Showing posts with label oscar 2008. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oscar 2008. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Oscars 2009: Who Will Win?

After a month of discussing whether Slumdog Millionaire will win Best Picture or if Kate Winslet will finally get her long-awaited golden statue, the moment has finally arrived.

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As huge lovers of movies and all things Hollywood, we thought we'd share our picks for the top 6 categories. Our choices are based on industry buzz, personal preference, and gut feelings. We do not under any circumstances suggest you use our picks for any Oscar pool you might be doing...

Best Picture: Slumdog Millionaire
Yes, we realize this is the safe choice. But with the amount of buzz this movie has generated, we feel it's an absolute no-brainer. Every now and then, the Academy votes for the feel-good movie of the year--and Slumdog looks like the next big winner.

Best Director: Danny Boyle, Slumdog Millionaire
Do you see a trend? We think they'll sweep these top two awards. Beg to differ?

Best Actor: Mickey Rourke, The Wrestler
We're not huge fans of Mr. Rourke but his performance was amazing and well respected across Hollywood. Many think Sean Penn may nab this one but we're going with our gut and picking Mickey. (Now if only he'd stop stalking Evan Rachel Wood...)
Best Actress: Kate Winslet, The Reader
Winslet's Oscar win is long overdue--we know it, she knows it, even the Academy knows it. Let's hope the universe works itself out and she wins a golden statue tonight. We heart Kate.

Best Supporting Actor: Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight
Because his performance was THAT GOOD. He commanded your attention while onscreen and delivered an almost-perfect performance. The academy will most definitely recognize this with a win.
Best Supporting Actress: Penelope Cruz, Vicki Cristina Barcelona
You couldn't take your eyes off her. She's an underrated actress who just might come into her own tonight.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

From people Magazine: Oscar Hair & Makeup Favorites

Ponytails, red lips and flawless skin – Jennifer Garner, Jessica Alba and more stars go for all-out glamour on the red carpet. By Melissa Liebling-Goldberg

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JENNIFER GARNER

"The first presenter of the night put the "emphasis on the strong slash part," according to her hairstylist Adir Abergel for Frederic Fekkai, combined with black cat-eye liner and shimmering nude lips."

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JESSICA ALBA

"For her "modern goddess" look, hairstylist Robert Ramos created a braided updo that was "beautiful and movie star-esque, but still edgy and stylish." Add her golden eyes and glowing skin, and the expectant star is truly divine."

and still nine female celebrities who has nomination from the best make up hair style.
you can see all of them here :
people magazine

Monday, February 25, 2008

Marion cotillard: the best celebrity female on academy awards 2008

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8PM: Red-carpet show on ABC - Regis Philbin is hosting, with classic Philbin mania. First interview: Geroge Clooney, who is with girlfriend Sarah Lawson. Clooney hijacks the interview by asking how Notre Dame basketball did, Philbin closes out by asking for an invite to Clooney's Italian villa.

Then Shaun Robinson interviews Best Actress nominee Marion Cotillard - wearing a stunning mermaid style Jean-Paul Gaultier dress - charming and sweet. Brooke Burke speaks with John Travolta and Kelly Preston; apparently it's not the night to ask about Tom Cruise's Scientology video.

Best Actress nominee Laura Linney briefly chats to Regia, then Best Supporting Actor nominee Javier Bardem fends what must be the billionth question about the Anton Chigurh hairstyle. All these interviews are so stilted! Miley Cyrus is now talking to Regis - why? Because Hannah Montana is a Disney show, and ABC is owned by Disney. Then again, the Hannah Montana concert movie was #1 at the box office a few weeks ago.

Guh, Brooke Burke refers to Juno as the "little indie that could" when talking to Jennifer Garner. How do the folks behind Little Miss Sunshine feel? Anyway, Garner, who is excellent in Juno, gives a shout out to her stylist - and Nicole Richie's enemy - Rachel Zoe. Helen Mirren is witty and classy when chatting with Regis.

