Sharing my love of all things Oscar. I see all the movies with nominations so you don't have to - and I do my best to research and help pick the winners. Subscribe, share your comments, and feel free to share with others. Follow me on Twitter @JodiBee.
Monday, March 28, 2022
Oscars Wrap Up
Sunday, March 27, 2022
Who Will Win? Who Should Win?
We have arrived at the big day! What a year of outstanding movies, incredible performances, and so many historic firsts I've lost count. Now, I'm not a great prognosticator but I do a lot of research on what some of my favorite ones think, and I try to put those into an aggregate and make my best guesses. If you win your pool thanks to my picks, don't forget to send me a 10% fee. Here we go!
Should Win: Belfast
When the film was over, I immediately said "that's Best Picture."
This is a tough year to predict, but given some of the earlier wins in other awards shows, I think it is going to be CODA. If I'm wrong, the experts are equally split with The Power of the Dog. This is one close race!
Saturday, March 26, 2022
Writing With Fire - 1 nomination
Friday, March 25, 2022
Summer of Soul (...Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised) - 1 nomination
Thursday, March 24, 2022
Attica - 1 nomination
Wednesday, March 23, 2022
Ascension - 1 nomination
Tuesday, March 22, 2022
The Hand of God - 1 nomination
Italy's entry for international feature film is Paulo Sorrentino's most personal, semi-autobiographical film where he revisits his family and his hometown with its cast of oddball characters. His aunt who is just a little off who loves naked sunbathing in front of her entire familly, his loudly bickering parents, and the whole village of folks who helped shape his character. Tragedy strikes and both of his parents are killed in a freak carbon monoxide poisoning incident, and he must figure out how to go on.
The film will surely make you good or better about your own family! As always with Sorrentino films, the setting is magnificent. I am definitely ready to take a trip to Naples! While this is surely not Sorrentino's best film, I enjoyed it.
Monday, March 21, 2022
Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom - 1 nomination
And now.... the winner of the Hidden Gem award! Each year, I grant this award to a film that I hadn't really heard of before it was nominated for an Oscar, and then it quickly became one of my favorite movies of the year. Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom represents the first ever Oscars nomination for the tiny country of Bhutan.
A teacher in Bhutan is assigned to teach in the most remote school in the country. Total population of the village is about 50, and the school is located in Lunana, which is an 8 day hike on foot. In Lunana, there is no electricity, no wifi, not even a blackboard, but there is a batch of unbelievably eager students with a real thirst to learn, and a village of very grateful and welcoming farmers who want to treat this teacher like royalty. Though the teacher is grumpy at first, the people and especially the children of the village so endear themselves to him that he can't resist falling in love with the community, and perhaps the more stereotypical trope of "I learned more from them than they learned from me" is present in this film.
Is the movie the most original and unique plot ever? No, we've seen versions of this film before. But I shed few tears at how touching this movie was, and it really got me. The actual non-actor villagers starred in this film, and you can't help but falling in love with them, and even with the teacher. I'm an evangelist for this movie because it was such a lovely delight. I can't recommend it enough and though the movie has no chance of winning the Oscar in this category, I'm so grateful to the Academy for amplifying it with a nomination. Truly a heartwarming and wonderful film.
Saturday, March 19, 2022
Free Guy, Shang-Chi, Spider-Man: No Way Home
Visual effects categories can be hit or miss, but each one of these films were a pleasure to watch!
Thursday, March 17, 2022
Animated Shorts
AFFAIRS OF THE ART
Wednesday, March 16, 2022
Four Good Days - 1 nomination
Diane Warren (music and lyric by)
For song "Somehow You Do"
Four Good Days is a harrowing story of Molly, a drug addict for 10 years, who has been promised a light of hope at the end of the tunnel. Her doctor has told her that if she can stay clean for just four full days, she will be eligible for a monthly shot that prevents drugs from taking any effect in her body, a drug that prevents toxic substances from binding to the central nervous system rendering them so ineffective that the addict will resist their pull. Molly's mother Deb has been through the wringer with her and her decade long addiction, and the vicious cycle of ineffective rehabs, and all of the things that those failures have wrought. A tense relationship with a history of lies, theft, abuse, worry, and the torture of loving someone but knowing that there's nothing you can do to help her. So now Deb decides to help (once again) and clings to the hope that a mere four days will get her daughter to the promised land.
It's a difficult film but this is Mila Kunis at her absolute best. Partnered with Glenn Close the film goes from tropey rehab film to engaging movie. Have we seen much of this before? Sure. But with these powerhouse actresses at the center, it was worth the time. I truly enjoyed it (as much as you can say that with such a difficult story.)
Now, sad to say, Dianne Warren - with her 13th Oscars nomination for Original Song is still not going to win. (Don't get me started on 'Til It Happens to You, which should have won... but I digress.). Her day is coming, but this talented songwriter just can't catch a break. Listen to the song, it's beautiful.
