Showing posts with label Everything Everywhere All At Once. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Everything Everywhere All At Once. Show all posts

Monday, March 13, 2023

Burning Questions from the 2023 Oscars


Wasn't it weird seeing someone host again?

Were you counting down the seconds until Jimmy Kimmel joked about the slap?

Didn't it take much longer than you expected? 

Actually, didn't his whole monologue take longer than you expected? 

But wasn't it still pretty good overall? 

Can you ever go wrong referencing Encino Man?

Were you worried Kimmel was going to talk about The Fabelmans all night? 

Did I not appreciate his Babylon joke? 

Is it possible he's right about James Cameron not being able to sit through his own movies?

Or enjoying drowning Kate Winslet?

Kimmel sure does like picking on Cameron, doesn't he? 

Do you think Cameron even cares?

Wasn't he spot on on about the Academy rewarding assault with a Best Actor Oscar?

And about everyone embarrassingly going along with it?

Will Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt be forever linked because of...Jungle Cruise

If you had to predict who'd present the first Oscar, wouldn't Johnson be an odds on favorite?

Wouldn't it be a bad start to miss Animated Feature considering how obvious that win was? 

Did you remember who won the supporting Oscars last year?

Wasn't the Ke Huy Quan moment every bit as special as we knew it would be?

After seeing Jamie Lee Curtis win, didn't it almost seem inevitable that she had to? 

Then again, was that a tough category to predict or what? 

How about her shout out to Halloween fans? 

Did Angela Bassett look...less than happy?

Were you thinking this was a good indication of how things would go for EEAAO?

Didn't that Diane Warren song sound like something you'd hear at the dentist's office?

Did you get the impression this nomination wouldn't end her 14-time losing streak? 

So, we're introducing movie trailers on the show now?

Doesn't EEAAO totally seem like David Byrne's type of movie?

As a Best Picture nominee, isn't Women Talking just a complete afterthought?

Not a question but...Jennifer Connelly!

Was it really necessary to keep THAT shot from The Whale on the screen while makeup artist Adrien Morot accepted his Oscar? 

Did this just ensure Connelly won't ever agree to return? 

Between Disney and Warner Bros., was this movie studios tribute night? 

When is the Orion Pictures montage?

Wasn't it great to see Gizmo?

And (not the real) Jenny The Donkey?

When will I stop picking Elvis as a winner in the craft categories?

Does this bode poorly for Austin Butler?

International Feature: most locked victory of the night?

Wasn't it funny when Kimmel said this was about the time in the show that people are missing the slapping?

Is Elizabeth Olsen the only actress to have actually gained respect and acting cred from starring in huge franchise movies?  

Were you worried/hoping My Year of Dicks would win Best Animated Short? 

Were you expecting such a stripped down performance from Lady Gaga?

Especially considering the song's from Top Gun: Maverick?

But wasn't it the best one so far? 

Did Hugh Grant call himself a scrotum?

Again, not a question but Babylon should have won for Production Design.

Again, not a question by Babylon should have won for Original Score.

Will that film ever be able to shake the stench of its box office failure?

They're really going to deny the 91-year-old John Williams also?

Is All Quiet cleaning up or what?

Are we back to regretting including all the categories on the show?

Just wasn't Elizabeth Banks' night, was it?

Aren't the Oscars a fitting venue for Cocaine Bear? 

Isn't "We just want to thank our families" the perfect place to cut a winner's speech off? 

Should the FCC prepare for another batch of pointless complaints for Rihanna's performance?

Remember those dark days when Sound was separated into two categories?

Did Kimmel really just joke about Robert Blake being in the In Memoriam montage? 

Wasn't his audience bit fairly quick and painless?

Did you think Chandrabose would sing through all of the "Naatu Naatu" acceptance speech?

Did John Travolta have a tough time getting through that In Memoriam intro or what?

When you saw the first name in the montage did it then become obvious why?

Um, Anne Heche?

Tom Sizemore?

Leslie Jordan?

These Daniels guys sure are characters aren't they? 

Fair to say Will Smith not presenting Best Actress? 

Hoping Kimmel really was joking about stretching the remaining awards out?

Weren't the presenter pairings fairly solid all night ?

About ten seconds before Best Actor was announced, why was I regretting my Austin Butler prediction?

Did the result answer that question? 

Is Brendan Fraser winning the happiest I've been to get a major category wrong?

Were you relieved Cate Blanchett didn't storm the stage in character as Lydia Tár when Michelle Yeoh won?

Given how the night went, how big a shock would it have been if EEAAO lost?

It took 95 years for a sci-fi film to win Best Picture?

Knowing the Academy's tastes, is anyone surprised?

Does it get any better than seeing Ke Huy Quan reunited with Harrison Ford onstage?

Didn't this seem like one of the more competently produced shows in recent years?  

Especially last year's?

Should we just accept that the Oscars feeling and being too long goes with the territory at this point?

Wasn't the "Telecasts Without Incident" gag a good closer?

Friday, March 10, 2023

2023 Oscar Predictions


You hear it all the time. "If so and so wins Best Picture, it's the end of the Oscars." For whatever reason, statements like that seem to have become more prevalent in the past five years, regardless of what's favored to win. But if we can be certain about anything, it's that the Academy Awards have been around for almost a century and will continue to air somewhere no matter how many people complain or the depths to which the telecast's viewership numbers sink. So if frontrunner Everything, Everywhere All at Once has drawn the ire of those deeming it unworthy of 11 nominations, it's important to remember how often we've been down this road, and will be again.

