2013 Oscar Recap
Oscar Recap
Argo Wins Best
Picture While Life of Pi Lands the Most Awards
Ben Affleck got the last laugh
after being snubbed by the Academy in the Best Director category when his film,
Argo, won the award for Best Picture. However, Ang Lee’s Life of Pi landed the
most Oscars overall, four, including an upset of Spielberg for director.
The only other major surprise arrived
at the outset of the telecast when Christoph Waltz won Best Supporting Actor
(Django Unchained) in a race thought to be between Robert De Niro (Silver
Linings Playbook) and (Tommy Lee Jones (Lincoln).
As for this critic’s prognostications, I got 15 of 21 correct,
including Argo.
Much of the pre-Oscar buzz had
been about Seth MacFarlane’s hosting the Oscars, and how his irreverent brand
of humor would be received by the crowd. Although he didn’t take many potshots
at Hollywood royalty, his monologue,
performances and banter did reflect a disappointing coarsening of the culture.
Whether invoking the name of
porn star Ron Jeremy or doing a song and dance celebrating nude scenes “We Saw
Your Boobs”, MacFarlane frequently resorted to racy material inappropriate for
children. He also took a few jabs at Jews, implying that claiming to be at
least half-Jewish or a big supporter of Israel was a prerequisite to making
it in show business.
But he leveled the lion’s
share of his acerbic barbs at African-Americans. For example, in a skit
inspired by Denzel Washington’s film Flight, he had a black, hand puppet drinking
alcohol and snorting coke,
Then there was his shockingly-pedophilic
sexualizing of 9 year-old Best Actress nominee Quvenzhane Wallis (Beasts of the
Southern Wild) by speculating about when she’d be too old to date George
Clooney. And he made light of domestic abuse when he suggested that Chris Brown
and Rihanna considered Django Unchained a date movie because it was about a man
trying to get back a woman who’s been subjected to unspeakable violence.
Seth also quipped that it’s
okay for Quentin Tarantino to use the N-word “because he thinks he’s black,”
and he wondered whether Daniel Day-Lewis might’ve tried to free Don Cheadle had
he bumped into him on the studio lot while still in character.
The offensive fare revolving around race was ultimately offset
somewhat when they had First Lady Michelle Obama open the envelope for Best
Picture from the White House. Still, this Oscar show was anything but a family
affair.
Complete List of Oscar Winners:
BEST PICTUREArgo
BEST ACTOR
Daniel Day-Lewis (Lincoln)
BEST ACTRESS
Jennifer Lawrence (Silver Linings Playbook)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Anne Hathaway (Les Miserables)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Christoph Waltz (Django Unchained)
BEST DIRECTOR
Ang Lee (Life of Pi)
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Argo
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Django Unchained
BEST ANIMATED FILM
Brave
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
Amour
BEST MUSIC (ORIGINAL SONG)
"Skyfall" (Skyfall)
BEST MUSIC (ORIGINAL SCORE)
Life of Pi
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
Lincoln
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Life of Pi
BEST DOCUMENTARY (FEATURE)
Searching for Sugar Man
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Life of Pi
BEST MAKEUP
Les Miserables
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Anna Karenina
BEST FILM EDITING
Argo
BEST SOUND EDITING
Tie: Skyfall and Zero Dark Thirty
BEST SOUND MIXING
Les Miserables
BEST SHORT FILM (ANIMATED)
Paperman
BEST SHORT FILM (LIVE ACTION)
Curfew
BEST
DOCUMENTARY (SHORT)
Inocente
Inocente
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