WAMG Marks The Blast Off Of PROJECT HAIL MARY With 14 Of Our Favorite High-Tech, Spaceship and Gadgets Movies

In Ridley Scott’s ALIEN, the audience isn’t introduced to the Xenomorph right off the bat, but to the glorious Nostromo travelling through space. Utilizing industrial scrap and military surplus to create a lived-in, “truckers in space”, the ship was filled with techy stuff like lighting built directly into the walls and ceilings using metal grates and practical fixtures, walls filled with “visual noise” created from banks of circuits and equipment salvaged from old automobiles, radios, and television sets. And best of all – the interior dressing came from scrapped Royal Air Force (RAF) stock. Designers famously used parts from a dismantled Handley Page Vulcan bomber to line the walls and corridors.

We still bow at the altar of ALIEN’s Production Designer Michael Seymour, Art Directors Les Dilley and Roger Christian (Christian is specifically credited with the “industrial” look of the Nostromo interiors, utilizing salvaged scrap metal and aircraft parts) and Set Decorator Ian Whittaker.

Read this article about the making of ALIEN: https://theasc.com/articles/behind-the-scenes-of-alien

Bravo to the genius who really got their Nerd on and published a book titled ALIEN: THE BLUEPRINTS. Its utter rapture filled with all the technical drawings of all the major ships and vehicles from the Alien movies, presented in incredible detail. Includes iconic spacecraft like the Nostromo, the Sulaco and the Covenant.

NASA is now readying the launch of the SLS (Space Launch System) rocket and Orion spacecraft powering the Artemis II from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida to travel to the Moon. Nothing will ever surpass the mighty Saturn V Rocket and the Apollo Missions, but the excitement surrounding the countdown to the Artemis II launch and return to Earth’s closest neighbor is nothing short of fantastic!

Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in PROJECT HAIL MARY, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo credit: Jonathan Olley © 2026 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

In the new film PROJECT HAIL MARY, the filmmakers and production designers had to answer a fundamental question: If humanity truly built a ship to save itself, what would it look like? Production designer Charles Wood (Guardians of the Galaxy, Avengers: Endgame) began that exploration with viability. If the filmmakers would be asking the audience to believe that this is humanity’s last, best effort to save the planet, the Hail Mary itself had to feel engineered as if very intelligent people built it under extraordinary pressure. The default of space-movie environments is steel-and-gray hues with sometimes bland or unarticulated spaces. But directors Lord and Miller wanted to experiment with the palette and create something fresh.

“They wanted it not to feel acrid or too monochromatic,” Wood says. “They wanted to find the color in space.” In addition, instead of sleek metallic minimalism, Wood introduced fabric and insulation as structural elements. Soft materials were woven into walls and padded surfaces were shaped and layered.

Gravity itself became part of the language design. Different areas of the Hail Mary operate under different gravitational states – acceleration gravity, centrifugal gravity, zero gravity – requiring sets that could rotate or reorient.

In the new film from directors Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, Science teacher Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) wakes up on a spaceship light years from home with no recollection of who he is or how he got there. As his memory returns, he begins to uncover his mission: solve the riddle of the mysterious substance causing the sun to die out. He must call on his scientific knowledge and unorthodox ideas to save everything on Earth from extinction…but an unexpected friendship means he may not have to do it alone.

Go on the ship: ProjectHailMary.com

And this isn’t Gosling’s first time playing an astronaut. Nope! Check out this clip where he played Neil Armstrong who commanded Apollo 11 becoming the First Man to set foot on the Moon.

To mark the blast-off of PROJECT HAIL MARY, we’ve come up with a list of 14 of our favorite techy, spaceship and gadgets movies.

For the movie nerds out there (including us) technically focused space movies are our jam, where we groove on the hard sci-fi films that emphasize realism and scientific concepts – but, okay, mostly for the lights, buttons, knobs, switches and toggles.

Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in PROJECT HAIL MARY, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo credit: Jonathan Olley © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

THE MARTIAN

A definitive “hard sci-fi” film that uses NASA-endorsed accuracy in botany, engineering, and orbital mechanics to show how a stranded astronaut can survive using existing or near-future tech.

The novel was absolutely brilliant with its schematics and it translated so well to the big screen showing a sophisticated fleet of spacecraft designed for the Ares program to transport the crew and supplies between Earth and Mars. Filled with an Orion capsule, The Hermes (and its ion engines), Taiyang Shen, and the Martian Rover, 

There were over 400 interactive screens and many weren’t just random code; they were a “patchwork” of real NASA data. For example, the weather screens used actual Martian atmosphere data, and the Hermes navigation screens used real motion vectors provided by NASA engineers. And the best? Instead of using green screens for monitors, the animations were played live on set. This allowed actors to actually interact with the buttons and data, making their reactions feel authentic. Glorious!

APOLLO 13

Based on a true story, it celebrates the ingenious problem-solving of NASA scientists who used “square pegs in round holes” and duct tape to bring astronauts home after a technical failure in deep space, never mind a slide rule. The lift off of the mighty Saturn V rocket, mission control in Houston and the crew in the command module made this Oscar nominated movie one filled with realistic physics, engineering, and survival.

Go see it at the Johnson Space Center in Houston TX – its a true marvel, with its original consoles and rotary dials.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn_(rocket_family)

GRAVITY

Director Alfonso Cuaron’s entire film is a masterclass in the physics of microgravity. It focuses on the “Kessler Syndrome,” where a chain reaction of satellite debris traveling at orbital velocity destroys everything in its path. Technology – specifically Manned Maneuvering Units (MMUs) and various airlocks – is the only thing preventing the protagonist from “drifting” forever into the vacuum.

The mind-boggling tech of this film won 7 Oscars at the 86th Academy Awards including Best Score (Steven Price), Best Visual Effects (Tim Webber, Chris Lawrence, David Shirk, and Neil Corbould) and Best Film Editing (Alfonso Cuarón and Mark Sanger).

INTERSTELLAR

The technological realism is thru the roof. The movie features plausible near-future technologies, such as the Endurance spacecraft, which uses rotation to create artificial gravity, and advanced robotic assistants like TARS and CASE. The interior is compact and practical, with a focus on functionality, including transparent touch screens, crew chairs, and a large main viewscreen. 

Check out this better look here – https://www.framestore.com/work/interstellar-cinematic-vr-experience 

2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY

A seminal work exploring humanity’s relationship with technology – from the first bone tool to the sentient AI HAL 9000 – as a driver for the next stage of human evolution.

The ships were wonders to behold.

Discovery One (USSC Discovery) was the 540-foot-long nuclear-powered interplanetary ship sent to investigate the signal from the monolith at Jupiter. It is controlled by the HAL 9000 computer. The Orion III Spaceplane was a sleek, needle-nosed Pan Am orbital clipper used to transport Dr. Heywood Floyd from Earth to the orbiting space station. The Aries Ib Lunar Lander was a  spherical, passenger-carrying moon shuttle that transports Dr. Floyd from the space station to the Clavius Base on the lunar surface and the Space Station V was a massive, rotating “wheel” station in Earth’s orbit that serves as a transit hub for travelers heading to the moon

MOON

Huge Nerd Alert!

Duncan Jones‘s movie uses a futuristic lunar mining operation to examine the ethical implications of cloning and the psychological toll of long-term isolation on a solo worker. It’s so rich to look at due to the lunar base, the space station (or lunar mining base) named Sarang Station located on the far side of the Moon to mine Helium-3, a clean alternative fuel for Earth. The movie stars Sam Rockwell as Sam Bell, the station’s sole human occupant, who is assisted by an artificial intelligence named GERTY. 

With the Helium-3 Harvesters and lunar rovers, the miniature models used instead of CGI gave these vehicles their realistic, gritty look.