The Oscars will be fine and no one should be spiraling into madness over something they emphatically claim to care nothing about. But that's the catch, isn't it? We do care because it's good to see quality work recognized and rewarded, even while sometimes vehemently disagreeing with the Academy's definition of that. Yes, the telecast itself is often a slog, with too many Best Picture nominees, show catastrophes like on stage assaults, wrong winners being read and favorites getting snubbed, but it's still the Oscars and that always counts for something. Plus it looks like we'll actually have a host this year.

As nice as it would be nice for the actual movies to make headlines for a change, I don't subscribe to the theory that films should rack up trophies for getting people into theaters again or "saving the moviegoing experience." If an insanely popular title like Top Gun: Maverick was to win the big prize, it should do so on creative merit, but we know how this works by now, as a vote can often say more about the tastes and proclivities of who's casting it than the movie itself. The good news is that the Academy rarely nominates garbage, clearing an admittedly low bar other awards bodies frequently don't.

With a much harder field to predict than usual, replicating my 23/24 score from last year feels like an impossibility with this many key races still up in the air, especially Best Actor and Supporting Actress,  which are close enough to be decided by a coin flip. It's worth noting this is the first year in some time (maybe ever) that I've seen the majority of films and performances nominated. That still may not help, but it's nice to be able to chime in with a "should win" for a change. Below are the predictions, along with some depth analysis for the major categories. As usual, I'm reserving the right to change any picks until the start of the show.  

*Predicted Winners 

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio
Marcel the Shell With Shoes On
Puss in Boots: The Last Wish
The Sea Beast
Turning Red

BEST ANIMATED SHORT
The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse
The Flying Sailor

Ice Merchants
My Year of Dicks
An Ostrich Told Me the World Is Fake and I Think I Believe It

BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
All That Breathes

Fire of Love
A House Made of Splinters
Navalny

BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT
The Elephant Whisperers
Haulout
How Do You Measure a Year?
The Martha Mitchell Effect
Stranger at the Gate

BEST LIVE-ACTION SHORT
An Irish Goodbye
Ivalu
Le Pupille
Night Ride
The Red Suitcase

BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE
All Quiet on the Western Front
(Germany)
Argentina, 1985
(Argentina)
Close 
(Belgium)
EO 
(Poland)
The Quiet Girl
(Ireland) 

BEST FILM EDITING
Top Gun: Maverick
(Eddie Hamilton)
The Banshees of Inisherin (Mikkel E.G. Nielsen)
Everything Everywhere All at Once (Paul Rogers)
Elvis (Jonathan Redmond & Matt Villa)
Tár (Monika Willi)

BEST SOUND
All Quiet on the Western Front
Avatar: The Way of Water
The Batman
Elvis
Top Gun: Maverick

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
All Quiet on the Western Front (Christian M. Goldbeck & Ernestine Hipper)
Elvis (Catherine Martin, Karen Murphy & Bev Dunn)
Babylon (Florencia Martin & Anthony Carlino)
Avatar: The Way of Water (Dylan Cole, Ben Procter & Vanessa Cole)
The Fabelmans (Rick Carter & Karen O’Hara)

BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris (Jenny Beavan)
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Ruth Carter)
Elvis (Catherine Martin)
Babylon (Mary Zophres)
Everything Everywhere All at Once (Shirley Kurata)

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
All Quiet on the Western Front (Volker Bertelmann)
The Banshees of Inisherin (Carter Burwell)
Babylon (Justin Hurwitz)
Everything Everywhere All at Once (Son Lux)
The Fabelmans (John Williams) 

BEST ORIGINAL SONG
“Lift Me Up, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Ryan Coogler, Ludwig Göransson, Rihanna & Tems)
"Hold My Hand," Top Gun: Maverick (Lady Gaga & BloodPop)
"Naatu Naatu," RRR (M.M. Keeravaani & Chandrabose)
"Applause," Tell It Like a Woman (Diane Warren)
“This Is a Life,” Everything Everywhere All at Once (Ryan Lott, David Byrne & Mitski) 

BEST MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
All Quiet on the Western Front 
The Batman
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
Elvis
The Whale

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
All Quiet on the Western Front
Avatar: The Way of Water
The Batman
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
Top Gun: Maverick

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
All Quiet on the Western Front (James Friend)
Empire of Light (Roger Deakins)
Bardo (Darius Khondji)
Elvis (Mandy Walker)
Tár (Florian Hoffmeister)

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
All Quiet on the Western Front (Edward Berger, Ian Stokell & Lesley Paterson)
Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (Rian Johnson)
Livng (Kazuo Ishiguro)
Top Gun: Maverick (Ehren Kruger, Eric Warren Singer, Christopher McQuarrie, Peter Craig & Justin Marks)
Women Talking (Sarah Polley) 

Both All Quiet and Top Gun are action oriented, director-driven vehicles more powered by action and visuals than words. Still, the nine nominations accumulated by the former means it can't completely be discounted from pulling off an upset. Glass Onion is a further reach, as Rian Johnson's admittedly well constructed script just doesn't have enough heft or consensus appeal to make it a threat here, especially against these heavier hitting nominees.Voters would go for Living, if only anyone noticed or remembered it's been nominated. So in a surprisingly thin field, it's not hard to see how Sarah Polley's Women Talking would have the edge given the source material's literary pedigree its surprise Best Picture nod. I'll consider this a make-up win for Polley, whose best film, the unnominated Take This Waltz, deserved to clean up over a decade ago.  

