Category: Awards

  • The Golden Globes Set the Date for 2016 Ceremony

    72nd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    It’s been only two weeks since the Golden Globes, but the Hollywood Foreign Press Association has wasted no time in announcing the date for the 2016 awards ceremony.

    Next year’s telecast will take place on Sunday, January 10, 2016 from 8-11 p.m. EST (5-8 p.m. PST). It will be the 73rd annual Golden Globes ceremony.

    “We look forward to follow this year’s successful Golden Globe Awards by celebrating what looks like another exceptional year in both film and television,” said HFPA president Theo Kingma in a statement.

    The 2015 Golden Globes, hosted for the third and final time by Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, scored 19.3 million viewers for NBC. No word yet on who may be hosting in 2016, but they have some big shoes to fill.

    [via: Variety]

    Photo credit: Getty Images

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  • ‘Frozen’ Songwriters Creating Oscars Musical Number

    US-OSCARS-PRESS ROOMWith Neil Patrick Harris aboard to host the Oscars, we knew there’d be singing and dancing. But it seems like viewers will get singing and dancing of the highest caliber.

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced that Oscar-winning husband-and-wife songwriters Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez will pen “an original multimedia, musical sequence” for the Feb. 22 ceremony.

    Titled “Moving Pictures,” the number will feature an “incredibly special song for Neil Patrick Harris and special guests,” according to Oscar producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron. The Lopezes are thrilled to work with Harris, who has hosted the Tonys and Emmys, but is emceeing the Oscars for the first time.

    Harris, meanwhile, couldn’t resist a little “Frozen” joking in his own announcement on Twitter:


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  • Oscars 2015: It’s a Real Race, But Not Between the Movies You Think

    US-ENTERTAINMENT-FILM-OSCAR-NOMINATIONSRemember just a couple weeks ago, in the days leading up to the Oscar nominations, when there was so much handwringing about how, instead of the populist slate the Academy might have preferred, all the likely nominees were obscure little films that few moviegoers had seen, meaning there would be little rooting interest for viewers and the ratings for the Academy Awards ceremony would plummet? Well, that’s not a problem anymore.

    There’s finally one bona fide blockbuster among the Best Picture nominees: “American Sniper,” which has grossed more than $200 million at this writing and may reach $300 million by the time the Oscar show is telecast, four weeks from now.

    What’s more, there’s a genuine cultural battle being fought, at least on the op-ed pages, in blogs, and on cable talk-fests, between “American Sniper” and “Selma.” Not that this makes much sense; aside from Best Picture nominations and questions about their historical accuracy, the two films have little in common. Plus, the films aren’t as easily shoehorned into political boxes as their supporters and detractors would suggest. After all, “Selma” is a portrait of a moment of moral decision in which neither the traditional right nor the establishment left comes off looking good. And “American Sniper,” a film made by a conservative-minded director who nonetheless openly opposed the Iraq War, is confoundingly ambiguous. Clint Eastwood says his movie is an antiwar film, but try telling that to flag-wavers in the audience cheering on Bradley Cooper’s Chris Kyle as he blows away the bad guys. Despite what Eastwood says, “Sniper” does not take an overt position on the morality of the Iraq War, of war in general, or of Chris Kyle’s actions in combat, with the film noting only the toll that warfare seems to take on the warrior’s soul and on his family back home.

    At any rate, the box office has already decided the battle between the two films in “Sniper”‘s favor. “Selma” has taken in $39 million so far, just one-fifth of “Sniper”‘s earnings, and it’s not likely to do more than $90 million by the time the Academy Awards ceremony rolls around. If it does make that much, that would be a very good number for a movie with a $20 million budget that has no big stars and focuses on a painful moment in American history that most U.S. moviegoers are too young to remember. It also means there would be a lot of “Selma” fans around to watch the awards show. But they’ll be far outnumbered by “American Sniper” fans. (Of course, you could be a fan of both…)

    And yet, none of this matters because neither film is going to win Best Picture. Sure, the sheer box office prominence of “American Sniper” will be impossible for Academy voters not to notice, and its six nominations over “Selma’s” two gives it a statistical edge, but it’s still not going to win any of the top prizes. (Sorry Bradley Cooper, but Best Actor will almost certainly go to Michael Keaton‘s comeback role in “Birdman” or Eddie Redmayne‘s physical transformation into the paralyzed Stephen Hawking in “The Theory of Everything.”)

