Category: Oscars

  • Oscars 2015: The 10 Best Reasons to Watch This Year

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    There’s always a lot of nay saying before the annual Oscar telecast rolls around, with prestige fatigue setting in even for those who haven’t been covering the various awards, nominees, and campaigns for the past few months. But there is a silver lining to every gloomy, awards show-shaped cloud, and this year’s broadcast, hosted by affably goofy song-and-dance man Neil Patrick Harris (who, it should be remembered, co-starred in the Oscar-nominated “Gone Girl”), could be really, really great.

    But if you’re saying to yourself, I really don’t want to watch this year. It will be boring and repetitive. But I sure could use a Top 10 list to really lay things out for me, have we got the top 10 list for you. Read on for the top 10 reasons to watch the Oscars this year.

  • 11 Actors Nominated for Two Oscars in the Same Year

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    An actor receiving double Oscar nominations in one year is definitely a rare occurrence, but it has probably happened more than you think. Even Julianne Moore, who is a nominee this year for “Still Alice,” has been nominated twice within the same ceremony for two separate performances. This year composer Alexandre Desplat is nominated in the Musical Score category for his work on “The Imitation Game” and “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” but we won’t be seeing any actors going for two times the gold this time around. Let’s take a look back at the eleven accomplished actors who have been nominated for two Oscars in the same year. Way to be overachievers, you guys…

  • Oscar Predictions 2015: Who Will Win Best Actress?

    Best Actress 2015This Sunday, all eyes will be on the star-studded Oscars!

    With less than a week before the big night, it’s time to look back and reexamine the most noteworthy performances and films of 2014. In countdown fashion, Moviefone will be releasing a set of staff predictions each day this week for the four major categories — kicking it off today with Best Actress.

    We’ve already given you the beat on the 2015 Oscars race, so now let’s break down our favorites to win Best Actress. Here, we’ve listed the actress we expect to win, and then, more importantly, which ones we think should win.

    Tim Hayne
    Who Will Win: Julianne Moore. Not only has she already won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role (a predictor of Oscar glory) for her portrayal of a woman dealing with early-onset Alzheimer’s in “Still Alice,” but Moore is poised to take home the trophy on career merit alone. This is her fifth nomination, and, in 2003, she became one of only a handful of actors to be nominated in both the Best Supporting and Best Actress categories. Her career has been filled with widely varied roles, many of them lauded, and the Academy undoubtedly believes she’s paid her dues. In short, it’s time.

    Who Should Win: Julianne Moore. I mean, come on. She deserves it for all the reasons I mentioned above, and more. It’s her year.

    Alana Altmann
    Who Will Win: Julianne Moore. Most people probably already assume the accomplished powerhouse has an Oscar under her belt, but the nominee has sadly gone home empty handed four times in the past. The versatile actress turned an unremarkable small film with a overwhelmingly heavy concept like “Still Alice” into something worth talking about. It’s her year to take it, especially since her competition isn’t that steep…

    Who Should Win: Julianne Moore. But we’re pretending she’s getting the award for the “will you be my mommy?” scene in “Boogie Nights.” Just kidding. (Sort of). What could have treaded into sappy tear-bait territory in “Still Alice” turned out to be a powerful, moving, and relatable portrayal of a woman whose world is slipping through her finger tips. And although we’re picking Julianne here, we’re going to take a moment to shout out Rosamund Pike’s nuanced breakout work as “Gone Girl’s” Amazing Amy just because it was one of the most fun performances to watch this year. It’s just not quite Moore-level emotional rawness.

    Jonny Black
    Who Will Win: Julianne Moore. She was incredible in “Still Alice” and has racked up award after award for her performance, and rightfully so. I mean, she’s the main draw for a downer of a movie (the story centers on Moore’s character who’s recently been diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s) and carries it alongside an impressive performance from Kristen Stewart. Moore’s 2015 nod is her fifth career Oscar nomination and it’s about time she takes home the golden statuette — she’s rarely been more deserving.

