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I just came from a place where the temperature did NOT go above five degrees Celsius for the past 5 days.  So today, I am back to good old 30 degrees Celsius.

As rad as this vacation may sound, this was also the reason why I missed the Oscar awards telecast.  This must be the only Oscar ceremony that I completely missed for the past 10 or so years.  Our 5-star hotel ironically did not have cable tv, and I was not able to access the net in the hotel, so I relied on CNN (which was dreadfully repetitive and incomplete) and the newspaper (also incomplete).  Thanks to Jess for posting the whole list of winners.

Best picture: No Country For Old Men
Best director: Joel and Ethan Coen, No Country For Old Men
Best actor: Daniel Day-Lewis, There Will Be Blood
Best actress: Marion Cotillard, La Vie en Rose
Best supporting actress: Tilda Swinton, Michael Clayton
Best supporting actor: Javier Bardem, No Country For Old Men
Best foreign language film: The Counterfeiters (Austria)
Best animated feature film: Ratatouille
Best adapted screenplay: No Country For Old Men
Best original screenplay: Juno
Best music (score): Atonement
Best music (song): Falling Slowly - Once (performed by Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova)
Best documentary feature: Taxi to the Dark Side
Best documentary short subject: Freeheld
Best visual effects: The Golden Compass
Best cinematography: There Will Be Blood
Best art direction: Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Best animated short film: Peter and the Wolf
Best short film: Le Mozart des Pickpockets
Best costume design: Elizabeth: The Golden Age
Best make-up: La Vie en Rose
Best sound mixing: The Bourne Ultimatum
Best sound editing: The Bourne Ultimatum
Best film editing: The Bourne Ultimatum

Reactions:

1.  I totally disagree that "No Country for Old Men" was the best picture of 2007, nor was it the best director or best adapted screenplay in my opinion.  No argument about Javier Bardem being the winner of Best Supporting Actor though.  His performance was the identifying mark of this film.  However, his role is quite one-dimensionally evil, wasn't it?  It seems no other colors were seen in this performance except black.

2.  Very happy for the win of "Falling Slowly" from "Once."  I thought this woult not have survived the "Enchanted" troika, but it did.  I read that Marketa Iglova was actually called back onstage to finish her speech, after it was cut off by the band.  Good for her.

3. I have seen three out of the four winners for acting categories.  As repeatedly pointed out in the press, there was no American actor among the four winners.  English Daniel, Spaniard Javier and Scot Tilda all played flawed violent characters. I do hope I get to see "La Vie En Rose" soon with French Marion who looked very good in her clips of her Oscar acceptance speech.

4.  More deserved awards:  Musical score of "Atonement" with the ingeniuous and effective use of the typewriter as a musical instrument.  Cinematography of "There Will Be Blood" where that oil rig explosion was such a powerful centerpiece shot.  Art Direction of "Sweeney Todd" where the decadent and dilapidated London was depicted.  The set direction of Mrs. Lovett's store where she bakes the "worst pies in London" was unforgettable.

5.  The film editing and sound awards won by "The Bourne Ultimatum" were thoroughly deserved!  Particularly the editing acheivement which was unmatched by any other film shown last year, I think.

While I was away, I also missed the American Idol episode last night featuring the Top 10 boys.  Again, I had to read about it on ew.com.  So the three Davids again had a great night, I gather.  And then on the other end, Luke and Jason may not escape the inevitable cut this Friday.

ReviewReviewReviewJunoFeb 23, '08 9:35 AM
for everyone
Category:Movies
Genre: Independent
This is the fifth and last Best Picture nominee that I have seen. Just in the nick of time for the Oscar ceremony on Monday morning, which I won't be able to watch! Isn't that ironic?

Anyway, of all the nominees, "Juno" is the most accessible to the casual movie fan. It is understandable why this is the only one of the five nominees to be a box office hit, grossing more than $100M.

