Top 10 Tuesday: WAMG’s Favorite Oscar Nominees

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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

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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

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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!

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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

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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

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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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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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Karen O To Perform “The Moon Song” From HER On The Oscars

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credit: Dan Martensen

Singer-songwriter Karen O will, for the first time, perform the Oscar®-nominated original song “The Moon Song” for a global television audience on the Oscars, show producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron announced today. The Oscars, hosted by Ellen DeGeneres, will air on Sunday, March 2, live on ABC.

“The Moon Song,” with music by Karen O and lyric by Karen O and Spike Jonze, was written for the film HER, directed by Jonze.

The three other nominated songs are “Happy” from “Despicable Me 2,” “Let It Go” from “Frozen” and “Ordinary Love” from “Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom.”

Karen O is the lead singer of the band Yeah Yeah Yeahs, which has released four albums, three of which have been nominated for Grammy Awards. She previously co-wrote original songs for the soundtrack of Jonze’s 2009 film “Where the Wild Things Are,” receiving a Grammy nomination for the featured song “All Is Love.” Karen O has performed on numerous other soundtracks, including those for “Frankenweenie” “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” and “I’m Not There”.

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HER, CAPTAIN PHILLIPS & STORIES WE TELL Take Home Top Honors At 2014 Writers Guild Awards

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HER, STORIES WE TELL and CAPTAIN PHILLIPS took home top honors on Saturday night as the big winners of the 2014 Writers Guild Awards for outstanding achievement in writing for screen. Television, radio, news, promotional, videogame, and new media writing were also recognized at simultaneous ceremonies at the JW Marriott L.A. LIVE in Los Angeles and the Edison Ballroom in New York City. It’s the final precursor guild award leading up to the Oscars.

Below is a complete list of the winners.

SCREEN WINNERS

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY (matched up with the Academy Awards nominations)
Her, Written by Spike Jonze; Warner Bros.

Nominees included American Hustle, Blue Jasmine, Dallas Buyers Club, Her and Nebraska.

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY (3 for 5 Oscar nominations)
Captain Phillips, Screenplay by Billy Ray; Based on the book A Captain’s Duty: Somali Pirates, Navy SEALS, and Dangerous Days at Sea by Richard Phillips with Stephan Talty; Columbia Pictures

In addition to Captain Phillips, the WGA nominees included August: Osage County, Before Midnight, Lone Survivor, and The Wolf of Wall Street. This year’s Oscar nominees are BEFORE MIDNIGHT, CAPTAIN PHILLIPS, PHILOMENA, 12 YEARS A SLAVE and THE WOLD OF WALL STREET.

DOCUMENTARY SCREENPLAY
Stories We Tell, Written by Sarah Polley; Roadside Attractions

Tom Hanks

TELEVISION AND NEW MEDIA WINNERS

DRAMA SERIES

Breaking Bad, Written by Sam Catlin, Vince Gilligan, Peter Gould, Gennifer Hutchison, George Mastras, Thomas Schnauz, Moira Walley-Beckett; AMC

COMEDY SERIES

Veep, Written by Simon Blackwell, Roger Drew, Sean Gray, Armando Iannucci, Ian Martin, Georgia Pritchett, David Quantick, Tony Roche, Will Smith; HBO

NEW SERIES

House of Cards, Written by Kate Barnow, Rick Cleveland, Sam Forman, Gina Gionfriddo, Keith Huff, Sarah Treem, Beau Willimon; Netflix

EPISODIC DRAMA

“Confessions” (Breaking Bad), Written by Gennifer Hutchison; AMC

EPISODIC COMEDY

“Hogcock!” (30 Rock), Written by Jack Burditt & Robert Carlock; NBC

LONG FORM – ADAPTED 

Muhammad Ali’s Greatest Fight, Written by Shawn Slovo, Based on the book by Howard Bingham and Max Wallace; HBO

SHORT FORM NEW MEDIA – ORIGINAL

“Episode 4: The Collected Sylvia” (Sylvia Plath: Girl Detective), Written by Mike Simses; sylviaplathgirldetective.com

