Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Erin's Oscar Reviews 2010

The Oscar Award nominations were announced on January 25, 2011, and so begins my annual quest to see as many as possible before Oscar Night. Fifty-six (56) films were nominated in 24 categories. On the day of the announcement, I had already seen 12 (23%). By the time the Oscar show aired, I had seen 34 (61%).

The hardest films to see are always the shorts. There are fifteen: five short films, five short animated films and five short documentaries. Fortunately, the Hollywood Theater in Portland, Oregon shows the five short films and the five short animated films every year for the price of two tickets. This year I took my 8-year-old daughter with me. She had a great time. I don't know why they don’t' show the documentary shorts.

  • 127 Hours: nominated for best picture, best actor, film editing, best score, best song ("If I Rise") and screenplay. This is the true story of how one plucky young man goes hiking in the mountains alone and has to cut off his arm in order to get back home again.
  • Alice in Wonderland: nominated for art direction, costume design and visual effects. It totally deserves all these nominations. It is a very beautiful film. Anne Hathaway was probably my favorite. Johnny Depp was also wonderful, but I really liked Anne Hathaway as the white queen. Her makeup, costume and acting were such that, at times, I wasn't sure it was her. And, I loved it when Alice appeared in her suit of armor. She looked just like Joan of Arc! (03/05/2010)
  • Animal Kingdom: nominated for best supporting actress (Jacki Weaver). This is an Australian film about a crime family. It starts with a teenage boy calling his grandmother letting her know that his mother just overdosed and died. He moves in with her and his uncles and tries not to get involved in their crimes, but he really can't escape. Weaver's character reminds me of Nurse Cratchet.
  • Another Year: nominated for best original screenplay. This is a very dull story about a happily married couple and their unhappy friends. The performances were first rate, but honestly, I just didn't get it. (11/22/11).
  • Barney's Version: nominated for best makeup. The nomination probably refers to the title character aging through the film. It the story of Barney and how he finds and looses love, but the audience is distracted trying to figure out if Barney really did kill his best friend or not. Although partly triumphant, it is ultimately a sad story, but an excellent film.
  • Biutiful: nominated for best actor (Javier Bardem) and best foreign language film (Mexico)
  • Black Swan: nominated for best picture, best actress, cinematography, director and film editing. I wasn't sure at first if I liked this film. The nail breaking scenes are really hard to watch, and the dancing is not filmed very well, but the story of this young ballerina's psychotic break is fascinating. The special effect when Natalie Portman's arms turn into wings was stunning! Mila Kunia and Winona Ryder were just as wonderful as Portman (01/23/11).
  • Blue Valentine: nominated for best actress (Michelle Williams). This is the story of a marriage collapsing. The couple attempts to rekindle their relationship with a romantic weekend, but it all falls apart. The disastrous weekend is intercut with flashbacks of the good times that the couple shared earlier in their relationship. Michelle Williams is brilliant, but the story is too sad to watch.
  • Confession, The: nominated for best live short film. A boy is preparing to make his first confession. Something very bad happens. The boy seeks out his priest early, but he can't bring himself to say what has happened. The priest recognizes his anguish, and grants him absolution, assuming he knows the kind of thing he needs to confess. It was sad because the boy really needed to confess. The priest guessed that he needed absolution, but the boy seemed just as anguished. Confession is good for the soul. Absolution lures us to the confessional, but I might be reading too much into this. (02/20/11)
  • Country Strong: nominated for best song ("Coming Home"). Gwyneth Paltrow is amazing in the role of a mega star musician. Most of these films are about musicians drinking themselves into oblivion, but this one is a little different. Her husband removes her from treatment early, so that she can do a tour. Throughout the film it obvious she is not yet well, but everyone needs her to make their payday, so she goes on until she can't go on anymore.
  • Crush, The: nominated for best live short film. This is a lovely, light, humorous film about a second grader in love with his teacher. When he discovers that she is engaged to someone who is not good fr her, he challenges him to duel. When he shows up with a real gun, it gets very tense, but it all ends well. If you can find this film, I think you will enjoy it. (02/20/11)