    Rather, the race still belongs to “Boyhood” and “Birdman,” with “The Grand Budapest Hotel” close behind. At this point, “Boyhood” and “Birdman” are neck-and-neck. Sure, “Boyhood” has won nearly every precursor award except two, but they’re big ones: the Producers Guild Award and the Screen Actors Guild award for Best Ensemble (the SAG equivalent of Best Picture). Given out this past Saturday, the PGA prize went to “Birdman,” and so did the SAG prize the next day. The PGA prize is a strong indicator of the eventual Oscar Best Picture trophy (which also goes to a film’s producers); the last seven PGA winners, and 18 out of the last 25, have gone on to win the Oscar. As for the SAG award, there’s a strong overlap between the SAG membership and the actor’s branch of the Academy, the biggest professional bloc among Academy voters. They’re not a majority, but Sunday’s win suggests “Birdman” has a lot more Academy support than previously estimated.

    Actually the Academy already seemed to have shown “Birdman” more love than “Boyhood,” granting Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu’s surreal comedy nine nominations to six for RIchard Linklater’s drama. (Yes, that’s the same number as “American Sniper,” but “Boyhood” earned a directing nomination for Linklater, while “Sniper” failed to do so for Clint Eastwood. Historically, it’s very rare for a film to win Best Picture without a Best Director nomination.)

    Meanwhile, “Budapest” remains a potential spoiler. It has nine nominations, like “Birdman,” and it’s won a handful of precursor awards, including Best Comedy at the Golden Globes and Critic’s Choice Awards earlier this month. Until the weekend after the Oscar nominations, it was, for almost all of 2014, the top-grossing film among this year’s Best Picture nominees, with a take of $59 million. (It’s since been surpassed by “The Imitation Game,” with $61 million, and of course, “American Sniper.”) The Academy’s traditional lack of respect for comedies will hurt “Budapest” even more than it will the semi-dramatic “Birdman,” perhaps leaving the field open for “Boyhood,” but at least “Budapest” still has some numbers in its favor.

    So by all means, “American Sniper” fans, come swell the ranks of Oscar-show viewers, drive up the ratings, and convince the Academy governors that expanding the Best Picture category from five nominees to as many as 10 wasn’t a mistake. But don’t be surprised if “Sniper” doesn’t win much, and don’t blame its losses on liberal politics. After all, “Selma” isn’t going to take the brass ring either. In the likelihood of their shared eventual snubbing by the Academy, maybe “American Sniper” and “Selma” fans can at last find common ground.
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  • SAG Awards 2015 Winners: The Full List

    sag awards 2015 winnersIt’s time for the 21st annual Screen Actors Guild Awards — the only awards show to exclusively honor TV and film performers. ‘Cause who else is going to give these poor unrecognized souls the attention they deserve?

    Some big names were up for major awards Sunday night (January 25), from Benedict Cumberbatch and Mark Ruffalo – who were nominated in both TV and film categories, not that they showed up – to Jennifer Aniston, Emma Stone, Meryl Streep, and the casts of “Game of Thrones,” “Downton Abbey,” “Homeland,” etc. It’s kind of like the Golden Globes, if the Golden Globes just focused on the pretty people and left out the lesser-known and potentially less attractive producers/directors/writers.

    SAG Awards 2015 aired live from 8 to 10 p.m. ET on TBS and TNT. Unlike most awards shows, it actually ended slightly early. (Is that what happens when no one hosts?) Here is the full list of winners, and the nominees who almost won:

    Performance By a Cast in a Motion Picture
    “Birdman” – WINNER
    “Boyhood”
    “The Grand Budapest Hotel”
    “The Imitation Game”
    “The Theory of Everything”

    Performance By a Female Actor in a Leading Role
    Julianne Moore, “Still Alice” – WINNER
    Jennifer Aniston, “Cake”
    Felicity Jones, “The Theory of Everything”
    Rosamund Pike, “Gone Girl”
    Reese Witherspoon, “Wild”

    Performance By a Male Actor in a Leading Role
    Eddie Redmayne, “The Theory of Everything” – WINNER
    Michael Keaton, “Birdman”
    Benedict Cumberbatch, “The Imitation Game”
    Jake Gyllenhaal, “Nightcrawler”
    Steve Carell, “Foxcatcher”

    Performance By an Ensemble in a Drama Series
    “Downton Abbey” – WINNER
    “Boardwalk Empire”
    “Game of Thrones”
    “Homeland”
    “House of Cards”

