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Showing posts with label Best Picture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Best Picture. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Congratulations Black Panther on the 7 Oscar nominations including historic best picture nomination - AND 3 WINS!



Congratulations Black Panther on the 7 Oscar nominations including historic best picture nomination

WAKANDA FOREVER!

UPDATE: Black Panther won the Oscars for ;

  1. Best Costume Designer (Ruth E Carter)
  2. Best Production Design 1) Production Design (Hannah Beachler) 2) Set Decoration (Jay Hart)
  3. Best Original Score (Ludwig Goransson) 



'Black Panther' by the numbers:
Budget: $200M
Domestic gross: $700M
WW gross: $1.35B
Oscar Nominations: 7
Historic 1st best picture Oscar nomination for a superhero movie

Congrats to Black Panther on its Academy Awards Nominations
• Best Original Song – "All The Stars"
• Best Original Score
• Best Sound Editing
• Best Sound Mixing
• Best Production Design
• Best Costume Design • Best picture

Aside from breaking records, Black Panther also tackled issues of morality, family and community politics, spirituality, classism, sins of the father, on top of showcasing culturally integrated costume designs and having tremendous influence on entire communities of people
Black Panther leads best picture nominees to near-record box office grosses

Black Panther makes history as the first superhero film to get a Best Picture

Hannah Beachler just became the first African American to ever be Oscar-nominated for Best Production Design. In addition to working on BLACK PANTHER (where she was Marvel’s first female production designer), she also did MOONLIGHT and BeyoncĂ©’s “Lemonade.”

Black Panther is far more culturally significant, has more on its mind, and is more worth discussing than any of those films. The Academy should give it Best Picture, as it was the most important mainstream film of 2018.

Black Panther has just made history by becoming the first Marvel film to be nominated for the Best Picture Oscar:

The 5 Best Music Moments From 'Black Panther'

'Black Panther' Becomes First Superhero Film To Score Best Picture Oscars Nomination
Wakanda makes history again.


Can Black Panther make Oscar history?
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/22/can-black-panther-make-oscar-history-8375191/?ito=cbshare

The Oscar nominations have arrived, and one of the pleasant surprises to come from the announcement is that of Black Panther being nominated for seven awards, including Best Picture. It’s a huge moment for Marvel, with the film being the first superhero film to be nominated for Best Picture. It’s a tough year, with the eight Best Picture nominees all coming in to February with some kind of momentum, but can Black Panther pull off the shock of the decade?
Read more:

Oscars: ‘Black Panther’ Becomes First Superhero Movie Ever Nominated for Best Picture
Tuesday morning, 10 years after Christopher Nolan’s “The Dark Knight” forced a significant paradigm shift at the Academy Awards, a superhero movie was finally nominated for best picture: Marvel’s “Black Panther.” And it represents a fairly remarkable culmination.

BLACK PANTHER NOMINATED FOR BEST PICTURE OSCAR
This year's Oscar nominees have been announced, and Black Panther has made history as the first superhero film nominated for the Best Picture award.

"Black Panther" becomes first superhero movie to get best picture Oscars nomination






Friday, March 2, 2018

Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty are returning to the Oscars, despite last year's Best Picture mix-up



Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty are returning to the Oscars, despite last year's Best Picture mix-up


After the envelopes for Best Actress and Best Picture got mixed up at the crucial moment during last year's Academy Awards, and caused one of the biggest gaffes in Oscars history, Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty were thrown into the spotlight for all the wrong reasons. 


They will, however, be returning to Hollywood's Dolby Theatre to make amends at the 2018 awards on Sunday, when they will be presenting the winner of the Best Picture category once again. 

Website TMZ reports that the Bonnie and Clyde stars were rehearsing the reveal this week, and went through their lines twice. Reports suggest the pair are folding last year's snafu into their script, with Dunaway starting: "Presenting is better the second time around," before Beatty followed up with, "The winner is 'Gone with the Wind.'"
The Academy has been less forgiving, however, of Brian Cullinan and Martha Ruiz, the PriceWaterhouseCoopers partners who have counted the votes and managed the envelopes containing the winners' names for years.