    Who Should Win: Julianne Moore. She’s fantastic in the movie and has more than paid her Academy dues. Have we even mentioned another actress’s name for this year’s race? Barely. She’s also front and center in two of the greatest and most talked about movies of the last twenty years, “Boogie Nights” (1997) and “The Big Lebowski” (1998), so just give her the damn thing!

    What’s your pick? Tell us in the comments below, and find out which star wins Best Actress when the Oscars air live Sunday, February 22 at 7 ET / 4 PT on ABC.
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  • Oscars by the Numbers: 24 Fascinating Academy Awards Stats

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    The accountants of PricewaterhouseCoopers aren’t the only ones crunching numbers on the run-up to the Oscars. We’ve compiled some fascinating stats about Hollywood’s biggest night: How many people will be watching? How long do winners really have to give a speech (in theory)? Who set a new record for the oldest Oscar nominee this year?

    And here’s one record this year’s Oscars will never beat: Shortest Oscar Ceremony Ever, unless it ends after the first award is given out.US-OSCARS-PRESS ROOM

  • 10 Most Controversial Oscar Moments in Academy History

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    When a billion people are watching, the Oscar stage is a tempting place to broadcast your political views, as more than one star or filmmaker has chosen to do. It’s not always a popular choice, as Vanessa Redgrave or Michael Moore can tell you.

    Controversial Oscar moments aren’t always about politics: Among the other scandals are a shockingly naked stranger, a barely-dressed starlet, and a persistent rumor about one surprising win.
    Most Controversial Oscar Moments

  • ​Oscars 2015: 7 Burning Questions Remain

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    The Oscars aren’t until next Sunday, but the race will be all over by Tuesday. The 17th is the day ballots are due; after that, it’s all in the hands of the number-crunchers at Pricewaterhouse Cooper. Still, there were a lot of last-minute awards given out over the weekend by several of the professional groups — writers, cinematographers, sound editors, sound mixers, and makeup artists and hairstylists — whose members will also be turning in their Oscar ballots this week. Their decisions should help you, not only to determine who’ll win the prizes in the more obscure corners of your Oscar pool ballot, but also which movies have broad enough support to win the more coveted prizes.

    What did we learn from this weekend’s guild awards?

    Well, the Writers Guild of America gave its original screenplay prize to “The Grand Budapest Hotel” and its adapted screenplay prize to “The Imitation Game.” Those are safe bets for the Oscars as well. The American Society of Cinematographers gave its top prize to “Birdman,” and even though Emmanuel “Chivo” Lubezki also won this Oscar last year for “Gravity,” he’s likely to win again this year for his stunning long-take tracking shots that comprise “Birdman.”

    The Cinema Audio Society, which recognizes the work of sound mixers, gave its live-action prize to “Birdman,” which not only makes that film the favorite for the Sound Mixing Oscar but adds yet another burst to its momentum for Best Picture. Don’t confuse this group with the Sound Editors (who handle sound effects, rather than the overall soundtrack), whose Golden Reel award this weekend went to “American Sniper.” That film is a safe bet for the Sound Editing Oscar, which, after all, usually goes to the loudest movie. (Yes, there are three war movies competing; besides “Sniper,” there’s “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies” and “Unbroken,” but the Academy will want to give at least one Oscar to “Sniper,” and this is about the only one it’s likely to get. As for the other two nominees, “Interstellar” had sound problems, according to many listener complaints, and “Birdman” hardly seems to belong in this category.)

    As for the Makeup and Hairstylist Guild Awards, they gave two prizes each to “Budapest” (Best Period Makeup, Best Period Hairstyling) and “Guardians of the Galaxy” (Best Contemporary Makeup, Best Special Makeup Effects). Since these two films are competing for the Makeup and Hairstyling Oscar (along with “Foxcatcher,” which went unrewarded by the guild), they seem to be evenly matched going into the final stretch. It’s a tough call; “Budapest” has an impressive array of whimsical mustaches and beards, not to mention Tilda Swinton’s elaborate old-age makeup, but “Guardians” had impressive makeup as well, was one of the year’s biggest hits, and is unlikely to win any other Oscars except maybe Visual Effects. So this category looks neck and neck.

    So, is it gonna be “Boyhood” or “Birdman”?