    Performance By a Female Actor in a Drama Series
    Viola Davis, “How To Get Away With Murder” – WINNER
    Claire Danes, “Homeland”
    Julianna Margulies, “The Good Wife”
    Tatiana Maslany, “Orphan Black”
    Maggie Smith, “Downton Abbey”
    Robin Wright, “House Of Cards”

    Performance By a Male Actor in a Drama Series
    Kevin Spacey, “House Of Cards” – WINNER
    Steve Buscemi, “Boardwalk Empire”
    Peter Dinklage, “Game Of Thrones”
    Woody Harrelson, “True Detective”
    Matthew McConaughey, “True Detective”

    Performance By a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries
    Frances McDormand, “Olive Kitteridge” – WINNER
    Ellen Burstyn, “Flowers In The Attic”
    Maggie Gyllenhaal, “The Honorable Woman”
    Julia Roberts, “The Normal Heart”
    Cicely Tyson, “The Trip To Bountiful”

    Performance By a Male Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries
    Mark Ruffalo, “The Normal Heart” – WINNER
    Adrien Brody, “Houdini”
    Benedict Cumberbatch, “Sherlock: His Last Vow”
    Richard Jenkins, “Olive Kitteridge”
    Billy Bob Thornton, “Fargo”

    Performance By a Male Actor in a Supporting Role
    J.K. Simmons, “Whiplash” – WINNER
    Robert Duvall, “The Judge”
    Ethan Hawke, “Boyhood”
    Edward Norton, “Birdman”
    Mark Ruffalo, “Foxcatcher”

    Performance By a Female Actor in a Supporting Role
    Patricia Arquette, “Boyhood” – WINNER
    Keira Knightley, “The Imitation Game”
    Emma Stone, “Birdman”
    Meryl Streep, “Into The Woods”
    Naomi Watts, “St. Vincent”

    Performance By an Ensemble in a Comedy Series
    “Orange Is the New Black” – WINNER
    “The Big Bang Theory”
    “Modern Family”
    “Brooklyn Nine-Nine”
    “Veep”

    Performance By a Male Actor in a Comedy Series
    William H. Macy, “Shameless” – WINNER
    Ty Burrell, “Modern Family “
    Louis C.K., “Louie”
    Jim Parsons, “The Big Bang Theory”
    Eric Stonestreet, “Modern Family”

    Performance By a Female Actor in a Comedy Series
    Uzo Aduba, “Orange Is The New Black” – WINNER
    Julie Bowen, “Modern Family”
    Edie Falco, “Nurse Jackie”
    Julia Louis-Dreyfus, “Veep”
    Amy Poehler, “Parks And Recreation”

    Action Performance By a Stunt Ensemble in a Motion Picture
    “Unbroken” – WINNER
    “Fury”
    “Get On Up”
    “The Hobbit: The Battle Of The Five Armies”
    “X-men: Days Of Future Past”

    Action Performance By a Stunt Ensemble in a Comedy or Drama Series
    “Game Of Thrones” – WINNER
    “24: Live Another Day”
    “Boardwalk Empire”
    “Homeland”
    “Sons Of Anarchy”
    “The Walking Dead”

    Lifetime Achievement Award
    Debbie Reynolds

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  • SAG Awards 2015 Red Carpet Photos

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    It’s time for the 2015 SAG Awards, and the stars are rockin’ red carpet.

    Tonight, in the heart of awards season, the 21st Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards is broadcasting live from Los Angeles at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT on TBS and TNT, with red carpet arrivals starting two hours earlier.

    This year’s nominees include veteran actress Patricia Arquette of “Boyhood,” whose earlier awards season wins make her the frontrunner for Best Supporting Actress. Meanwhile, Alejandro González Iñárritu’s ambitious “Birdman” has racked up four nominations — the most by any film — including a Best Actor nod for Michael Keaton. In TV, ABC’s “Modern Family” leads the way with four nominations, with yet another nod for Best Ensemble Cast in a Comedy Series.

    Before the winners are announced, check out the red carpet photos of your favorite stars. From Benedict Cumberbatch and Jennifer Aniston, to the always chic Julia Louis-Dreyfus.
    US-ENTERTAINMENT-SAG AWARDS-ARRIVALS

  • 13 Reasons Why the SAG Awards Should Be Your Favorite Awards Show

    20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards - Show
    The Screen Actors Guild Awards, airing this Sunday, January 25, aren’t as high-profile as some of the other awards shows clamoring for your attention throughout January and February. Indeed, awards fatigue from the People’s Choice, Critic’s Choice, and Golden Globes may keep you from watching, or maybe you’re just saving up your red-carpet energy for next month’s Grammys and Oscars.