Animated Feature Oscar with Anne Hathaway

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After a serious Steve Carrell realizes he's actually presenting the Animated Feature Oscar with Anne Hathaway, not Best Documentary, the pair present the Best Animated Film Oscar to Brad Bird, for Ratatouille. Brad Bird mentions his guidance counselor's doubt that he could make movies helped prepare him for the movie business. A nervous Katherine Heigl - wearing red (it's the color of the night - Anne Hathaway was also in red) presents the Best Makeup Oscar to the La Vie on Rose team - Didier Lavergne, Jan Archibald; close-up of Marion Cotillard, who looks like she's about to cry.

Where are the big categories? Traditionally the Oscars throw the viewers a bone, by presenting Best Supporting Actor or Actress early. But Jon Stewart introduces the first Best Song performance - it's Amy Adams singing the Happy Working Song from Enchanted. She sounds great, but after the great scene from the movie, with all the rodents and creatures (see it here), it's a pretty spare treatment. Can it be that we yearn for some crazy Debbie Allen dance number?

Back from commercial break, Jon Stewart tells us that the Kodak Theater attendees spend commercial breaks snarking about what the viewing audience is wearing. Then it's Dwayne "Don't Call Me The Rock Anymore" Johnson presenting the Best Visual Effects Oscar to the Golden Compass crew - Michael L. Fink, Bill Westenhofer, Ben Morris, Trevor Wood - who give a short, nice speech. Go behind the scenes production teams!

Oscar Night 2008: celebrity female the Academy Awards 3

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Montage of best supporting actress awards, which leads to last year's supporting actor winner, Alan Arkin, stepping out to present the Best Supporting Actress Oscar. And the winner is...Tilda Swinton, for Michael Clayton! A mild upset, as Ruby Dee or Cate Blanchett had been expected to win. But Swinton - wow! She's stunned and says the Oscar looks exactly like her agent, who deserves the award. She also said Michael Clayton writer-director Tony Gilroy walks on water and mentioned George Clooney wearing the Batman suit on set ("You rock!"). She's awesome - if you haven't yet, see her in The Deep End or Orlando.

Jessica Alba, in a lovely third trimester gown, mentions the Scientific Academy Awards handed out a few weeks ago. Insert a joke about the pregnant actresses and Jack Nicholson's virility. Then Josh Brolin and James McAvoy, after riffing on previous famous movie lines, present Best Adapted Screenplay to Ethan Coen and Joel Coen's adaptation of No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy. They previously won best original screenplay with Fargo.

Sid Ganis, the Academy president, tries to enlighten the average non-Hollywood Joe or Jane about the Oscar nominating and voting process with a montage (of course a montage) about the, uh, process, but not the Price Waterhouse Coopers part. The Academy's voting is super secret - as the Barbra Streisand-Katharine Hepburn tie in 1969 showed, votes can be close (Streisand reportedly only joined the Academy that year and probably voted for herself - had she not voted, she would have lost by one vote!).

Then the third song nominee - it's the second of three Enchanted songs. Kristen Chenoweth, Broadway star and actor on ABC's Pushing Daises, sing "How Do You Know?" with a cast of characters. She has a terrific voice and stage presence.

Oscar Night 2008: celebrity female Best move of the night

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10:57PM Best move of the night: Jon Stewart has Marketa Irglova come out and give her speech because she didn't get to give one. And she gives a lovely speech about independent musicians and having hope. Then Cameron Diaz comes out, stumbling a bit, and presents the Best Cinematography award to Robert Elswit for There Will Be Blood. Elswit thanks the production designer, director Paul Thomas Anderson and Daniel Day-Lewis.

Hillary Swank comes out to introduce the In Memoriam montage of actors, noting that some actors made their marks over many decades while others were taken too soon, "with their best yet to come." Some of the names: Roscoe Lee Brone, Laszlo Kovacs, Michaelangelo Antonioni, Suzanne Pleshette, Deborah Kerr, Jack Valenti, Kitty Carlisle Hart. The biggest cheers seem to be for Ingmar Bergman, and the segment ends with a shot of Heath Ledger in Brokeback Mountain. Fade to black and commercial.

