Most popular posts tagged George Clooney

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Hugo! Dujardin! MERYL?! Were you ‘Buffs as shocked as we were on Sunday? Apparently, we weren’t alone.

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We’ve created our very own drinking game for the Independent Spirits, so don’t go out tonight. Stay in, watch the awards show, and get embarrassingly soused. Bottoms up!

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best actor 2012
23
Feb 2012

The race for Best Actor this year is tight. It’s the face-off of the Hollywood handsomes between Clooney, Pitt and Dujardin. Or perhaps the lovable Gary Oldman will steal the statuette. And what of newcomer Demien Birchir?

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clooneydujardinpitt
23
Feb 2012

The countdown to the Oscars is running down ‘Buffs and with all this anticipation, we’re becoming a tad nostalgic. Pining for some Hollywood classics? See which big names are being compared to some of the greats. And if you’re all about the here and now, then don’t miss out on even MORE Muppets and some surprises to be seen on the 2012 red carpet!

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rosered
22
Feb 2012

The Oscars are only a few days away and who can help but falling over from anticipation? The glitz! The glamor! The hallowed red carpet…

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9
Feb 2012

So you’ve already got your bets placed for the dark horses and frontrunners of the Oscar race. When the nominations were announced early January 24, most came as no surprise. But the only thing more exciting than nomination announcements are the snubs. And boy, were there a few that riled up the fans and critics.

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Critics Tallied Up for Oscar Wins

Hugo! Dujardin! MERYL?! Were you ‘Buffs as shocked as we were on Sunday? Apparently, we weren’t alone.

All of the film world has been buzzing about this year’s Oscars; we’ve been gabbin’ away since November. And as we rotated between tweets, popcorn and our Oscar sheets, our jaws dropped when newcomer Jean Dujardin and Academy Award vet Meryl Streep took the top prize for acting. Way to throw a bone at us, old dodgy Oscar voters.

Guess not even the critics can get it right every time. We looked at seven critics’ top picks for the evening’s biggest awards.

For the most part, it seems like the experts were unanimous for their Best Supporting Actor and Best Picture guesses. Only Mashable and Time Out opted for Clooney to win Best Actor, but the two were also the only ones to guess Meryl Streep as the female victor. It seems almost as annual as the awards show itself that Streep is a Best Actress contender—always a nominee, never a winner (at least not since 1982′s Sophie’s Choice). How did she finally edge out her main competition (and fellow Doubt co-star) Viola Davis to come out on top? Hollywood felt the third win was long overdue, and they may be rooting for Meryl to tie with Katharine Hepburn’s four Oscar wins. Davis sure hit home with her emotionally driven role, and many were hoping to make this year another one for the books (she would have been the second African-American female to ever win Best Actress, and she and Octavia Spencer would’ve made a winning pair from the same film).

Alas, those Oscar voters sure like to keep us viewers on our toes.

What were your reactions to the Oscar wins? Were your guesses on par, or were you duped by Streep’s win, too? Sound off below!

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The Most Indie Drinking Game EVER

It’s getting closer and closer to the be-all and end-all of the award season, and with every passing award show, we learn more about what the film tastes are for the past year. The Independent Spirit Awards will be broadcast tonight at 10 pm on IFC and hosted by Seth Rogen. Dubbed as the alternative to the Academy Awards and hailed for its usually exciting and unexpected wins, the Independent Spirits have evolved in tandem with the definition of “independent,” and this year many of the nominees are also a part of the Oscar ballot. So, as we ‘Buffs watch which Indies pulled it out this year, here’s a little something to help us wind down and remind us what the award season is really about—having fun (not sobbing into our pillows or throwing things when our favorite film doesn’t win). We’ve created our very own drinking game for the Independent Spirits, so don’t go out tonight. Stay in, watch the awards show, and get embarrassingly soused. Bottoms up!

The Independent Spirit Awards Drinking Game

Take a sip…

- You wish Seth Rogen was still chubby.
- The camera cuts to Ryan Gosling with a sexy smirk on his face.
- The Descendants wins.
- Michelle Williams wins Best Female Lead.
- Take Shelter wins.
- Elizabeth Olsen is referred to as “coming into her own.”
- J.C. Chandor wins for Best First Screenplay.
- George Clooney appears on-screen with a toothy grin.
- For every person recognized in the In Memorium.
- If you giggle when the presenter reads The Redemption of General Butt Naked.

Take a shot…

- Michel Hazanavicius’s name is pronounced correctly.
- You can name three movies John Cassavetes acted in (you’re not drunk enough!).
- Ryan Gosling wins Best Male Lead.
- The person you picked for the Someone To Watch Award actually wins (we have no idea).
- Cedar Rapids wins.

Drink the whole bottle…

- Melancholia wins.
- Jean Dujardin wins over Michael Shannon for Best Male Lead (it’s over).