    Still, for sheer entertainment value, it’s hard to beat the SAGs. Like the Globes, they honor celebrities from both TV and film while plying the winners and losers with liquor. Like the Oscars, they’re voted on by actual movie professionals. And like the MTV Movie Awards, they’re often irreverent, mercifully brief, and scheduled to air more than once in case you don’t catch them live. For viewers at home, they offer the best elements of all awards shows and none of the worst. If you watch the SAGs this Sunday, here’s why you may find it superior to this season’s other star-studded self-congratulatory celebrations.

    1. The SAGs have been around for 21 years. That’s long enough to be taken seriously but not so long as to have become stodgy and formulaic.

    2. The SAGs are given only to actors. No sitting through awards for people you don’t care about, like costume designers, animators, directors, or writers.

    3. Each year, the ceremony begins with a handful of actors, from rising ingenues to beloved veterans, revealing how they got into the business. Which is sort of fascinating, occasionally funny, and often touching.

    4. The SAGs are surprisingly irreverent, even the annual lifetime achievement awards. Recall Betty White’s salty acceptance speech a few years ago, or Rita Moreno’s lively turn last year. This year’s winner is Debbie Reynolds, who’ll be introduced by her daughter, Carrie Fisher. So it should be an especially witty, funny, risqué occasion.

    5. It’s probably the only awards show this season where you’ll see “Boyhood” kid Ellar Coltrane, “Grand Budapest Hotel” lobby boy Tony Revolori, “Orange Is the New Black” breakout Laverne Cox, Kravitz, and Rashida Jones as presenters.

    6. The awards are voted on by members of the Screen Actors Guild, so it’s actors voting for their peers. That means the voters are people who are actually experts in the field; it’s not classical musicians voting for rappers, or cinematographers voting for sound effects editors, or faux part-time journalists voting for actual industry professionals.

    7. There are 165,000 members of the Screen Actors Guild, which makes for a large and broad voting sample. So statistically speaking, the awards are more valid than the Emmys (about 15,000 voters), the Oscars (6,124 voters), the Tonys (868 voters), the Critic’s Choice Awards (250 voters), or the Golden Globes (90 voters).*

    8. No musical numbers.

    9. Unlike the Golden Globes, the SAGs still pay tribute to beloved actors who’ve died in the last 12 months by compiling an “In Memoriam” montage. And because they’re actors, they’re all people you’ve probably heard of.

    10. They honor stuntmen and stuntwomen. How cool is that? Alas, they don’t give out those prizes during the televised ceremony, but you can catch them during the online pre-show, which is being simulcast at sagawards.tntdrama.com, sagawards.org, and people.com.

    11. They’re on both TNT and TBS. You know, in case you can’t find ’em.

    12. The awards don’t run a minute over two hours. They can’t, since TNT and TBS rerun them immediately.

    13. Speaking of, if you miss ’em live at 8 p.m. ET, they’re on again at 10 p.m.

    *The SAGs probably have more voters than the Grammys, too, but Moviefone couldn’t confirm the number of National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences members who vote for the Grammys. We placed an inquiry to NARAS, which failed to respond by press time.

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  • Oscars 2015: The Reasons for the Black Shutout Are More Complicated Than You Think

    Well, with last Thursday’s announcement of the Oscar nominations, the sometimes ratings-challenged Academy Awards got all the traditional media and online attention they could have wished for. Too bad almost all of the attention was negative.

    Usually, Oscar controversies are about taste — whether “Crash” was really better than “Brokeback Mountain,” or whether “Shakespeare in Love” was really better than “Saving Private Ryan.” This year’s controversy over “Selma,” however, is shining an unflattering light on Hollywood’s racial politics.

    The snubbing of “Selma” in every category except Best Song and, curiously, Best Picture — that’s only part of what has professional and amateur critics up in arms. As many have noted, this year is the first since 1998 that no actors of color have been nominated. The nominations list has drawn predictable condemnation from the likes of Spike Lee and Rev. Al Sharpton, who has threatened to go to Hollywood and take unspecified steps to remedy the situation. Even Cheryl Boone Isaacs, the president of the Academy, has felt compelled to address the outrage. Meanwhile, on Twitter, #OscarsSoWhite has become a trending hashtag.