The situations and the dialogues are so much closer to reality than the others. The plot is simple and direct, but the treatment is unique. It was interesting to note that the writer (Oscar nominated and likely winner of Best Original Screenplay) Diablo Cody used to be a stripper. I guess that would account for the avant garde yet frank treatment of the sensitive subject matter of teenage sex and pregnancy. The script has a decidedly feminine bent, showing the strengths of the women characters.

The musical score was very unusual. I cannot even define the genre of that music and those quirky jangly songs! Very interesting soundtrack.

The actors are really very good here, led of course by Ellen Page playing Juno. She is very believable in her portrayal of a strong sensible, smart-alecky high school girl whose unexpected pregnancy expectedly shakes up her life. I can't believe she is actually already 20 years old!

Jennifer Garner is very remakable as well playing the childless woman who wanted to adopt Juno's baby. She has very touching moments, and she was really effective in them. Especially that scene where she was talking to Juno's bulging tummy in the mall. There was also those tense scenes that dealt with complicated marital issues she had with her husband Mark (Jason Bateman).

My favorite couple in this movie are J.K. Simmons and Allison Janney as juno's dad and stepmom. If this movie was set in the Philippines, all hell would have broken loose in that scene where Juno confesses her pregnancy to her parents. There was none of that here, in a rather sharp contrast of cultures. They had very witty and snappy lines. Great scene of Allison giving the holier-than-thou ultrasound technician a piece of her mind.

Overall, it was admittedly better than I expected. However, I do not really think this is really Best Picture material. It won't go home empty-handed I would bet. I do think its main chance for an Oscar is for its Original Screenplay. That said, the morality issue will always be with this movie. What message exactly does it say and deliver to teens of today about teen pregnancy?


ReviewReviewReviewReviewAtonementFeb 17, '08 6:34 PM
for everyone
Category:Movies
Genre: Drama
This is the fourth of the Oscar Best Picture nominees I watched. Compared to the other three, this movie is the one where I come out feeling that Oscar is written all over it. This is the one with the elegant epic feel, reminiscent of past Oscar winner "The English Patient".

This is where cinematography (by Seamus Mc Garvey) is a key star element. All the scenes were meticulously composed shot like a special painting on a moving canvas. So many breathtaking and sweeping landscapes. Even the scenes depicting the horrors of war were imbued with artistic insight. So many vivid portraits as well with penetrating pain and anguish.

This is where the musical score (by Dario Marianelli) harks back to bygone grandiosity, like many past Oscar winners. Yet the tension in the music is uniquely heightened by the sound of typewriters typing. This ties in neatly with the story as the central character is a writer.

The story begins with Briony Tallis (an Oscar nominated Saoirse Ronan), a fanciful 13 year old girl who loves to write. She had just read a lustfully-worded love letter by the son of their household help Robbie (James McAvoy) to her sister Cee (Keira Knightley) and actually caught them in a compromising situation in the library. That night, as an assault is perpetrated on a guest in their opulent household. Briony accuses Robbie as the culprit and thus he is brought to jail. This part of the movie felt like "Gosford Park."

The second part of the movie traces how the love story of Cee and Robbie progressed through the war years four years after the arrest. Robbie was released from jail when he decided to join the army. Cee becomes a nurse. However, Robbie gets sent to France and they continue to communicate their love through letters. This part of the movie felt like "Cold Mountain" and "A Very Long Engagement."

I felt the third and last part of this story is the one that gives it its defining characteristic and twist. The story goes back to Briony, now 18 (Romola Garai). She is now fully cognizant of her erroneous accusation and its tragic effects. She gives up her slot at Cambridge and becomes a nurse as well. She seeks out Robbie and her sister in order to atone for her past sins. And just when you thought it is all over, Briony comes back again, this time in the present (Vanessa Redgrave) in an epilogue with more.