Both have been replaced ahead of this year's role, and the accountancy company has also installed a third balloting partner to sit with Oscar producers in the show's control room. Furthermore, Tim Ryan, the company's US chairman, said he would be personally involved with the Oscars this year. 


Envelopegate, one year on: who was to blame for the biggest catastrophe in Oscars history? 









Monday, February 27, 2017

OSCARS 2017: Price Waterhouse Coopers Statement and Apology about Wrong Best Picture Envelope


OSCARS 2017: Price Waterhouse Coopers Statement and Apology about Wrong Best Picture Envelope


Epic Academy Awards flub: What went wrong




The apology
PwC apologized to the casts of both films, as well as Beatty and Dunaway, for the "error."
"The presenters had mistakenly been given the wrong category envelope and when discovered, was immediately corrected," the firm said in a statement. "We are currently investigating how this could have happened, and deeply regret that this occurred.
PwC has in the past portrayed its involvement in the Oscars as a symbol of its integrity.
"PwC's role in the Oscars balloting process represents the firm's lasting legacy of utmost accuracy and confidentiality," Ruiz said in a statement issued before the 2015 ceremony.

On Sunday, Cullinan's twitter feed was filled with photos taken backstage at the event -- including best supporting actress Viola Davis and best actress Emma Stone.
Later, after PwC issued its apology, all Oscar night tweets disappeared from Cullinan's account.
"We appreciate the grace with which the nominees, the Academy, ABC, and [host] Jimmy Kimmel handled the situation," PwC said in its statement.

Cullinan, the managing partner for PwC's business in Southern California, explained the envelope logistics in an interview published on Medium on February 10.

"The producers decide what the order of the awards will be. We each have a full set. I have all 24 envelopes in my briefcase; Martha has all 24 in hers. We stand on opposite sides of the stage, right off-screen, for the entire evening, and we each hand the respective envelope to the presenter. It doesn't sound very complicated, but you have to make sure you're giving the presenter the right envelope," he said.
It's not clear why two sets of envelopes are needed, but security appears to be a major concern for PwC. The briefcases used are kept under lock and key, for example.


And the loser is ... PricewaterhouseCoopers

The global accounting firm has apologized for the embarrassing envelope mix-up that resulted in "La La Land" being wrongly announced as best picture at the Oscars.
It's still not clear exactly how PwC, which has administered the Oscars balloting process for more than 80 years, allowed the wrong red envelope to be carried on stage in a snafu that spoiled Hollywood's biggest moment of the year.
PwC says it maintains control over "all aspects" of the Academy's voting process.
The firm has sole custody of all votes, and is responsible for keeping the results confidential. Once the ballots have been tabulated, two senior accountants memorize every winner, and then prepare two briefcases with the envelopes used by presenters on the big night.

The two accountants -- Martha Ruiz and Brian Cullinan -- carry the briefcases to the ceremony via "separate, secret routes." The pair stand backstage and hand envelopes to award presenters before they walk onstage.
It was a breakdown in the final stage of this process that led presenter Faye Dunaway to announce "La La Land" as the winner of cinema's most prestigious prize, only for "Moonlight" to be confirmed as the true champion moments later.
What went wrong?

The first sign that something was amiss came when Warren Beatty took an extended pause before showing the card to his fellow presenter. Dunaway went ahead, pronouncing "La La Land" as best picture.

The cast and crew of the musical reacted in typical fashion: They bounded up to the stage and began issuing a flurry of "thank yous" to supporters and family members. A man wearing a headset and holding an envelope then appeared onstage.
It fell to "La La Land" producer Jordan Horowitz to explain that something had gone very wrong.

"I'm sorry, there's a mistake. 'Moonlight,' you guys won best picture."
"This is not a joke," he said. He flashed the real card at the crowd: "Moonlight," it read.

Beatty suggested that he had been given the wrong envelope.
"I want to tell you what happened," Beatty said before leaving the stage. "I opened the envelope and it said 'Emma Stone, La La Land.' That's why I took such a long look at Faye."