    It’s a little too easy to blame this year’s awards slate on old-fashioned racism. After all, this is the same Academy that, last year, named “12 Years a Slave” Best Picture, nominated Steve McQueen for Best Director, nominated Chiwetel Ejiofor for Best Actor, nominated Barkhad Abdi for Best Supporting Actor, and named Lupita Nyong’o Best Supporting Actress. And Alfonso Cuaron became the first Latino to win Best Director. And this year, Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu could become the second; his film “Birdman” tied with “The Grand Budapest Hotel” for most nominations this year (nine each), including Best Picture. Conversely, Clint Eastwood failed to score a nomination for himself for directing “American Sniper,” even though the film was cited for Best Picture and several other categories. Did he not get the nomination because he’s white? Or because the liberals in the Academy still won’t forgive him for his chair speech at the Republican National Convention in 2012?

    Still, this year’s sudden white-out seems fishy. But if it’s not straight-out racism, a lot of other excuses have been trotted out to explain it. A lot of awards-season voters didn’t receive “Selma” DVD screeners in time. The controversy over the film’s historical accuracy may have soured some Academy members on the film. (Though similar controversies over the factuality of “Foxcatcher” and “The Imitation Game” didn’t keep those films from getting a slew of nominations.) Or maybe this was just such a strong year for films that there just wasn’t room to recognize the contributions of black people to the industry this year.

    This last reason sounds especially specious. Not to slight the Best Actor nominees this year, but was David Oyelowo’s performance as Rev. Martin Luther King in “Selma” — the one element of the movie no one seemed to find fault with — not worthy to be included among them? And aside from “Selma,” was Chadwick Boseman’s performance as James Brown in “Get On Up” a lesser achievement than those of the white actors nominated for biopic roles this year? Did Gugu Mbatha-Raw not deserve consideration for her starring roles in “Belle” or “Beyond the Lights”? Was Chris Rock’s screenplay for “Top Five” not worthy of inclusion? Did cinematographer Bradford Young, who shot both “Selma” and “A Most Violent Year,” not deserve a nod? Did not one black person do Oscar-worthy work this year?

    Rather, the problem seems more complicated and systemic. It’s been pointed out that the Academy membership is 94 percent white. This, in turn, is probably reflective of what the film industry looks like as a whole, especially behind the camera. As Chris Rock has noted, people in Hollywood tend to hire other people who resemble themselves. That’s not necessarily racism, just a failure of imagination, an inability to think outside the box. The Academy Awards seem to work the same way; voters tend to choose nominees from their own background unless (like last year) they’re given a compelling reason not to.

    The answer to the problem, then, seems to require a more diverse Academy membership. Which is something that Academy president Boone Isaacs (who is the Academy’s first black president) says her organization is working toward. Addressing the nomination controversy, she told the Associated Press, “In the last two years, we’ve made greater strides than we ever have in the past toward becoming a more diverse and inclusive organization through admitting new members and more inclusive classes of members,” Without directly criticizing this year’s slate of nominees or the process that created it, she added, “And, personally, I would love to see and look forward to see a greater cultural diversity among all our nominees in all of our categories.”

    Of course, for her to add more minority folk to the Academy roster, there have to be more of them finding work in Hollywood. Which ultimately means there has to be more diversity in the executive suites among those who make hiring decisions, both in front of and behind the camera.

    It would make economic sense. After all, according to the Motion Picture Association of America, Latinos go to the movies more often than other Americans, and white people go less often. (African-Americans make up 12 percent of frequent moviegoers, consistent with their numbers in the populace as a whole.) Yet it’s only recently that the studios have recognized Latinos as a market worth courting, or that African-Americans want to see more than just Tyler Perry and Kevin Hart movies. The current box-office success of “Selma” and its overwhelmingly positive word-of-mouth (measured by a rare A+ grade at CinemaScore) suggests that, not only are black audiences hungry for more substantive and dramatic stories in which they can see their own hopes and aspirations reflected on screen, but that some white viewers are interested in such stories as well.

    The studio system in general is not poised to make such films, not because of racism but because the distributors are wedded to the blockbuster business model. All their eggs are in the giant-acton-spectacle basket, since such movies return hundreds of millions of dollars. Modestly budgeted dramas like “Selma” (or “The Theory of Everything” or “The Imitation Game,” for that matter) aren’t part of the business plan because their returns, while profitable, are also modest. These may be the kind of movies that win Oscars, but the major studios have all but abandoned that business to the independents. Again, it’s more about a failure of imagination than outright bigotry.