I am not surprised that this film had already won the Golden Globe and the British Academy Awards for Best Picture. I feel that its chance for the Oscar for Best Picture may be compromised by the fact that its Director Joe Wright was not nominated. I am not surprised why its lead stars McAvoy and Knightley were not nominated. While they maybe the bigger stars, in the story, they play support to the main story of the Briony character. While this film had its flaws, particularly its derivative feel in a greater part of the story as I have already indicated. But so far in its totality, among all the nominees I have watched, this is my favored one for Best Picture of 2008.


ReviewReviewReviewReviewMichael ClaytonFeb 16, '08 10:52 AM
for everyone
Category:Movies
Genre: Drama
This is the third of the five Oscar Best Picture nominees that I have seen. I would not have expected this movie to be a Best Picture nominee at all if watched this last year. The build up of the movie is very slow. It only gains momentum in the middle and then it has you under its masterful grasp. The ending is quite neat though, even predictable, thus exposing the simplicity of the plot. However, it would also emphasize the excellence of the directorial style of Tony Gilroy (in his directorial debut) that makes the totality of this film transcend the limitations of the script.

The acting was definitely excellent. The three main characters all play lawyers. All three were deservedly nominated for Oscars in acting. In fact, as a testament to the level of acting in "Michael Clayton", this is the only movie with more than one cast member nominated for Oscar Acting awards this year.

The star is definitely George Clooney. He was really very good here in a subtle and quiet way (so unlike the over-the-top style of Daniel Day Lewis in "There Will Be Blood"). He plays a lawyer who is employed by a firm as a "fixer", someone who uses under the table methods to smooth out creases in the cases of other lawyers. Clooney deglamorizes himself here (if that's possible) in playing a sad, down-and-out character who gets caught in a high stakes legal case involving big business. He makes the audience forget his real life persona. That lingering close-up on his face as he rides a taxi at the end shows him going though an entire gamut of emotions without a word nor gesture--excellent.

Tom Wilkinson, whom I have admired as an actor since "In The Bedroom," is Arthur. He plays a big time defense lawyer who discovers that the firm he is defending, U-North, was actually killing people with its weed-killer products, and turns crazy in the process. His monologue about the sins of the company directed towards the agents whom he found out were bugging his apartment was a highlight of acting excellence.

Tilda Swinton was not really an actress I liked from her past work. I will always picture her as the Snow Queen in the Narnia movie. This may be the only film that I have seen her in modern dress. Here, she plays the in-house attorney of U-North who had to resort to desperate measures to cover up for the sins of the company she works for. Cool on the surface, a bundle of nerves behind the scenes. Very good also.

Compared with the other two nominees I have seen, this is actually more accessible to the regular viewer, since it is modern and the language used is clear. It is very effective as a character study. I am of the opinion though that its chances of winning Best Picture is a long shot. It lacks the epic feel that Oscar seems to love. The nomination alone may be its reward.


ReviewReviewReviewThere Will Be BloodFeb 3, '08 6:45 PM
for everyone
Category:Movies
Genre: Drama
This movie is almost a one-man show. And that one man is Daniel Day-Lewis.

At first I thought I was watching a silent movie. The background story of Daniel Plainsview's humble beginning as a silver miner who got lucky hitting an oil deposit and how he adopted the infant son of a worker who got killed in the mine (whom he named HW), was all told in images and music, no dialogue. You knew you were in for a different type of movie. The first words were said only thirty minutes or so into the movie.

This is one of those epic (2 hrs. and 40 minutes, but it certainly felt longer than that) movies about oil. "Giant" with James Dean immediately comes to mind, but this movie did not have the gentility of Rock Hudson and Elizabeth Taylor. This movie is as dirty and grimy, and ruthless as it gets.

Essentially it depicted how Daniel (with HW in tow) sweet-talks his way with the simple backward folk in order to cheaply get their oil-blessed property. Then, problems arose when Daniel did not want his oil well blessed by the young preacher Eli. From there, misfortunes started to happen, worst of which was when HW suffered total deafness because of an oil rig explosion. Daniel's life was never the same after that. Towards the end, he was a broken drunk rich man, with plenty of unresolved conflict within him, that results in tragic consequences.