SXSW Review: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2009/03/sxsw-review-moon/ 

Tribeca Review: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2009/04/tribeca-review-moon/ 

EVENT HORIZON

Okay so it ended up being jump to the “hell” dimension, which many at the time went… “HUH?!” But the awesome “industrial-gothic” design of the S.S. Event Horizon, divided into three primary modules, was connected by a 2-kilometer-long access corridor known as The Neck. The Bridge and the Gravity Drive had sci-fi fans intrigued by all it’s panels filled with monitors, lighted buttons and toggle-switches galore.

Read ASC’s interview visual effects supervisor Richard Yuricich, ASC and visual effects producer Stuart McAra here and cinematographer Adrian Biddle, BSC here — featuring director Paul W.S. Anderson.

Designed to look like a cathedral to evoke a sense of religious dread, the corridors are octagonal, and the lighting is kept low to make the ship feel “alive” and predatory.

Paul W.S. Anderson film has since become a cult movie and there’s even a Event Horizon: Dark Descent #1 – available now from IDW Dark.

Discover what happened to the original crew of the Event Horizon in this all-new cosmic horror graphic novel set in the universe of the terrifying cult-classic film!

This original comic series serves as an official prequel to the film! The Event Horizon was a revolutionary spaceship designed for one mission: faster-than-light travel with a top-secret, experimental gravity drive. But upon activating the device, the ship journeyed across the borders of Hell itself. In a nightmarish realm of torments beyond imagining, Captain Kilpack and the crew of the Event Horizon must resist all manner of demonic forces—including Paimon, the eyeless King of Hell, and their own descents into madness and bloodlust—if they’ve any chance of escaping back to their own world.

Abandon all hope and board the Event Horizon with multiple Eisner Award winner Christian Ward (writer of Batman: City of Madness, Two-Face) and powerhouse sci-fi artist Tristan Jones (Aliens: Defiance, Tales of the TMNT) in this unbelievable story of the true and final fate of the original Event Horizon crew.

WHICH BRINGS US TO ITS UNOFFICAL SEQUEL, ACCORDING TO FANS….

SUNSHINE

In Danny Boyle’s 2007 film Sunshine, the technology and spacecraft represent a blend of near-future industrial realism and high-concept scientific theory, developed with guidance from physicist Brian Cox.

The Icarus II is a massive vessel designed for a singular, suicide-mission-style objective: delivering a payload to reignite the dying Sun.  Solar Shield: The most prominent feature is a one-mile wide refractory gold-leaf shield that protects the ship from intense solar radiation and heat. The Spine: A long, delicate central armature connects the shield to the living quarters and engines. In the film, this spine rotates slowly to provide a degree of stability. Living Quarters: Designed to feel claustrophobic and utilitarian, contrasting with the vastness of the exterior. The Payload: A massive stellar bomb roughly the size of Manhattan, constructed from dark matter and uranium. 

The techy part is the Computer on The Icarus, an AI with a natural-language interface that communicates verbally with the crew. Its mainframe is kept in a coolant bath to prevent overheating and the Observation Deck, a room that allows the crew to view the Sun directly through attenuation filters.

EUROPA REPORT

This “found footage” style film focuses on plausible mission design and the scientific process involved in a private mission to find life on Jupiter’s moon, Europa. 

The user interfaces (UIs) in the film are minimalist and data-heavy. Transparent displays and helmet Heads-Up Displays (HUDs). Instead of flashy animations, the screens show telemetry data, oxygen levels, and orbital mechanics. This “functional” design makes the technology feel like it was built by engineers, not graphic designers.

THE BLACK HOLE

We love this film! It saw two Oscar nominations for Best Cinematography and Best Visual Effects and still one of our favorite sci-fi films ever.

The Black Hole combines gothic horror with sci-fi, centering on a massive spacecraft (the USS Cygnus) perched at the edge of a black hole, exploring the technological hubris of a scientist obsessed with entering it. The ship utilized powerful anti-gravity projectors (powered by a fictional element called Signium) that allow it to hover motionless on the edge of the black hole’s event horizon. Due to its immense size, the crew used a manually controlled, one-way tram system to travel between major sections like the docking bays and the control tower – a magnificent room filled with computer monitors.

The interior of the tower features one of the most elaborate sets in 1970s science fiction, designed to emphasize both the ship’s massive scale and its gothic atmosphere. 

A dominant feature is a massive star map and holographic display used for mapping and studying the black hole, the former crew turned into mindless cyborgs. The tower is designed with multiple levels and catwalks, allowing Reinhardt and his primary sentry, Maximilian, to oversee operations from elevated positions.

We also loved V.I.N.CENT voiced by an uncredited Roddy McDowall. He was a robot aboard the U.S.S. Palomino. Great score too by composer John Barry.

AD ASTRA

Where do we start with this futuristic film that explores the vastness and silence of the solar system through a journey to Neptune, using realistic depictions of lunar bases and commercial space travel to reflect on a son’s search for his father.

This was a dream for space enthusiasts – A space elevator, an International Space Antenna, Mars underground base, Vesta IX and Lima Station and the Cepheus – the SpaceCom transport vessel travelling to outer space. It made us believe Space exploration and tourism was a common event.

SILENT RUNNING

Director Douglas Trumbull’s amazing film focuses on environmental tech in space, where a botanist maintains the last of Earth’s plant life in geodesic domes attached to a spacecraft after all plant life on Earth has gone extinct. Named the Valley Forge, Berkshire, and Sequoia, these several massive American Airlines Space Freighters were tasked with carrying Earth’s last botanical samples. They were great to look at and were based the geodesic design on the Climatron dome at the Missouri Botanical Garden. These freighters are approximately 2,500 feet long (nearly half a mile) while the filming miniature for the Valley Forge was a 26-foot-long masterpiece built over six months using parts from over 80 different model kits.

But it’s the three little robots – originally designated as Drones 1, 2, and 3—that are the heart of the film’s emotional journey. Freeman Lowell (played by Bruce Dern), re-programs the clunky, box-shaped service drones to give them distinct personalities and nicknames them after Donald Duck’s nephews, Dewey, Huey and Louie.

THE CLOVERFIELD PARADOX

To start, this has to be the greatest example of pure marketing genius. To have kept it a secret, revealing it during the Superbowl eight years ago, followed by the surprise debut on Netflix immediately afterwards that Sunday night was unbelievable! We bow low on that drop!

https://www.netflix.com/title/80134431

Now to the tech stuff. The Cloverfield Station is a massive space station orbiting Earth in the year 2028. It is a modular, high-tech habitat designed to house the massive particle accelerator at its core. The Bridge/Cockpit features a mix of traditional physical controls and modern multi-functional displays.

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The Shepard is the station’s primary experimental device, a particle accelerator described as being “one thousand times more powerful” than any on Earth.Its goal is to provide a sustainable, infinite energy source to save humanity. When finally successfully activated, the Shepard overloads and creates a “power curve” that rips the fabric of space-time. The device doesn’t just generate power; it causes the station to jump into a parallel universe and move to the opposite side of the sun. The firing of the Shepard shattered reality across multiple dimensions and timelines.

SATURN 3

The film is set at a remote base in the asteroid belt of Saturn, and crewed by 2 scientists, and was filled with futuristic gadgets featuring detailed props and computer consoles that serve as the “tech parts” of the station’s life support and research systems. The base was equipped with numerous wall-mounted consoles and interactive displays used for monitoring life support, research data, and internal security.

