
Of the films I had seen in the Best Picture category, I would have rated District 9 significantly higher. The story wasn't one we'd seen variants of thirty-seven times before, and the main character wasn't charismatic or likeable. That's a brave movie-making choice right there.
As for people complaining about Bigelow winning Best Director, and them saying she only won because she's a woman, here's a can of shut-the-fuck-up, drink deep.
She won in spite of being a woman. If you can't accept that little fact, you're part of the problem.
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Yes it should have, because it was in every respect the superior film. Return of the King is visibly rushed, badly edited and dreadfully paced. It's smug where it should be dramatic and it's sluggish when it should be rushing at a breakneck pace.
I don't think we should be under any illusions that the Oscar for Return of the King was for The Lord of the Rings as a whole. It's just sad they didn't give the Oscar to Fellowship, which was easily the best film of the three.
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And if you look at the year Fellowship of the Ring missed out, it was clearly better than A Beautiful Mind which basically won on the strength of Crowe's performance. God knows, the script of Mind was rubbish. It's a biopic that fictionalised a living person's life, and screwed up the explanation of the theory that earned him a Nobel Prize!
I think we need a year where the Academy just give everyone they need to a catch up award, and then we can get on with rewarding the best of each year, rather than giving awards to those that missed out previously at the cost of those that should be the legitimate winners.
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From: (Anonymous)
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I'll still disagree on Lost In Translation. It's all Bill Murray. His performance is strong enough to make up for the fact that it's poorly paced, poorly scripted, poorly shot, and that Scarlett Johanssen doesn't have any settings other than "pout" and "vamp". The tragedy isn't that the film lost Best Picture and Best Director to Peter Jackson, it's that it lost Best Actor to Sean Penn in Mystic River (does anyone even remember that performance today?).
From: (Anonymous)
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And if Oscars were deserved, Heath Ledger wouldn't have had to wait till he was dead for his. The Joker was a great performance for sure - but his masterpiece was Ennis Del Marr.