ANIMATION

“A Test Before Trying” (The Simpsons), Written by Joel H. Cohen; Fox

COMEDY / VARIETY (INCLUDING TALK) – SERIES

The Colbert Report, Writers: Stephen Colbert, Tom Purcell, Michael Brumm, Nate Charny, Rich Dahm, Paul Dinello, Eric Drysdale, Rob Dubbin, Glenn Eichler, Gabe Gronli, Dan Guterman, Barry Julien, Jay Katsir, Frank Lesser, Opus Moreschi, Bobby Mort, Meredith Scardino, Max Werner; Comedy Central

COMEDY / VARIETY – MUSIC, AWARDS, TRIBUTES – SPECIALS

Blake Shelton’s Not So Family Christmas, Head Writers: Jay Martel, Ian Roberts Writers: Alex Rubens, Charlie Sanders; NBC

QUIZ AND AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION

Jeopardy!, Written by John Duarte, Harry Friedman, Mark Gaberman, Debbie Griffin, Michele Loud, Robert McClenaghan, Jim Rhine, Steve D. Tamerius, Billy Wisse; ABC

DAYTIME DRAMA

Days of Our Lives, Written by Lorraine Broderick, David Cherrill, Carolyn Culliton, Richard Culliton, Rick Draughon, Christopher Dunn, Janet Iacobuzio, David A. Levinson, Ryan Quan, Dave Ryan, Melissa Salmons, Christopher J. Whitesell; NBC

CHILDREN’S – EPISODIC & SPECIALS

“influANTces” (A.N.T. Farm), Written by Vincent Brown; Disney Channel

DOCUMENTARY – CURRENT EVENTS

“Egypt in Crisis” (Frontline), Written by Marcela Gaviria & Martin Smith; PBS

DOCUMENTARY – OTHER THAN CURRENT EVENTS

“The Choice 2012” (Frontline), Written by Michael Kirk; PBS

TIED WITH:

“Silicon Valley” (American Experience), Telescript by Randall MacLowry and Michelle Ferrari; Story by Randall MacLowry; PBS

NEWS – REGULARLY SCHEDULED, BULLETIN, OR BREAKING REPORT

“Tragedy at Newtown” Special Edition (ABC World News with Diane Sawyer), Written by Lisa Ferri and Matt Negrin; ABC

NEWS – ANALYSIS, FEATURE, OR COMMENTARY

“Lethal Medicine” (60 Minutes), Written by Michael Rey, Oriana Zill de Granados, Michael Radutzky; CBS

RADIO WINNERS

DOCUMENTARY

“2012 Year in Review,” Written by Gail Lee; CBS Radio News

NEWS – REGULARLY SCHEDULED, BULLETIN, OR BREAKING REPORT

“Afternoon Drive,” Written by Bill Spadaro; CBS Radio/1010 WINS

NEWS – ANALYSIS, FEATURE, OR COMMENTARY

“Remembering C. Everett Koop,” Written by Scott Saloway; CBS Radio News

PROMOTIONAL WRITING AND GRAPHIC ANIMATION WINNERS

ON-AIR PROMOTION (TELEVISION, NEW MEDIA OR RADIO)

The Crazy Ones, “Building a Better Comedy,” Written by Erial Tompkins; CBS

TELEVISION GRAPHIC ART AND ANIMATION

CBS News Animations: “Brain Injury,” “Pills,” “Bionic Leg,” “Midland Parade,” “Concordia Salvage;” Animation by David Rosen; CBS News

VIDEOGAME WINNER

OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT IN VIDEOGAME WRITING 

The Last of Us, Written by Neil Druckmann; Sony Computer Entertainment

Three-time Emmy-winning Everybody Loves Raymond actor-comic Brad Garrett hosted the West Coast WGA ceremony, which was executive produced by Cort Casady.

