It’s that time of year again. The Oscar nominations have been announced and as always, there were some surprises in the nine Best Picture nominees. So let’s take a look at the nominations. Hugo led with 11 nominations and The Artist came in with 10. Here’s a deeper look into the Best Picture Category.

The Artist

It may be 2012, but this homage to the era of silent movies by director Michel Hazanavicius, starring Jean Dujardin and Bérénice Bejo was a breath of fresh air in a climate of extravagant productions.

With 10 nominations, this black and white movie has already made its mark this year. It takes place in the late 1920s where Jean Dujardin plays George Valentin, a handsome silent movie star, who helps a talented young woman Peppy Miller, played by Bérénice Bejo, rise to success only to see his own career fade as she rises.

It’s a touching ode to the pitfalls of love, fame and tragedy intertwined beautifully with the movie industry’s paradigm shift from silent movies to the “talkies” as a backdrop.

The Descendants

Easily one of George Clooney’s best performances, this comedic drama by Alexander Payne, of Sideways fame, is set in Hawaii. It’s a movie that incorporates humour and tragedy with equal dexterity. George Clooney plays Matt King, a husband and father of two girls, who tries to make sense of his life after his wife suffers a boating accident and goes into a coma.

The film does a great job at showing that life isn’t black and white, it’s a spectrum and what Payne has done best, is given all the characters a sense of realism that is relatable.

Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

This was one of the surprises of the lot. A movie panned by critics and reviews for the most part — Rotten Tomatoes is currently rating it at 48 per cent. Director Stephen Daldry’s fourth film revolves around the performance of a 13-year-old Thomas Horn, with no previous acting experience, whose father played by Tom Hanks dies in the World Trade Centre attacks.

Horn discovers a key hidden in a vase in an envelope labelled “Black,” and embarks on a journey to find out what the key leads to and perhaps receive one last message from his dad.

The Help

Based on a novel of the same name written by Kathryn Stocket, the film takes place during the Civil Rights Era. Emma Stone plays Eugenia “Skeeter” Phelan, an aspiring journalist, who decides to write about the daily trials and tribulations of two black women working for white families in the suburban south of America.

The best part of The Help is that it refrains from caricaturing anything. Every character on screen is relatable and three-dimensional without over-doing anything. It’s a strong movie that has its weaknesses but is held together with a kind of saucy humour balanced by great storytelling.

Hugo

Probably the leader of the pack for taking the Oscar home, Martin Scorsese’s Hugo is a sublimely made love letter to the magic of cinema. The opening sequence of Hugo is probably the best use of 3D technology since James Cameron’s Avatar.

Hugo played by Asa Butterfield, had an uncle who was in charge of the clocks at a Parisian train station. His father’s dream was to complete an automated man he found in a museum, but he dies before completing it. The boy grows up hiding himself in the maze of ladders, catwalks, passages and gears of the clockworks themselves, but then he encounters a cranky toy shop owner named Georges Méliès played by Ben Kingsley. In essence, the story becomes the story of filmmaking itself, and no one other than Scorsese could have made it.

Midnight in Paris

One of my favourite movies of 2011, Midnight in Paris is vintage Woody Allen. This charming comedy is about a couple on vacation in Paris. Gil played by Owen Wilson and Inez played by Rachel McAdams are officially in love, but Gil’s real love is Paris itself.


Comments are closed.

Comments (5)

Arslan
January 27, 2012 11:17 am
i really want descendants to win but looks like warhorse or artist can be tough competitors--- as long George colony get the Oscar as well as Michelle it will be awesome.
Mohammad A Dar
January 26, 2012 7:20 am
What Pakistan has to do with Oscar, one incident to give whole nation of Pakistan a bad name, incidents of this sort happen in America and Europe every day and no one makes a move about them.
Syed Rizvi
January 26, 2012 3:42 am
Woody Allen has always been my favorite movie man. I saw this film three times still didn't have enough of it. Now my neighbor gave me a DVD of this film as a Christmas present. Now I can watch this as much as I want to.
Anirudh
January 26, 2012 12:30 am
I can't believe that 'Drive' hasn't made it to this list. Ryan Gosling speaks so few words, and conveys so much. Bernie Rose makes for a terrific villain, and Carey Mulligan is sensitive without being timid.
pakistani
January 25, 2012 8:41 pm
i predict The Descendants, will win