For we geeks living in the early 80’s this was the perfect movie – the evil robot Hector, spaceships and a space station… this was the ultimate Nerdvana

You can even watch the entire movie here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bD_tyBy3I3Q

Contributed by Michelle McCue, Marc Butterfield and Melissa Thompson

Top 5 Space Travel Films

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On July 4, 2016, NASA’s Juno spacecraft arrived at Jupiter to begin its exploration of the planet. Although NASA’s mission to Jupiter is unmanned, we thought it appropriate to honor the accomplishment with a list of five top films about NASA and space travel. Rather than consider science fiction space films generally, this list focuses mainly on space travel closer to home.

THE MARTIAN

Director Ridley Scott and author Andy Weir worked hard to get the science mostly right, in this dramatic thriller about an astronaut accidentally left behind on Mars. Matt Damon heads a terrific cast and injects a lot of humor and makes scientist/astronauts look cool. The film has been praised by people who worked at NASA for getting the teasing patter and resourceful team work among astronaut/scientists right. Perhaps the best, most scientifically accurate movie about space and astronauts yet.

GRAVITY

Okay, it has some problems with the science, but astronauts have praised its ability to capture the sense of being in space. And it is a heck of an edge-of-your-seat thriller, starring Sandra Bullock as one tough woman astronaut who has to depend on her own brains and skills when disaster strikes the international space station. The scenes of space walking and of hurtling above Earth in orbit are breathtaking.

2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY

A great visionary science fiction film, filled with mystery and the surreal, along with a harrowing sequence featuring the iconic evil computer HAL. The non-CGI visual effects still impress in this ground-breaking film from Stanley Kubrick and science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke.

APOLLO 13

Based on a real event, Tom Hanks stars as one of a team of astronauts whose trip to the moon is short-circuited by malfunction. This inspiring, fact-based drama is a nail-biter and a testament to astronauts’ bravery, coolness under fire and NASA engineers’ resourcefulness.

THE RIGHT STUFF

A classic film about how it all began for NASA, with a spotlight on the the hotshot jet plane test pilots who became the first American astronauts.

Top 10 Tuesday: WAMG’s Favorite Oscar Nominees

oscaNOMSr

We’re getting closer to Hollywood’s night to shine – the Oscars. This year’s nominations are a bevy of brilliant films, performances and crafts, the motion picture industry at its best.

The Academy Awards is the gold standard by which every other awards show is measured, because when it comes to the biggest night in film, nobody does it better than Oscar!

In anticipation of the star-studded night at the Dolby Theatre, the gang at WAMG has chosen their favorite nominees – from the Best Picture and Best Acting categories to the technical categories, here’s a close-up look at our Top 10 Favorite nominees.

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BEST Picture – AMERICAN HUSTLE

Christian Bale;Jeremy Renner;Jennifer Lawrence;Elisabeth Rohm

By Jim Batts

The Best Picture Oscar usually goes to the film that shines a light on a social injustice, a historical event, or individuals battling injury or disease. The most wildly entertaining (sorry Marty and Leo, but three hours of arrogant drug abusers wears very thin) of the nine nominees has, at least, one of those areas covered. As it states right before the action begins, “some of this really happened”. AMERICAN HUSTLE looks into the “Abscam” scandal of the late 1970’s, but it’s so much more. It’s about people trying to survive, discovering true love, and being given second chances.

Perhaps even more than of the characters, the biggest second chance story may be the director and co-screenwriter David O Russell. Bouncing back from some box office duds and some humiliating on set secret videos, Russell has delivered the best of his recent comeback trilogy that began with THE FIGHTER and continued with last year’s (last year?!) SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK. HUSTLE owes much of its inspiration to Scorsese (particularly GOODFELLAS) as the camera careens through the hotel rooms and restaurants while a superb pop music soundtrack conveys every mood and atmosphere. But Russell’s not just aping a film-making master. The film explodes with energy and humor as it celebrates these cops and con men (and women).

As with PLAYBOOK, Russell has placed an actor in each of the Oscar categories this year. Many have worked with him before and now join forces in a very impressive repertory company. Christian Bale proves to be a new cinematic chameleon as he transforms into the schlubby (maybe the screen’s greatest comb-over!) Irving (this guy was Batman?). Amy Adams stuns as the slinky, sexy Sydney (and the “hoighty-toighty” Lady Edith), full of street smarts as she uses her wardrobe (those blouses opened doooown to there!) to distract. Particularly distracted (and smitten) is Bradley Cooper, freed from the paycheck drudgery of THE HANGOVER III, as the ambitious FBI man, Richie. The film’s biggest revelation may be Jennifer Lawrence as the manipulative Rosalyn who’s pathetic, seductive, and repellant, often at the same time. Also terrific is Jeremy Renner as the back-slapping politco who may just be the film’s center of morality along with comic Louis CK as Richie’s put-upon, frustrated superior. Oh, and there’s a fantastic cameo by an iconic actor in a highlight I won’t spoil. This is an unmatched movie dream team.

This year’s Oscars will more likely be a repeat of the 1990 awards when the more high-minded DANCES WITH WOLVES won out over GOODFELLAS. But as the years have gone by, which has been more celebrated, referenced, and studied? Sure, it’s nice that the Academy likes to send a nice moral message with the big prize, but I’m still hoping that Russell and his merry band of tricksters can pull off a truly big “golden” sting.

Best Documentary Feature – THE ACT OF KILLING

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By Travis Keune

Rarely does a documentary film present itself with such an original approach as THE ACT OF KILLING. Director Joshua Oppenheimer takes an absolutely terrible part of Indonesian history and devises a method to explore the dark subject matter of the film with the actual people responsible for the atrocities that exposes the truth with full transparency, but with a touch of surreality.

Oppenheimer asked the individuals responsible for the executions of alleged communists in Indonesia to reenact what occurred on film in whatever way they felt most comfortable.The result of which is honest, but oddly just as entertaining as it is heartbreaking, especially as the emotional toll begins to build and erupt and the killers humanity shows through and the regret and guilt emerges. As an audience, we bare witness to this experiment in psychology unfolding in a way never before seen on film.

The film is sometimes awkward, or even difficult to watch, but the end result is a masterpiece in documentary filmmaking that won the support of Werner Herzog and will leave a lasting impression.

Best Cinematography – Roger Deakins PRISONERS

PRISONERS

By Michelle McCue

The terrifying events that unfold in PRISONERS cause each character to react in a manner he or she likely never would have thought possible.

Screenwriter Aaron Guzikowski’s story and Director Denis Villeneuve’s film, along with a top-flight roster of actors, including Hugh Jackman, Jake Gyllenhaal, Viola Davis, Maria Bello, Terrence Howard, Melissa Leo and Paul Dano, are captured by legendary cinematographer Roger Deakins.

Deakins utilized color, along with light and shadow, to amplify the atmosphere around the story while most of the time, giving this heavy drama a monochromatic feel. Creating a claustrophobic, dark element, the cinematographer shot the film digitally. The days in PRISONERS are gloomy and overcast, and the nights, largely because of Deakins’ work, are very poetic.

Roger Deakins is a ten-time Academy Award nominee for Best Cinematography, for his work on Joel and Ethan Coen’s FARGO, THE MAN WHO WASN’T THERE, O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU?, NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN and TRUE GRIT; Frank Darabont’s THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION; Martin Scorsese’s KUNDUN; Andrew Dominik’s THE ASSASSINATION OF JESSE JAMES BY THE COWARD ROBERT FORD; Stephen Daldry’s THE READER, which he shared with Chris Menges; and, most recently, Sam Mendes’ SKYFALL.

Yet, the Oscar has always eluded him.

However, nominated seven times for the BAFTA Award, Deakins has won three for THE MAN WHO WASN’T THERE, NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN and TRUE GRIT.

His work has also garnered him eight nominations for the British Society of Cinematographers (BSC) Best Cinematography Award, with five wins, and two Independent Spirit Awards, with an additional nomination. In 2008, he received the National Board of Review’s Career Achievement Award, and in 2013, Deakins was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the UK, the only cinematographer to have been given this high honor.