I have liked DDL ever since he played the genteel Cecil in "A Room With A View". Now, more than 20 years later, DDL is really in an acting tour-de-force in "There Will Be Blood". However, I must say that this acting was also flawed in a way. It started out really well, DDL was really very good in those early scenes as an oil speculator. But when religion came into the picture, I felt his acting went over the top, as if it was for a stage play. There was a scene when he had to submit himself to joining the church of Eli, subjecting himself to a "throwing out the demons" ceremony in order to get access to a piece of land. And then there was that scene in the end where he used milkshakes as a metaphor for how he had been able to get oil was a case of too much self-conscious acting. The over-acting in these scenes, not only by DDL, but also Paul Dano (who played preacher Eli), was almost humorous in its excess.

I liked this one better than "No Country For Old Men" as it had more substance and structure by its writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson (of "Magnolia" fame). The cinematography was very impressive. The camera work and editing of that big scene of the fateful oil rig explosion that made HW deaf was also very good. The musical score was something else. There was no sweeping music as you would expect from epics like that of "Dances With Wolves". Instead there were these seemingly unrelated pieces of music, that do not seem to be appropriate to the scene. It felt experimental in a way. It was interesting though. This movie was clearly trying to be a cinematic masterpiece, but I think its efforts are too obvious and obtrusive. Not bad by any measure, but I think it went a little overboard.


ReviewReviewNo Country For Old MenFeb 1, '08 6:28 PM
for everyone
Category:Movies
Genre: Drama
I watched this movie because it was the pick to win the Oscar for Best Picture this year. I don't get it. I did not like it. It was very long and episodic. While there well-shot individual scenes, yet with no coherence in its totality. It seemed to be about this guy Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) who stumbled into a bag containing two million dollars, and how this money turns his life topsy-turvy (I know, we've seen that before). But somewhere down the line, it lost me as to what it was really all about.

The violence is too brash and in-your-face, yet numbing and gratuitous. These scenes are largely due to one man, Anton, played by Javier Bardem, who really very creepy in his cool yet crazed killer role. He went to town with it, and is considered a lock for the Best Supporting Actor prize. While I was very distracted with his weird hairstyle, he was successful in developing tension in every scene he was in. He was especially effective in the quiet scenes like that with the gas station owner, the wife of Moss, and even that with a miscast Woody Harrelson. The question always comes up in your head--will he shoot them or not?

The Texas accents are too thick for me to understand the dialogues clearly, and that further reduced my full understanding. That entire mumbling monologue of Tommy Lee Jones that brought the movie to an unsatisfying, not to mention, sudden, end was such a major anti-climactic let-down for me.

I liked the Coen brothers' work with "Fargo," that actually succeeds despite its unusual premise. But this one is very disorganized in its direction. This was exemplified was that strange decision was having a main character die off-camera. Why? It felt like you just wasted your time following his actions and decisions, just to have his character snuffed out so suddenly and anonymously.

In general, I was very disappointed with this one. Maybe too much high expectations led to my reduced appreciation. I don't really get the title up to now. Definitely, this was not how I felt after watching "The Departed" the other year. I knew right away that film was a winner. This one, I don't think I would even have the patience to watch again.


Blog EntryOscar Nominations for 2007 Out!Jan 22, '08 10:06 AM
for everyone
Best motion picture of the year
"Atonement" (Focus Features)
A Working Title Production
Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner and Paul Webster, Producers
"Juno" (Fox Searchlight)
A Dancing Elk Pictures, LLC Production
Lianne Halfon, Mason Novick and Russell Smith, Producers
"Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.)
A Clayton Productions, LLC Production
Sydney Pollack, Jennifer Fox and Kerry Orent, Producers
"No Country for Old Men" (Miramax and Paramount Vantage)
A Scott Rudin/Mike Zoss Production
Scott Rudin, Ethan Coen and Joel Coen, Producers
"There Will Be Blood" (Paramount Vantage and Miramax)
A JoAnne Sellar/Ghoulardi Film Company Production
JoAnne Sellar, Paul Thomas Anderson and Daniel Lupi, Producers

