Best Cinematography Oscar and ISA
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- Nigel
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Best Cinematography Oscar and ISA
Dion Beebe and Robert Elswit.
I really liked Beebe's work on "In the Cut". And Elswit did a great job on GNGL...
Both are great at their work.
Good Luck
I really liked Beebe's work on "In the Cut". And Elswit did a great job on GNGL...
Both are great at their work.
Good Luck
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Didn't see "Geisha" but I thought "The New World" was fantastic and should have won. Leave it to the Academy to make weird choices 
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"I also heard "Capote" was great but I missed it all together."
I think most people did... not the Academy, but everyone else. It looked pretty good but not the kind of movie I can make my semi-annual journey to the theatre to see.
I think most people did... not the Academy, but everyone else. It looked pretty good but not the kind of movie I can make my semi-annual journey to the theatre to see.
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The Oscars are more often than not just a political exercise. How else do you explain Rex Harrison winning Best Actor for "My Fair Lady" over the incredible three-role performance by Peter Sellers in "Dr. Strangelove"? There are tons of examples more recent. Best Picture and even Cinematography choices leave plenty of room for argument. I guess that is the nature of awards...
David M. Leugers
David M. Leugers
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Interesting year for the Oscars - things took a more indie twist than usual. I mean, Capote was filmed in Winnipeg for crying out loud!
Wasn't surprised that Geisha took the Cinematography award, although I admit to having seen zero of the year's "Big" films. That's never happened to me before, although my wife saw Brokeback and there's an unwatched copy of Le Carre's Constant Gardner sitting in the midst of a pile of letters in my office.
Wasn't surprised that Geisha took the Cinematography award, although I admit to having seen zero of the year's "Big" films. That's never happened to me before, although my wife saw Brokeback and there's an unwatched copy of Le Carre's Constant Gardner sitting in the midst of a pile of letters in my office.
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Vintage Gadgets & Technology
Vintage Gadgets & Technology
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cant believe you guys bother watching oscar winners or nominees.
you arent really interested in filmmaking are you?
:lol:
s8hÃâ€Ãƒâ€t
you arent really interested in filmmaking are you?
:lol:
s8hÃâ€Ãƒâ€t
..tnx for reminding me Michael Lehnert.... or Santo or.... cinematography.com super8 - the forum of Rednex, Wannabees and Pretenders...
- Scotness
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Too trueS8 Booster wrote:cant believe you guys bother watching oscar winners or nominees.
you arent really interested in filmmaking are you?
:lol:
s8hÃâ€Ãƒâ€t
Oscars =

(except the girls look great)
Scot
Read my science fiction novel The Forest of Life at https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01D38AV4K
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"cant believe you guys bother watching oscar winners or nominees"
"Watching" is different from periodically looking at the results online. I don't think anyone here (at least I hope not) sat in front of the TV for three hours. Although I did tune in to see the performance of the song from Hustle & Flow... I liked Jon Stewart's comment: Oscars - Three Six Mafia - 1, Martin Scorsese, 0.
"Watching" is different from periodically looking at the results online. I don't think anyone here (at least I hope not) sat in front of the TV for three hours. Although I did tune in to see the performance of the song from Hustle & Flow... I liked Jon Stewart's comment: Oscars - Three Six Mafia - 1, Martin Scorsese, 0.
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- flatwood
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Well, I watched em and had a good time and even saw a former studio client in the audience (Keith Urban) and John Travolta was a presenter and I had a tiny part in Urban Cowboy back in the day, thats what makes it fun besides rooting for Hustle and FLow with the Tennessee connection. Reese Witherspoon, I dont know and havent seen Walk The Line but I did know Johnny Cash who, many years ago supplied a couple of autographed photos for the studio walls here.Nigel wrote:....However, I do like to know who wins for Cinematography.
As far as New World is concerned, they never screened it here in the boonies but I will definately pick up the dvd of it. I cant wait to see the cinematography in it.
They made sure to cut to Keira enough (thank god). She was sitting next to Jack Nicholson. It made me wonder whose luckier...
If you like Matt Dillon though, holy god, you missed your oscars. He was cut to the most and a lot of the other shots he was still in the frame somehow, second only to Heath Ledger and Michelle Williams, then Keira/Nicholson. I wasn't paying attention 100% but most of the time I would look up, if it wasn't Jon Stewart or a montage, it was dillon.
If you like Matt Dillon though, holy god, you missed your oscars. He was cut to the most and a lot of the other shots he was still in the frame somehow, second only to Heath Ledger and Michelle Williams, then Keira/Nicholson. I wasn't paying attention 100% but most of the time I would look up, if it wasn't Jon Stewart or a montage, it was dillon.
"The New World" should have won for Best Cinematography. Not only did it have better visuals, but unlike "Memoirs of a Geisha", it never succumbed to "style-over-substance". Both the visuals and the story were given equal treatment, and went together seamlessly. With "Geisha", storytelling and visual style battled frequently, and visual style always emerged as the victor.
"Capote" was a film that I wish won more awards- and I'll start with acting. Philip Seymour Hoffman was brilliant, but so was Catherine Keener- their interactions together throughout the film were moments to savor.
Why the Academy wouldn't award "The New World":
It's not political. Never once does it shamelessly manipulate the audience, or strive to be a big giant epic, nor does it ever preach (yet even more proof that trailers can be misleading). This is the only Terrence Malick film I've ever seen, but from what I've heard, this objective angle of storytelling exists in all of his films... which I see has quite a few critics irritated. Personally, I love it.
"Capote" was a film that I wish won more awards- and I'll start with acting. Philip Seymour Hoffman was brilliant, but so was Catherine Keener- their interactions together throughout the film were moments to savor.
Why the Academy wouldn't award "The New World":
It's not political. Never once does it shamelessly manipulate the audience, or strive to be a big giant epic, nor does it ever preach (yet even more proof that trailers can be misleading). This is the only Terrence Malick film I've ever seen, but from what I've heard, this objective angle of storytelling exists in all of his films... which I see has quite a few critics irritated. Personally, I love it.