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
No Time To Die - 3 nominations
Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures (Original Song) Billie Eilish (music and lyric by) Finneas O'Connell (music and lyric by) For song "No Time to Die" |
Best Achievement in Visual Effects Charlie Noble Joel Green Jonathan Fawkner Chris Corbould |
Best Sound Simon Hayes Oliver Tarney James Harrison Paul Massey Mark Taylor |
James Bond has retired from her Majesty's service, but every time he gets out, they pull him back in. Not just any they from MI6, but the newly dubbed 007 finds him and begs him to return to help with their latest case, sure to end the world. It is the latest bioweapon which targets an individual's DNA (and that of the person's family) but is harmless to those standing nearby. As Bond is hunting down his prey, he finds refuge with his former lover and discovers that she also has a child (spoiler alert... the child is Bond's), and he becomes entangled with this family. As you'd expect, there is a grand confrontation with the big baddie, and while the attack goes as any Bond fan would expect, there is also one final twist that nobody will see coming.
You're not going to want to miss our Oscars reactions episode on 2 Movie Jews. Here's that link!
Monday, March 14, 2022
Coming 2 America - 1 nomination
Prince Akeem has become King after the sad and untimely death of his father. He and his wife have resettled in the kingdom of Zamunda, and they have three wonderful and fierce daughters. When a nearby despot threatens to upend his kingdom, Akeem must go back to America to find the son he never knew he had so that he has and heir who can succeed Akeem. But with three powerful daughters who have grown up in Zamunda, Akeem also begins to question the rules around royal inheritance.
If, like me, you grew up in the 80s and 90s and you loved Coming To America, you'll love this one too. It has all the nostalgic references including a reprise of the beloved band, Sexual Chocolate. The costumes are over the top and probably worthy of a nomination in their own rights. Of course, the film is nominated for the makeup and hairstyling artists' abilities to transform Eddie Murphy and Arsenio Hall into multiple characters, as they did in the first film. It's a silly, fun, comedic romp. (and my husband appreciates that - he is always bummed that the Oscars honor so few comedies!)
Saturday, March 12, 2022
Cyrano - 1 nomination
Cyrano is the well known classic tale of unrequited love by Cyrano, the master of language who is in love with Roxanne. He believes Roxanne could never love him (classically) because of a nose deformity, and (presently) because he is a dwarf. There have been many film adaptations (my favorite being the one starring Steve Martin) and this one is even a musical. If Peter Dinklage could sing (better, to be fair, he is not terrible but he is also not great), it might have worked better because the rest of the supporting cast is quite talented. The costume design is beautiful and certainly worthy of a nomination, and often is the kind of period piece that wins Oscars. The songs are also very well crafted but the movie dragged in a way that it shouldn't have.
If I were someone who rated films, I'd call this one 3 stars (out of 5). Not the best, but perfectly fine.
Friday, March 11, 2022
Cruella - 2 nominations
Best Achievement in Costume Design Jenny Beavan |
Best Achievement in Makeup and Hairstyling Nadia Stacey Naomi Donne Julia Vernon |
I love a good prequel and this is a great one. Cruella de Vil, notorious dalmation hunter, has an origin story and her name is Estela. Estela is a talented, aspiring, and naive fashion designer. Having been orphaned and left on the streets as a child, she's had to claw her way to a choice position with her idol, The Baroness, having raised herself with her trusty pals and fellow petty criminals, Horace and Jasper.
But the Baroness steals her designs and emotionally abuses Estela, and not only that, Estela figures out that the Baroness has had a hand in her own mother's death, and not only that, has stolen Estela's only connection to her mother, a precious necklace. Estela becomes singularly focused on retrieving the necklace and it wouldn't hurt if in doing so, she can exact her own revenge.
I'm generally not a huge fan of "I was hurt so that explains how I became a villain" stories, but this one is absolutely delicious and it generally works for Disney. The costumes are MAGNIFICENT and by all rights deserves to win this category (even if we won't see it televised). Even if you don't see the film, I encourage you to search for the Cruella costumes on the internet, and I dare you not to be blown away. While I didn't expect to even like this one, I loved it!
Wednesday, March 9, 2022
Live Action Shorts
The Live Action shorts are consistently good when it comes to Oscar nominees. Most years there is one that I don't love, but as a category represents the best of filmmaking. This year is an exception - every single short this year was very good, well crafted, gut wrenching, and utterly important. Let's walk through each.
ALA KACHUU - TAKE AND RUN
Tuesday, March 8, 2022
House of Gucci - 1 nomination
House of Gucci was one of my most anticipated films of the year. I love Lady Gaga as an actress, even when I saw the previews, I thought "here's Gaga's acting Oscar" all served up and ready to go. This film had all the apparent bones of a multi-category Academy Awards nominee - a power cast, an intriguing plot including murder, and amazing vistas for the likes of some of the technical awards like production design and costuming.
House of Gucci follows Patrizia Reggiani who makes it her mission to marry into the Gucci family. She does marry Maurizio Gucci, and then begins her ambitious campaign to put herself and her husband deep into the company's affairs. She endears herself to the rest of the family but over time, these relationships crack as she maneuvers and betrays anyone she needs to for the sake of power and controlling the company. Eventually, her marriage completely disintegrates, as well, and Maurizio pushes her out without a thought.
Sadly, it wasn't a great film. The performances were mediocre and no two people had the same Italian accent. Sometimes the same person didn't have the same Italian accent throughout the movie. Of course, the fashion in the film is magnificent and that is the most fun part. The story dragged, the characters weren't compelling (Adam Driver always is a bit dead eyed to me, and Jared Leto was just a clown but his makeup completely transformed him beyond recognition, and is likely responsible for the nomination). You can give this one a pass.