Performance by an actor in a leading role
George Clooney in "Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.)
Daniel Day-Lewis in "There Will Be Blood" (Paramount Vantage and Miramax)
Johnny Depp in "Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" (DreamWorks and Warner Bros., Distributed by DreamWorks/Paramount)
Tommy Lee Jones in "In the Valley of Elah" (Warner Independent)
Viggo Mortensen in "Eastern Promises" (Focus Features)

Performance by an actress in a leading role
Cate Blanchett in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" (Universal)
Julie Christie in "Away from Her" (Lionsgate)
Marion Cotillard in "La Vie en Rose" (Picturehouse)
Laura Linney in "The Savages" (Fox Searchlight)
Ellen Page in "Juno" (Fox Searchlight)

Performance by an actor in a supporting role
Casey Affleck in "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford" (Warner Bros.)
Javier Bardem in "No Country for Old Men" (Miramax and Paramount Vantage)
Philip Seymour Hoffman in "Charlie Wilson's War" (Universal)
Hal Holbrook in "Into the Wild" (Paramount Vantage and River Road Entertainment)
Tom Wilkinson in "Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.)

Performance by an actress in a supporting role
Cate Blanchett in "I'm Not There" (The Weinstein Company)
Ruby Dee in "American Gangster" (Universal)
Saoirse Ronan in "Atonement" (Focus Features)
Amy Ryan in "Gone Baby Gone" (Miramax)
Tilda Swinton in "Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.)

Achievement in directing
"The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" (Miramax/Pathé Renn) Julian Schnabel
"Juno" (Fox Searchlight) Jason Reitman
"Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.) Tony Gilroy
"No Country for Old Men" (Miramax and Paramount Vantage) Joel Coen and Ethan Coen
"There Will Be Blood" (Paramount Vantage and Miramax) Paul Thomas Anderson

Best foreign language film of the year

"Beaufort" (Israel)
"The Counterfeiters"  (Austria)
"Katyn" (Poland)
"Mongol" (Kazakhstan)
"12" (Russia)

Best animated feature film of the year
"Persepolis" (Sony Pictures Classics) Marjane Satrapi and Vincent Paronnaud
"Ratatouille" (Walt Disney) Brad Bird
"Surf's Up" (Sony Pictures Releasing) Ash Brannon and Chris Buck

Adapted screenplay
"Atonement" (Focus Features) Screenplay by Christopher Hampton
"Away from Her" (Lionsgate) Written by Sarah Polley
"The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" (Miramax/Pathé Renn) Screenplay by Ronald Harwood
"No Country for Old Men" (Miramax and Paramount Vantage) Written for the screen by Joel Coen & Ethan Coen
"There Will Be Blood" (Paramount Vantage and Miramax) Written for the screen by Paul Thomas Anderson

Original screenplay
"Juno" (Fox Searchlight) Written by Diablo Cody
"Lars and the Real Girl" (MGM) Written by Nancy Oliver
"Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.) Written by Tony Gilroy
"Ratatouille" (Walt Disney) Screenplay by Brad Bird, Story by Jan Pinkava, Jim Capobianco, Brad Bird
"The Savages" (Fox Searchlight) Written by Tamara Jenkins

Achievement in sound editing
"The Bourne Ultimatum" (Universal)
Karen Baker Landers and Per Hallberg
"No Country for Old Men" (Miramax and Paramount Vantage)
Skip Lievsay
"Ratatouille" (Walt Disney)
Randy Thom and Michael Silvers
"There Will Be Blood" (Paramount Vantage and Miramax)
Matthew Wood
"Transformers" (DreamWorks and Paramount in association with Hasbro)
Ethan Van der Ryn and Mike Hopkins