Cullinan, the managing partner for PwC's business in Southern California, explained the envelope logistics in an interview published on Medium on February 10.

What It Feels Like To Count Oscar Votes
A behind-the-scenes look at the world’s biggest awards show

Courtesy of https://medium.com/art-science/what-it-feels-like-to-count-oscar-votes-f89a38efdf1c#.s3cauuvu2

As we gear up for the Oscars on February 26th, we’re sharing an exclusive look behind-the-scenes through our Making the Oscars series.
Brian Cullinan and Martha Ruiz are partners at the professional services firm PricewaterhouseCoopers. They are also the only two people who know the list of Oscar winners before the rest of the world. In this post, they reflect on PwC’s history at the Academy Awards and why theirs is the coolest job an accountant can have.
How does one become an Oscars balloting leader?
Brian Cullinan: Both Martha and I are based in Los Angeles, but that’s not the main criteria necessarily. We both work heavily with entertainment companies. My background is in assurance and Martha works mostly with tax clients. When my predecessor retired from the firm, he asked if I’d be willing to take over his role, and of course I said yes. This will be the fourth consecutive year I have been involved, and Martha joined the team as one of 

the lead partners just a couple of years ago.
Martha Ruiz: Prior to becoming one of the Oscar ballot leaders, I had been involved as one of the team members for a number of years. So I had some history behind the overall process, and was fortunate enough to be asked to take on this role.
BC: This is the 89th Academy Awards and it’s PwC’s 83rd year doing the ballot counting. During that entire time, we’ve had two partners lead the process in order to ensure redundancy in everything we do.
In the 83 years we’ve been doing it, I’m the 13th partner to do it and Martha’s the 14th.
We have a lot of continuity. We keep the teams intact as much as we can over time.

What was your first Oscars experience like?
BC: I knew about PwC’s role in the Oscars before I even joined PwC 32 years ago. It’s surreal to walk down the red carpet carrying the briefcase with the winning envelopes in it, doing interviews with the global press and being part of this line of well-known actors, actresses, producers and directors on the red carpet.
It’s one of the coolest jobs that an accountant can have.
MR: My first year, I didn’t realize until the end of the show all that had happened that day because I was focused on making sure that I followed every single protocol. I distinctly remember, after the last envelope was handed to the presenter, it was like a flashback — “Wow that was great, that was exciting.” — but as each minute was passing during the day of the show, I was laser-focused.
How does it feel once you’ve delivered the last envelope?
MR: As soon as that last award is announced, Brian and I meet onstage and head over to get something to drink very quickly at the Governors Ball.
BC: Some people ask us if we are relieved once the last envelope is handed out and the show is concluded, suggesting that we have no further secrets to keep.
In reality, there are a number of secrets that we keep forever.
Some of those include: who got second? Or, how close was it? Those questions we never answer. It doesn’t end with the last envelope.
What does the ballot-counting process entail?
MR: The ballot-counting process is still done very manually. Although members have the option to vote online, we convert to a paper process to do the tabulation. We divide the counting amongst a number of team members in such a way that no one will have a significant percentage of the total. Brian and I will then get everything together so that we’re the only ones that see the total count for each of the categories. Ideally, we like to have everything completed several days before the show. That last day is when Brian and I will start memorizing the winners of each category and start quizzing each other.
We make sure that we don’t have any of the final winners written down anywhere.
It’s that extra measure to make sure it really is only to our memory at that point, to make sure that everything’s accurate.
BC: The show is at the end of February this year. We’ll probably start work on next year’s Oscars in March. It’s almost a full year-round process. Some months are lighter than others, but it builds all the way until the show.