Presenters who appeared at the WGAW’s L.A. awards ceremony included Oscar nominee Bruce Dern (Nebraska), two-time Emmy and Golden Globe-winning The Good Wife star Julianna Margulies, Oscar-nominated writer-actress Julie Delpy (Before Midnight), three-time TV Guide Award and People’s Choice Award-winning Castle co-star Stana Katic, Oscar-winner and Emmy-nominated Justified co-star Walton Goggins, SAG Award-nominated actor Dermot Mulroney (August: Osage County), WGA-nominated Parks and Recreation co-star Nick OffermanTrue Blood co-star Joe Manganiello, Emmy and Golden Globe-nominated actress Amber Tamblyn (Two and a Half Men), three-time SAG Award-nominated Breaking Bad actress Betsy BrandtRizzoli & Isles co-star Sasha Alexander, WGA-winning writer and Emmy-nominator actor B.J. Novak (The Office), TV Guide Award-winning actor Jeff Perry (Scandal), and six Daytime Emmy Award-winning Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek.

The Writers Guild of America, West presented several special honors during its ceremony: Academy Award-winning comedy director-writer Mel Brooks (The Producers) presented the WGAW’s Laurel Award for Screenwriting Achievement to Oscar-nominated screenwriter-director Paul Mazursky (An Unmarried Woman) for lifetime achievement, two-time Golden Globe and Daytime Emmy-winning Happy Days star Henry Winkler presented the Guild’s Paddy Chayefsky Laurel Award for Television Writing to Happy Days creator Garry Marshall, Oscar-nominated actress Jennifer Tilly (Bullets Over Broadway) presented the Guild’s Valentine Davies Award to The Simpsons co-developer/ and philanthropist Sam Simon for his community service and humanitarian efforts, WGA-winning screenwriter Bob Eisele (The Great Debaters) presented the WGAW’s Morgan Cox Award posthumously to late screenwriter Thomas C. Cook (The China Syndrome) for Guild service, and WGAW Vice President Howard A. Rodman presented the WGAW’s Paul Selvin Award, for written work which embodies constitutional rights and civil liberties, to documentary filmmaker Alex Gibney for his screenplay We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks.

HER – The Review

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By Michael Haffner

Guy meets girl.  The two fall in love.  They live happily ever after.  End of film, roll credits.  That pattern of events isn’t always what happens in real life, and sometimes (rarely) that’s also not always the case on the silver screen either.  Depending on whom you’re with, love can take you to great heights or deep and dark lows.  Yet, what happens when that someone is a something?  Like say for example a computer program.  HER presents this unusual scenario with all the heart and sadness that would accompany any traditional love story.  But is it a story where you just see everything displayed on screen or actually feel it?

By day, Theodore (Joaquin Phoenix) works for a company that offers the service of constructing personalized letters to send to another’s loved one.  By night, Theodore searches for companionship while coping with a divorce from his ex (Rooney Mara) that has yet to be finalized.  He goes about this through playing video games with fellow online gamers and calling some strangers on the phone he has just met electronically.  All seems hopeless for the quiet and aloof outsider until he discovers a new computer operating system that is meant to be fully compatible with your personality.  Enter “Samantha.”  What begins as a few personal questions into one another’s life soon becomes much more.

Reviewing Spike Jonze’s filmography reveals trends and themes that connect many of his short projects and feature length films.  The residue of his past films can be easily identified throughout HER.  Once again the main character seems to be a loner of sorts who is looking for more from life; something that might fill an emotional void.  This same character can be previously found in BEING JOHN MALKOVICH, WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE, and the beautiful and touching short film I’M HERE – a short that also finds Jonze exploring what defines love in a world of artificial life.  While the soft lighting and dreamlike gaze Jonze filters through most of his films is still intact here, art director Austin Gorg takes a unique approach to the color palette of this not so distant future world by painting it in a sea of pastel tones.  Los Angeles seems warm and inviting and the technology that the inhabitants almost solely interact with is portrayed as just as welcoming.  So often we see in films a more cold and sterile tech-based view of the future.  This unique approach to the sci-fi genre may be off-putting to some even before you get to the atypical idea of a man falling in love with his operating system.