Achievement in sound mixing
"The Bourne Ultimatum" (Universal)
Scott Millan, David Parker and Kirk Francis
"No Country for Old Men" (Miramax and Paramount Vantage)
Skip Lievsay, Craig Berkey, Greg Orloff and Peter Kurland
"Ratatouille" (Walt Disney)
Randy Thom, Michael Semanick and Doc Kane
"3:10 to Yuma" (Lionsgate)
Paul Massey, David Giammarco and Jim Stuebe
"Transformers" (DreamWorks and Paramount in association with Hasbro)
Kevin O'Connell, Greg P. Russell and Peter J. Devlin

Achievement in visual effects
"The Golden Compass" (New Line in association with Ingenious Film Partners)
Michael Fink, Bill Westenhofer, Ben Morris and Trevor Wood
"Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End" (Walt Disney)
John Knoll, Hal Hickel, Charles Gibson and John Frazier
"Transformers" (DreamWorks and Paramount in association with Hasbro)
Scott Farrar, Scott Benza, Russell Earl and John Frazier

Achievement in film editing
"The Bourne Ultimatum" (Universal) Christopher Rouse
"The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" (Miramax/Pathé Renn) Juliette Welfling
"Into the Wild" (Paramount Vantage and River Road Entertainment) Jay Cassidy
"No Country for Old Men" (Miramax and Paramount Vantage) Roderick Jaynes
"There Will Be Blood" (Paramount Vantage and Miramax) Dylan Tichenor

Achievement in art direction
"American Gangster" (Universal)
Art Direction: Arthur Max, Set Decoration: Beth A. Rubino
"Atonement" (Focus Features)
Art Direction: Sarah Greenwood, Set Decoration: Katie Spencer
"The Golden Compass" (New Line in association with Ingenious Film Partners)
Art Direction: Dennis Gassner, Set Decoration: Anna Pinnock
"Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" (DreamWorks and
Warner Bros., Distributed by DreamWorks/Paramount)
Art Direction: Dante Ferretti, Set Decoration: Francesca Lo Schiavo
"There Will Be Blood" (Paramount Vantage and Miramax)
Art Direction: Jack Fisk, Set Decoration: Jim Erickson

Achievement in cinematography
"The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford" (Warner Bros.) Roger Deakins
"Atonement" (Focus Features) Seamus McGarvey
"The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" (Miramax/Pathé Renn) Janusz Kaminski
"No Country for Old Men" (Miramax and Paramount Vantage) Roger Deakins
"There Will Be Blood" (Paramount Vantage and Miramax) Robert Elswit

Achievement in costume design
"Across the Universe" (Sony Pictures Releasing) Albert Wolsky
"Atonement" (Focus Features) Jacqueline Durran
"Elizabeth: The Golden Age" (Universal) Alexandra Byrne
"La Vie en Rose" (Picturehouse) Marit Allen
"Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" (DreamWorks and Warner Bros., Distributed by DreamWorks/Paramount) Colleen Atwood

 Achievement in makeup
"La Vie en Rose" (Picturehouse) Didier Lavergne and Jan Archibald
"Norbit" (DreamWorks, Distributed by Paramount) Rick Baker and Kazuhiro Tsuji
"Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End" (Walt Disney) Ve Neill and Martin Samuel

Achievement in music written for motion pictures (Original score)
"Atonement" (Focus Features) Dario Marianelli
"The Kite Runner" (DreamWorks, Sidney Kimmel Entertainment and Participant Productions, Distributed by Paramount Classics) Alberto Iglesias
"Michael Clayton" (Warner Bros.) James Newton Howard
"Ratatouille" (Walt Disney) Michael Giacchino
"3:10 to Yuma" (Lionsgate) Marco Beltrami

Achievement in music written for motion pictures (Original song)
"Falling Slowly" from "Once"
Music and Lyric by Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova
"Happy Working Song" from "Enchanted"
Music by Alan Menken, Lyric by Stephen Schwartz
"Raise It Up" from "August Rush"
Nominees to be determined
"So Close" from "Enchanted"
Music by Alan Menken, Lyric by Stephen Schwartz
"That's How You Know" from "Enchanted"
Music by Alan Menken, Lyric by Stephen Schwartz

The 2008 Academy Awards will be presented (hopefully) on Sunday, February 24, 2008, at the Kodak Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center.


