2000). The winner of this category often aligns with the winner of Art Director's Guild Award. The AGAs went to Babylon (Period film), Everything Everywhere All at Once (Fantasy film) and Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (Contemporary film) — and not past front-runner Elvis. And the Oscar goes to Babylon..

Win the Best Costume Design category

Babylon and Black Panther have been award-season frontrunners, but then Everything Everywhere (Sci-FI/Fantasy), Glass Onion (Contemporary) and Elvis (Period) each won at the Costume Designer Guild Awards. I think the overall love of Elvis shows up here. The devil in disguise takes this one.

Win the Best Makeup and Hairstyling category

After the MUAHS award rewarded Everything Everywhere (contemporary), Elvis (Period) and The Whale (Special) and Black Panther and Elvis (hair), the race for Oscar is wide open. Since Oscar voters usually vote for the most visible transformations, but Elvis and The Whale have risen to the top. Go with the more loved, more-nominated film, Elvis.

Win the Best Documentary Feature category (Feature)

This year's topics are all Oscar bait so it may come down to which films were seen — but oops four of five are very accessible. All That Breathes (Saving Bird of Prey, Netflix), All the Beauty and the Bloodshed (Photographer, HBOmax), Fire of Love (scientists and lovers in a volcano, Disney/Hulu), A House Made of Splinters (Ukraine children's home, VOD) and Navalny (Russian assassination attempt, HBOmax). 

Fire of Love has passionate fans. I'm going with the most riveting one that everyone voting stayed awake for — Navalny.

Win the Best Animated Short Film category

While I'd love the Academy to pick a more original choice such as Ice Merchants or My Year of Dicks, the celebrity VO and wide distribution of The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse should win. Its animation and beautiful brushstrokes are eye-catching even if adults may chuckle at its trite, bumper sticker wisdom. I had to be reminded, while watching and chuckling in intended spaces, "this is for young kids!" Put your votes on: The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse to fly away with this one.

Win the Best Documentary Short category

There's not any math for this category. Your choice between The Elephant Whisperers (a couple in South India, who devote their lives to caring for an orphaned baby elephant) and Strangers at the Gate (A Marine plans a terrorist attack in a mosque in a small American town, until he meets his potential victims). Honestly, I'm going with the one most accessible — on Netflix — The Elephant Whisperers.

Win the Best Live Action Short Film category

Your choice of Le Pupille (girls in a boarding school in WWII Italy) and An Irish Goodbye (estranged brothers in Ireland are reunited). One smart choice is to go with the more accessible one here too (Le Pupill on Disney +). In a record year for Irish nominees, I think one of them finally wins here. An Irish Goodbye gets my feckin' vote.

Win the show’s running-time tiebreaker.

In 2002, the show ran for four hours and 23 minutes. It's been trending down ever since, until last year's slap.  

Here are the timings for the past ten years:
2009: 3 hours, 30 minutes
2010: 3 hours, 37 minutes
2011: 3 hours, 15 minutes
2012: 3 hours, 14 minutes
2013: 3 hours, 35 minutes
2014: 3 hours, 30 minutes
2015: 3 hours, 43 minutes
2016: 3 hours, 37 minutes
2017: 3 hours, 49 minutes
2018: 3 hours, 53 minutes
2019: 3 hours, 23 minutes
2020: 3 hours, 36 minutes
2021: 3 hours, 19 minutes
2022: 3 hours, 40 minutes


Win the Best Picture category

Since the preferential voting system was added, all the old stats don't matter. All Quiet won BAFTA. Fabelmans and Banshees won the Golden Globe, whatever.

However, the PGA has a preferential voting ballot. While they are a conservative group, they chose Everything Everywhere over Top Gun:Maverick, Fabelmans and Banshees. It has a lot of love across the board as witnessed at the SAG awards.

In the 27 years in which SAG, the PGA and DGA have all presented their top honors, only one film (Apollo 13 in 1995) has won all three but then lost the best picture Oscar.
The math says it all. The Oscar goes to Everything Everywhere All At Once.

Good luck with your Oscars pool everyone!

Monday, March 6, 2023

All the Feckin' Irish Oscar Nominees - and where to watch 'em


Kenneth Branagh's Belfast scored six nominations in 2022. In The Name of the Father scored seven nominations in 1994. But 2023 is the year Oscar went big-time Irish. For Oscars 2023, a record 14 feckin' nominations are from Ireland.

Lucky coincidence that Oscar Sunday kicks off the week of St. Patricks Day.

Martin McDonagh's Banshees of Inisherin has nine top nominations. Paul Mescal (Normal People) is also up for best actor for his unforgettable turn in indie fave Aftersun. And other nominations include Best International Film and Best Live Action short. Sounds like some good streaming choices leading up to Oscar Night and St. Paddy's weekend, doesn't it? Here's what you need to know.


The Banshees of Inisherin

Colin Farrell, the actor who stars in a lot of movies you expect to be good, but aren’t, is finally in a good film. It’s so feckin’ good. Banshees reunites In Bruge actors Farrell and Brendan Gleeson as frenemies living on the made-up Irish island of Inisherin in the 1920s.

The island may not be real but from its thatched roofs, thick accents, local characters and dark brew pubs, this gorgeous film sure makes it seem so. Writer and Director Martin McDonagh (Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Illinois) has assembled a dark comedy about two men and a friendship severed while giving a finger to predictive storytelling.


Banshees is nominated for all the major awards: Best Picture, Director, Screenplay, Editing, Score and four acting nominations (Colin Farell, Brendan Gleeson, Kerry Condon and Barry Keoghan.

Where to watch: In theaters and available on HBOMax and VOD



Aftersun

Born in Maynooth, Ireland Paul Mescal scored his first TV acting job as Connell in Normal People. He was nominated for an Emmy.

His first movie role? The young father in Aftersun, a well-loved movie that is sitting on Rotten Tomatoes at 95%. He's nominated for Best Actor and yea, he is the next big thing.


Aftersun is a daughter's (Frankie Corio) memory of a vacation in Turkey with her idealistic father, lovingly told. With patience given for its slow pace, tiny details and minimal plot, the film delivers on storytelling and its unexpected sweetness stays with you long after.

Where to watch: Rent or buy on VOD



An Irish Goodbye

At a farm in rural Northern Ireland, a pair of estranged brothers are reunited after a premature death. Kinda the opposite story of feckin' Banshees of Inisherin in that it may move you to reconnect with a loved one.

The relationship of Turlough (Seamus O’Hara) who returns home and his brother Lorcan (James Martin) completely works. An Irish Goodbye is a contender with a nomination for Best Short Film — Live Action.

Where to watch: In theaters playing the Short Films and available on RealGood TV



The Quiet Girl (An Cailin Ciuin) 

"The Quiet Girl" has been nominated for an Oscar for Best International Feature film, the first Irish-language film to be so honored.

I have not yet seen this film, a coming-of-age drama about a nine-year-old who’s abandoned by her poverty-stricken parents and sent to live with distant relatives. It is nominated for Best International Feature Film.


Where to watch: Opened this Friday in theaters.

Additionally, Jonathan Redmond was nominated for best editing for his work on Elvis and Richard Baneham was nominated for best visual effects for Avatar: The Way of Water. With St. Patrick's Day coming up soon and the Oscars even sooner, it looks like a good excuse to fire up the TV and have a gargle.