Whether you are able to believe the connection between a man and his computer isn’t necessarily the point of the film as much as the bigger question it asks of the audience: can you accept that love can exist in an unorthodox relationship?  The whole point of HER is to question what constitutes as a real relationship in our modern and technological times.  Considering the final thing many of us do before going to bed is check our smart phones or laptops, it does seem like this could very well be the next logical step.  Spike Jonze presents this scenario in a passionate way that focuses on the quiet and intimate moments many of us have also experienced with a loved one.  Joaquin Phoenix handles this “physical” challenge with a natural innocence.  You believe that he’s falling in loving even if the idea occasionally feels preposterous.  The fact that some of the romantic scenes and dialogue fall short of eliciting a strong emotion is not to be blamed on Phoenix’s vulnerable performance, but maybe Jonze’s too sweet for his own good script.  There’s a familiar pace to the way the relationship unfolds that felt a little too rehearsed; which of course plays into the whole idea of whether or not the computer is only doing what it is being programmed to do.  As sufficient as Scarlett Johansson is in the voice-only role, I found her iconic voice distracting and overly seductive for the part.  Often her vocal inflections come across like a classy sex-line operator instead of an adequate match for Theodore’s personality.  I can’t help but wonder how Jonze’s original choice of Samantha Morton might have better fleshed-out “Samantha.”

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Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.

In theory, HER has everything I would want in a love story.  Thoughtful ideas are brought to light and characters takes precedence over spectacle.  It’s not just some glossy, Sunday afternoon time-waster that stars a past winner of “sexiest man of the year.” Films of this genre don’t often have a lot to say about love.  That alone makes HER one of the most important relationship dramas to come out since . . . well . . . ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND  (of course written by frequent Spike Jonze collaborator Charlie Kauffman).  Unfortunately Jonze doesn’t quite have the same depth of Kaufman’s nuanced script.  Where he makes up for that is in constructing a believable future Los Angeles that could very well exist in the next ten years.  Marveling at the upgrades in current day technology and retro throwback fashion thankfully doesn’t take the focus away from the journey on display.  At the same time, the film never fully engaged me to the point that I fell under its love spell either.  I watched a well-made love story unfold but never felt a personal connection to it.  Some viewers will be able to look past and see the “person” beyond the computer and beyond the recognizable actress voicing her.  Maybe I watched HER with a closed mind, but I never actually saw “her.”  It always felt like a man talking to a computer who clearly needed “her’ more than “she” needed him – c’est la vie.  In 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY, the ship’s computer program, the HAL 9000, attempts to talk Dave out of pulling the plug after what it did to the rest of the crew.  Stanley Kubrick and writer Arthur C. Clarke had the idea that man would someday have to evolve to overcome computers.  Spike Jonze seems to be saying that man may always need a counterpart, regardless if they are real or artificial.  If true love knows no bounds, who’s to say that a man can’t love a machine?  I guess I just wish it were a love that was more tangible.

4 out of 5

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Win A Pass To The Advance Screening Of HER In St. Louis

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Set in Los Angeles in the near future, HER follows Theodore (Joaquin Phoenix), a complex, soulful man who makes his living writing touching, personal letters for other people.

Heartbroken after the end of a long relationship, he becomes intrigued with a new, advanced operating system, which promises to be an intuitive and unique entity in its own right. Upon initiating it, he is delighted to meet “Samantha,” a bright, female voice (Scarlett Johansson) who is insightful, sensitive and surprisingly funny. As her needs and desires grow, in tandem with his own, their friendship deepens into an eventual love for each other.

HER
Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.

From the singular perspective of Oscar®-nominated filmmaker Spike Jonze comes HER, an original love story that explores the evolving nature—and the risks—of intimacy in the modern world.

HER opens everywhere, January 10th, 2014.

Enter to win tickets to the advanced screening of HER on Monday, January 6 at 7PM.

Answer the following question:

Spike Jonze directed this 2009 fantasy drama adapted from a 1963 children’s book.

What is the name of this film?

OFFICIAL RULES:

1.  YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.

2.  ENTER YOUR NAME AND ANSWER IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.

3.  NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

This film has been rated R for language, sexual content and brief graphic nudity.