    Perhaps the wisest perspective on the situation comes from erstwhile firebrand Spike Lee, whom the Oscars famously snubbed 25 years ago for directing the landmark “Do the RIght Thing,” a movie that the Academy ultimately overlooked for Best Picture in favor of “Driving Miss Daisy,” a comforting racial fable that, a quarter-century later, looks quaintly patronizing at best. Talking to the Daily Beast, Lee pointed out that the ultimate arbiter of quality is not the Academy but history. Today, he pointed out, “nobody is talking about motherf—in’ ‘Driving Miss Daisy.’ That film is not being taught in film schools all around the world like ‘Do the Right Thing’ is.” He added. “You can’t go to awards like the Oscars or the Grammys for validation. The validation is if your work still stands 25 years later.”
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  • Oscar Nominations 2015: Emma Stone’s Reaction to First Nom Is Profane and Perfect

    72nd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Emma Stone couldn’t contain her excitement — or four-letter words — when reacting to the news of her first-ever Oscar nomination, for “Birdman,” on Thursday morning.

    The Best Supporting Actress nominee released a statement in recognition of the honor, and couldn’t help but unleash some of her signature personality (and profanity) that we’ve grown to know and love. The statement started rote enough before veering off into “awesome” territory.

    “Well this is surreal,” Stone’s statement said. “I am completely knocked out. Thank you to the Academy for this incredible honor. I am very proud and lucky to be part of ‘Birdman’ and I can’t believe it came to this. I am so f––ing excited. Are you allowed to say ‘f––’ when making a statement for the Oscars? I’m just really f––ing excited.”

    As far as the F-word goes, we think an Academy Award nominee is allowed to say whatever she pleases. Swear away, Emma, and stay awesome.

    [via: Vanity Fair]

    Photo credit: Jason Merritt via Getty Images

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  • Oscar Nominations 2015: ‘Dick Poop’ Is This Year’s ‘Adele Dazeem’

    87th Academy Awards Nominations Announcement
    We’re still not done mocking John Travolta for his epic mangling of Idina Menzel’s name during the 2014 Oscars telecast. But it looks like Adele Dazeem already has some competition in this year’s Most Cringeworthy Name Pronunciation category: Dick Poop.

    That unfortunate blunder came courtesy of none other than Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs, who was attempting to say “Dick Pope” when announcing the nominees for Best Cinematography. Sadly for Pope, his nomination for British biopic “Mr. Turner” was overshadowed by Isaacs’s incorrect — and frankly, head scratching — pronunciation of his name.

    Perhaps Isaacs was fatigued from already pronouncing the tongue-twisting names of Pope’s fellow nominees, including “Ida” cinematographers Lukasz Zal and Ryszard Lynzewski. But when she got to his name, she very clearly said “Dick Poop,” before correcting herself. In the clip below, courtesy of Slate, you can hear the audience titter and Boone try to stop herself from laughing after the unfortunate error.

    But Pope has proven to be a good sport about the snafu, telling USA Today that he actually felt more sorry for Isaacs than himself, and revealing a great sense of humor.

    “You know what, I have been called a lot worse in my time,” Pope told USA Today. “I don’t think twice about anything like that. I am happy to be nominated.”

    [via: Slate, USA Today]

    Photo credit: Kevin Winter via Getty Images

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  • Oscar Nominations 2015: ‘LEGO Movie’ Director Makes His Own Statuette Following Snub (PHOTO)

    2014 New York Film Critics Circle Awards - Arrivals
    Among the biggest surprises when the Academy Award nominations were announced Thursday was the snub of “The LEGO Movie” in the Best Animated Feature category. While the fun flick had been considered a lock to win the statuette, it nevertheless came up short when the Oscar shortlist was revealed.

    The outcry was immediate and loud, leaving many fans and industry insiders alike scratching their heads in disbelief over the film’s almost complete shut-out. (It did manage to score one nomination in the Best Original Song category, for upbeat anthem “Everything Is Awesome!!!”)

    But “LEGO” co-director Philip Lord was not among those crying foul. Instead, he had the perfect response to the news.

    “It’s okay,” he wrote on Twitter, accompanied by a photo of a LEGO-ified Oscar statuette. “Made my own!”


    We applaud both Lord’s creativity, and his ability to be a good sport. The merits of “LEGO” may have gone unrecognized by The Academy, but moviegoers know that everything is a little bit more awesome because this film exists.

    [via: Philip Lord]

    Photo credit: Andrew H. Walker via Getty Images

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