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.
Sunday, February 16, 2025
Friday, February 14, 2025
The Six Triple Eight - 1 nomination
- Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures (Original Song)
- Diane Warren
- "The Journey"
Thursday, February 13, 2025
Nosferatu - 4 nominations
- Best Achievement in Makeup and Hairstyling
- Best Achievement in Cinematography
- Best Achievement in Production Design
- Craig Lathrop (production designer)
- Beatrice Brentnerova (set decorator)
- Best Achievement in Costume Design
Young Thomas has been sent to Transylvania to close a lucrative Real Estate deal by his employer. Leaving his young, beautiful wife Ellen at home, he discovers a creepy castle and an even creepier owner. He is aware that something odd is going on as he passes out and awakens with a bite mark, and each night as he dreams terrible dreams, he awakens with more bite marks in the morning. He insists on leaving, but not before the owner gets him to sign a contract in a foreign language that is presumably the land sale document. Though he questions if he should sign a document which he can't read, he also is lured by the commission he will earn and be able to take care of his beloved wife and make the couple rich.
Of course when he returns home, he realizes what he has done - he has signed a document nullifying his marriage opening the door for Nosferatu to join with Thomas' wife, and who Nosferatu has claimed as his own for decades. On the other hand, if his wife does not submit to the vampire willingly within three nights, it is made clear that Thomas will be killed. Ellen summons the vampire to her room, and tricks him into having sex with her and draining her blood until sunrise, killing Nosferatu with sunlight and herself in sacrifice for Thomas.
This is not my kind of movie and I'll bet if you go back into the blog history, you'll be hard pressed to find a single film of this genre that I liked. Not so with this one, it was gorgeously filmed and the story was so engaging that I liked it very much. I most certainly would not have seen it if not for the Oscar nominations, but that just teaches me a lesson that sometimes a good film is a good film, even when it comes in a package that I wouldn't normally open. I'm hardly opening my veins for the next vampire flick, but when I'm wrong, I'm wrong. This one was worth the view.
Wednesday, February 12, 2025
A Different Man - 1 nomination
- Best Achievement in Makeup and Hairstyling
Edward is an actor who lives with neurofibromitosis, a genetic condition which manifests in him with disfiguring facial features, the kind typified in The Elephant Man. He is used to being stared at, and he has created a full life though he has yet to find a lover who can accept him for who he is and not what he looks like. He takes an experimental drug which over time removes all of the skin and tumors leaving only the handsome face of Sebastian Stan. But Edward has trouble adapting to his new life, one that has him working as a very successful real estate broker, yet he is drawn back to the theater and to auditions, when he discovers that his only appeal as an actor is his old face. He doesn't quite know how to live, how to be in the world without the face and life experience that he knows well. The new look doesn't comfort him, it unnerves him. When he meets and befriends another actor with the same condition who seems to live in the world without shame, without judgement, he seems to question his whole life and his whole personality.
The film does a good job of playing on the title - is he a different man now that he has a new face and a new life? Are the two phases of his life separate so as to make his one identity two different identities? Does a man with the same condition but a vastly different life experience show him what he could have been had he been a different kind of man? While my husband referred to this as "The Substance but for men," the execution of the change and the commensurate challenges to one's identity make this film far more interesting and far less gross.
It's not for everyone and I wouldn't say that you MUST see this movie. But if you're willing to go on the journey with Edward to identify the core of identity, you might just like it. Or perhaps you would if you were a different... never mind.
Tuesday, February 11, 2025
International Feature - The Girl with the Needle (France) and The Seed of the Sacred Fig (Germany)
Monday, February 10, 2025
Animated Feature Films
This year's Animated Features do not have a bad one in the bunch (and that's saying something, there is usually at least one I don't like). The stories are compelling, the animation is fantastic, and none is like the other. I highly recommend all of them!