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Tár (Todd Field)
The Fabelmans (Tony Kushner & Steven Spielberg)
Everything Everywhere All at Once (Daniel Kwan & Daniel Scheinert)
The Banshees of Inisherin (Martin McDonagh)
Triangle of Sadness (Ruben Östlund)

This one's far more interesting and competitive, as the category's stacked with all Best Picture nominees. You'd figure this would favor EEAAO, and it does, but none of the others can be counted out, except maybe Triangle of Sadness. Banshees could take this since McDonagh is a stalwart here, having previously earned nominations for In Bruges and Three Billboards, but there's this nagging feeling the film may have peaked too early. Tár is foremost a directing and acting achievement while The Fabelmans could earn serious points for Kushner and Spielberg's ability to shape and mold the latter's life into a cohesive screenplay that does the legendary director's early life justice. But we know where all the momentum is and should brace ourselves for this being one of many EEAAO wins.        

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Angela Bassett (Black Panther: Wakanda Forever)
Hong Chau (The Whale)
Kerry Condon (The Banshees of Inisherin)
Jamie Lee Curtis (Everything Everywhere All at Once)
Stephanie Hsu (Everything Everywhere All at Once)

What was that about a coin toss? In a category that always carries some degree of unpredictability each year, this race is unusually tight. Whenever it's down to two, there's a good chance anything can happen, including a splitting of votes that allows a deserving underdog like Banshees' Kerry Condon to sneak in, especially given her recent BAFTA victory. And while the temptation's there to dismiss The Whale's Hong Chau, anything's possible. Unfortunately, my preferred choice of Stephanie Hsu seems unlikelier, which is a shame since a strong argument can be made she's the heart and soul of EEAAO rather than co-star Jamie Lee Curtis, who steps way outside the box as quirky IRS auditor Dierdre Beaubierdre

Fresh off a SAG win, Curtis has momentum, industry wide likeability and would give a terrific speech that gets people talking the next day. But if it's a career award then Angela Bassett seems just as worthy for her role as Queen Ramonda in Wakanda Forever, making her the first Oscar winner in an MCU film. You could even argue she should already have a trophy for either What's Love Got To Do With It or Strange Days. What this may come down to is a test of EEAAO's potential dominance and an early test of how smitten voters really are with it. Either Curtis carried by the tide or respect for Bassett wins out. Almost too close to call.  

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Brendan Gleeson (The Banshees of Inisherin)
Brian Tyree Henry (Causeway)
Judd Hirsch (The Fabelmans)
Barry Keoghan (The Banshees of Inisherin)
Ke Huy Quan (Everything Everywhere All at Once)

The only true lock of the night. All these performances are impressive but there's only one actor here everyone's rooting for. This goes for critics, viewers, voters and probably even a few of his fellow nominees in this category. Watching Ke Huy Quan rush the stage to accept his Oscar go down as one of those special awards moments played on endless repeat for years to come. The only thing capable of topping it should be the speech, since there's little doubt The Goonies and Temple of Doom star will be thanking a certain nominated director sitting in the front row. It says a lot that even those who don't care for EEAAO still agree he's the best part of the film and completely deserves this.

Kerry Condon is more likely to nab supporting honors for Banshees than either Gleeson or Keoghan, who will probably cancel each other out. In a different era, Judd Hirsch would win for sentimental reasons, but as memorable as his Fabelmans performance is, many believe the role is just too small for him to upset. And for my money, David Lynch was even better in the film, with even less screen time. Bryan Tyree Henry's surprise inclusion for Causeway will be looked at as reward enough. No one other than Quan has a shot.  

BEST ACTRESS
Cate Blanchett (Tár)
Ana de Armas (Blonde)
Andrea Riseborough (To Leslie)
Michelle Williams (The Fabelmans)
Michelle Yeoh (Everything Everywhere All at Once)

A two-horse race if there ever was one. We've gotten to the point where the backlash to the backlash regarding Andrea Riseborough's unusual campaign has actually improved her chances, but there's a big difference in getting the necessary number of votes to be nominated and having enough to actually win. My hunch is she'll fall short, despite giving a career best performance in To Leslie deserving of the attention it's gotten. That Ana de Armas defied the odds in getting nominated for her fearless Marilyn Monroe portrayal in the widely reviled Blonde speaks to her talent and the fact she'll probably be here again. It's not "category fraud" if you place yourself in a tougher race, which is what Michelle Williams did, possibly costing herself a supporting trophy. It's looking like we'll have to wait a little longer to see the five-time nominee referred to as an Academy Award winner, a designation she's deserved for a while now.  

Even while trading precursor wins with EEAAO's Michelle Yeoh, Cate Blanchett was still thought to have this in the bag for her complex tour de force as icy classical conductor Lydia Tár. It's a career high performance made for Oscar, but Yeoh has suddenly surged and now the only question left is if voters think two-time winner Blanchett's been honored enough and are willing to overlook one of the more acclaimed acting turns of recent times by the industry's most respected actress. But it looks like that's exactly what could happen, as the Academy has a chance to anoint a long underappreciated talent in a movie most voters seem to really love. A Blanchett loss may not age that well, but then again, few could claim Yeoh isn't at the least the next strongest choice.   