  • Day & Night: nominated for best animated short. This film plays as a lead into Toy Story 3. It features two characters: Day and Night. When they first meet, they don't like each other, and they quarrel, but as they spend a little time together, they come to appreciate what each has to offer. In the end, they get to switch places (06/18/10)
  • Dogtooth: nominated for best foreign language film (Greece) . This film is very beautifully shot, but the story is so strange that I do not recommend it. It's about a couple with three adult children who have never been allowed to leave the house. They live in a large house with a large yard and a high fence. They have been taught that it is dangerous outside, and they will not be prepared to leave until they loose a dogtooth. There is no explanation for why the children have been raised this way. It's just weird for weirdness sake (01/31/11).
  • Exit through the Gift Shop: nominated for best documentary feature. Thierry Guetta, a French immigrant in Los Angeles, is obsessed with film. He films everything. When he becomes interested in graffiti artists, he films them constantly, but he doesn't actually know how to make a film, so he leaves his footage with Bansky, the preeminent graffiti artist, and he makes some art himself. He's not very good, but he is very successful. (01/31/11).
  • Fighter, The: nominated for best picture, supporting actor (Bale), supporting actress (Adams & Leo), directing, film editing and writing. I didn't expect to like this film, and I didn't. First of all, it was boxing. I don't like boxing films. They always show the fighters all beat to hell. This film was not exception to that standard. The characters in this film were such deeply flawed individuals that it was just hard to watch, sad. The one bright spot was that Mark Wahlberg (who isn't nominated) is really very easy on the eyes, and his character is really quite likable, too. (12/17/10)
  • Gasland: nominated for best documentary feature. Exploring the wisdom of replacing coal with natural gas. Apparently drilling for natural gas poisons the water table. Hundreds of thousands of wells have been drilled through the rural west. There are plans to drill in Pennsylvania and New York where millions of people receive their water from a single enormous unfiltered aquifer. I had to write my senator after viewing this film. (02/09/11)
  • God of Love: nominated for best live short film. This is a very nice little film. A talented dart thrower prays to God for the love of a woman. Instead, God sends him a box full of magic darts. He tries to get the girl to fall in love with him, but it turns out he's a lot better at matching up other people. (02/20/11)
  • Gruffalo, The: nominated for best animated short film. This is a lovely little film that maintains the language of the children's book is based on, narrated by a mother squirrel voiced by Helena Bonham Carter - perfectly charming - a bit slow of pace. (02/20/11)
  • Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1: nominated for art direction and visual effects, and deservedly so. This movie looks great! It's probably the best installment of the franchise. I think it struck just right balance between details and pace, and I think Emma Watson steals the screen from her costars. (11/19/10)
  • Hereafter: nominated for visual effects. A little boy looses his twin brother, a woman has a near-death experience, and a man with the ability to speak with the dead struggles with his gift. As they each struggle with loss, their three stories converge. A lovely but forgettable film.
  • How to Train Your Dragon: nominated for best animated feature and best score. This was truly delightful film. I have small children, so I see a lot of animated films every year. This was truly a bright spot. It's well drawn, but nothing fancy. The dialogue is very witty. My kids quote it constantly. And, it includes some really poignant life-lessons. The lead character is a young Viking who is very clever, but not very strong, so he doesn't really fit in with his friends. The people are deeply prejudiced against dragons based on a tragic misunderstanding. (03/26/2010)
  • I Am Love: nominated for costume design. This is an Italian film starring Tilda Swinton. The costumes are a beautiful collection of Italian fashion, but the story is completely confusing. A woman with adult children falls in love (inexplicably) with her son's friend. When her son finds out, he freaks out, hits his head and dies, but she still runs away with her lover, abandoning the rest of the family in their grief. I don't get it. (01/25/11)
  • Illusionist, The: nominated for best animated feature. A man who has always made his living with his magic show finds his audience shrinking when he meets a girl who believes his illusions are true magic. Her faith in him is invigorating, and he allows her to follow him to his next city where he continues to charm her until she finds boyfriend who makes all her dreams come true.
