Let The Games Begin first act read today, in Toronto
The first act of my script Let The Games Begin will be dramatically read tonight in Toronto, at WildSound. If you’re in Toronto, try to go check it out (and vote for me): “The WILDsound 1st ACT to ACT to ACT Screenplay Festival’s March 2010 Reading will be held on Friday, March 26th at the National Film Board Cinema, 150 John Street, in the Entertainment District in downtown Toronto.”
Wildsound 2010 Winner (Top 3)
I am an official winner of the 2010 Wildsound Feature Screenplay Contest (the Top 3 are official Winners of the contest, and then it goes to an audience vote). I’m excited and pleased that my script was enjoyable to enough readers that it managed to win.
The way it works is this: the first act of my script will now be read at a WildSound event in Canada in March. If it is selected as the audience pick, then the entire script will be read in May. Fingers crossed for coming out ahead in the audience voting, as I’d love to hear the script read in its entirety in May.
Oscar Thoughts 2010
Time for my annual thoughts on the Oscars. I don’t make many predictions, I mainly write what I think about the various categories.
Short Animated Film
Nothing wrong with the other entries, but — Wallace and Gromit! Nick Park deserves to win it. It is, however, a crying shame that Peter Sohn’s Partly Cloudy was not nominated. It is very sweet, original, and, of course, excellently crafted.
Original Score
I’d love to see Michael Giacchino win, but I suspect this is another category where the Avatar juggernaut will roll on unstopped.
Original Song
As is usual, I don’t care for any of the songs on the list.
Make-up
No opinon.
Sound Editing and Mixing
It doesn’t seem like the nominating committees tried very hard on these two. It’s all the big films, and will probably come down to more Avatar vs. The Hurt Locker. I think I’d go with The Hurt Locker, because I loved the way the sound was used to create both a sense of place, and emotion. While also excellent, Avatar was mainly overwhelming, which with sound I think is easier than being subtle.
Foreign Language Film, Short Film, Documentary, and Documentary Short
I never manage to see all the foreign, documentary, and short films before the actual Awards, but that’s fine with me. Every year I get to hear about numerous excellent films to go check out that I might otherwise not, and almost always several of them are both excellent and also something I personally can find interesting and/or entertaining.
Film Editing
I thought the cutting in District 9 was quite excellent. Same with Avatar and Hurt Locker, but I’d throw down for D9 on this one because I felt the editing was a strong component to making the world seem real. More than Avatar, D9 gave me room to slip into my own imagination and allow me to forget I was watching a fictional film. Hurt Locker did, as well, but that’s a bit easier with a realistic drama.
Costume Design
Nothing wrong with the other contenders, but I’d pick The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus, mainly because I prefer to see the craft awards go to the shows where they weren’t simply flat-out recreating a particular historical era (unless some recreation work is just so outstanding as to rise above all else — which I don’t see this year).
Art Direction
I’d be keen to see this go to Parnassus also, mainly based on the “rooting for the little guy” ethic, but I suspect Avatar will take this one. In terms of creating a comprehensive, visually rich world, Avatar would be a well deserved choice. Frankly, I’d probably vote for Avatar for this myself, and lie about having voted for Parnassus in order to support the littler guy. Or maybe I really would vote for Parnassus. Doesn’t matter much, I suspect Avatar will scoop this up, too.
Cinematography
Avatar or The Hurt Locker. I could go either way.
Visual Effects
Avatar and District 9 are both quite worthy of their nominations.
Avatar will certainly win, but District 9 cost a reported $30M, whereas Avatar was $240M (both according to IMDb Pro, though some reports claim Avatar was closer to $400M). In my opinion, the District 9 crews did an amazing job at creating a convincing world with less than 20% of the budget Avatar had (budget for the whole film, who knows what the percentages of budget spent on F/X only were like between the two).
On the other hand, the Avatar crews created some incredible environments, and the scope and scale of the work is awe inspiring. Both D9 and Avatar animators did a great job making characters whose designs are awkward at best really come alive. I didn’t expect to empathize with either the insectoid Christopher Johnson, or the blue, catlike Neytiri, but I actually did. Both are quite worthy.
Star Trek was decent enough, but was the work really better than Terminator 4, 2012, or Transformers 2? It’s hard to say. All four of those films had good work and bad, though as an actual film, Star Trek is certainly more worthy (but that’s not what the nomination is supposed to be about).
Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress
Precious all the way. I thought Mo’nique and Gabourey Sidibe were both amazingly good in that film. If you haven’t seen that film, you should, though be warned: it is a very difficult film emotionally.
Best Supporting Actor
I loved Christoph Waltz in Inglorious Basterds, but on the other hand his characterization, as enjoyable as it was, was a reflection of some of the very strong criticism I have about that film (about how it eschews character in favor of gimmick, and how the most compelling elements of the story are thrown away or ruined during the climax in order to make room for spectacle rather than story).
Therefore, I’d pick Christopher Plummer in The Last Station.
Best Actor
George Clooney or Jeremy Renner. I thought both were quite excellent in their respective films. I’d probably go for Clooney, but it’s damned close in my mind.
However, I am picking from the available options. I also happen to think it is a crying shame that neither Sam Rockwell (Moon) nor Sharlto Copley (D9) were nominated. Both were amazing. Both were integral to their films. Without those actors, those films would not have been as excellent as they are — in fact, the films may not have worked at all with different actors — a criteria I’d think would be essential to this nomination. It goes to show the fact that acting, not VFX, is what makes a truly great Sci-Fi film continues to be woefully ignored by The Academy.