BEST ACTOR
Austin Butler (Elvis)
Colin Farrell (The Banshees of Inisherin)
Brendan Fraser (The Whale)
Paul Mescal (Aftersun)
Bill Nighy (Living)

It's really hard not to get flashbacks to 2014 Oscars when Michael Keaton's likely comeback win for Birdman was derailed by eventual victor Eddie Redmayne, who reaped the benefits of playing real life figure Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything. It's almost become a long running joke how heavily the Academy favors biographical performances, with Rami Malek's take on Freddie Mercury being the most recent example. This could spell trouble for The Whale's Brendan Fraser considering Austin Butler not only physically transforms himself into the King of Rock and Roll, but actually does a lot of his own singing, a rarity in the musical biopic genre. And despite a recent SAG win and continued momentum, it's possible voters feel honoring one comeback is enough with Fraser's Encino Man co-star Ke Huy Quan. 

Working against Butler is that he'd be one of the youngest winners ever and Fraser's empathic performance as the lonely, morbidly obese Charlie is as undeniable as the actor's personal story. This is the tightest race, making the remaining contenders an afterthought. Farrell's heat is gone, Paul Mescal's turn and film feel too small for the win and Living's Bill Nighy might be the least visible nominee in years. As painful as it is to admit, the chances of them rewarding Fraser has dwindled slightly, making it entirely possible the Academy passes over my favorite male performance of 2022 to fall back on their old habits. Butler's great in a film seen and liked by far more, and has a Best Picture nomination, even if it's still difficult to envision him onstage knowing how the Oscars favor experience over youth. Still, The Whale's lack of prominence or broad support in other categories is a red flag. This is close enough to result in a historic tie, but no one's crazy enough to predict that.              

BEST DIRECTOR
Ruben Östlund (Triangle of Sadness)
Todd Field (Tár)
Daniel Kwan & Daniel Scheinert (Everything Everywhere All at Once)
Martin McDonagh (The Banshees of Inisherin)
Steven Spielberg (The Fabelmans)

That fleeting period when this race seemed up in the air ended, since becoming an inevitability that the Daniels will bring it home. Is an upset possible? Sure, but this is one of the few categories you can comfortably check off without a second thought because it just makes sense. EEAAO is the movie voters like the most and a lot of that can be attributed their direction. Plus, they just won the DGA and have been front and center this whole time, likably promoting the film as if their lives depended on it.

The Daniels somehow losing would be a shock because there's just no reasonable alternative, save for maybe Spielberg, due to his legacy and the fact that The Fabelmans is his best in a long time. Five years ago he'd probably win, but the landscape has drastically changed and a bigger audience for it could have helped. If we're technically talking about the best directed effort then Todd Field triumphs, but it's hard to remember the last time the Academy rewarded that. It's a miracle Triangle of Sadness's Ruben Östlund got in and McDonagh has a better chance at Banshees love in the screenplay category. Mark another one down for EEAAO, as Picture and Director are shaping up to match again.        

BEST PICTURE
All Quiet on the Western Front
Avatar: The Way of Water
The Banshees of Inisherin
Elvis
Everything Everywhere All at Once
The Fabelmans
Tár
Top Gun: Maverick
Triangle of Sadness
Women Talking

The year's sleeper, All Quite on the Western Front, has made up a lot of ground, but it winning would be an unprecedented upset at the level of Crash or Moonlight considering how it lacks both directing and editing nods. Avatar: The Way of Water is here because there are ten slots, it's just good enough and made a lot of money. Aside from a strong showing at the BAFTAs, Banshees has been losing steam over the past month, making a victory in any major race a real long shot. If vote tallies were ever revealed to the public, we'd probably all be surprised just how well Elvis did, but it's still all about Butler's performance. 

In another decade The Fabelmans wins Best Picture, as it's just the kind of traditionally well made, coming-of-age story that voters always drooled over. While that's not as true now, it's still one of Spielberg's weirder, more strangely compelling recent works and I'm glad we got it. Tár is brilliant, but a critic's film, too cold and complex for Academy tastes. Top Gun: Maverick is its polar exact opposite, a crowd thrilling spectacle done right that raked in tons of money for the industry, but even its biggest boosters admit it's a superb fast food meal you don't give a second thought to after the credits roll.

Triangle of Sadness would be this year's head-scratching inclusion if not for the presence of Women Talking, which takes a spot that could have belonged to Babylon, The Whale or any other number of films I loved this year that everyone else despised. With PGA, DGA, SAG and WGA guild wins, it's pretty much a cakewalk for EEAAO, which should successfully convert on a decent amount of its 11 nominations, driving the film's most vocal opponents up the wall. They'll be in for a long night.             

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

2023 Oscar Nominations (Reaction and Analysis)


Announced earlier this morning from the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills by actors Riz Ahmed and Allison Williams, the 95th Academy Award nominations (full list here) are now known. This means all the arguing and predicting can officially commence, leading into a telecast on March 12 that could have a lot riding on it. Or maybe not, depending upon who you ask. For those within the industry, as well as fans, journalists and critics following this closely, it's still a big deal. And the best thing about this year's reading of the nominees is that it actually felt like one, with a welcome return to the press conference format, as audible gasps and cheers could be heard when certain names were announced, or in some cases, left off. 

While doing this in a Zoom-style format these couple of years was clearly a necessity, the Academy was already tinkering with the nomination announcements pre-pandemic so it was especially gratifying to see it presented this way again. But beyond being handled well and going off without a hitch, it also gave some hope to awards prognosticators who filled out a scorecard since the first few categories mostly played out as expected. All that changed once some of the bigger categories were announced, many of which contained a fair share of subs and surprises.  