  • In a Better World: nominated for best foreign language film (Denmark).
  • Incendies: nominated for best foreign language film (Canada).
  • Inception: nominated for best picture, art direction, cinematography, music, sound editing, sound mixing, visual effects and writing. This was a great film. It's about a spy who travels inside people subconscious while they are dreaming to steal corporate secrets, and just like the Matrix, I left the theater wondering if I was awake or asleep. (07/16/10)
  • Inside Job: nominated for best documentary feature. This is a GREAT film about the 2008 financial crisis. It wasn't an accident. Smart people knew it was going to happen, and they were silenced, so that other people could make a LOT of money, and NO ONE went to jail.
  • Iron Man 2: nominated for visual effects. This film is a first-rate action film and a first-rate comic book film. It looks great. The story is solid. Robert Downey, Jr. is brilliant. I was disappointed that they had to recast the character of War Machine, and I thought that the villain was far less interesting than the heroes. Scarlette Johansen was delightful surprise. Her fight scene was totally cool. (09/28/10).
  • Kids Are All Right, The: nominated for best picture, actress (Bening), supporting actor (Ruffalo) and writing. I was very disappointed with this film. It was billed as a film about two children raised by two moms on a quest to find their biological father, but it turned out to be about two middle-aged lesbians who had lost the spark in their marriage. It's nice to have something lighter in the best picture category, but the characters and relationships were not very convincing or interesting. (2/2/10)
  • Killing in the Name: nominated for best documentary short.
  • King's Speech, The: nominated for best picture, actor (Firth), supporting actor (Rush), supporting actress (Carter), art direction , cinematography, costume design, directing, film editing, music, sound mixing and editing. This is a beautiful story, beautifully told, well deserving all of its accolades, full of priceless moments. At the end of the story, I was struck by the fact that this man, King George VI, found himself in such terrifying circumstances: at war with fascist Germany, but the thing that frightened him most was the rather ordinary fear of public speaking. (2/5/10)
  • Let's Pollute: nominated for best animated short film. This is probably the shortest of the short films. It's only 6 minutes long. Of course it is trying to discourage people from polluting by pretending to encourage it. My 8-year-old daughter was thoroughly confused, but the other adults in the audience with me laughed in all the right places. (02/20/11)
  • Lost Thing, The: nominated for best animated short film. This was really charming - lots of imagination in this film. A boy finds a thing on the beach. It's alive but cannot speak. Its about 10 feet tall and 5 feet wide and very friendly. It looks something like a teapot crossed with an crab. Anyway, over the course of the film, he tries to find the thing a home. (02/20/11)
  • Madagascar, a Journey Diary: nominated for best animated short film. I did not like this film. It started out interestingly enough: lots of beautiful pictures in lots of different animation styles, but it never stopped switching styles, so when it finally tried to tell a story, I kept getting distracted, but it didn't try very hard. This film comes off as a student showing off how many different ways he knows how to draw a film. (02/20/11)
  • Na Wewe: nominated for best live short film. This film was terrifying - lots of tension and drama, but ultimately much ado about nothing. It is set in Rwanda. A military patrol stops a van full of people and tries to sort out the Hutu from the Tutsi. (The Tutsi will be executed). The comedy or absurdity of the situation is finally revealed as each person tries to explain their complicated family background. (02/20/11)
  • Outside the Law: nominated for best foreign language film (Algeria).
  • Poster Girl: nominated for best documentary short.
  • Rabbit Hole: nominated for best actress (Nicole Kidman). This is a heart breaking story about a couple who is coping with the death of their young son. It is a heart breaking story, but it is ultimately triumphant. Highly recommended.
  • Restrepo: nominated for best documentary feature. This film is about an outpost in Afghanistan. As a documentary, it doesn't really tell a story, but as a snap shop of the war in Afghanistan it presents our soldiers as completely incompetent.
  • Salt: nominated for best sound mixing. This is Angelina Jolie as an action hero and everything that you would expect from that, no disappointments. The story is that Jolie's character, Salt, works for the CIA, and she might be a sleeper spy for Russia. Half the fun of the film is trying to answer that question: who is Salt? And there are several twists to keep that interesting. The film excels with disguises, so it’s a shame is wasn't nominated for makeup, but the action films always seem to show up in the sound categories. (01/30/11)