    Tough to say. There’s a precedent either way. “Boyhood” won the BAFTA for Best Picture last weekend, along with many precursor awards earlier in the season, and the last six BAFTA winners have gone on to win the Best Picture Oscar as well. Then again, it’s not clear that people in Hollywood actually care what the British Academy thinks; rather, the BAFTAs seem to reflect conventional wisdom, not generate it.

    “Birdman” has won the three major guild awards (Producers, Screen Actors, and Directors), and it’s been 19 years since a movie (“Apollo 13”) won all three of those and failed to win Best Picture. Also, the Academy seems to have gotten over its long-standing bias against movies about show business (see recent winners “The Artist” and “Argo”). Plus, there’s the simple fact that it has nine nominations to six for “Boyhood.” On the other hand, it’s very hard to win Best Picture without even scoring an Editing nomination (as “Birdman” failed to do), and there’s also just the general weirdness factor, contrasted with the more traditionally heartfelt “Boyhood.” So I’d say the odds favor “Birdman,” but it’s going to be very close.

    Does any other movie have a chance?

    Not really. The way the weighted voting system works for Best Picture ballots favors movies that are widely admired (if not loved) over movies that inspire passionate feelings for or against. So movies that are divisive or don’t inspire much enthusiasm will fall by the wayside. Not everyone loves “Boyhood” or “Birdman,” but they’re both widely admired.

    As for the others, “American Sniper” may be far and away the most populist movie among the Best Picture nominees, having earned more than $300 million to date, but to the Academy, it’s still too controversial. “Grand Budapest Hotel” has as many nominations as “Birdman,” but it’s a more overt comedy, and comedies almost never win. “The Imitation Game” and “The Theory of Everything” are pretty standard-issue biopics, with only their strong lead acting performances to distinguish them. “Selma” is as divisive in its own way as “American Sniper,” though it’ll probably win Best Original Song and have to be satisfied with that. “Whiplash” doesn’t feel like the kind of grand, ambitious movie that says “Best Picture,” though tyrannical music teacher J.K. Simmons is a lock for Best Supporting Actor.

    Who’ll win the acting prizes?

    Along with Simmons, “Still Alice” star Julianne Moore and “Boyhood” co-star Patricia Arquette have been locks for Actress and Supporting Actress since day one. That leaves Best Actor as the only truly suspenseful race.

    Let’s see, Benedict Cumberbatch did a solid job playing Alan Turing in “The Imitation Game,” but the role isn’t as flashy as the others in the category. Bradley Cooper is nominated for the third time in three years, but the Academy’s ambivalence toward the real-life story of Chris Kyle, which will keep “American Sniper” from winning Best Picture, will extend to Cooper’s performance as well. (Indeed many pundits were surprised he was even nominated.) Steve Carell’s physical and dramatic transformation for his creepy “Foxcatcher” role is impressive, but it’s not clear that the movie is all that well regarded or even widely seen. Besides, if the narrative behind the performance is what a great job a comedian did with a dark and dramatic role, it’s easier to go with Michael Keaton for “Birdman,” which also has the virtue of being the actor’s comeback role and his first recognition by the Academy during a long and celebrated career. The only one who can trump him is Eddie Redmayne, for his striking physical transformation as Stephen Hawking in “The Theory of Everything.” Playing someone who overcomes tremendous physical or mental disability is often a sure path to Oscar success. Both actors have won a number of precursor awards this season, so this category remains a toss-up, to be decided according to which personal narrative the Academy prefers.

    Is Oscar campaigning getting out of hand?

    Seems so. After all, it’s kind of silly that personal narrative should matter so much (as opposed to, you know, merit), but it does. The “For Your Consideration” ads for “The Imitation Game” popping up on the trade websites are just the latest symptom. They hint that Academy members should pick the film (and Cumberbatch) because it’s a way of honoring Turing as a gay martyr. That’s pretty rich for a film that’s been accused of downplaying the World War II codebreaker’s homosexuality. Plus, it’s a tactic likely to backfire, as it did nine years ago for “Brokeback Mountain.”