Everything Everywhere All At Once, led with 11 nods, possibly shutting down the talk of it being too polarizing for older Academy members. Whether this large contingent of supporters will translate into enough votes to win the big prize another story, especially with The Banshees of Inisherin and Netflix's All Quiet on the Western Front nipping at its heels with 9 nominations each. While I still contend that  10 Best Picture nominees is too many and waters down the entire field, voters again made it apparent they're not necessarily interested in using these slots to assemble an incredibly eclectic group of nominees or veer too far from what they've always done. There are always exceptions, but for the most part, Oscar voters like what they like and have specific tastes that  heavily deviate from critics and audiences. And as we've seen in recent years, this can create challenges for the actual telecast, both in terms of ratings and actual entertainment value. Let's see how they did this time.

-The first notable surprise was probably Causeway's Brian Tyree Henry in Supporting Actor. That he ended up beating out The Fabelmans'  Paul Dano and The Good Nurse's Eddie Redmayne for the fifth slot isn't nothing. And anyone who thought Judd Hirsch wasn't making it in for The Fabelmans doesn't know the Academy, as there was no chance the 87 year-old veteran actor would be excluded, regardless of the screen time issue. Banchees' Brendan Gleeson and Barry Keoghan predictably round out the category while it's now frontrunner Ke Huy Quan's to lose for Everything Everywhere.

-The presence of both Jamie Lee Curtis and Stephanie Hsu in Supporting Actress for Everything Everywhere is revealing. It indicates a lot of goodwill for the film, especially considering as recently as a couple of weeks ago many seemed sure Hsu would be left out. That they justifiably recognized her performance as essential is yet another box checked in its favor. But it's Angela Bassett who's suddenly emerged as the favorite for Wakanda: Forever, meaning Hong Chau (The Whale) and Kerry Condon (Banshees) have some catching up to do.

-The two big overperformers were All Quite on the Western Front and Triangle of Sadness, both nabbing Picture and Screenplay notices, plus a surprise directing nomination for Triangle's Ruben Östlund. It's ironic that the former ended up being Netflix's awards pony considering they bet everything on Glass Onion, which disappointed with only a sole writing nod.  

-The biggest snub just might be Top Gun: Maverick's Claudio Miranda failing to get in for cinematography. He wasn't just merely expected to earn a nomination, but favored to win. It's an inexplicable exclusion for a blockbuster that's still expected to run the table when it comes to the technical categories (visual effects, sound and editing all within grasp). Still, not hearing his name may have been the morning's most perplexing moment. 

-Remember when the documentary category was the one of the most anticipated? Not to say the selected nominees aren't worthy, but it does seem as if this race is missing some of the luster it had in previous years. The same could be said for Animated Feature, which will more than likely be won by Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio.

-Continuing their tradition of royally botching the Best Original Song category, voters awarded perennial runner-up Dianne Warren her 14th nomination for "Applause" from the anthology film Tell It Like a Woman. This while Taylor Swift is completely snubbed for "Carolina" (Where The Crawdads Sing) and LCD Soundsystem's brilliant "New Body Rhumba" from White Noise gets egregiously excluded. That one really stings. R.R.R receives its only recognition here, for "Naatu Naatu," as it's looking like a three-way race between that, Lady Gaga's "Hold My Hand" (Top Gun), Rihanna's "Lift Me Up" (Wakanda Forever) and Ryan Lott and David Byrne's "This is a Life" (EEAAO). In Original Score, 90-year-old John Williams earns his 53rd (!) nod for The Fabelmans. 

-The decision to push The Fabelman's Michelle Williams for lead instead of supporting just cost her a locked Oscar. On the bright side, she should already have two or three of them, so there's reason to believe the five-time nominee will get more shots at this. Going against both Cate Blanchett (Tár) and Michelle Yeoh (EEAAO) is an uphill battle, but the lead story here is Andrea Riseborough in To Leslie. Whatever was done over the past couple of weeks worked, as sheer online will and word of mouth for an unsung, underseen performance got her in, sure to result in some interesting discussions about what it takes to get a nomination. 

-The attempts to tear down Blonde were only partially successful, with even the film's biggest detractors being forced to admit Ana de Armas' work was amazing, especially in the face of that controversial material and all the immense scrutiny playing Marilyn Monroe entails. Babylon being considered the financial flop of the year destroyed Margot Robbie's chances here and The Woman King just didn't have enough behind it to earn Viola Davis a nod. The Riseborough and de Armas surges most affected Danielle Deadwyler, who at one point seemed to be a lock for Till. Pearl's Mia Goth was a non-starter due to the Academy's long standing genre bias, but boy would it have been great if that materialized. 

-Despite the rapturous reception for Top Gun: Maverick, it was always hard to envision them nominating Cruise for this. It's just not the kind of performance AMPAS typically goes for, so they didn't. And whatever admiration exists for The Fabelmans just wasn't enough to carry star Gabriel LaBelle through. Instead, things shaped up mostly how we thought, with Paul Mescal (Aftersun) and Bill Nighy (Living) taking the two indie underdog slots while Colin Farrell (Banshees), Austin Butler (Elvis) and comeback king Brendan Fraser (The Whale) battle it out. With Butler now overtaking Farrell and Fraser getting a second wind after overcoming some initially scathing reviews, this has suddenly turned into one of the more intriguing races. 