Blog EntryOscar Best Song ContendersJan 9, '08 7:41 PM
for everyone
There are some great songs in this year's list  of 59 eligible songs for nomination in the Best Song Category. My bets to make the 5 nominations are:

1.  “Say” from “The Bucket List” :  This is a beautiful acoustic number by John Mayer used in the film starring Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman.






2.  “Come So Far (Got So Far to Go)” from “Hairspray” :  This is the song used over the closing credits of the 2007 version of "Hairspray."  It is in the same upbeat period style as the rest of the songs in the movie and was sung by the film's stars Zac Efron, Nikki Blonski and Queen Latifah.





3.  “Falling Slowly” from “Once” :  I have already posted about this song a few months back here:  http://3xhcch.multiply.com/video/item/57.  Another song from this movie is also eligible, “If You Want Me”.

4.  “Guaranteed” from “Into the Wild”"Into the Wild" is a movie directed by Sean Penn.  A lot of the music in that movie was written by the great Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam (whom I had the chance to be in the same breathing room with backstage at their Manila concert about 12 years or so back, but that's another story...).  I feel that "Guaranteed" is the best of the three eligible songs from this movie, the others being "Rise" and "Society."  The acoustic guitar work on this song is amazing.  There are no official videos but there are several cover versions available of these three songs on youtube here, here and here.

5.  “So Close” from “Enchanted” :  There are three songs from the Disney movie "Enchanted".  "So Close" is the love song by Jon McLaughlin.  The other two are more typical Disney grand production number type songs:  “That’s How You Know” and “Happy Working Song”.  The latter two may be great to watch onstage if they are nominated.

Other popular contenders are:

“Despedida” from “Love in the Time of Cholera” :  This slow Spanish torch song is gaining popularity because of its Golden Globe nomination, and maybe because of its high-profile singer Shakira.

“Grace Is Gone” from “Grace Is Gone” is written by Clint Eastwood and performed by Jamie Cullum for the movie starring John Cusack.  It is another acoustic number, which seems to be the vogue among indie productions.  Very good also!  Listen to it here.

“A Hero Comes Home” from “Beowulf” :  This haunting song, played over the closing of "Beowulf" is sung by Broadway star Idina Menzel.

“Way Back into Love” from “Music and Lyrics” :  One of only two eligible songs that made it into local pop radio.  This song was sung by stars Hugh Grant and Drew Barrymore.  Another song from the same film, “PoP! Goes My Heart”, also made the list.  The other radio hit is “Before It’s Too Late (Sam and Mikaela’s Theme)” from “Transformers” by the GooGoo Dolls.  The chances of these songs getting into the final list are quite slim though.  Quite unlike the case in 1984, when all 5 Best Song Nominees were actually Number 1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 ("Footloose", "Let's Hear It For the Boy", "Against All Odds", "Ghostbusters", and the winner "I Just Called To Say I Love You").