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(L-r) AMY ADAMS, JOAQUIN PHOENIX and director SPIKE JONZE on the set. Photo by Sam Zhu.

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©2013 UNTITLED RICK HOWARD COMPANY LLC. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

Watch The New Trailer For Spike Jonze’s HER

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Photo by Merrick Morton

Writer/director Spike Jonze brings his distinct style and insight to this modern relationship story, HER, a film that takes an unconventional look at the nature of love. Here’s a look at the brand new trailer.

Set in Los Angeles in the slight future, HER follows Theodore (Joaquin Phoenix), a complex, soulful man who makes his living writing touching, personal letters for other people. Heartbroken after the end of a long relationship, he becomes intrigued with a new, advanced operating system, which promises to be an intuitive and unique entity in its own right.

Upon initiating it, he is delighted to meet “Samantha,” a bright, female voice (Scarlett Johansson) who is insightful, sensitive and surprisingly funny. As her needs and desires grow, in tandem with his own, their friendship deepens into an eventual love for each other.

HER
Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.

From the singular perspective of Oscar-nominated filmmaker Spike Jonze comes HER, an original love story that explores the evolving nature-and the risks-of intimacy in the modern world.

Written and directed by Jonze, the romantic drama stars Oscar nominee Joaquin Phoenix (“The Master,” “Walk the Line,” “Gladiator”), Oscar nominee Amy Adams (“The Master,” “Doubt”), Oscar nominee Rooney Mara (“The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo”), Olivia Wilde, and Scarlett Johansson.

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(L-r) AMY ADAMS, JOAQUIN PHOENIX and director SPIKE JONZE on the set. Photo by Sam Zhu.

The idea for HER had been simmering with Jonze for years. “The initial spark,” he recalls, “was an article I saw online about 10 years ago, about instant-messaging with an artificial intelligence. I linked to it and I said ‘Hello,’ and it said ‘Hello.’ ‘How are you?’ ‘Good. How are you?’ We had a little exchange and there was an initial buzz of, ‘Wow, I’m talking to this thing, this thing is listening to me,’ and then the illusion quickly dissolved and I could tell it was parroting what it had heard before and it wasn’t intelligent, it was just a clever program. But that initial buzz was exciting. Eventually I thought about the idea of a man who’s having a relationship with an entity like that, but a fully formed consciousness, and what could happen, and used that as a way to imagine this love story.”

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(L-r) JOAQUIN PHOENIX with director SPIKE JONZE on the set. Photo by Merrick Morton.

“There are lots of ideas here about technology and the world we live in, the isolation that it can create as well as the connections it creates, and the way we’re changing as a society,” says Jonze. “But as I was writing the story, I always ended up putting those themes in the background. The high concept always takes a back seat to the relationship between Theodore and Samantha. Every scene is based in their reality as a couple. We wanted to look at it as a relationship between two individuals and, through them, make a story that looked at love and relationships as complexly and from as many angles as possible.

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(L-r) JOAQUIN PHOENIX as Theodore and ROONEY MARA as Catherine. Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.

“I wanted to touch on some of the needs and fears, the judgments and expectations we bring into a relationship; the things we don’t want to acknowledge, or things we pretend we don’t need, but need anyway; the ways in which we connect with each other, or try to connect and fail,” he continues. “We want to be known, but at the same time, are afraid of being known.

“Samantha was created to evolve,” he says. “And once she’s set in motion, like once we’re all set in motion, there’s no limit to where that’s going to take us and who we’re going to become. If you fall in love with someone, that’s the risk you take.”

HER will open in limited release on December 18, 2013 in New York, Los Angeles and Toronto, and go wide on January 10, 2014.

This film has been rated R for language, sexual content and brief graphic nudity.

http://www.herthemovie.com/

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Spike Jonze’s HER To Open In Limited Release On December 18

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Warner Bros. Pictures has moved the release date of Spike Jonze’s romantic drama HER. The film will now open in limited release in New York, Los Angeles and Toronto on December 18, 2013, and wide on January 10, 2014. HER will be premiering at the New York Film Festival as the Closing Night Gala Presentation on October 13.