Writing, Adapted
What a difficult choice. In different ways, Up In The Air, District 9, and Precious are all quite excellent. In The Loop is also quite worthy (I’ve not yet either seen or read An Education). I suppose, in terms of sheer artistry of writing, I’d have to go with Up In The Air (though I’d love to see a sci-fi like D9 actually win a story-centric award).
Writing, Original
I am reassured that Avatar is not nominated in this category, because the writing was far and away the weakest element of that film. It’d be interesting to see Up get this, because animated films don’t win writing awards very often, but being up against The Hurt Locker, The Messenger and A Serious Man doesn’t bode well for Up.
In terms of just writing as an art and craft, I’d probably go with A Serious Man. And as for Inglorious Basterds, it has some really great stuff in it, and some stuff I really feel doesn’t work, so for me it’s not a serious contender. I’m disappointed that Moon was not nominated instead.
Animated Film
I’m impressed that The Secret of Kells made the nomination list. Talk about a great victory for the little guy: Kells is a six and a half million euro production out of Les Armateurs in France, and is quite an excellent film to boot. That it got notice amongst the giants of American animation goes to show that sometimes folks at The Academy really do “get it”. I actually liked all of the nominees that I’ve seen (I haven’t seen The Princess and The Frog). All that said, of course I’m rooting for Up. I think Up is excellent, and would even if I were not a Pixar employee.
Directing
As far as I’m concerned, this should either go to Katherine Bigelow or Jason Reitman. I think I liked Up In The Air somewhat better overall, but I think the material and conditions of making The Hurt Locker were much more difficult. I’d vote for Bigelow.
Too bad Duncan Jones was not nominated for Moon.
Best Picture
Expanding it to ten films has really made things interesting. To start with, there is only one film on the list I don’t particularly care for — Inglorious Basterds (I haven’t seen The Blind Side or An Education). And even Basterds had moments of sheer brilliance, and it’s dialog is certainly far better than Avatar, I just think it went far enough off the rails to plunge out of contention in my mind.
Choosing for this category calls into question what the award is supposed to actually be. If one takes to heart that the award goes to the Producer(s), then perhaps it could be seen as a “most incredible act of filmmaking” award. From that perspective, Avatar would be a shoe-in. It’s hard to fathom that that thing actually got made. The sheer audaciousness of it is in itself award-worthy, but to pull it off so successfully is truly an epic act of filmmaking.
If one looks at the award as an award for “most culturally resonant film”, then Avatar is also a lock. Having made a zillion dollars at the box office, and already inspiring legions of LARP-ers and Cosplayers to create their own Avatar worlds, there is no dobut about Avatar’s cultural significance. On the other hand, popularity alone would lead to some very unsatisfying Best Picture awards.
However, if it is best use of all the elements of filmmaking to tell a coherent, entertaining (or thought-provoking) story in a compelling manner, then the field is wide open. Any one of the nominees that I’ve seen, save for Basterds, is worthy in my book. Avatar is one of the weakest in terms of traditional Best Picture components — acting, dialog, story depth — but not so weak that it winning would be offensive.
And the only film I can think of off the top of my head that I feel should have been nominated but wasn’t is Moon. I literally couldn’t decide if it were up to me.
But it isn’t up to me, and I think Avatar is going to overcome being one of the weakest of the lot in terms of acting and dialog, and win anyway.
Finalist: Spring 2010 Wildsound Feature Screenplay Contest
I’ve been very busy writing on three different projects (though one has pushed the other two aside recently as it has deadlines), and working like crazy on a big project at work, so I haven’t been blogging much, but I have some news:
My screenplay “Let The Games Begin” is a finalist in the 2010 Wildsound Feature Screenplay Contest, a contest which includes feedback on all submissions and gives the winner an opportunity to hear their script performed by professional actors in Canada. I think that’s a pretty cool prize for a contest, and would really love the chance to hear the script read by professionals and make edits and adjustments to it based on that experience.
The same script was also a Finalist in the 2009 Austin Film Festival Drama Screenplay Competition. I am a big fan of Austin as an experience — I’ve met several folks through Austin who I now consider friends — and I’m proud to have placed two years in a row (in 2008 my script “Welcome To Akron” was a Quarterfinalist).
Help Haitian Film Students
Haitian film students who survived the earthquate are attempting to make a documentary of the tragedy from a Haitian perspective — about Haitians by Haitians. Not only will this help them continue to live their lives, and pursue their dreams, it is also a positive action they can take to help their country recover.
Their current project can illustrate the power of film to tell the story of underrepresented people, and underscore how filmmaking can be a part of the response to a major disaster in terms of both short-term awareness building, and longer-term documentation that both tells an important story and assists in the analysis of how to better prepare for future disasters.
These students study at The Ciné Institute, based in Jacmel on Haiti’s southern coast. The school was completely destroyed in Tuesday’s earthquake. The Ciné Institute provided Haitian youth with film education, technical training, and media related micro enterprise opportunities.
If you’d like to donate money or equipment to help them keep shooting, and rebuild their school, click here.
(I heard about this opportunity to help Haitian film students through an e-mail sent by Peter Marshall of actioncutprint.com.)