Deakins has been nominated eleven times for the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) Award and won three, for SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION, THE MAN WHO WASN’T THERE and SKYFALL. Cited was his work on the ten features listed above, as well as on Sam Mendes’ REVOLUTIONARY ROAD. He received the ASC’s Lifetime Achievement award in 2011.

He has also served as visual consultant for several animated features, including WALL•E, HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON, RANGO, RISE OF THE GUARDIANS and THE CROODS. He is currently consulting on HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 and the cinematographer on Angelina Jolie’s UNBROKEN.

Academy Voters! Don’t you think now would be a good time to finally acknowledge Deakins with an Oscar?

BEST Actress – Cate Blanchett as Jasmine, BLUE JASMINE

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By Tom Stockman

Were it a weaker year for the Best Actress category, Judi Dench would be a shoo-on for her swan song PHILOMENA or Sandra Bullock might take home the big prize for her desperate and resourceful turn in GRAVITY. But it’s not a weak year. It’s an extraordinarily strong one, but neither of these gals (nor Ms Streep or Ms Adams) stands a chance against Cate Blanchett and her ferocious performance in BLUE JASMINE.

The range of emotions Woody Allen’s script demanded of Blanchett was immense and she responded with a performance people will be talking about for a long time. Blanchett was a riveting image in BLUE JASMINE, not just for the things Jasmine said but for the ravaged beauty and sadness she allowed the camera to find in her face and clothes-horse figure. Blanchett fully embodied the agony of Jasmine as the character went from vodka-soaked delusional to haughty dismissal of those she considered inferior and from gloomy introspection to babbling madness.

Constantly throwing back Xanax and martinis to cope, Blanchett performed emotional highs and lows, often within the same scene and her performance was really something to see. The Oscar will join the many other awards she’s deservedly received for this role.

Best Picture – CAPTAIN PHILLIPS

Tom Hanks

By Melissa Thompson

Going in to see CAPTAIN PHILLIPS, I was pretty much prepared to see another “docudrama” that was going to depict a real-life event. I didn’t know too much about the story of Captain Richard Phillips and the Maersk Alabama, other than the nightly blurbs we would see on the news during the time the events occurred. Somali Pirates, merchant marines, hostages, Navy Seals – all the buzz words were there, so like many others I was enticed into seeing the movie. Turns out it was a REALLY good movie. It had everything. Good guys, bad guys, a hero, numerous gunfights, a ton of suspense, and best of all, a happy ending of sorts. I thoroughly enjoyed the movie, but couldn’t help but think it was almost “too good”.

So many “true stories” these days take so much dramatic license, you don’t really know how much is true and how much is embellished just to create a more powerful narrative. But I wasn’t 100% convinced. So I did some research, and what I found was pretty amazing. Turns out, the way the events are portrayed in the film is EXACTLY how it happened. Details and timelines are precise, as well as much of the dialogue that took place between the crew, the pirates, and Phillips himself.  I was most fascinated by this clip –  CNN news footage that could be easily confused with the movie if you didn’t know what you were watching:

With so many films these days relying on CGI and special effects, it was refreshing to see a true story be, well, true! There was no cliffhanger, or plot twists, or ridiculous global destruction. Just the harrowing sequence of events told from the perspective of those who were actually there. If that is not a Best Picture nominee, I don’t know what is.

BEST Original Screenplay – HER

HER

By Gary Salem

The original screenplay nomination for HER is my favorite because Spike Jonze had so many ideas that work together on different levels. He created a compelling sci-fi romance in a world that looks strange and familiar at the same time.

The operating system gets inside Theodore’s head both literally and figuratively. Her gets inside the viewer’s head and stays there to give them something to think about, like being in love…with technology.

Best Animated Short Film – GET A HORSE!

GET A HORSE!

By Melissa Howland

Directed by Lauren MacMullan and produced by Dorothy McKim, GET A HORSE! is the perfect blend of black and white hand drawn animation and 3D computer imaging.

The short is a contemporary homage to the first animated shorts featuring Mickey Mouse, with all-new, black-and-white, hand-drawn animation that’s paired with full-color, 3D, CG filmmaking—in the same frame. Mickey (voice of Walt Disney), his favorite gal pal Minnie Mouse and their friends Horace Horsecollar and Clarabelle Cow delight in a musical haywagon ride—until Peg-Leg Pete shows up and tries to run them off the road. This groundbreaking short takes a sharp turn when Mickey finds himself separated from Minnie and must use every trick up his sleeve to find his way back to her.

GET A HORSE! is packed with laughs, and features archived recordings of Walt Disney for the voice of Mickey Mouse. As a short, it stands apart from anything we’ve seen in animation, and is sure to put a smile on your face!

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR – Jonah Hill as Donnie Azoff, THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

By Tom Stockman

I wasn’t sure of Jonah Hill’s performance as Jordan Belcourt’s bucktoothed loose-cannon first lieutenant Donnie Azoff in WOLF OF WALL STREET would be received as brilliantly comic or an undisciplined train wreck.

It was a strange role, one that straddled drama and dark comedy but it was perfect for the actor. Whether masturbating in public or swallowing goldfish, Hill was so much fun to watch in WOLF OF WALL STREET and clearly made an impression on the Academy.

He won’t win, in part because of the political incorrectness of the character, and because it’s a strong field, but he deserved the nom and I’m glad he got it.

Best Actress – Sandra Bullock as Dr. Ryan Stone, GRAVITY

GRAVITY

By Sam Moffitt

I have not seen very many of the movies up for awards this year. But I cannot imagine that any actor or actress could possibly do better work than Sandra Bullock does in GRAVITY.

Set in outer space this remarkable film is really about inner space. Stranded through a series of calamities in Earth orbit Sandra Bullock’s character Ryan Stone goes through serious changes trying to get back to solid ground. I’m not sure if everything she does is possible with the current technology of space travel but the tension and suspense are unbearable.

GRAVITY is an epic look at the human will to survive, that incredible drive that can bring people through to safety in the most grueling of ordeals. Gravity is a love song to every person who ever struggled to overcome cancer, who was ever ship wrecked, buried under rubble, lost in the desert, wounded in a war, maimed in an accident and struggled against over whelming odds to not only survive but to prevail and get on with their lives.

Think of all the people in just the last ten years affected by hurricanes, civil wars, drought, famine, volcanoes, tornados, tsunamis and their struggles to survive.

The sorrows of the whole human race are laid on Sandra Bullock’s frail shoulders and she comes through, my Lord how she comes through!

How heartbreaking to see tears in zero gravity, and in 3-D! How awesome to see the performance of a lifetime that relies so much on body language, facial expressions and gestures. And her performance is almost entirely alone. The only recent film comparable would have to be 127 Hours and James Franco’s brilliant performance in another story of survival against all the odds.

The sight of Ms Bullock curled in a fetal position and turning slowly, slowly in zero gravity is awesome, heartbreaking, primal, (on a gut level) and so poetic and beautiful, all at once. This is genius film making by Alfonso Cuaron and Sandra Bullock is the only passenger on a roller coaster ride back to the pull of Earth’s Gravity.

Sandra Bullock has already won an Oscar, for The Blind Side, but if ever an actor deserves another win it is her incredible work in GRAVITY. She is one of the best actors of her generation; GRAVITY is one for the ages.