    Meanwhile, songwriting nominee Diane Warren, who’s been nominated six previous times without a win, is griping that neither singer Rita Ora nor the Relativity record label are doing enough to campaign for her tune “Grateful,” from the film “Beyond the Lights.” She may have a point — the song is certainly an underdog in a category that contains “Glory” (from “Selma”), “Everything Is Awesome” (from “The LEGO Movie”) and “I’m Not Gonna Miss You” (from “Glen Campbell: I’ll Be Me.”). “Glory” is the favorite (because “Selma” has to win something), and everyone loves “Everything Is Awesome” (though not enough to overcome the Academy’s aversion to satirical songs). Campbell’s tune, inspired by his valiant struggle against Alzheimer’s, has sentiment and personal narrative on its side. The other nominee, “Lost Stars,” from the little-seen musical “Begin Again,” has even less of a shot than “Grateful.” Which makes Warren’s carping seem, well, less than “Grateful.” To the extent that personal narrative matters, she’s not helping her cause.

    Is it really an honor just to be nominated?

    Yes. In fact, it’s lucrative. Not only to the nominees enjoy the likelihood of salary raises the next time they’re up for a role, but even if they don’t win, they’ll take home a swag bag this year worth a reported $125,000. This collection of luxury goods and travel gift certificates isn’t an official Academy gift (it’s put together by an outside firm, without the Academy’s endorsement), but it’s still a pretty nice consolation prize for the 80 percent of nominees who won’t go home with trophies.

    In the grand scheme of things, how much does all this matter?

    Not much, perhaps. As film critic Richard Roeper pointed out in a tweet, “Fifty Shades of Grey” earned more during its Valentine’s Day weekend debut than “Boyhood,” “The Theory of Everything” and “Whiplash” have earned all together during their entire runs. Of course, “Grey” isn’t going to win any Oscars next year, but swag bags aside, it looks like this year’s Best Picture contenders are fighting over who gets to be king of an awfully small anthill. The winner, whether it’s “Birdman” or “Boyhood,” will be celebrated for a moment and forgotten by the time next year’s Oscars roll around. After all, last year was the year of “12 Years a Slave,” and yet this year, the Academy seems to have forgotten that black people exist, either as story subjects or as performers and filmmakers.

    Then again, who’s to say this year’s Oscar race will have no larger impact? Five years ago, “The Hurt Locker” became the lowest-grossing Best Picture winner in ages, and yet it seems Clint Eastwood must have seen it. What else is “American Sniper” but his “Hurt Locker,” an Iraq War movie that is careful not to take a political position on the war itself, that celebrates the heroism of the troops while reckoning the moral and soul-destroying cost of combat on the lives of individual servicemen and their families? Five years ago, that seemed a radical artistic approach; today, it’s a mainstream blockbuster. Whose to say that, a few years from now, we won’t be seeing mainstream hits that incorporate the structural innovations of “Boyhood” and “Birdman”? For all the seasonal squabbling over politics, ego, wounded pride, and money, the art of storytelling through moving pictures continues to advance, and it’s good to have an annual excuse to stop and recognize that.
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  • Most Oscar-Nominated Stars in Academy Awards History

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    With the Oscars right around the corner (Sunday, February 22), it’s the perfect time to look back at Academy Awards past and answer the question: Who’s been nominated for the most Oscars? And we’ll do one better: Tally up their wins.
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  • 22 Oscar Winners and Nominees Who Started Out on Soap Operas

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    Everybody’s got to start somewhere: For some people it’s theater or commercials, but for many, many actors, their first job was on a soap opera. Julianne Moore played dual characters on “As the World Turns,” Laurence Fishburne played a teen drug dealer on “One Life to Live” and Susan Sarandon played a murderous drifter on “Search for Tomorrow,” a soap that was also among the first gigs for Tommy Lee Jones, Kevin Kline, and Viggo Mortensen.

    Who else got a boost from daytime drama? Brad Pitt, Marisa Tomei, and some of the most acclaimed Oscar winners in the U.S., Australia, and even England.oscar nominees soap operas

  • 10 Animals That Deserved Oscars

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    For decades, people have been trying to determine what non-human beast has delivered the best performance of all time and, well, let’s settle the debate once and for all.