-Some snubs in the directing category include Baz Luhrmann (Elvis), James Cameron (Avatar: The Way of Water), Edward Berger (All Quiet on the Western Front) S.S. Rajamouli (R.R.R.), Charlotte Wells (Aftersun) and Sarah Polley (Women Talking) even if it's tough to call anything a "snub" with five slots to the ten Best Picture contenders. Of the listed, Berger's exclusion might be the only real surprise given how well his film did across the board. Spielberg's still the favorite, even if you can't completely count out the Daniels (EEAAO), or even Martin McDonagh (Banshees) or Todd Field (Tár) given their pedigrees. Triangle's Östlund is the shock here, as few saw that coming.        

-Again, with 10 Best Picture nominees, it's hard to get bent out of shape about omissions. The Whale's mixed reception probably caught up with it and Babylon and R.R.R. were always reaches, as was Wakanda Forever. Taking their places were Triangle of Sadness and Women Talking, the latter of which was actually very poorly received in some circles, to the point it almost feels like filler. Top Gun: Maverick and the Avatar: The Way of Water are the blockbuster inclusions everyone's been clamoring for while Elvis continues to pick up steam. Whether The Fabelmans has enough to go all the way is questionable, but the same could also be said for the more critically adored Tár and Banshees of Inisherin. All Quite on the Western Front may have ascended from nothing to a serious threat overnight, but all eyes still remain on Everything Everywhere, which just further asserted its potential dominance on Oscar night.

    

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

The Best (and Worst) Movie Posters of 2022

If a single word springs to mind when considering the most memorable movie posters, it's probably "iconic." It may not apply to every one, but chances are if you're able to instantly conjure up a single, striking image in your mind whenever that film's title is mentioned, it applies. Think Jaws, E.T., A Clockwork Orange, The Shining or Vertigo. All top-tier cinematic achievements matched by one-sheets that transcend a poster's purpose, resulting in a beautiful union of marketing and art. 

Those are extreme examples, occupying space in the pop culture lexicon alongside the film itself and emerging as an easily identifiable logo. Occasionally it becomes such a calling card that you could conceivably remove the title treatment (often also memorable) and still identify the film. So even if the theatrical experience has undergone drastic changes over the past few years, movie posters always seems to adapt along with it, their initial intent remaining the same. This idea of iconography isn't gone, just rarer. 

None of 2022's best designs can touch those classics, but that doesn't mean the principles and concepts behind them aren't still in play. Unlike 2021, where I scrounged to fill ten spots, this was a much better year, proving again there's usually a strong correlation between a film's quality and its poster. It's always a toss-up whether the top pick will present itself early and obviously with little competition, or be an unexpected winner that emerges from a crowded field of contenders. This time it's the latter, which I actually prefer, since it speaks to the quantity of exceptional designs over the past 12 months.

Just a reminder that only official, studio approved theatrical and screening posters released during the calendar year 2022 (possibly including upcoming 2023 films) are eligible. Most images via Impawards.com Below are the top ten, along with an alphabetically ranked runners-up list, and of course, the highly anticipated, but always entertaining year's worst. 

The Best...


10. Everything, Everywhere All At Once 

Capturing the polarizing chaos that is Everything, Everywhere All At Once would seem to be an impossible task, but illustrator James Jean nails it, melding all its wackiness onto a kaleidoscopic one-sheet that tells us everything and then some. From the googly eyes, to the hot dog fingers all the way to the two Evelyns framing the top and bottom, there's this strange thematic organization to the insanity that'll likely remind the movie's most ardent defenders why they love it (and prolong the agony of its detractors). Lots of little details here, all converging in Jobu's "everything bagel" black hole. A24 also released a series of parody posters based on the film's many multiverses, but it's this that easily stands as the most inventive and visually appealing of them all.


9. Fall

In the case of the vertigo-inducing, high altitude location thriller Fall, this is exactly how the movie looks, feels and is shot. No false advertising here, as you'll know with one look whether you're up for it. Just glancing at it may make some acrophobiacs nauseous, but there's a brilliant simplicity to Richard Rho's approach that only grows in impressiveness the longer you stare. The awesome use of all that wide open negative space and the breaking ladder captures the film at the apex of it suspense. You also have to love how the blinding sun against the blue skyline is sandwiched in between the top of the tower, nearly kissing its tag line. The functional sans serif title treatment is a perfect choice, with a navy typeface that's bold, impactful and well placed. "Dropping Soon." Clever.  Amidst a myriad of throwback designs, this poster's almost jarringly modern, which was a gutsy choice  Sometimes a teaser doesn't even need to knock your socks off, just convey the film as cleanly and efficiently as possible. Bonus points for playing with perspective and height in an inspired way I can't remember seeing since this.   

 

8. Spin Me Round

If GrandSon's design for Jeff Baena's romantic comedy Spin Me Round looks slightly familiar that's because it is, strikingly resembling the Criterion Collection cover art for John Waters' Polyester. While there are noticeable differences, the romance novel paperback theme is front-and-center and maybe creatively executed a little better here, going even further with that aesthetic. Drumming up curiosity as to what the film could have up its sleeve, it's busy, but you have to appreciate how the typeface is configured and repurposed to look much more like a trashy airport read than a movie poster. The label on the top left and even that crease going down the "spine" is proof of that attention to detail. With vibrant colors and top notch illustrations (just look at Alison Brie) are topped off by the couple perfectly posed behind that cheesy-looking title treatment. 