What is your role during the show?
BC: The producers decide what the order of the awards will be. We each have a full set. I have all 24 envelopes in my briefcase; Martha has all 24 in hers. We stand on opposite sides of the stage, right off-screen, for the entire evening, and we each hand the respective envelope to the presenter. It doesn’t sound very complicated, but you have to make sure you’re giving the presenter the right envelope.
PwC has been involved in the Oscars ballot count for decades. What has changed over the years? What has stayed the same?
BC: I can say for sure that our view of our role has stayed the same — how critical it is to be accurate and keep it confidential. We check things dozens of times, recounts and double-checks. We’ll have staff go back two and three times to make sure, and then Martha and I will review and recount to ensure there are no differences between what we have and they had. So far, there’s never been a problem.
MR: I think online voting has been a positive change because you certainly see more members have the ability to vote right until polls close. What’s stayed the same: the protocols, the procedures and the length to which we go to ensure the confidentiality and integrity of the process.

Do you have a favorite Oscar moment?
BC: A couple of years ago, when Neil Patrick Harris was the host, he set up his Oscar predictions at the beginning of the show, had them in our briefcase and was going to reveal them at the end. The briefcase was under lock and key. Through the rehearsals, they told me my role was to hold the key and then, at the end of the show, right before Best Picture was announced, I would go on stage and hand Neil the key without saying anything.
Then the show came, we got to that part at the very end, and just before I was up to go onstage, one of the stage managers came over and attached a microphone to my lapel and put a battery in my pocket.
He told me that Neil had changed his mind earlier that day and that when I went out there, he was going to ask me a few questions. Of course, I had no idea what he was going to ask me. I had about two minutes to think about it, but in the end it turned out great.
MR: That first year, we were taking some pictures on the red carpet and we got photo-bombed by John Legend because he saw the briefcase and wanted to be a part of the picture. We have a couple of those that happen from time to time.
When Brian and I walk down the red carpet, people know who we are simply because we’re holding the briefcase.
BC: Martha raises a good point. I think, a lot of times, we’re amazed because celebrities will come over to us and ask if they could have their picture taken with us, which is kind of a 180 from what normally happens.


Sunday, March 2, 2014

THE OSCARS: 7 THINGS TO LOOK FORWARD TO AT THE OSCARS, 2nd MARCH 2014


HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 84TH ACADEMY AWARDS

NUMBER 1 – ELLEN DEGENERES HOSTING THE OSCARS FOR A 2ND TIME

Ellen Degeneres hilarious opening monologue


Everyone has been looking forward to America’s daytime chat show hostess and comedienne Ellen Degeneres hosting the Academy Awards again. She is quick with the wit, there is no toilet humour, and has no fear, A-Listers be aware. Ellen also has class, unlike Seth McFarlane, we will not be hearing any toilet humour from his side kick “Ted”…nor will there be a song and dance number called “We saw your boobs”….the female celebrities can breathe a sigh of relief!

Who can forget when Ellen asked Steven Spielberg to take a photo of her and Clint Eastwood for Myspace and gave Martin Scorsese a script for a follow up to Goodfellas and Big Momma’s House called “Good Mamas”.



My favourite joke was about how nominees get their nominations, as America did not vote for Jennifer Hudson on American Idol and America voted for Al Gore in the presidential elections, both LOST but won their respective Oscars on the night!


Judy Garland, Liza Minnelli, Joey Luft, Lorna Luft
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Judy Garland receiving her juvenile Oscar for Wizard of Oz
 
 
 
NUMBER 2 – THE TRIBUTE TO THE WIZARD OF OZ

The Academy has confirmed that Judy Garland’s children, the legendary Liza Minnelli, Lorna Luft, and Joey Luft will pay tribute to their mum the epic that is the Wizard of Oz. I secretly hope that the last surviving Wizard of Oz Munchkin Jerry Maren, will make an appearance as a member of the Lollipop Guild. We are already humming the songs before the Oscars begin. We had also hoped Judy Garland’s best friend from the Golden Age of MGM, Mickey Rooney would host the tribute, but there has been no mention from Oscars HQ. It has been confirmed that movie star and blonde Bombshell Kim Novak will introduce the the tribute. Kim Novak became friends with Judy Garland and her then husband Sid Luft when they use to party and gamble with Frank Sinatra and the Rat Pack in L.A and Las Vegas.