    From “The Wizard of Oz” to “Jaws,” here are 10 animals that deserved to take home Oscars. It’s about time these furry and ferocious thespians got some love.
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  • Oscars 2015: ‘Boyhood,’ ‘Birdman,’ Backlash, Behavior, and Backstory

    boyhood birdmanFor all the months of campaigning surrounding Oscars season, this week is the one week that actually counts. Ballots for the final vote went out to Academy members on Friday, February 6, and must be submitted by next Tuesday, February 17. So whatever happened before, it’s what’s on voters’ minds this week that matters.

    The two big questions this week are: 1.) Does “Boyhood” or “Birdman” have the edge? and 2.) Which individuals would voters like to see up on the podium thanking their agents, spouses, and higher powers (God, Harvey Weinstein, et al)?

    “Boyhood” and “Birdman” have been locked in a tight race for Best Picture for nearly three months. For most of that time, “Boyhood” seemed to have the edge, but its early momentum is now nearly spent. “Birdman” has won the trifecta of the major guild prizes. Last month, it won at the Producers Guild and Screen Actors Guild Awards, and on Saturday, it completed the trio with a Directors Guild Award for Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu. The DGA prize is traditionally a very strong predictor, not just of the Oscar for Best Director, but for Best Picture as well. (In its 65-year history, the DGA prize has presaged the Academy Award for Best Director all but seven times.) The overwhelming support of Hollywood’s professional guilds, whose memberships tend to overlap with the roll of Academy voters, for “Birdman” suggests that the surreal Michael Keaton film is now the favorite. Indeed, it has more Academy Award nominations than any other movie this year except “The Grand Budapest Hotel” (they’re tied with nine; “Boyhood” has six), but since Oscar seldom rewards comedies, “Birdman” has the edge there, too.

    (For those who are keeping track, the DGAs gave their documentary prize to Laura Poitras, adding to the awards tally for Best Documentary Oscar nominee and likely winner “Citizenfour.”)

    During the long period when “Boyhood” and “Birdman” were neck-and-neck, critics praised both films for their creativity and technical achievements, and while many preferred “Boyhood” for displaying more heart, they saw both films as Oscar-worthy. Now, however, there’s even the beginnings of an anti-“Boyhood” backlash, as evidenced by an essay that ran Friday in the New York Times. In the article, Times weekend culture editor Mary Jo Murphy slams “Boyhood’s” narrative strategy — showing the characters growing and changing over a 12-year span by filming the actors once a year for 12 years — as derivative of Michael Apted’s celebrated “Up” series of documentaries, which has revisited the same group of Britons every seven years for the last half-century, since they were seven years old. The implication is that the Academy shouldn’t reward Richard Linklater’s film for its gimmickry and lack of originality.

    As Scott Feinberg has noted in The Hollywood Reporter, this attack is suspicious. First, Linklater has acknowledged in interviews the influence of the “Up” films on his work. (If any of Linklater’s movies deserve comparison to the “Up” series, it’s his “Before” trilogy, which has revisited the same fictional couple every nine years.) Second, Apted has praised “Boyhood” and has noted the substantial differences between it and his “Up” movies. Finally, the timing of the article’s publication is strange, since “Boyhood” has been in theaters for nearly eight months. Why blast it now, unless one wants to sabotage its Oscar chances? At the very least, the timing of Murphy’s piece suggests that “Birdman” will benefit from the narrative that it’s been an underdog throughout this awards season. (Consider how well that worked for “Argo” a couple years ago.)

    As far as the second question, of who belongs on the Oscar podium, that’s being decided this week by the subtler aspects of campaigning, as the nominees work to prove themselves capable of appearing gracious on camera. The biggest test came last Monday at the annual nominees’ luncheon at the Beverly Hilton, a once-casual event that, over the past two decades, has become as rigorous a public rite of passage as any of the awards season red-carpet ceremonies. Reporters are invited to watch nominees profess their admiration for each other, pay rapt attention while Academy biigwigs urge them to keep their acceptance speeches brief if they win a trophy on Feb. 22, pose for a massive group photo, and display their table manners while they eat. Surely nyone who can withstand that kind of scrutiny deserves some sort of prize.