  • Social Network, The: nominated for best picture, actor (Eisenberg), cinematography, directing, film editing, music, sound mixing and writing. This is the story of how Mark Zuckerberg invented facebook. It's mostly a character study. It's really, really good - a lot of fun to watch. Highly recommended. Don't miss this one. In the story there is a conflict between two characters about putting advertising on the site. Ultimately they don't put advertising on the site, but they never explain how they make billions of dollars with this website (02/12/11).
  • Strangers No More: nominated for best documentary short.
  • Sun Come Up: nominated for best documentary short.
  • Tangled: nominated for best song ("I See the Light"). This is a completely delightful film. I can't imagine why it was denied a nomination for best animated feature (along with Despicable Me). My favorite thing about this film is that animal companions do not steal the scenes from the human characters, and the prince doesn't upstage the princess. She got to be the hero of her own story, and that is important to me. I credit the addition of John Lasseter to the production teams at Disney Studios to the superior quality of work coming from that studio in recent years (11/24/10).
  • Tempest, The: nominated for costume design.
  • Town, The: nominated for best actor in a supporting role (Jeremy Renner). This film is about a bank robber who falls in love with his hostage. Renner turns in a first class performance, and its fun to see films set in Boston. The story and the characters are interesting but not captivating. This is a great film to see, but it is not a must-see film. (02/15/11)
  • Toy Story 3: nominated for best picture, best animated feature, best song ("We Belong Together"), sound editing and writing. This was a very sentimental film. The toys' boy, Andy, is going to college, and they worry about being thrown away, put into storage, or donated. The great adventure surrounds their accidental donation to a day care facility and subsequent quest to return to Andy's house. It's the perfect conclusion to the greatest animated trilogy in film (06/18/2010).
  • Tron Legacy: nominated for sound editing. This film was visually spectacular, but I did not find the story, characters or even the world particularly compelling or interesting. I did love the way they were able to cast a young (12/17/2010).
  • True Grit: nominated for best picture, actor (Bridges), supporting actress (Steinfeld), art direction, cinematography, costume design, directing, sound editing, sound mixing and writing. I liked this film very much. This is one of those rare gems in which a very young protagonist is very well written. Steinfeld plays a young girl who hires a Marshal to hunt down her father's killer in the Wild West. She delivers a spectacular performance, at least as good as Anna Paquin in The Piano (1993). I was also impressed with the way in which the west was portrayed as a very rough, no-nonsense place (01/23/11).
  • Unstoppable: nominated for sound editing. This is a cool action adventure story about a runaway train. Loosely based on a true story.
  • Warriors of Qiugang: nominated for best documentary short.
  • Waste Land: nominated for best documentary feature. This is a lovely story about turning garbage into art. The artist went to Rio de Janeiro and hired trash pickers to help him gather the materials he needed. He did portraits of them and sold them for LOTS of money which he gave them. It was interesting that some pickers were able to use the money to change their lives forever but others were not. Highly recommended.
  • Way Back: nominated for best makeup.
  • Winter's Bone: nominated for best picture, best supporting actor (Hawkes), best actress (Lawrence) and writing. It was really good. The trailer had filled me with dread, but the fate of our heroine was not nearly as bad as I had imagined. This film is about a 17-year-old girl taking care of her 12-year-old brother and 6-year-old sister when she finds out that her father put up the house for his bond, and if he doesn't show for court, they will be evicted. She sets off looking for him, and she finds a lot of trouble, but eventually, she finds the truth, and the solution to her problem. (2/2/10)
  • Wish 143: best live short film. This is a cute little film about a boy with cancer who makes a wish. It's a British film, so he's not talking to the Make-A-Wish Foundation, but a similar organization. What he really wants is to loose his virginity. What follows is hilarious and heart breaking all at the same time. (02/20/11)
  • Wolfman: nominated for best makeup. This film really does have great makeup, and a great cast, and great sets, but the story is time-worn, and I did not find the characters compelling. I could not bring myself to care one way or the other about their fate. (02/15/11)

