Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Oscar nominees 2009


The carpets are rolled out, the lights are shining and the statue is glistening with much awaited glory...

On January 22nd, the Academy of Motion picture Arts and Sciences announced the nominees for the 81st Academy Awards.

The Curious case of Benjamin Button, Frost/Nixon, Milk, Slumdog Millionaire and The Reader: A compelling catalogue depicting catastrophic worlds, the Oscar nominated movies are chronicles depicting lives caught in constant turmoil. Whether it is the depressing optimism of Slumdog Millionaire or the persistence of a gay activist in Milk, the movies depict the pressures and anxieties of surviving in an age that oppresses.

Take Stephen Daldry’s The Reader. Based on the book by Bernhard Schlink, it is a secret romance between a young man and an older woman, a war criminal who was an S.S. officer. A choice that leaves them both wrestling with guilt, Daldry’s depiction of fulfilled passion and guilty love, leaves the readers of the movie with a dilemma concerning thwarted choices.  Kate Winslet’s serious yet tender performance has already bagged her a BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) and a Golden Globe, and can also snatch an Oscar, which she has been declined the last five times.

The Curious case of Benjamin Button, another highly acclaimed film, is a narrative about abnormality of body and time where Benjamin, played diligently by Brad Pitt, ages backwards till he dies of young age. Grappling with paradoxes of living and decaying, David Finch’s magic realist lens allows us to be a part of this unusual storytelling.

Another movie that bags the nomination is Ron Howard’s Frost/Nixon, a tense drama about a journalist’s perseverance in uncovering the lie behind the President. Frost/Nixon is a slice of political history, shared between the rigorous journalist and the conniving ex-President and Howard has attempted to be as faithful to history while crafting this movie.

Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire is also a strong contender for the Oscars for its exciting script and inspiring performances. Winner of the best film at Golden Globes and BAFTA, Slumdog Millionaire has been hailed as a trans-national and global document that records the “rags to riches” journey of one Indian chai-wala. Set in the Maximum city Mumbai, Boyle (who is known for the cult hit, Trainspotting) traverses through its slums and chronicles lives that have been festering in crime and poverty. Based on the book ‘Q and A’ by Vikas Swaroop, Boyle creates an enthralling slum saga witnessed through western novelty.  

Gus Van Sant’s biopic of Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, captures the intolerance and the subsequent revolution of America in the seventies. The movie Milk has been nominated for best film, best Director, best Actor and the best Supporting Actor. A moving tale of perseverance and pursuit, this true story of 1978, still possesses contemporary resonance. Set in the town of San Francisco, the biography of Milk becomes a treatise for making the personal life a political victory. Sean Penn plays Harvey Milk with ease and eccentricity, but at the same time instils in him a blossom of humanity.

Milk’s political cry of “I’m Harvey Milk and I want to recruit you” has bagged Sean Penn a best actor nomination. However, Mickey Rourke as the Randy ‘The Ram’ Robinson in The Wrestler is an intense study of the glory and the horrors of the wrestling world. An iconic performance by Rourke revives his dwindling career as he plays ‘The Ram,’ a battered hero who once sparkled inside wrestling rings, but is a failure in outside world.

Rourke and Penn are also competing with Brad Pitt’s performance as Benjamin Button, and Frank Langella as the imposing President in Frost/Nixon.

In the best actress category, Kate Winslet leads not only with her performance in The Reader, but also her highly acclaimed but sadly not nominated contribution in the Revolutionary Road, an account of the slow erosion of the American dream. However, Meryl Streep’s portrayal of Sister Aloysius Beauvier in Doubt can give Winslet a run for her money. Streep portrays Beauvier with an upright moral righteousness and Victorian discipline that terrifies her students and staff.

A dark horse in this category could be Melissa Leo in Frozen River, who plays a single mother who smuggles immigrants into the country. Her under-rated and subtle rendering of this character has won approval and applause from critics. Also nominated in this category are Anne Hathaway in Rachel Getting Married, a family drama amidst a wedding, and Angelina Jolie in The Changeling, a nightmarish story about a mother who has lost her son.  

Similarly, a diverse range awaits the best actor in a supporting role. The nominations range from a psychotic madman to a preacher accused of sodomy, from an award winning method actor, dealing in scatological humour to a disgruntled and homophobic murderer.

Heath Ledger’s portrayal of the Joker in the Dark Knight has earned him an Oscar nomination for the Best actor in supporting role. His dark, menacing and fiendish performance as Joker (that has previously been portrayed by Jack Nicholson) stands as a mammoth tribute to his achievements. Due to his brooding and anarchist portrayal, Ledger’s Joker was more noticeable than the movie’s eponymous hero, Batman. Joker’s maniacal laugh, distinct and tottering walk, and hideous makeup all seem to scream out that “whatever doesn't kill you simply makes you... stranger.”

Ledger’s last on-screen work, is in stiff competition with Philip Seymour Hoffman who plays Father Flynn in Doubt. Straddling innocence and guilt, Hoffaman’s performance as Father Flynn is compassionate and strong but just enough human to make us doubt. Another nomination in this category is Tropic Thunder’s Robert Downey Jr. who plays a method actor, generating laughs by his racial embodiments as the painted blackface. Josh Brolin has also nabbed a nomination for his performance in Milk, a movie about Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to be elected in a public office.

Film critics like Roger Ebert, however, have already pronounced Heath Ledger as their favourite man, who far from being a caricature is a vicious match for the title character.

Critics have also declared Viola Davis from Doubt as front runner for the best actress in the supporting role. Her minute appearance of ten minutes shakes up and stuns the audience. Other nominees include Penelope Cruz from Woody Allen’s Vicky Cristina Barcelona (who has already won a BAFTA for her performance), Amy Adams as the young and innocent nun in Doubt, Marisa Tomei as the stripper in The Wrestler, and Taraji Henson in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.

When the results will be declared on February 22nd, irrespective of the wins or the losses, it will be a victory for History, which has been presented with honesty and laced with tastefulness. The nominations are stories of individual triumphs in socially evolving times and the Oscar nominations have tried to enunciate the potential of human suffering and will. 

Vanshika Sahni

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