takyris said:
Well, as somebody who liked both The Two Towers and Chicago, I was fine with the 2002 verdict. As someone who never saw A Beautiful Mind, I'm not in a position to judge -- I'm not a huge fan of Russell Crowe, and the movie seemed to be a Shine-like tormented brilliance movie. I'm not a huge fan of those movies, but if it was a really really good one, then it deserved to win. I loved Shakespeare in Love and liked Saving Private Ryan, and would have been fine with either of them winning. I wasn't a huge fan of Fargo, but I did like the nested storytelling of the English Patient.
A Beautiful Mind = Shine with numbers. I wasn't very impressed by it at all. I didn't like Shakespere in Love either, but I knew right away that it'd be loved by critics because it was a costume drama starring Gwyneth Paltrow. Critics love their costume dramas.
On an aside, I can honestly say that you're probably only the third or fourth person I've talked to online who liked
The English Patient. Most people I've talked to found it insufferably slow and boring. I guess it's definately not a film designed for mass appeal.
My point is that, while I can understand your personal dissatisfaction with movies you liked not winning, I'm not sure I see that as a license to toss out the Oscars. Oh, wait... I'm in an SF forum... I'm supposed to be complaining that Spider-Man isn't up for Best Picture.
My lack of faith in the Academy is more than just dismay over movies losing that I feel should have won. It's mostly because I believe that the recipients of the various awards are decided more upon insider politics (you know, like who is the current darling among the Hollywood community, that kind of stuff) than whether or not they are the best in their respective fields.
I know that Spider-Man will never be nominated for Best Picture; the Academy is notorious for ignoring sci-fi and fantasy films unless they completely revolutionize their respective genres, like
Star Wars and
The Lord of the Rings.
I tend to look at it this way: 25 years from now, movies like
Chicago and
A Beautiful Mind will be all but forgotten, but you can bet that
The Fellowship and the Ring and
The Two Towers will still have millions of fans worldwide. It's not like you ever hear about
Chariots of Fire and
Annie Hall anymore, but everybody in the world knows about
Raiders of the Lost Ark and
Star Wars.
In short, those are the reasons why I place the Oscars on the same levels as the Teen Choice Awards.
To the other posters: Sorry for hijacking the thread with my Oscar rant.
I certainly don't want to put myself in a position of defending Halle Berry, because a) I was unimpressed with her in the first X-Men movie as well and b) I'm not drooling over her like everybody else. But come on. Look at the way she acted on late night shows -- she obviously didn't take her role as Storm seriously and thought it was a bit stupid. It's likely that her agent pushed her into it in order to get her more recognition in the young adult market. One can dislike her in a particular role without completely discrediting her acting ability. Well,
I can -- but according to your definitions, I'm an art-house snob. And if an actress who was respected in other performances was lousy in a particular movie, I'd chalk that up to bad casting.
In other words... I still think Jeremy Irons is a great actor despite having seen him in both Dungeons & Dragons AND The Time Machine.
Yeah, I know the feeling. I'm a big fan of Arnold Shwarznegger and consider him one of the greatest action stars of all time, despite having seen him in
Batman & Robin and
Red Sonja.