Sunday, February 27, 2011

The 83rd Annual Academy Awards

The 83rd Annual Academy Awards
February 27, 2011
honoring the best in film during the year 2010

5:30 PM The show starts with clips form the ten films nominated for Best Picture. Then the hosts James Franco and Anne Hathaway inserted themselves into clips. Very much like Billy Crystal did when he hosted. Their opening "monologue" was not bad. They both drew attention to their mothers. Mothers has been chosen as a theme for the evening.

5:40 BEST ART DIRECTION presented by Tom Hanks, and the Oscar goes to ALICE IN WONDERLAND. The recipient had prepared a tiny hat for the Oscar Award that looked just like the hat worn by Johnny Depp as the Mad Hatter.

5:45 BEST CINEMAGRAPHY presented by Tom Hanks, and the Oscar goes to Wally Pfister for INCEPTION.

5:50 BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS presented by Kurt Douglas a hilarious presentation which he dragged out as long as he could. The Oscar goes to MELISSA LEO for The Fighter. She was quite speechless at first, but she got going alright after she cursed a little, just the king in the The King's Speech.

6:00 BEST ANIMATED SHORT presented by Kunis and Justin Timberlake. Justin used an "app" to change the backdrop on stage. And the Oscar goes to THE LOST THING.

6:05 BEST ANIMATED FEATURE presented by Kunis and Justing Timberlake, and the Oscar goes to TOY STORY 3.

6:10 BEST ADAPTADED SCREENPLAY presented by Javiar Bardem, and the Oscar goes to Aaron Sorkin for THE SOCIAL NETWORK. His speech went on a little bit long. The music was playing louder and louder and louder.

6:15 BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY presented by Javiar Bardem, and the Oscar goes to David Seidler for THE KING'S SPEECH. "My father always said to me I would be a late bloomer. I believe I am the oldest person to ever win this award. I hope that record is broken quickly and often… I would like to thank her Majesty the Queen for not putting me in the tower for using the Melissa Leo F word... I would like to accept this on behalf of all the stutters in the world… We have a voice…"

6:20 Anne Hathaway sings a version "On My Own" in which she complains about Hugh Jackman's refusal to sing a duet with her. She was wearing a tuxedo, so James Franco came out in a dress. I hate it when drag is used as a joke like that.

6:25 BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM presented by Helen Mirren and Russell Brand. Helen speaks in French, and Brand translates hilariously, comparing Helen's performance as Queen Elizabeth II to Colin Firth's performance as King George VI and the Oscar goes to IN A BETTER WORLD from Denmark.

6:30 BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR presented by Reese Witherspoon. Reese's presentation was very ordinary, the emphasis was on the clips of the performances, and the Oscar goes to Christian Bale in the FIGHTER. Christian gives a very nice speech that ends in tears when he thanks his wife.

6:40 Somebody from the Academy and Somebody from ABC Network announced that they have renewed their contract and ABC will continue to broadcast the Oscars through 2020.

6:40 BEST ORIGINAL SCORE presented by Hugh Jackman and Nicole Kidman. Their introduction included some bits from some really great scores such as Star Wars, E.T. and West Side Story. Followed by clips from the nominees, and the Oscar goes to Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross for THE SOCIAL NETWORK

6:45 BEST SOUND MIXING presented by Matthew McConaughey and Scarlett Johansson and the Oscar goes to Lora Hirschberg, Gary A. Rizzo and Ed Novick for INCEPTION.

6:50 BEST SOUND EDITING presented by Matthew McConaughey and Scarlett Johansson, and the Oscar goes to Richard King for INCEPTION.

Marissa Tomei reviews the Academy's Scientific and Technical Awards.

6:55 BEST MAKEUP presented by Cate Blanchet, and the Oscar goes to WOLFMAN.

7:00 BEST COSTUME DESIGN presented by Cate Blanchet, and the Oscar goes to Colleen Atwood ALICE IN WONDERLAND. She also won for Chicago and Memoirs of a Geisha. She is the first winner tonight who actually had a written speech prepared. Unfortunately it was not very good, nor very well delivered.

7:05 President Obama announces that his favorite movie song is "As Time Goes By" from Casablanca. Kevin Spacey announces the first performance of a song nominated for Best Song: "We Belong Together" from TOY STORY 3 performed by Randy Newman. I've been looking forward to this portion of the show. I am almost always disappointed. This year was no exception. The piano was too loud, couldn't here the vocals. Why can't the Academy get this right. They mess up the Best Song performances EVERY year.

Mandy Moore and Zachary Levi sing "I See the Light" from TANGLED. This performance was much better, but sedate. It would be nice if this portion of the show looked and felt more like the Grammys.

7:10 BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT presented by Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhall, and the Oscar goes to Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon for STRANGERS NO MORE.

7:15 BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM presented by Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhall, and the Oscar goes to Luke Matheny for GOD OF LOVE. The recipient who is presumably the director was also the star of the film. He also pulled out a scrap of paper and started thanking people including his mother, father and love.

James Franco introduced a series of clips altered to make the following films appear to have been musicals: Harry Potter and he Deathly Hollows, Toy Story 3, Social Network and Twilight: Eclipse. It was pretty funny.

7:20 BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE presented by Opra Winfery. Winfery describes a documentary as the opposite of an escape which is what most films are, and the Oscar goes to Charles Fergunson and Audrey Marrs for INSIDE JOB. Fergunson began by stating that no financial executive has yet been sent to jail.

7:25 Billy Crystal received a standing ovation. He introduces a clip from the very first televised Oscar show hosted by Bob Hope.