With its new December opening, the move now places the film in key awards consideration.

Set in Los Angeles, in the near future, “Her” follows Theodore Twombly (Joaquin Phoenix), a complex, soulful man who makes his living writing touching, personal letters for other people. Heartbroken after the end of a long relationship, he becomes intrigued with a new, advanced operating system, which promises to be an intuitive and unique entity in its own right. Upon initiating it, he is delighted to meet “Samantha,” a bright, female voice (Scarlett Johansson) who is insightful, sensitive and surprisingly funny. As her needs and desires grow in tandem with his own, their friendship deepens into an eventual love for each other.

From the singular perspective of Oscar-nominated filmmaker Spike Jonze (“Being John Malkovich”) comes “Her,” an original love story that explores the evolving nature—and the risks—of intimacy in the modern world.

Written and directed by Jonze, the romantic drama stars Oscar nominees Joaquin Phoenix (“The Master,” “Walk the Line”), Amy Adams (“The Master,” “Doubt”) and Rooney Mara (“The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo”); Olivia Wilde (upcoming “Rush”); and Scarlett Johansson (“Lost in Translation”).

http://www.herthemovie.com/
https://www.facebook.com/herthemovie

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Photo: ©2013 UNTITLED RICK HOWARD COMPANY LLC. COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES

Watch Joaquin Phoenix, Scarlett Johansson And Amy Adams In First Trailer For Spike Jonze’s HER

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Joaquin Phoenix stars in this first look at HER – the new modern-day love story from Oscar-nominated filmmaker Spike Jonze (“Being John Malkovich”).

Set in Los Angeles, slightly in the future, HER follows Theodore Twombly, a complex, soulful man who makes his living writing touching, personal letters for other people. Heartbroken after the end of a long relationship, he becomes intrigued with a new, advanced operating system, which promises to be an intuitive entity in its own right, individual to each user. Upon initiating it, he is delighted to meet “Samantha,” a bright, female voice, who is insightful, sensitive and surprisingly funny.

As her needs and desires grow, in tandem with his own, their friendship deepens into an eventual love for each other. From the unique perspective of Oscar-nominated filmmaker Spike Jonze comes an original love story that explores the evolving nature—and the risks—of intimacy in the modern world.

Written, directed and produced by Jonze, HER stars Joaquin Phoenix (“The Master”), Amy Adams (“The Master”), Scarlett Johansson (“Hitchcock”), Rooney Mara (“The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo”), Chris Pratt (“Moneyball”) and Olivia Wilde (“People Like Us”).

An Annapurna Pictures Production, a Film by Spike Jonze, HER will be distributed domestically by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company on November 20.

http://www.herthemovie.com/
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Spike Jonze’s HER Set For A November 20 Release

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Photo by Francois G. Durand/Getty Images

Warner Bros. Pictures has announced that HER, the new modern-day love story from Oscar-nominated filmmaker Spike Jonze (“Being John Malkovich”) and Annapurna Pictures, will open in limited release on November 20, 2013.

The film will be released initially in New York, Los Angeles and Toronto, with future cities and dates to be announced.

Written, directed and produced by Jonze, HER stars Joaquin Phoenix (“The Master”), Amy Adams (“The Master”), Scarlett Johansson (“Hitchcock”), Rooney Mara (“The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo”), Chris Pratt (“Moneyball”) and Olivia Wilde (“People Like Us”).

Joining Jonze as producers on the film are Vincent Landay and Megan Ellison. Daniel Lupi and Ted Schipper will serve as executive producers, with Natalie Farrey and Chelsea Barnard as co-producers.

The behind-the-scenes creative team includes director of photography Hoyte Van Hoytema (“Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy”), production designer KK Barrett (“Where the Wild Things Are”), costume designer Casey Storm (“Where the Wild Things Are”) and editors Eric Zumbrunnen (“Where the Wild Things Are”) and Jeff Buchanan (“Be Kind Rewind”).

An Annapurna Pictures Production, a Film by Spike Jonze, HER will be distributed domestically by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.