BEST ACTOR – Leonardo DiCaprio as Jordan Belfort, THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

By Michael Haffner

I hope Mr. DiCaprio doesn’t take offense when I say that I truly believe he was born to play Jordan Belfort. Or is Jordan Belfort now really only a “person” thanks to DiCaprio? Either way, the character that emerges on the screen is Scorsese’s dizzying, frantic, and hilarious THE WOLF OF WALL STREET is equal parts unbelievable and frighteningly real thanks in no small part due to Leonardo Dicaprio’s fearless performance. In their fifth on-screen collaboration, Scorsese seems to unleash the shackles on his cinematic muse. Drugs are consumed in excess. Sex is as regular as brushing your teeth multiple-times-a-day.

Most importantly, money can buy you happiness. Well. . . at least a form of happiness. And just as the high from drugs begins to fade away, and the sex eventually reaches its climax, and the money eventually runs out, so too does one’s happiness if you invest your entire life in material belongings. This is all the more ironic considering the film is centered around a power driven financial investor whose job requires him to invest other’s money. The idea of a film chronicling the lavish lifestyle of greedy corporate investors is far from original. However, in the hands of veteran director Scorsese, the escapades conducted by this wild WOLF is consistently entertaining and leaves the audience hungry for more – which says a lot considering the film is almost 3 hours long. Some audience members might not be able to look past the hedonistic activities portrayed on screen by Leonardo DiCaprio.

I know for a fact there have been several screenings where moviegoers walked out of the film. I’m not here to convince those people that I’m right and they’re wrong for walking out, but I will say that they’re choosing to ignore the best performance to date from Mr. DiCaprio. Several times throughout the film we see him take the stage and deliver rousing speeches to his merry band of heathens. He takes to the mic like a Southern Baptist preacher, delivering rags to riches stories and exciting his “congregation” into a fury of shouting, reveling, and fanatical responses that wouldn’t seem out of place among some places of worship. It is in moments like these where I also found myself converted.

I truly adore THE WOLF OF WALL STREET and I know that my love for Scorsese’s film wouldn’t be the same if it not for DiCaprio’s portrayal of Jordan Belfort. You hear stories of DiCaprio jet-setting across Europe with a harem of Victoria Secrets’ models and you can’t help but compare his real life a bit to the film’s main character – which was inspired by real events. Although I know I should separate an actor’s personal life from his career, I can’t help but feel that in this case of “life imitating art” or “art imitating life,” that the result is worthy of Oscar gold.

So that’s our favorites. Let us know yours in our comments section below.

Watch the Oscars this Sunday, March 2, on ABC.

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BAFTA 2014 Winners – GRAVITY Leads With 6 Awards; 12 YEARS A SLAVE Clinches Best Picture

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With two weeks to go until the 86th Academy Awards are handed out in Hollywood, all eyes were on London as the EE British Academy Film Awards were announced Sunday evening from the Royal Opera House.

12 YEARS A SLAVE was named Best Film with Chiwetel Ejiofor winning leading actor. GRAVITY won six awards including British Film, Director, Original Music, Cinematography, Sound and Special Visual Effects, while AMERICAN HUSTLE won three BAFTAs for Original Screenplay, Make Up & Hair, and Supporting Actress for Jennifer Lawrence.

Leading Actress was presented to Cate Blanchett for playing the title role in BLUE JASMINE – her third BAFTA win ­– and in his feature film debut Barkhad Abdi won Supporting Actor for CAPTAIN PHILLIPS.

12 YEARS A SLAVE

Hosted by Stephen Fry, the ceremony featured a live performance from multi-platinum-selling artist Tinie Tempah and Mercury Prize nominee Laura Mvula.

Dame Helen Mirren was the recipient of the BAFTA Fellowship, Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema went to Peter Greenaway (THE COOK, THE THIEF, HIS WIFE & HER LOVER), while the EE Rising Star Winner (voted for by the public) was Will Poulter.

Check out the red carpet arrival photos HERE.

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Full list of winners:

Outstanding British Film:  GRAVITY – Alfonso Cuarón, David Heyman, Jonás Cuarón

Best Film: 12 YEARS A SLAVE – Anthony Katagas, Brad Pitt, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Steve McQueen

British Short Film:  ROOM 8 – James W. Griffiths, Sophie Venner

British Short Animation:  Sleeping With The Fishes – James Walker, Sarah Woolner, Yousif Al-Khalifa

Production Design:  THE GREAT GATSBY – Catherine Martin, Beverley Dunn

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Sound Winner:  GRAVITY – Glenn Freemantle, Skip Lievsay, Christopher Benstead, Niv Adiri, Chris Munro

Editing Winner: RUSH – Dan Hanley, Mike Hill

Documentary Winner:  THE ACT OF KILLING – Joshua Oppenheimer

Christian Bale;Amy Adams;Bradley Cooper

Make-Up and Hair Winner:  AMERICAN HUSTLE – Evelyne Noraz, Lori McCoy-Bell, Kathrine Gordon

Costume Design Winner:  THE GREAT GATSBY – Catherine Martin

Original Music Winner: GRAVITY – Steven Price

Animated Film Winner: FROZEN – Chris Buck, Jennifer Lee

FROZEN

Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer:  Kieran Evans – Kelly + Victor

Supporting Actor: Barkhad Abdi – CAPTAIN PHILLIPS

Cinematography: GRAVITY – Emmanuel Lubezki

Supporting Actress:  Jennifer Lawrence – AMERICAN HUSTLE

Jennifer Lawrence

Original Screenplay Winner: AMERICAN HUSTLE – Eric Warren Singer, David O. Russell

Adapted Screenplay Winner:  PHILOMENA – Steve Coogan, Jeff Pope

Special Visual Effects Winner:  GRAVITY – Tim Webber, Chris Lawrence, David Shirk, Neil Corbould, Nikki Penny

Film Not in the English Language Winner: THE GREAT BEAUTY – Paolo Sorrentino, Nicola Giuliano, Francesca Cima

Chiwetel Ejiofor

Leading Actor Winner: Chiwetel Ejiofor – 12 YEARS A SLAVE

Director Winner:  Alfonso Cuarón – GRAVITY

Leading Actress Winner:  Cate Blanchett – BLUE JASMINE

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The Academy Presenting First-Ever “Oscar Concert” Celebrating Nominated Scores and Songs February 27

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For the first time as part of its annual Oscar Week events, the Academy will present a live “Oscar Concert” celebrating this year’s nominated scores and songs on Thursday, February 27, at 8 p.m. at UCLA’s Royce Hall.

The program features an 80-piece orchestra performing suites from each of the nominated original scores, conducted by their composers.

They include:

William Butler and Owen Pallett, “Her”

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Alexandre Desplat, “Philomena”

Thomas Newman, “Saving Mr. Banks”

Steven Price, “Gravity”

John Williams, “The Book Thief”

Prior to each piece, the respective composers will participate in a brief onstage conversation with film critic and radio host Elvis Mitchell about creating their scores.

The concert also will feature this year’s nominated original songs, including “Let It Go” from “Frozen,” performed by Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez, and “Happy” from “Despicable Me 2,” performed by Jill Scott.  Other special performers and guests will be announced on www.oscars.org.

Tickets are $100 and $75 and can be purchased online at www.ticketmaster.com.

The Oscars, hosted by Ellen DeGeneres, will air on Sunday, March 2, live on ABC from the Dolby Theatre at the Hollywood & Highland Center.

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Alfonso Cuaron’s GRAVITY Crosses $100 Million Milestone In IMAX 3D Theatres Worldwide

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IMAX and Warner Bros. Pictures have announced that GRAVITY has passed the $100 million global box office benchmark in 639 IMAX 3D theatres worldwide since its initial release Thursday, Oct. 3, 2013.

As of Feb. 5, 2014, the film had reached $48.6 million in 330 IMAX 3D theatres domestically and $51.5 million from 309 theatres internationally. GRAVITY represents the third IMAX Hollywood film to cross the $100-million threshold, following AVATAR in 2010 and THE DARK KNIGHT RISES in 2012.