7. Butterfly in the Sky

Featuring interviews with host LeVar Burton and the legendary PBS show's creators, to say the 2022 "Reading Rainbow" documentary, Butterfly in the Sky slipped under the radar would be an understatement. But just look at this poster, which is everything the program represented in a single, eye-catching illustration that not only conjures up nostalgic memories of its opening credits, but the iconic theme song itself. It would have been so easy to just photoshop Burton onto the poster, add a title and call it a day. But this avoids replicating the errors of the disappointingly bland 2018 one-sheet for that masterful Mr. Rogers documentary, Won't You Be My Neighbor? You can't look at these images (especially the pages flying out of the TV) and not immediately reflect on everything the show meant to those who grew up on it. And it looks fantastic to boot, with dazzling illustrations and colors, a flawlessly placed brown title and the Tribeca laurel reef, all accompanied by a nice, clean border. Still trying to uncover who designed this.

 

6. Get Away If You Can

Here's another film that really fell through the cracks. Released back in August on VOD, actors and writer/directors Terrence Marin and Dominique Braun's sailing thriller, Get Away If You Can came and went with little fanfare, but Aleksander Walijewski's poster for it is unforgettable. With a plot revolving around the exploration of a deserted island, the studio at least knew to place the great Ed Harris at the forefront of what can best be described as a highly unusual, but visually captivating one-sheet that isn't overwhelmed by an onslaught of type and credits. The beige border and aqua blue color combo makes for a great contrast, with the two divers descending toward the title below and away from Harris' face on the bottom of the boat. As far as why Harris' face is on the bottom of the boat? Who knows, but it's a great choice. The design takes a page from Jaws, but in reverse. 

 

5. Armageddon Time

Sending out some classic The Last Picture Show vibes, this elegantly simple throwback for James Gray's autobiographical Armageddon Time demonstrates an understated excellence that's gone missing in modern posters, Successfully channeling the film's New York setting circa 1980, this GrandSon design also manages to replicate the style of poster that would accompany the film's release during that era. It's very deliberately intended to convey the theme and tone of the picture rather than misrepresent or oversell the picture as anything other than an adult prestige drama. And by taking this route, it ends up serving as the best, most honest advertising for this release. Those who want to see it will and that's the audience most likely to appreciate the artistry behind this one-sheet. The brown title treatment against the beige is immaculate and what even needs to be said about that spectacular skyline sketch? Part of me wonders how good this would look if you kept the tag line on top, but removed the vertical cast credits down the middle, freeing up even more negative space. Then again, it does help to know who's in it. Just great work all around.     

 

4. White Noise

The first official poster for Noah Baumbach's White Noise was surprisingly underwhelming. Then a few character one-sheets followed that weren't much better and we're left wondering...that's it? Yes, it's Netflix, but Don DeLillo's 1985 supposedly unfilmable novel on which this is based should be insane enough on its own to inspire some really wacky designs. And now here it is, as illustrator Marija Tiurina summons her inner Where's Waldo? to give us this gloriously detailed collage of chaos that's bursting through every corner of the page with moments and characters from the film. As fun as it's been seeing Waldo photoshopped into this online, there's actually enough going on that we don't even need him and you could just try spotting Don Cheadle instead. Posters and even t-shirts like this enjoyed spurts of popularity during the 80's and 90's, but this approach is still kind of a deep cut, albeit an entirely welcome one. You just don't see this kind of thing anymore and Tiurina does it about as skillfully as you'll ever see, crafting a worthy homage that reflects the movie's zaniness. 


3. Pearl

While the influence behind MOCEAN's "X-traordinary" design for Ti West's Pearl is clearly Italian horror movie posters of the 70's and 80's, it possesses that rare, attention-getting quality prevalent in those aforementioned classic one-sheets. There is an iconic quality to it, evident by the fact that you really could take away that bloody title treatment (which is outstanding) and credits and still completely know what this is. A lot of that can be attributed Mia Goth, whose performance and look in the film is so immediately recognizable that you could have gone in numerous directions designing the poster, just as long as she's prominently featured. The optimistically wide-eyed "who, me?" look is almost too perfect, complete with the bloody hands covering her cheeks. The black background makes the bright red pop and there's some good manipulation of perspective with a sepia toned Pearl chopping up her victim as the blood flows down the road into that beige background, forming the title. This retro aesthetic is nothing new, but it's still in a class all its own, serving as the ultimate companion piece for West's film. 

 

 2. Resurrection

P+A's design for the twisty Rebecca Hall thriller Resurrection could on the surface just be described as a grainy, black and white image of her character. But there's a lot more going on, to the point that we really have to question what we're looking at here. Especially the incorporation of those imprisoning orange vertical lines, taking an ordinary head shot into a creepy realm that befits the film's subject. The stark contrast between the black and white and those strong, bold orange bars is what jumps out most here. Pressed up and piercing through it is her eye, resulting in a genuinely unsettling sideways glance that lets us know something's askew. With thick, functionally placed off white title type and a superb border of the same color, notice how those bars feed right into those bold black pull quotes at the bottom and the credits. While undeniably a throwback, it's tough coming up with many past examples it draws from, suggesting maybe this concept is more original than it's gotten credit for. Hall is no stranger to appearing on memorable posters for her films, and here's yet another one, wildly unique enough to lure you into giving it a watch.