The other eligible songs are as follows:

“Do You Feel Me” from “American Gangster”
“At the Edge of the World” from “Arctic Tale”
“Someday” from “August Rush”
“This Time” from “August Rush”
“Raise It Up” from “August Rush”
“Break” from “August Rush”
“Nothing’s There” from “Badland”
“The Devil’s Lonely Fire” from “Badland”
“The Stars of Orion” from “Berkeley”
“To Be Surprised” from “Dan in Real Life”
“My Hands Are Shaking” from “Dan in Real Life”
“I’ll Be OK” from “Dan in Real Life”
“December Boys” from “December Boys”
“Atkozott Egy Elet” from “56 Drops of Blood”
“O, Atyam!” from “56 Drops of Blood”
“Eleg!” from “56 Drops of Blood”
“A Dream” from “Freedom Writers”
“Lyra” from “The Golden Compass”
“Good Luck Chuck” from “Good Luck Chuck”
“Shut Me Out” from “Good Luck Chuck”
“I Was Zapped by the Lucky Super Rainbow” from “Good Luck Chuck”
“Lullabye for Wyatt” from “Grace Is Gone”
“The Tale of the Horny Frog” from “The Heartbreak Kid”
“China Doll” from “Honeydripper”
“It Will Stay With Us” from “The Hottest State”
“Never See You” from “The Hottest State”
“First Amendment Blues” from “Larry Flynt: The Right To Be Left Alone”
“Hello (I Love You)” from “The Last Mimzy”
“Baby Don’t You Cry” from “Waitress”
“Beautiful Ride” from “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story”
“Walk Hard” from “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story”
“Let’s Duet” from “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story”
“Back Where You Belong” from “The Water Horse”
“Ordinary People” from “Music Within”
“Pretty Much Amazing” from “Nancy Drew”
“Le Festin” from “Ratatouille”
“Land of Quiet Poems” from “Resurrecting the Champ”
“Love Will Still Be There” from “September Dawn”
“Royal Pain” from “Shrek the Third”
“Rule the World” from “Stardust”
“Huck’s Tune” from “Lucky You”
“Little Wonders” from “Meet the Robinsons”
“Another Believer” from “Meet the Robinsons”

The much awaited announcement of Oscar nominees (as much an event as the big night) will be on January 22, 2008.

Blog EntryMy Oscar Night Thoughts 2-26-07Feb 26, '07 5:18 PM
for everyone
Here are some of my thoughts about this year's Oscar awards....

A bit disappointed with the way Ellen Degeneres handled the hosting chores this year.  Not enough punch.  Lame parts like the tambourine and choir that went nowhere, same with the useless vacuum cleaner bit.

General comments:  Interesting filler segments with the dancers and their shadow formations behind a screen.  Best was their Happy Feet rendition.  This Oscar show was not not very lively and really very long.  The camera seemed to have fixated on the same actors over and over, such as Jack Nicholson (as usual the scenestealer), Leo diCaprio and Mark Wahlberg.  The Celine Dion song number was not very good, dull and unnecessary!  Not too many interesting speeches this year.

Best presenters:
1.  Abigail Breslin and Jaden Smith for the Best Animated Short Film. 
2.  Anne Hathway and Emily Blunt presenting in their "Devil Wears Prada" characters (with hilarious support from Meryl Streep in the audience) for Best Costume Design.
3.  Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas and Steven Spielberg clowning around and presenting Best Director to most deserving winner Martin Scorsese!

Most beautiful presenters were Gwyneth Paltrow (whom I haven't seen for a long while) and Jennifer Lopez (looking different with the short curls, but great as usual).

Most surprising wins: 
1.  Alan Arkin for "Little Miss Sunshine" for his few onscreen minutes that was the heart of the movie.  The buzz was too loud for Eddie Murphy, and he seemed to have left the theater after his loss.
2.  "The Departed" for Best Picture - I admit I broke into applause when Jack Nicholson announced this winner!
3.  Melissa Etheridge over the Dreamgirls trio of nominees... right after their great musical number!
4.  "The Lives of Others" from Germany over triple awardee "Pan's Labyrinth"!  I really have to find myself a copy of this movie!

Best musical number:  I know it is over the top, but the Jennifer Hudson-Beyonce led Dreamgirls number was a much needed shot to enliven the ceremonies!

Disappointing loss:  The grand gilded royal costumes of "Curse of the Golden Flower" costumes lost ot the more common French ballgowns of "Marie Antoinette"

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