 

NUMBER 3 – THE RETURN OF THE DIVINE MISS BETTE MIDLER

Songstress  and actress Bette Midler has not been to the Oscars for many years, she was last seen on the Oscar stage presenting with the her co-stars from The First Wives Club in 1997. Old timers and the new generation will be re-introduced to the sumptuous vocal acrobatics of Miss Midler, who is known to bring magic to the stage.

Bette Midler at the 1997 Oscars

 

Shirley Temple receiving her Juvenile Oscar 1935
NUMBER 4 – IN MEMORIUM

Get the tissues ready in 2013 and early 2014, we lost some amazing actors and executives. The most memorable being, America’s little sweetheart Shirley Temple, who was the most famous child star of all time. At the age of 5, Shirley Temple single handedly saved Fox studios from bankruptcy. She later landed some good adult film roles but never quite made the transition into grown up movies. She moved to Television where she landed a storybook series. She retired from show business in 1950 and then pursued a successful career in public service as an Ambassador and head of protocol. The little girl that the world fell in love with will be sorely missed….we hope she is resting in peace on the Good Ship Lollipop with “Uncle Billy”, the legendary Billy Bojangles Robinson.

Some other memorable stars that passed away in the past season are movie stars Peter O’toole, Joan Fontaine, Paul Walker, Philip Seymor Hoffman, Corey Monteith, James Gandolfini, Richard Griffiths, Eleonor Parker, Esther Williams, James Avery, Deanna Durbin, Richard Briers, Jean Stapleton, Sid Caesar , Harold Ramis, Juanita Moore, Maximilian Schell , Alicia Rhett   

 

NUMBER 5 – MANDELA TRIBUTE

Since Gandhi, there has never been a statesman and humanitarian that has been so globally respected, admired and written about. So it is a fitting tribute that the Academy Awards have chosen to remember the global statesman. Bono and U2 have been selected to perform at the Oscars as a tribute to the memory of Nelson Mandela.

 

NUMBER 5 – STEVE MCQUEEN AND 12 YEARS A SLAVE

The best Oscar moments are always when history is made, like when Kathryn Bigelow became the first woman director to win an Oscar and was given the Oscar by non less than Barbra Streisand! Tonite Oscar attendees might witness history in the making if Steve McQueen of Black British descent becomes the first black director to win an Oscar for 12 years a Slave. He has so far lost every time to Director Alfonso CuarĂłn (Gravity). However he has taken most of the “Best Film” and “ Best Producer” accolades during the award season. The predictions say that is so far a two man race for “best director” it could be Steve McQueen or Alfonso CuarĂłn, either of which will be a British win!

 


NUMBER 6 – AFRICAN NOMINATIONS AT THE OSCARS

We do love firsts. If either Lupita Nyong’o (Kenya) or Barkhad Abdi (Somalia) they will be become the first Africans to win an Oscar! Steve McQueen has called Lupita Nyong’o his muse and poured his admiration for how she carried the scenes. On the red carpet, Lupita has already made waves as a fashion icon. The likes of USA Vogue editor Anna Wintour and Victoria Beckham have been on the phone. She has already made the covers of various international magazines and possibly the envy of every supermodel alive. Lupita has a second movie out, “Non-Stop” starring Liam Neeson which grossed $10 million on its opening day, and was ranked #1. Barkhad Abdi has a BAFTA in the bag, although he lost most of the accolades to Jared Leto (The Dallas Buyer’s Club). Barkhadi is a novice having never studied acting, he was a limo driver and went to the casting call for Captain Phillips when they advertised for Somali citizens to play pirates. Good luck to both of them.

Pharrell performing "Happy" at the BRIT awards

 
 
NUMBER 7 –  THE PERFORMANCES

This year we have a treat as Oscars HQ have chosen 6 exquisite performances to cater to all tastes! We cannot wait for broadway legend and powerhouse Idina Menzel (Wicked, Glee) to perform “Let it Go” and Pharell’s feel good tune of the year “Happy”. I hope the Oscars have a 5 second delay as the rocktastic Pink will be in the house, we are hoping she will create some kind of controversy. Anything else would be boring from rocker Pink! Remember her half naked acrobatic act at the Grammy Awards?

 
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Performing
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