1. Tár (All Versions)


 

If anyone would appreciate the symmetrical composition of these posters, it's the embattled fictional conductor Lydia Tar of Todd Field's Tár. Emerging from the darkness and towering above us all, AV Print's ingenious concept for one of 2022's most acclaimed films lets us know under no uncertain terms that this is Lydia's space and anyone else will be shrunk and overwhelmed by her greatness, much like the characters she's stepped over on her path to dominance. Arms outstretched, it's as if a whole page couldn't even contain the character's wingspan, physicality, ambition and talent. Another great example of cleverly manipulating space and perspective, first two posters still manage to maintain that austere, inaccessible quality that makes the film itself such a challenging mystery box enigma. 

The huge transparent title and credits across Blanchett's torso compliments the image well, but for comparison's sake, look at that second version, which removes everything but the title. A noticeable improvement, only reinforcing the idea that text is often the biggest obstacle to work around. So despite far preferring the simpler version, they did a great job using text in a manner that really fits the overall design's form and function. But better still is Desi Moore's official Cinemark poster (also doubling as the 4K/UHD blu ray cover art), which captures the emotionally detached maestro in all her repetitive obsessiveness with that hypnotizing illustration. All these posters loom as large as the title character herself, which is quite a feat.  


Runners-Up...

 


 

 


 


 



 


 


 

 

 







































 



































 ...And The Worst



Both these films boast impressive casts. So impressive that they should be prominently listed. See, they're big stars. You can read their names here. In text. There are many of them. 


While the idea of Jon Hamm playing Fletch definitely has potential, you'd never know it looking at whatever this is supposed to be. The familiar paperback concept (executed to far greater effect above with Spin Me Round) strangely resembles a Xerox copy of a rejected art assignment. Besides Hamm not looking quite like himself at all, everything just seems off, not to mention surprisingly unpleasant to look at.  


Despite being photoshopped beyond all recognition, it's hard to not to be mildly impressed that Tomlin, Fonda, Moreno and Field will all be sharing the screen together for the first time (bonus points for matching the correct names to the actresses). And yet it's still cringeworthy, managing to meet all the middle of the road expectations you'd expect from a comedy depicting four senior friends' trip to Super Bowl LI to watch their hero. Tom Brady doesn't need to be on the poster, but you wonder how much goofier this could have been if he was.  

  


Coming soon to your local public library...Steven Spielberg's The Fabelmans. That Toronto Film Festival poster really does look like something you'd see on the bulletin board next to a missing pet flyer or babysitting inquiry in the lobby while returning your overdue book. But even that can be forgiven, until you realize the borderless theatrical version is identical, yet somehow drabber. And all these sentimental images do little beyond reinforce everyone's biggest Spielberg misgivings going in. Supposedly, the film's much better than this, but young Sammy Fabelman walking toward projected images of his life on a studio backlot only heighten any concerns of syrupy content. At least they were smart enough to put Michelle Williams front and center, but that's about it. Maks Bereski's unofficial poster shows how this could have been done well.


Poor Andy Garcia, who looks legitimately perplexed at either how he ended up in HBO Max's Father of the Bride remake or got digitally manipulated onto its poster. Maybe both. Can't say I blame him. As far as no one knowing the film exists, generic advertising like this helps explain why.


Even by Netflix standards, this is pretty uninspired. And very, very blue. And that they simply repeated the same formula for the individual character and ensemble cast versions makes it clear what the game plan was all along. Just throw stars on the posters. They'll watch anyway. It doesn't matter.



To Jeff Goldblum's credit, he has his trademark bemused look suggesting he'd rather be anywhere than on a character poster for Jurassic World: Dominion. And it's hard to disagree. But I feel worse for that unidentifiable actress below who's baring only a vague resemblance to someone who looks like Laura Dern.  


Just a guess that this is supposed to be one of those body swap comedies, but Diane Keaton actually looks de-aged here (defeating the conceit of a younger person trapped in a senior citizen) and the others just look superimposed into a background containing the tidiest, most carefully placed pool party mess you've ever seen.


Tom Hanks is a lot of things, but "Grumpiest Man in America" doesn't exactly feel like the most accurate descriptor. But putting that, his menacing scowl and a fake cat aside, this does seem to represent a trend for the actor of late. They've basically just stopped designing posters for his films, opting instead to just paste the actor on a one-sheet with some text. If anyone deserves better, it's him. 


It's not a list without our requisite Cage entry and this one doesn't disappointment. It seems like they've ironically gone to great lengths to age him in this poster for The Old Way. But his name sure is perfectly centered on that hat, depriving us the knowledge of what crazy hair he'll be sporting this time.


The most dramatic rose ceremony ever.


The Son blah blah blah blah Florian Zeller blah blah blah Hugh Jackman blah blah blah blah. When pull quote posters are done well, there's nothing better, but this is just an mountain of small, unreadable italicized text. On the bright side, this does look like Laura Dern.  


Forget about appearing on the same poster, Eva Longoria and Matt Walsh don't look like they're even sharing the same country, state or zip code here.

 

What a disappointment. The Whale should have been the movie poster of the year. Just an illustration of Brendan Fraser's head on a whale's body. Someone needs to get on that. Instead, we get the now ubiquitous screenshot cleaned up and photoshopped to such an extent that it actually undermines the dramatic subject matter. The bright aqua title type is an interesting choice, but with this uninspired approach A24 has again revealed their discomfort promoting the film due to the fat suit "controversy." The hesitancy isn't doing the film or Fraser any favors.