    According to press accounts of the event, everyone who showed seemed to pass with flying colors. (Notably absent: “Birdman” director Iñarritu, who’s currently filming on location, and Benedict Cumberbatch.) Rosamund Pike said she didn’t know there were going to be reporters there, but she answered their questions like a pro. Bradley Cooper and Clint Eastwood deftly deflected questions about the controversies surrounding “American Sniper,” saying the important thing was to get viewers talking about the hardships soldiers face. Eastwood’s fellow 84-year-old, Robert Duvall, suggested he wasn’t nervous about the Oscars because he knows he won’t win. (If he did, the Supporting Actor nominee for “The Judge” would be the oldest actor ever to win an Oscar, but J.K. Simmons is the category favorite for his turn in “Whiplash.”) Posing for the group photo, “Whiplash” director Damian Chazelle seemed appropriately humbled at being asked to stand next to Oprah Winfrey (present as nominated producer of Best Picture contender “Selma”). Marion Cotillard managed to stand longer than any other woman in spiked heels. Laura Dern brought along her dad, Bruce Dern, who was nominated for an Oscar last year for his performance in “Nebraska.” Due deference was paid to Ted Sarandos (producer of nominated documentary “Virunga”), who, as the chief content officer of Netflix, seemed to hold in his hand the future careers of everyone else in the room.

    The good-behavior tour continued on Sunday with the BAFTAs, the British answer to the Academy Awards. Again, it’s not like the Oscar voters back in Los Angeles pay much attention to whom the Brits voted for — they picked “Boyhood” for Best Picture, Director, and Supporting Actress (Patricia Arquette), along with Eddie Redmayne for Best Actor, Julianne Moore for Best Actress, and J.K. Simmons for Best Supporting Actor — since almost all their choices, save perhaps “Boyhood,” were already Oscar favorites. But the Academy members in Hollywood do pay attention if something scandalous happens at the BAFTAs. Back in 2002, Russell Crowe notoriously punched out a BAFTA telecast producer who cut short his acceptance speech (which included a poetry reading). News of the incident is widely credited with costing Crowe an Oscar for “A Beautiful Mind,” with the Best Actor prize going instead to Denzel Washington for “Training Day.” (Yes, Washington could have won the award on merit alone, but his win also insured that there’d be no BAFTA-like boorish behavior from Crowe at the Oscar podium.)

    Thankfully, there weren’t any reports of Crowe-like crudeness from the BAFTAs. Still, 14 of the 15 performers nominated for both BAFTAs and Oscars made a point of making the transatlantic trek and smiling for the cameras. (Only Emma Stone, currently acting on Broadway, didn’t make it to London.) All of them were showing the Academy what troopers they can be, especially the British stars. Eddie Redmayne, Benedict Cumberbatch, Keira Knightley, Felicity Jones, and Rosamund Pike have certainly been racking up the frequent flyer miles this awards season, crossing back and forth between L.A. and London for various red-carpet events.

    The fine line the nominees have to walk, even on the red carpet, was illustrated by another New York Times article, by awards columnist Cara Buckley, who suggested a revolt is brewing among actresses tired of being treated as mannequins by awards-show reporters, citing recent refusals of nominees Julianne Moore and Reese Witherspoon to show off their nails for E!’s mani-cam. On the one hand, Buckley notes, actresses want to be taken seriously, especially at a time when they have to fight for well-rounded roles. On the other, the question “Who are you wearing” isn’t so inane when you consider the deal most actresses have to make in order to get loaned couture to wear on the red carpet: be a walking, talking billboard for the designer. The article cites the example of Lupita Nyong’o, whose elegant red-carpet appearances last year led not only to a lucrative cosmetics endorsement but to an Oscar. Sure, she could have won for “12 Years a Slave” on merit alone, but it helped that she looked and acted the part of a glamorous and gracious winner. As the makers of “Boyhood” and “Birdman” are discovering, the behind-the-scenes narrative counts, too.
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