Inside Out 2
Kelsey Mann and Mark Nielsen
Riley and her more complex set of teenage emotions are back and trying to navigate the challenges of popularity, loyalty, and the most essential questions of maturity and human relationships, all while playing hockey. Joy, Anger, Disgust, Sadness, and Fear welcome Ennui, Anxiety, Envy and Embarrassment to their emotional attic, and these more complex emotions mean more difficult experiences for the team - especially Joy - to navigate. While Joy is looking for ways to sequester hard emotions, Anxiety is taking control and developing a self-talk that is not healthy for poor sweet Riley. The sequel does a great job of bringing the chaotic but optimistic tone of the first film into the second one, and it's worth a watch for sure.
Adam Elliot and Liz Kearney
Let's start with our most important announcement - Memoir of a Snail is NOT an animated movie for children. It explores adult themes and follows twin sister Grace separated from her beloved brother Gilbert after their alcoholic father dies. She has an intense snail collecting hobby and they each go to foster homes that are less than ideal and moreover, Grace's life becomes a series of difficult and devastating losses. But she survives by befriending an older woman named Pinky who puts joy and spirit back into her life. Meanwhile, Gilbert has no such refuge, except for one child who is kind to him in the abusive home he lives in. When tragedy strikes, Grace realizes that she should have been looking for her brother rather than spending money on snail paraphernalia. Now, I know this is going to sound a little bit crazy, but Memoir of a Snail is my Hidden Gem Award winner. It's emotional gravity and brilliant storytelling (and wonderful animation) was a surprise that knocked me out.
Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl
Nick Park, Merlin Crossingham and Richard Beek
OMG, W&G do it again! And this time, the film manages to bring back an old familiar character from a prior film - an evil penguin who has been locked up in prison thanks to our leads, and now he wants revenge. Wallace continues to be an incredible inventor, but this time, he invents an AI robot garden gnome who will do all of your chores unless his coding turns him into pure evil! When he builds a tiny, evil, robot garden gnome army, they set to the task of framing Wallace. Ever on the case and never fooled by shenanigans, Gromit must save the day and set the world right before the penguin escapes and Wallace is locked up forever. As always, a delightful film, funny, sarcastic, and yet totally relevant to the AI landscape of today's world.
The Wild Robot - 3 Nominations
Chris Sanders and Jeff Hermann
The Wild Robot is also nominated for Original Score and Best Sound.
Sunday, February 9, 2025
The Substance - 5 nominations
- Best Achievement in Makeup and Hairstyling
- Best Motion Picture of the Year
- Best Achievement in Directing
- Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role
- Best Original Screenplay
Well, I haven't exactly been panting to write this blog post. I saw the preview for this film and I thought it looked like a brilliant and scathing commentary on aging and fame. What I got was a horror movie with a basically interesting idea (though if you take one moment to think about it, the premise is deeply flawed) with a seriously questionable ending.
The basic plot is that Demi Moore (who is pretty wonderful and who ironically looks amazing) is a middle aged former model and current fitness show star and her creepy boss/studio exec gives her notice that he is shutting down her show and tells her that she is no longer marketable because she is too old. She comes upon a handsome young man and his seemingly older counterpart who explains that they are same person and that they are taking a substance that gives back youth. She tracks down the "company" and begins a regimen. What they don't tell her is that she isn't going to go back in years and that a younger version of her is going to be birthed from her body and they will have to switch off one week at a time. (and for my taste, that scene... ew.)
The plot hole is that she doesn't know what happens in the weeks that she is lying dormant, and her younger twin doesn't know what she is doing while she is lying dormant. So, why would anyone recommend something that they themselves don't get to experience? Moore's character doesn't recapture her youth, the mutant she births does. She doesn't get to live a new younger life, she gets to lie on the floor being fed intravenously while her mutant lives the younger life. Why would anyone recommend this once the bait and switch has happened for the first person in the experiment?
At any rate, of course things don't go exactly to plan and the ending is possibly the only plausible one they could muster but I'm betting there are a bunch of act threes somewhere in a garbage can. Many people are raving about this film and it has a more than decent chance of winning this prize. My only theory is perhaps they watched the movie while on substances of their own.