GRAVITY continues to pull moviegoers in to IMAX theatres, with a Jan. 31, 2014, re-release into 330 IMAX 3D locations in North America and other international territories.

The film will be released on Blu-ray February 25, but see it on the big screen and in IMAX 3D!

Filmmaker Alfonso Cuaron’s internationally lauded drama, which stars Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, has been a hit with audiences and critics alike, closing in on the $700 million mark at the global box office, while receiving 10 Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture, Best Actress (Sandra Bullock) and Best Score (Steven Price).

Demand for the film – which was also nominated for four Golden Globes, with Cuaron winning Best Director – has been particularly high in IMAX 3D.

Opening Oct. 4, Gravity was the highest-grossing IMAX release of 2013, both domestically and globally.

Academy Award winners Sandra Bullock (The Blind Side) and George Clooney (Syriana) star in GRAVITY, a heart-pounding drama that pulls you into the infinite and unforgiving realm of deep space. The film was directed by Oscar nominee Alfonso Cuaron (Children of Men).

GRAVITY was written by Alfonso Cuaron & Jonás Cuaron, and produced by Alfonso Cuaron and David Heyman (the Harry Potter films). Chris deFaria, Nikki Penny and Stephen Jones served as executive producers. This film has been rated PG-13 for intense perilous sequences, some disturbing images and brief strong language.

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GRAVITY’s Alfonso Cuarón Takes Home Top Honors From Directors Guild of America

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Another Oscar pre-cursor award was handed out Saturday night.

Director Alfonso Cuarón won the DGA’s Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film for GRAVITY. This top honor puts him in a good spot to win the Academy Award for Best Director on Oscar Sunday, March 2. The awards for 2013 were announced during the 66th Annual DGA Awards Dinner at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza in Los Angeles. Other DGA nominees were Paul Greengrass (Captain Phillips); Steve McQueen (12 Years A Slave); David O. Russell (American Hustle); and Martin Scorsese (The Wolf of Wall Street).

With just five weeks until the Oscars are announced from the Dolby Theater in Hollywood, 12 YEARS A SLAVE, which tied with GRAVITY last Saturday to earn the top award at the Producers Guild, seems to be in a three-way race with AMERICAN HUSTLE which took home the Screen Actors Guild award last weekend.

As Oscar pundit Scott Feinberg wrote in his Hollywood Reporter article “Will Weinstein’s ‘Philomena’ Benefit From Best Picture Split?”, be on the lookout for PHILOMENA and a surprise upset for Best Picture.

The DGA and PGA win for GRAVITY firmly places the film as the frontrunner, but as you can see in the most recent edition of the Gurus o’ Gold, many are predicting a split between the Best Picture and Best Director.

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Upcoming awards to note: The Writer’s Guild Awards are on February 1, ACE Eddie’s (editors guild) are February 7 and the BAFTA’s (Gravity – 11 nominations, including Best Film, Outstanding British Film. 12 Years a Slave and American Hustle – ten nominations) are held on February 16.  Final voting for the 86th Academy Awards ends at 5 p.m. PT on Tuesday, February 25th.

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Actress Jane Lynch hosted the ceremony before an audience of more than 1,600 guests. Presenters included (in alphabetical order): Ben Affleck, Debbie Allen, DGA Secretary-Treasurer Michael Apted, DGA President Paris Barclay, Sandra Bullock, Nick Cannon, Don Cheadle, Steve Coogan, Bradley Cooper, DGA Fifth Vice President Jon Favreau, DGA Past President Taylor Hackford, Tom Hanks, Keith Jackson, Anna Kendrick, Allison Liddi-Brown, Sarah Paulson, Rob Reiner, and Kerry Washington.

The DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film has traditionally been a near perfect barometer for the Best Director Academy Award.

Only seven times since in the DGA awards’ 65 year history, has the DGA Award winner not won the Academy Award:

1968: Anthony Harvey won the DGA Award for The Lion in Winter while Carol Reed took home the Oscar® for Oliver!. 1972: Francis Ford Coppola received the DGA’s nod for The Godfather while the Academy selected Bob Fosse for Cabaret. 1985: Steven Spielberg received his first DGA Award for The Color Purple while the Oscar® went to Sydney Pollack for Out of Africa. 1995: Ron Howard was chosen by the DGA for his direction of Apollo 13 while Academy voters cited Mel Gibson for Braveheart. In 2001 Ang Lee took home the DGA Award for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, while the Oscar® went to Steven Soderbergh for Traffic. In 2003 Roman Polanski received the Academy Award for The Pianist, but the DGA Award went to Rob Marshall for Chicago. 2012: Ben Affleck won the DGA Award for Argo, while the Academy chose Ang Lee for Life of Pi.

In addition to Cuaron’s win last night, Steven Soderbergh won for Best Television/Mini-series for the Liberace biopic BEHIND THE CANDELABRA. This was Soderbergh’s first DGA Award and third nomination. He was also the recipient of this year’s Robert B. Aldrich Service Award for extraordinary service to the DGA and its membership.

Female filmmaker Jehane Noujaim took home the DGA Documentary award for THE SQUARE. This was her second DGA Award and third nomination. She won the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary for Startup.com in 2001 (together with Chris Hegedus) and was also nominated in this category in 2004 for Control Room.

Alfonso Cuarón, Ben Affleck

(Photo by Richard Shotwell Invision/AP)

Alfonso Cuarón

12 YEARS A SLAVE and GRAVITY Tie At 25th Annual Producers Guild Awards – Winners

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12 YEARS A SLAVE and GRAVITY have tied at this year’s PGA. With AMERICAN HUSTLE taking the SAG ensemble on Saturday night, we have a bonafide Best Picture race on our hands folks!  This is the first tie for the top film in Producers Guild Award history.

The PGA split keeps the Oscar race wide open in one of the tightest three-way battles in years, with “American Hustle” still in the game following a week of big showings at the Golden Globes, Oscar nominations and Screen Actors Guild Awards.

Tonight the Producers Guild of America (PGA) announced this year’s winning motion picture and television productions at the 25th Annual Producers Guild Awards ceremony at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles.

David Heyman, Anthony Katagas, Jeremy Kleiner, Dede Gardner, Alfonso Cuaron, Steve McQueen, Brad Pitt
David Heyman, Anthony Katagas, Jeremy Kleiner, Dede Gardner, Alfonso Cuaron, Steve McQueen, Brad Pitt (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision for Producers Guild/AP Images)

In addition to the competitive awards, the Producers Guild presented special honors to Barbara Broccoli & Michael G. Wilson (David O. Selznick Achievement Award in Theatrical Motion Pictures), Robert Iger (Milestone Award), Peter Jackson & Joe Letteri (Vanguard Award), Chuck Lorre (Norman Lear Achievement Award in Television), Chris Meledandri (Visionary Award) and FRUITVALE STATION (Stanley Kramer Award). The 2014 Producers Guild Awards Co-Chairs are Lori McCreary (INVICTUS, “Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman”) and Michael De Luca (CAPTAIN PHILLIPS, MONEYBALL, THE SOCIAL NETWORK).

The 2014 Producers Guild nominated films and television programs are listed below in alphabetical order by category along with producers. The producers’ names for each nominated production are listed in alphabetical order and may not reflect the order of screen credits. The winners are indicated in bold and with an asterisk (*).

Last year, the PGA awarded ARGO with its Darryl F. Zanuck Outstanding Producer Award in Theatrical Motion Pictures, marking the sixth consecutive year the Producers Guild has presaged the Motion Picture Academy’s choice.

