Showing posts with label Dexter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dexter. Show all posts

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Screen Actors Guild Nominations

JoBeth Williams welcomes you! "They're heeeeeeeee--eeeere"

Giggly Rosario Dawson & Angie Harmon announced the SAG nominations at 9:00 AM EST after being introduced by JoBeth Williams.

Though this is the last major clue as to where Oscar acting nominations will go, it is not the "this is it!" twin that many like to claim.

Important Differences From SAG to Oscar: Contrary to what you often read on the internet there is not significant overlap in the voting pools between SAG and Oscar. Unless they've recently changed their rules, SAG randomly chooses a sliver of its membership each year to do the nominations. Some miniscule percentage of them might be Academy members but the numbers don't add up to a big percentage. SAG is a mammoth union, representing 200,000 film, tv and background performers and all dues paying members can vote on the winners. Oscar's acting branch is infinitely harder to join; it's a final club on steroids to use The Social Network as handy 2010 reference. There are 1,205 voting actors in the Academy who all get nominating ballots. All of the Academy's 1,000+ actors are or were SAG members (having acted in films for years) but the other 198,795 SAG members are definitely not members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.



Other key differences: SAG nominators are (statistically) fonder of child and very young adult actors than Oscar. They're also arguably more populist in their choices overall having given the big prizes to people from smash comedies like Renée Zellweger in Chicago (2002) or Johnny Depp in Pirates of the Caribbean (2003) and arguably more influenced by your place in the Hollywood food chain, choosing legends over newbies for wins in hotly contested contests like Bening beating Swank in 99/00, Day-Lewis over Brody in 02/03 or Christie beating Cotillard in 07/08.  They are also not allowed to vote their own mind when it comes to "lead" versus "supporting" issues. Oscar voters may vote for you in whichever category they personally feel is correct. SAG voters may only vote for you in the category that your studio submits you in (which explains Keisha Castle Hughes' bizarre "supporting" citation at SAG for Whale Rider).

Nominations with commentary after the jump




2010 NOMINATIONS TELEVISION

Best Female Actor (Drama Series)
  • Glenn Close (Damages)
  • Mariska Hargitay (L&O: SVU is a Comedy)
  • Julianna Marguiles (The Good Wife)
  • Elisabeth Moss (Mad Men)
  • Kyra Sedgwick (The Closer)
This lineup is really gross to me, indicating that SAG voters really really love their procedurals. I do not. Procedurals are death to actors who want to dig in deep to characterizations.
    Best Male Actor (Drama Series)
    • Steve Buscemi (Boardwalk Empire)
    • Bryan Cranston (Breaking Bad)
    • Michael C Hall (Dexter)
    • Jon Hamm (Mad Men)
    • Hugh Laurie (House)
    Applause in the room for Michael C Hall. People sure do love his death-dealing. After Six Feet Under and Dexter... what can his third morbid series role be? Doesn't death come in threes?
      Best Female Actor (Comedy Series)
      • Edie Falco (Nurse Jackie)
      • Tina Fey (30 Rock)
      • Jane Lynch (Glee)
      • Sofia Vergara (Modern Family)
      • Betty White (Hot in Cleveland)
      White continues her ubiquity. Didn't she win lifetime achievement last year? I haven't seen Cleveland otherwise this is a gorgeous lineup. I'd love to see Falco or Vergara at the podium though.

      Best Male Actor (Comedy Series)
      • Alec Baldwin (30 Rock)
      • Ty Burrell (Modern Family)
      • Steve Carell (The Office)
      • Chris Colfer (Glee)
      • O'Neill (Modern Family)
      Another terrific lineup. Well chosen.