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Best Actor…Storified

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LINKS WE LIKE: Now & Then

The countdown to the Oscars is running down ‘Buffs and with all this anticipation, we’re becoming a tad nostalgic. Ever wonder where our Oscar noms got their start (like perhaps a French sketch comedy show…)? Pining for some Hollywood classics? See which big names are being compared to some of the greats. And if you’re all about the here and now, then don’t miss out on even MORE Muppets and some surprises to be seen on the 2012 red carpet!

The Muppets cozy up to Academy President, Tom Sherak

Pitt & Clooney the new Newman & Redford?  Slate

Oscars 2011 (2010 films) in retrospect; what you might have missed. IndieWire

Jean Dujardin before The Artist. You don’t want to miss this. We wish we spoke French. Youtube

No Dogs Allowed! Uggie’s pre-Oscar upset. Yahoo

What do a nun, a football coach, and a marine have in common? Oscar tickets! Dayton Daily News

Sacha Baron Cohen “uninvited” to Oscars Vulture

Got some Oscar dirt to share? Post your links below in the comment section.

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rosered

LINKS WE LIKE: Everything Oscar

The Oscars are only a few days away and who can help but falling over from anticipation? The glitz! The glamour! The hallowed red carpet. Well we’ve got some news for you with today’s Oscar links. Have you not been keeping track of all the Oscar hosts throughout the years ever since the beginning? Don’t worry we took care of that for you, we have provided you with a comprehensive guide. Also for all you fashion mavens out there, check out what the stars spend their salaries on. Don’t be jealous! And of course a few other links, to round out and compliment any raging Oscar obsession. Enjoy!

Check out some favorite Oscar fashions on Pinterest.

Do you think the Oscars need a makeover? OnPoint.

That comprehensive list of Oscar hosts: The Paley Center.

The Descendants and Midnight in Paris take home the Writers Guild Awards. First Showing.

Check out a 360 degree view of red carpet preparations. 360.

Also, the Costume Designers Guild Awards. Deadline.

Do you like today’s links? Share some of your own!!!

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Why Potter, Fassbender and Gosling Got no Oscar Love

So you’ve already got your bets placed for the dark horses and frontrunners of the Oscar race. When the nominations were announced early January 24, most came as no surprise. The Artist and Hugo lead the noms, the ladies of The Help are shining brighter than ever before, and it looks like it could finally be Clooney’s year for Best Actor. But the only thing more exciting than nomination announcements are the snubs. And boy, were there a few that riled up the fans and critics.

Young and old shed a few years the world over when The Boy Who Lived waved his wand for the last time in Deathly Hallows: Part II. Audiences were essentially unanimous in thinking the final installment was a series’ best, with acting, action, and visual effects. And yet…Alan Rickman got not even a nod for his last act as the cunning Severus Snape. The film wasn’t even considered for Best Picture, despite the fact that it definitely grossed more than all the nine nominated movies combined worldwide! In fact, like a few of the other installments, Harry Potter was only appreciated in the visual department, for Art Direction, Visual Effects, and Makeup. We can’t help but be a tad offended by this.

But looking at Deathly Hallows: Pt. 2 from a genre standpoint, it’s hard to narrow the film down to one category. Fantasy? Action? Children’s movie? A combination of the three and more, which throws Oscar voters in for a loop. Though the J.K. Rowling books are geared towards a demographic under the age of 25, the films have reached populations of all age spans. Both the universality and ambiguity of who in the audience can relate and appreciate the film shows how voters were not swayed by an adaptation of YA fiction novels, no matter how great of reads they are or how well they translate on-screen.

Actor Ryan Gosling sure kept busy in 2011 with three starring roles in Crazy, Stupid, Love; Drive; and The Ides of March, not to mention his much-hyped role in last year’s Blue Valentine. No doubt he’s one of the hardest working thespians out there (good thing he still has time for the gym…), but come ON, voters! Give the man his due for something other than Half Nelson. It’s not enough that he was robbed of People’s Sexiest Man Alive by a tool; now he had to show off his muscles that much harder. Gosling is one of few actors who can say a mouthful within a script by saying nothing at all; shame the Academy Awards didn’t use those few extra votes wisely. But the Oscars rarely go for films so edgy and indie like Drive, which had many good aspects and even Albert Brooks’ terrifyingly-amazing performance to back it up.

And let’s not forget the man who dropped trou and made US, the audience, feel bad about looking. Steve McQueen’s Shame was one of the most provocative films of last year, and we’re not talking just about Michael Fassbender’s impressive member. The film made the viewer feel sorry for his nymphomanic character, and it seemed more violating than pleasurable watching Fassbender get it on with, well, everything on-screen. Hardly has an actor this year been so raw in a role, and we feel Fassbender, as a rising star of 2011 and 2012, deserves much more praise in the form of gold statuettes. Or at the very least, why not fill the awkward 10th spot of Best Picture nom with Shame, which portrayed a usually-euphemistic-looking New York City as a grim, gray place. McQueen and Fassbender were horrible robbed of such fine craft that we the audience so rarely get for our money’s worth at the theaters. It’s a damned shame that the NC-17 rating made the film so taboo for moviegoers and critics, who have truly missed out.

Are we just huffing and puffing here, or do you ‘Buffs agree with these snubs?

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