David Heyman, Alfonso Cuaron
David Heyman, Alfonso Cuaron  (Photo by John Shearer/Invision for Producers Guild/AP Images)

The Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures:

American Hustle (Columbia Pictures)
Producers: Megan Ellison, Jon Gordon, Charles Roven, Richard Suckle

Blue Jasmine (Sony Pictures Classics)
Producers: Letty Aronson, Stephen Tenenbaum

Captain Phillips (Columbia Pictures)
Producers: Dana Brunetti, Michael De Luca, Scott Rudin

Dallas Buyers Club (Focus Features)
Producers: Robbie Brenner, Rachel Winter

*  Gravity (Warner Bros. Pictures)
Producers: Alfonso Cuarón, David Heyman

Her (Warner Bros. Pictures)
Producers: Megan Ellison, Spike Jonze, Vincent Landay

Nebraska (Paramount Pictures)
Producers: Albert Berger, Ron Yerxa

Saving Mr. Banks (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures)
Producers: Ian Collie, Alison Owen, Philip Steuer

*  12 Years a Slave (Fox Searchlight Pictures)
Producers:  Anthony Katagas, Jeremy Kleiner, Steve McQueen, Brad Pitt & Dede Gardner

The Wolf of Wall Street (Paramount Pictures)
Producers: Riza Aziz, Emma Koskoff, Joey McFarland

Brad Pitt
(Photo by John Shearer/Invision for Producers Guild/AP Images)

The Award for Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures:

The Croods (DreamWorks Animation)
Producers: Kristine Belson, Jane Hartwell

Despicable Me 2 (Universal Pictures)
Producers: Janet Healy, Chris Meledandri

Epic (Twentieth Century Fox)
Producers: Jerry Davis, Lori Forte

*  Frozen (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures)
Producer: Peter Del Vecho

Monsters University (Pixar Animation)
Producer: Kori Rae

"FROZEN" (Pictured) ELSA. ©2013 Disney. All Rights Reserved.

The television nominees and winners are:

The David L. Wolper Award for Outstanding Producer of Long-Form Television:

American Horror Story: Asylum (FX)
Producers: Brad Buecker, Dante Di Loreto, Brad Falchuk, Alexis Martin Woodall, Ryan Murphy, Chip Vucelich

*  Behind the Candelabra (HBO)
Producers: Susan Ekins, Gregory Jacobs, Michael Polaire, Jerry Weintraub

Killing Kennedy (National Geographic Channel)
Producers: Mary Lisio, Larry Rapaport, Ridley Scott, Teri Weinberg, David W. Zucker

Phil Spector (HBO)
Producers: Michael Hausman, Barry Levinson

Top of the Lake (Sundance Channel)
Producers: Philippa Campbell, Jane Campion, Iain Canning, Emile Sherman

The Long-Form Television category encompasses both movies of the week and mini-series.

The Award for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures:

A PLACE AT THE TABLE (Magnolia Pictures)
Producers: Julie Goldman, Ryan Harrington, Kristi Jacobson, Lori Silverbush

FAR OUT ISN’T FAR ENOUGH: THE TOMI UNGERER STORY (First Run Features)
Producers: Brad Bernstein, Rick Cikowski

LIFE ACCORDING TO SAM (HBO Documentary Films)
Producers: Andrea Nix Fine, Sean Fine, Miriam Weintraub

*  WE STEAL SECRETS: THE STORY OF WIKILEAKS (Focus Features)
Producers: Alexis Bloom, Alex Gibney, Marc Shmuger

WHICH WAY IS THE FRONT LINE FROM HERE? THE LIFE AND TIME OF TIM HETHERINGTON (HBO Documentary Films)
Producers: James Brabazon, Nick Quested

The Norman Felton Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Drama:

*  Breaking Bad (AMC)
Producers: Melissa Bernstein, Sam Catlin, Bryan Cranston, Vince Gilligan, Peter Gould, Mark Johnson, Stewart Lyons, Michelle MacLaren, George Mastras, Diane Mercer, Thomas Schnauz, Moira Walley-Beckett

Downton Abbey (ITV – United Kingdom;  PBS – United States)
Producers: Julian Fellowes, Nigel Marchant, Gareth Neame, Liz Trubridge

Game of Thrones (HBO)
Producers: David Benioff, Bernadette Caulfield, Frank Doelger, D.B. Weiss, Christopher Newman, Greg Spence, Carolyn Strauss

Homeland (Showtime)
Producers: Henry Bromell, Alexander Cary, Michael Cuesta, Alex Gansa, Howard Gordon, Chip Johannessen, Michael Klick, Meredith Stiehm

House of Cards (Netflix)
Producers: Joshua Donen, David Fincher, Karyn McCarthy, John Melfi, Eric Roth, Kevin Spacey, Beau Willimon

The Danny Thomas Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Comedy:

30 Rock (NBC)
Producers: Jack Burditt, Robert Carlock, Luke Del Tredici , Tina Fey, Matt Hubbard , Marci Klein, Jerry Kupfer , Colleen McGuinness, Lorne Michaels, David Miner, Dylan Morgan , Jeff Richmond , Josh Siegal, Tracey Wigfield

Arrested Development (Netflix)
Producers: John Foy, Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, Mitchell Hurwitz, Dean Lorey, Troy Miller, Richard Rosenstock, Jim Vallely

Big Bang Theory, The (CBS)
Producers: Bill Prady, Chucke Lorre, Steve Molaro, Faye Oshima Belyeu

*  Modern Family (ABC)
Producers: Paul Corrigan, Abraham Higginbotham, Ben Karlin, Elaine Ko, Steven Levitan, Christopher Lloyd, Jeffrey Morton, Dan O’Shannon, Jeffrey Richman, Chris Smirnoff, Brad Walsh, Bill Wrubel, Danny Zuker

VEEP (HBO)
Producers: Simon Blackwell, Christopher Godsick, Armando Iannucci, Stephanie Laing, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Frank Rich, Tony Roche

The Award for Outstanding Producer of Non-Fiction Television:

30 for 30 (ESPN)
Producers:  Bill Simmons, John Dahl, Erin Leyden, Connor Schell

*  Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown (CNN)
Producers: Anthony Bourdain, Christopher Collins, Lydia Tenaglia, Sandra Zweig

Duck Dynasty (A&E Networks)
Producers: Deirdre Gurney, Scott Gurney, Mike Odair, Hugh Peterson, Adam Saltzberg, Charlie Van Vleet

Inside The Actors Studio (Bravo)
Producers: James Lipton, Shawn Tesser, Jeff Wurtz

Shark Tank (ABC)
Producers: Mark Burnett, Becky Blitz, Bill Gaudsmith, Yun Lingner, Clay Newbill, Jim Roush, Laura Skowlund, Max Swedlow

The Award for Outstanding Producer of Live Entertainment & Talk Television:

*  Colbert Report, The (Comedy Central)
Producers: Meredith Bennett, Stephen T. Colbert, Richard Dahm, Paul Dinello, Barry Julien, Matt Lappin, Emily Lazar, Tanya Michnevich Bracco, Tom Purcell, Jon Stewart

Jimmy Kimmel Live (ABC)
Producers: David Craig, Ken Crosby, Doug DeLuca, Gary Greenberg, Erin Irwin, Jimmy Kimmel, Jill Leiderman, Molly McNearney, Tony Romero, Jason Schrift, Jennifer Sharron, Josh Weintraub

Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (NBC)
Producers: Hillary Hunn, Lorne Michaels, Gavin Purcell, Michael Shoemaker

Real Time with Bill Maher (HBO)
Producers: Scott Carter, Sheila Griffiths, Marc Gurvitz, Dean Johnsen, Bill Maher, Billy Martin, Matt Wood

Saturday Night Live (NBC)
Producers: Ken Aymong, Erin Doyle, Steve Higgins, Erik Kenward, Lorne Michaels, Lindsay Shookus