7:30 BEST VISUAL EFFECTS presented by Robert Downy Jr and Jude Law. Their presentation banter was really funny, and the Oscar goes to Paul Franklin, Chris Corbould, Andrew Lockley and Peter Bebb for INCEPTION.

7:35 BEST FILM EDITING presented by Rober Downy Jr. and Jude Law, and the Oscar goes to Angus Wall and Kirk Baxter for THE SOCIAL NETWORK.

7:40 Jennifer Hudson announces the performance of "If I Rise " from 127 Hours by A. R. Rahman and Florence Welch. This is a really beautiful song.

Jennifer Hudson announces the performance of "Coming Home" from Country Strong by Gwyneth Paltrow. She does a really nice job, but it is staged in such a dull way. She stands in the middle of a dark stage in a beautiful dress with a microphone and a spotlight.

7:45 BEST ORIGINAL SONG presented by Jennifer Hudson, and the Oscar goes to Randy Newman for "We Belong Together" from TOY STORY 3. Newman notes that he has been nominated 20 times and he has only won twice. He also notes that he must thank several people even though it doesn't make good television. He also complains that there were only four nominees when every other category has five nominees.

7:50 Celine Dion sang "Smile Though Your Heart is Breaking" while they show clips of people who have passed on during the past year. I didn't recognize many names or faces except Leslie Nielson, Robert Culp, Bob Boyle, Lynn Redgrave, Dennis Hopper, Blake Edwards and Lena Horne.

7:55 Halle Barry spoke a special tribute to Lena Horne, the first person of color to sign a performance contract with a major motion picture studio. Halle Barry is the first woman of color to win the Oscar for Best Actress. Lena Horne was the first woman of color to be nominated for the Oscar for Best Actress.

8:00 BEST DIRECTOR presented by Hilary Swank and Kathryn Bigelow (the first woman to win the Oscar for Best Director), and the Oscar goes to Tom Hooper for THE KING'S SPEECH. He thanked his mother for suggesting The King's Speech as a suitable film project. The moral of the story: listen to your mother.

8:05 Govenor's Awards for Lifetime Achievement presented earlier, introduced by Annette Bening: (1) Jean-Luc Godard, director, received an Honorary Award for passion. For confrontation. For a new kind of cinema; (2) Francis Ford Coppola, producer-director, received the Irving G. Thalberg Award for a consistently high quality of motion picture production; (3) Eli Wallach, actor received an Honorary Award for a lifetime’s worth of indelible screen characters; (4) Kevin Brownlow, historian and preservationist, received an Honorary Award for the wise and devoted chronicling of the cinematic parade.

8:10 BEST ACTRESS presented by Jeff Bridges. As he announced the name of each nominee, he said something nice about each nominee. This is better than last year when they chose five different people to say nice things about each nominee, but I still think it is over kill. We've seen all this sort of thing for actors. Do this for directors or producers or writers. And the Oscar goes to Natalie Portman for BLACK SWAN.

8:20 BEST ACTOR presented by Sandra Bullock. She also said nice things about each nominee as she announced their names, and the Oscar goes to Colin Firth for THE KING'S SPEECH.

8:30 BEST PICTURE presented by Steven Spielberg. A very clever set of clips with the audio from the king's speech. And the Oscar goes to THE KING'S SPEECH!

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Erin's Oscar Picks 2010

Best Actor: Colin Firth (The King's Speech)
Best Supporting Actor: Geoffrey Rush (The King's Speech)
Best Actress: Natalie Portman (Black Swan)
Best Supporting Actress: Helena Bonham Carter (The King's Speech)
Best Animated Feature: Toy Story 3
Best Art Direction: Alice in wonderland
Best Cinematography: Inception
Best costume Design: Alice in wonderland
Best Directing: The King's Speech
Best Documentary Feature: Inside Job
Best Documentary Short: The Warriors of Quigang
Best Film Editing The King's Speech
Best Foreign Language Film: Biutiful
Best Makeup: Barney's Version
Best Original Score: 127 Hours
Best Original Song; We Belong Together from Toy Story 3
Best Animated Short Film: The Lost tHing
Best Live Action Short Film: the Crush
Best Sound Editing: Inception
Best Sound Mixing: Inception
Best Visual Effects: iNception
Best Adapted Screenplay: The Social Network
Best Original Screenplay: The King's Speech
Best Picture : The King's Speech