      Best Female Actor (Miniseries/Movie)
      • Claire Danes (Temple Grandin)
      • Catherine O'Hara (Temple Grandin)
      • Julia Ormond (Temple Grandin)
      • Winona Ryder (When Love is Not Enough)
      • Susan Sarandon (You Don't Know Jack)
      It's like a Temple Grandin key party up in there. Could vote splitting make this a big comeback for Winona?
        Best Male Actor (Miniseries/Movie)
        •  John Goodman (You Don't Know Jack)
        • Al Pacino (You Don't Know Jack)
        • Dennis Quaid (That Special Relationship)
        • Edgar Ramirez (Carlos)
        • Patrick Stewart (Macbeth)
        I didn't even know John Goodman was in You Don't Know  Jack. Remember when he was married to Roseanne or when he used to always be in the Coen Bros pictures. Carlos is confusing me. I do not like it when things get prizes in both film & television. Stop blurring the lines! Big screens or small screens. Me no likely medium sized screens.
          Best Ensemble (Drama)
          • Boardwalk Empire
          • The Closer
          • Dexter
          • Teh Good Wife
          • Mad Men
          Best Ensemble (Comedy)
          • 30 Rock
          • Glee
          • Hot in Cleveland
          • Modern Family
          • The Office
          It wasn't enough to give Betty White one nomination when you can give her two. As much as I continue to love 30 Rock and admire Glee for casting actors who can actually sing... Modern Family deserves this ten-fold. Such a seamless cast, no weak spots; everyone is hilarious.

          Stunt Ensemble (Series)
          • Burn Notice
          • CSI New York
          • Dexter
          • Southland
          • True Blood
          I'm confused how five series get nominated for stunts but only three movies? Last I checked movies had lots of stunts, too.

          2010 NOMINATIONS FILM
          Mother & Son (The Fighter). Can they both take home SAG & Oscar?

          Best Female Actor (Supporting Role)
          • Amy Adams (The Fighter)
          • Helena Bonham-Carter (The King's Speech)
          • Mila Kunis (Black Swan)
          • Melissa Leo (The Fighter)
          • Hailee Steinfeld (True Grit)
          You can consider The Fighter women and HBC all locked up. As for Kunis & Steinfeld... I'd say they still have to fend off the amazing sixtysomething ladies (Jacki Weaver, Dianne Wiest, Barbara Hershey). Check out Scott Feinberg's list of awesome relevant stats. Many people are saying that Kunis is locked up after Globes & SAG nods but that's just not the case. Someone is denied nearly every year in that situation (though usually only one person).
            Best Male Actor (Supporting Role)
            •  Christian Bale (The Fighter)
            •  John Hawkes (Winter's Bone)
            • Jeremy Renner (The Town)
            • Mark Ruffalo (The Kids Are All Right)
            • Geoffrey Rush (The King's Speech
            In a very rare occurences I like all five nominees in a supporting actor category. Two of them are probably leads but what can you do. I expect Oscar will embrace Andrew Garfield (The Social Network) here so one of these men will have to go. 
              Best Female Actor (Leading Role)
              • Annette Bening (The Kids Are All Right)
              • Nicole Kidman (Rabbit Hole)
              • Jennifer Lawrence (Winter's Bone)
              • Natalie Portman (Black Swan)
              • Hilary Swank (Conviction)
              Hilary Swank's surprise appearance here is noteworthy in that it shows how (still) hotly contested the Best Actress race is. The way I see it there are 3 locks (Bening, Portman, Lawrence) due to support for both the performances and the films which house them and then there is 1 probable but vulnerable (Kidman) due to support for performance but not the film and then there are still 6 women (Williams, Rapace, Moore, Swank, Swinton, Manville) trying to nab 1 remaining spot. Theoretically, any of them might for various reasons and 1, at least, will.

              Best Male Actor (Leading Role)
              •  Jeff Bridges
              • Robert Duvall
              • Jesse Eisenberg
              • Colin Firth
              • James Franco
              You can expect to see Eisenberg, Firth & Oscar host Franco nominated for Oscar but spots #4 & 5 are confusing; two spots for three men. Duvall, Bridges and SAG-shunned Ryan Gosling have to fight it out with one of them losing.
                Best Ensemble (Cast)
                •  Black Swan
                • The Fighter
                • The Kids Are All Rigth
                • The King's Speech
                • The Social Network
                This is a huge huge get for Black Swan, which is arguably in some ways a one-woman show. The rest of the field is much closer to the type of film that one would expect to see getting ensemble attention, for better and for worse. Not that the Swan ensemble isn't terrific. It's just not the thing you'd usually see here so it shows their heat as a film. UPDATE: "When a Nomination is Still a Snub" further notes on this always bizarre category.
                Stunt Ensemble
                • Green Zone
                • Inception
                • Robin Hood
                Why only 3 nominees? Is it because CGI are not stuntmen and movies have less and less reality and more and more coding? This was Inception's only nod today but we knew it was never going to be an 'actor's film'. They'll make up for it with votes from the tech branches of the Academy.