11:09PM: Amy Adams presents the Best Score Oscar - after a few examples of famous scores including Oscar orchestra leader Bill Conti's Rocky theme - to Dario Marianelli's score for Atonement. Tom Hanks comes out and introduces U.S. soldiers in Baghdad, who then announce the nominees for Best Short Documentary Film. Which is an interesting move, since many of the feature length documentary nominees are Iraq or Afghanistan war-related. The Best Documentary, Short Subject, winner is Freeheld, about NJ police officer Laurel Hester who was dying and wanted to give her partner her benefits

Oscar Night 2008: celebrity female the Academy Awards 2

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Hanks presents Best Documentary, Feature, to Taxi to the Dark Side. Director Alex Gibney notes that his father, a Naval interrogator, encouraged him to make the movie, angry over "what was being done to the rule of law." The film was picked up by HBO.

11:24PM Just a few more awards - Best Original Screenplay, Best Actor, Best Director and Best Picture. Let's bring this in before midnight! Harrison Ford comes out to present Best Original Screenplay - the winner is Diablo Cody, for Juno. She might be the Oscar winner to show off her sexy lady tattoo. She dedicates the award to the other nominees and thanks the production team, star Ellen Page, director Jason Reitman, and her family "for loving me exactly the way I am."

11:30PM Return from the commercial break directly into the Best Actor of Years Past montage. Dame Helen Mirren present the Best Actor Oscar to Daniel Day-Lewis for his role in There Will Be Blood. After kissing Mirren, he says, "That will be the closest I'll ever get to a knighthood." He gives a nice speech (thanks Paul Thomas Anderson, his co-stars, his wife) and pays tribute to his grandfather, father (former British poet laureate) and his sons. Guess George Clooney was right, when he called himself the "Hillary Clinton" in the Best Actor race, next to DDL's "Barack." So, was Johnny Depp John Edwards?

11:39PM Back from commercial to a clip of Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau's Best Director introduction from a past telecast - god, were they awesome actors. And wow, now there's a montage of the past 30+ years of Best Director winners, which reminds everyone that the winners are typically white men (okay, Ang Lee won two years ago). Martin Scorsese comes out to present Best Director (aka "Best Achievement in Directing") to Joel Coen and Ethan Coen, making this the first time a pair of directors has won. In fact, back when Fargo received a Best Director nomination, the Academy (and Directors Guild) only allowed one person, so Joel Coen got the nod.

Denzel Washington comes out to present the Best Picture winner.... And it's No Country for Old Men. Joel and Ethan Coen come out of the wings, waiting for mega-producer Scott Rudin to come to the stage. Rudin, previously nominated for The Hours, is thrilled and thanks Cormac McCarthy, who had quite a 2007 (Oprah picked his book The Road for her Book Club). And we're loving the cuts back to Frances McDormand (Joel's wife), who is cheering and happy.

The show ends at 11:48PM. It was definitely an Oscars ceremony that paid tribute to the smaller, independent (with some studio aid) film, with No Country for Old Men, There Will Be Blood, and Juno winning the major awards. It's great that the Academy is honoring well-made, interesting films, but the ceremony did feel a bit anti-climactic (save for wins for Tilda Swinton, Marion Cotillard and Once)
sorce : www.gothamist.com

Oscar Night 2008: celebrity female the Academy Awards

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Photograph of Queens native Amy Ryan, nominated for best supporting actress for her role in Gone, Baby Gone

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At 8:30PM (following a half-hour red carpet special), the 80th Annual Academy Awards ceremony will begin, finally putting an end to the "There Will Be Oscar" or "Oscar Country for Old Men" type headlines.

You can prep yourself with the Oscar nominees list as you watch (or avoid) red carpet coverage. You could read NY Times movie critic A.O. Scott's slightly curmudgeonly but totally valid essay on the Oscars: "I am nonetheless bothered by the disproportionate importance that the Academy Awards have taken on, and by the distorting influence they exercise over the way we make, market and see movies in this country." (Scott does make it clear he enjoy the Oscars; NY Times' David Carr, aka the Carpetbagger, has a companion essay about just reveling in the Oscarness.) The Daily News' Jack Matthews has his guesses about who will win tonight - for instance, he thinks Daniel Day-Lewis will win Best Actor, but Viggo Mortensen should win for his work in Eastern Promises. The Post offers up alternative awards - Best Bloodbath goes to Sweeney Tood.