The Award for Outstanding Producer of Competition Television:

Amazing Race, The (CBS)
Producers: Jerry Bruckheimer, Elise Doganieri, Jonathan Littman, Bertram van Munster, Mark Vertullo

Dancing With The Stars (ABC)
Producers: Ashley Edens-Shaffer, Conrad Green, Joe Sungkur

Project Runway (Lifetime)
Producers: Jane Cha Cutler, Desiree Gruber, Tim Gunn, Heidi Klum, Jonathan Murray, Sara Rea, Colleen Sands

Top Chef (Bravo)
Producers: Tom Colicchio, Daniel Cutforth, Casey Kriley, Jane Lipsitz, Erica Ross, Nan Strait, Andrew Wallace

*  Voice, The (NBC)
Producers: Stijn Bakkers, Mark Burnett, John de Mol, Chad Hines, Lee Metzger, Audrey Morrissey, Jim Roush, Kyra Thompson, Nicolle Yaron, Mike Yurchuk, Amanda Zucker

The following programs were not vetted for producer eligibility this year:

The Award for Outstanding Sports Program:

24/7 (HBO)
Hard Knocks (HBO)
Monday Night Football (ESPN)
Real Sports With Bryant Gumbel (HBO)
*  SportsCenter (ESPN)

The Award for Outstanding Children’s Program:

Dora the Explorer (Nickelodeon)
iCarly (Nickelodeon)
Phineas and Ferb (Disney Channel)
*  Sesame Street (PBS)
SpongeBob Squarepants (Nickelodeon)

The Award for Outstanding Digital Series:

Burning Love (http://screen.yahoo.com/burning-love/)

Epic Rap Battles of History (www.epicrapbattlesofhistory.com)

Lizzie Bennet Diaries, The (www.youtube.com/lizziebennet)

Video Game High School (http://www.rocketjump.com/category/vghs)

*  Wired: What’s Inside (http://video.wired.com/series/what-s-inside)

Oscar Nominated GRAVITY Coming To IMAX on January 31

GRAVITY 3D

IMAX and Warner Bros. Pictures today announced that Alfonso Cuarón’s GRAVITY will be returning to domestic IMAX theatres starting January 31.

Cuarón’s spectacular sci-fi thriller, which stars Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, has been a hit with audiences and critics alike, grossing nearly $700 million at the global box office, while receiving 10 Academy Award nominations including Best Picture.

Demand for the film – which was also nominated for four Golden Globes, with Cuarón winning Best Director – has been particularly high in IMAX 3D. Opening Oct. 4, Gravity was the highest-grossing IMAX release of 2013, both domestically and globally. It’s also the 3rd most popular IMAX DMR® film of all time worldwide.

“Congratulations to Alfonso, David Heyman and Warner Bros. on today’s Academy Award nominations. We’re delighted with the overwhelming success of Gravity and the continued demand we’re seeing from moviegoers, both domestically and around the world, to bring it back in IMAX,” said Greg Foster, CEO of IMAX Entertainment and Senior Executive Vice President, IMAX Corp.

“Word of mouth has been tremendous, with fans and critics demanding that Gravity must be experienced in the most immersive way possible. The film’s ample awards consideration has further cemented its place in cinema history, and we’re thrilled to be able to offer it again.”

The IMAX release of Gravity has been digitally re-mastered into the image and sound quality of The IMAX 3D Experience® with proprietary IMAX DMR® (Digital Re-mastering) technology. The crystal-clear images coupled with IMAX’s customized theatre geometry and powerful digital audio create a unique environment that make audiences feel as if they are in the movie.

In celebration of GRAVITY’s re-entry into IMAX theatres in the UK last weekend, film fans queued for hours at Showcase Cinema’s IMAX Cinema in Bluewater.  As you can see in the photos below, NASA astronauts were among them, suited and booted and eager to get hold of the hottest ticket on planet earth.

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Courtesy of IMAX®

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Courtesy of IMAX®

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GRAVITY Returning To The Big Screen January 17

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Following months of overwhelming critical and audience acclaim and numerous year-end awards, Warner Bros. Pictures is bringing Alfonso Cuarón’s cinematic achievement GRAVITY back to big screens nationwide.

The film, which stars Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, will be re-released on more than 900 screens on January 17, 2014, it was announced today by Dan Fellman, President, Domestic Distribution, Warner Bros. Pictures.

Originally released on October 4, 2013, GRAVITY instantly became a favorite of both critics and audiences. It has since become one of the most honored films of the year, most recently bringing a Golden Globe Award for Best Director to Alfonso Cuarón. The film has also received 11 BAFTA Award nominations and 10 Critics’ Choice Award nominations, both including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Actress (Bullock)*.

It has also won Best Picture awards from several prestigious critics organizations, including the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, and has been included on 395 critics’ and critics groups’ top ten lists, as well as being named one of the AFI’s ten best films of the year. It was also announced as the year’s best reviewed film by the website Rotten Tomatoes.

In addition, the talents behind the film have been recognized by their peers, with a Directors Guild of America Award nomination for Cuarón; a Producers Guild of America Award nomination for David Heyman and Cuarón; a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for Bullock; a American Society of Cinematographers Award nomination for Emmanuel Lubezki; an Art Directors Guild Award nomination for Andy Nicholson; and an American Cinema Editors’ Eddie Award nomination for Cuarón and Mark Sanger*.

GRAVITY has also been a smash hit at the box office, earning more than $670 million worldwide and counting, with most moviegoers opting to view it in 3D.

In making the announcement, Fellman stated, “We are thrilled by the many accolades for ‘Gravity,’ which have generated renewed word-of-mouth and interest in seeing the film, whether for the first time or to experience it again. We wanted to give audiences everywhere another opportunity to see it the way it was meant to be seen—on the big screen.”

Academy Award® winners Sandra Bullock (“The Blind Side”) and George Clooney (“Syriana”) star in GRAVITY, a heart-pounding thriller that pulls you into the infinite and unforgiving realm of deep space. The film was directed by Oscar® nominee Alfonso Cuarón (“Children of Men”).

Dr. Ryan Stone (Bullock) is a brilliant medical engineer on her first shuttle mission, with veteran astronaut Matt Kowalski (Clooney) in command. But on a seemingly routine mission, disaster strikes. The shuttle is destroyed, leaving Stone and Kowalski completely alone—tethered to nothing but each other and spiraling out into the blackness. The deafening silence tells them they have lost any link to Earth…and any chance for rescue. As fear turns to panic, every gulp of air eats away at what little oxygen is left. But the only way home may be to go further out into the terrifying expanse of space.

GRAVITY was written by Alfonso Cuarón & Jonás Cuarón, and produced by Alfonso Cuarón and David Heyman (the “Harry Potter” films). Chris deFaria, Nikki Penny and Stephen Jones served as executive producers. The behind-the-scenes team included multiple Oscar®-nominated director of photography Emmanuel Lubezki (“Children of Men,” “The New World”); production designer Andy Nicholson (art director “Alice in Wonderland”); editors Alfonso Cuarón and Mark Sanger (VFX editor “Children of Men”); and costume designer Jany Temime (the “Harry Potter” films). The visual effects were handled by Oscar®-nominated visual effects supervisor Tim Webber (“The Dark Knight”). The music was composed by Steven Price (“Attack the Block”).

GRAVITY

Warner Bros. Pictures Presents an Esperanto Filmoj/Heyday Films Production, an Alfonso Cuarón Film, GRAVITY. Released in 3D and 2D and IMAX®, the film is being distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment company. This film has been rated PG-13 for intense perilous sequences, some disturbing images and brief strong language.

gravitymovie.com

*Award winners not yet announced.