                Your turn. Share opinions in the comments. Particularly about those crazy tight fifth spots in all four acting categories.

                Related Post: SAG injustice (the ensemble category) BFCA & Globe nominations (good comparison points. In an unholy union of the three, you basically have your Oscar list)

                  Friday, June 18, 2010

                  Yes, No, Maybe So: Conviction (née Betty Anne Waters)

                  First things first, changing your movie title from something very specific like Betty Anne Waters to something as generic as Conviction is not a good sign. Searching for Conviction on IMDb will get you several films, theatrical/dvd/made-for-TV. Searching for Betty Anne Waters gets you just one. Are they scared of people thinking "ewww, it's a girl's movie!" or maybe "Is this a sequel to Amelia? That sucked" or what?

                  But here's the trailer.



                  So here's where we break it down.

                  Yes, no, or maybe so?

                  The supporting cast is jam-packed with good actors: Melissa Leo - sure okay; Sam Rockwell - yes, please; Minnie Driver -why the hell not?!; Juliette Lewis -Yes, please x 10. And wherever I can get her which isn't on silver screens that much. I had all but forgotten that she had a role in this film. I never knew, even before the forgetting, that it would a real role, and not some throwaway part. But she's even name-checked in the trailer and with her Academy Award Nominee status no less. Yay and also Wow because that doesn't happen much. With all of these good actors on board, maybe they'll all escape the typical "I'm poor! Listen to my weird townie/rural accent!" actor's trap. An accent is not a character.

                  You're
                  smart.
                  You'll
                  know
                  that I
                  don't have
                  to explain
                  myself here.
                  Kapeesh?

                  I don't think there's enough films made about brothers & sisters and their unique bonds. I really don't. Usually if you see a film about siblings it's almost always brothers with a random sister act hitting us now and then. I'm always curious to see if actors can pull off a familial bond. Most of the time this game of pretend is no more than adequate but when something really clicks between two actors in terms of family chemistry, it can be truly potent stuff. I'm hoping Swank and Sam pull it off since the whole film will kind of depend on it.

                  I suppose I'm a "maybe so" based solely on Juliette Lewis and Oscar interest. But I'll be an immediate "no" with mediocre reviews. I really can't be bothered with courtroom dramas unless the reviews are strong. I personally think it's the genre that's most "dead" onscreen. As in, why is someone making this movie? They'd better have a damn good reason and explain it with some cinematic zing! But every once in awhile there's a great one (see Erin Brockovich)

                  This is neither here nor there but the film is directed by Tony Goldwyn, grandson of legendary studio mogul Samuel Goldwyn. You might not know Tony's name but you surely know his face. He's that vaguely eyebrow-less guy who Hollywood always wants you to loathe and also loathe yourself for loving because he's super attractive.


                  Hey, it's a niche. An actor's gotta work.

                  But is it really fair to hate on him for killing his best friend to get into Demi Moore's pants? Because who wouldn't have offed their buddy for Demi circa 1990? I mean, cut a guy some slack. It's Demi.

                  Goldwyn A.D./B.D
                  before and after psychoanalyzing one Dexter Morgan

                  I've been watching Dexter lately on Netflix Instant Watch (that obsession has cooled a bit). Goldwin directs multiple episodes and in one he even directs himself as a psychiatrist who kills off powerful women after reducing them to hot messes with a lethal combo of bad therapy and drugs. [Why are psychiatrist always evil in movies? Discuss.] Naturally, Dexter cuts him up into little itty bits.

                  Goldwyn previously directed the critically well received A Walk in the Moon (1999) but, alas, Conviction (née Betty Anne Waters) doesn't star Diane Lane and Viggo Mortensen.

                  Are you a yes, no or maybe so?
                  *
                  Hilary Swank