We'll be back later to liveblog Hollywood's biggest night. We can't bear to watch Ryan Seacrest on E! - he was talking to the great actor Tom Wilkinson (nominated for best supporting actor in Michael Clayton, previously nominated for In the Bedroom) and all Seacrest could discuss was Wilkinson's fondness for the TV show Friends and talking about George Clooney.

source : www.gothamist.com

from oscar 2008 : Behind the scene`s

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The Ben Affleck wife,Jennifer Garner used wrong shoes, Toilet as her favorite place
this happened might in the stage be still being organised and trained for several days before the peak night, on Sunday (24/2).
But, the behaviour affair of the celebrities behind the stage was clearly other related.the silver screen not their guarantee not nervous in the Academy Award stage.

Marion Cotillard was seen most startled when descending the stage after accepting Oscar's cup for the best actress.
He was at once welcomed by the warm embrace the actor Forest Whitaker.
They embraced almost one minute, then gazed at each other, and exploded their laughter.
"I trembled.
This wow, extraordinary," she said.

The same surprise was felt by Tilda Swinton, the winner of the best supporting actress.
The English actress only could say "wow, wow, wow,".
He in fact forgot the envelope was inscribed with his name as the winner.
Therefore, the actor Alan Larkin that was assigned to announce his name until must pursue Swinton.
"Oh OK, this his proof (the victory)," said Swinton.

The concern was also felt by Katherine Heigl.
The star 27 of Dresses indeed did not joke during in the stage said concerned.
After the screen, when being asked about his situation by someone crew, Heigl only said, "I needed cigarettes."

Bad torque was also felt by Cameron Diaz.
The former sweetheart Justin Timberlake could not say cinematography words fluently.
"I did not read out his category correctly," said Diaz to Amy Adams.

The master of ceremonies Jon Stewart also had the special method of releasing relief just as Oscar ended and the stage curtain was closed.
With the writers, Stewart gathered and gave congratulations.
"You carried out the extraordinary work, really good," said Stewart to his crew.and
celebrity female said :
"i can understands pal..."

from oscar 2008 : and the oscar didn`t go to hollywood

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and the winner is ...
for best actor : Danie day-lewis (there will be blood)
for best actress : Marion Cotillard (lavie en rose)-france
for best director : Joel Coen and Ethan (no country for old man)-usa
for best movie : No Country For Old Man

celebrity female said :
"as we know,Hollywood is not the one`s movie center now.i love this competition."

From Academy awards 2008 : The director of the first Older Brother who defeated Oscar

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Joel and Ethan Coen

Los Angeles - the Director again became the centre of attention in the night Oscar's 80, on Sunday night (24/2). atin the Academy Awards peak night last year Martin Scorsese gained Oscar's four, including the prestigious category best director, yesterday the turn of the director Coen was related that was successful.

Joel and Ethan Coen recorded the new history as the director of the first sibling older brother who defeated Oscar for the best director.
The film, No Country for Old Men, rule over the night Oscar with brought came home four appreciations were prestigious.

Used the adaptation scenario from the recipient's novel Pulitzer the work of Cormac McCarthy, No Country for Old Men was crowned as the best film overcame There Will Be Blood, Michael Clayton, Atonement, and Juno.
For the length of his career, Joel and Ethan Coen the fanatic with the texts of their original scenario.
They only made two films have a basis the other source, that is No Country for Old Men and Brother, Where Are you?that inspiration came from the Greek epic old was entitled The Odyssey.

The Coen Brothers achievement might be currently equated with the upper plank film-maker who also gained three appreciations at the same time.
That is, Francis Ford Coppola (The Godfather Part Ii), James Cameron (Titanic), as well as Billy Wilder (The Apartment).

Celebrity Female : Congratulation Guys ....!

Oscar Night 2008: celebrity female Renee Zellweger presents the Best Film Editing Oscar

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Renee Zellweger presents the Best Film Editing Oscar to The Bourne Ultimatum's Christopher Rouse. Rouse reveals that his father is Russell Rouse, who won an Oscar for writing Pillow Talk! Cool! Nicole Kidman, who is pregnant yet still seems like she's Botoxing, comes out to introduce Honorary Oscar recipient Robert Boyle, who was the production designer for North by Northwest, The Birds, Marnie, Fiddler on the Roof, and Mame. Boyle is helped on stage because he is frail; he thanks "Hitch" for giving him his first big film.