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SLAM!

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Posts posted by SLAM!

  1. 4 hours ago, WrathOfHan said:

    The Witch is a horror movie that, while well received, has a fair share of non-fans. Oh, and it's horror. 

    Zootopia is an animated movie with less acclaim than Inside Out. If IO couldn't get nominated, Zootopia won't.

    I agree. Horror movies haven't been Oscar fodder in a very long time, and Inside Out's snub just raised the acceptance bar crazy high for animation.

     

    And I really don't want the W-word-movie anywhere near any award ceremonies whatsoever. But that's just me.

  2. Just now, slambros said:
    30 minutes ago, cannastop said:

    The Lego Movie wasn't exactly a Hollywood production. For example, the animation was done in Australia. There's no way the Academy would snub a Disney movie that did so well.

     

    I don't feel like the country of production is a viable factor nowadays. These days, an animated movie from anywhere in the world can edge it's way in the nomination slot if it's good enough. Just last year, an average-for-the-company Studio Ghibli film, When Marnie Was There, and the Brazilian Boy and the World double-teamed out of nowhere to edge out The Good Dinosaur, an american Pixar film.

     

    Also, I could use the argument that in 2010, when Toy Story 3 and How To Train Your Dragon were already locks, but you had other American hits like Tangled and Despicable Me in contention, the academy went for The Illusionist, a French/British film, instead to fill the 3rd spot in what was a three-movie year. By the Hollywood-Disney logic, Tangled would've won that 3rd nomination in an absolute landslide.

     

    However, I agree that relations with the Hollywood people wouldn't hurt a film's chance.

     

    (Unrelated side note: the guy that made The Illusionist and The Triplets of Belleville has his next movie in 2017. It'll be interesting to see what happens with that one!)

     

  3. I don't feel like the country of production is a viable factor nowadays. These days, an animated movie from anywhere in the world can edge it's way in the nomination slot if it's good enough. Just last year, an average-for-the-company Studio Ghibli film, When Marnie Was There, and the Brazilian Boy and the World double-teamed out of nowhere to edge out The Good Dinosaur, an american Pixar film.

     

    Also, I could use the argument that in 2010, when Toy Story 3 and How To Train Your Dragon were already locks, but you had other American hits like Tangled and Despicable Me in contention, the academy went for The Illusionist, a French/British film, instead to fill the 3rd spot in what was a three-movie year. By the Hollywood-Disney logic, Tangled would've won that 3rd nomination in an absolute landslide.

     

    However, I agree that relations with the Hollywood people wouldn't hurt a film's chance.

     

    (Unrelated side note: the guy that made The Illusionist and The Triplets of Belleville has his next movie in 2017. It'll be interesting to see what happens with that one!)

  4. On 3/12/2016 at 1:02 PM, cannastop said:

    How the fuck is it not going to get a nomination? Have you seen the acclaim it has, and the money it's making? I think whether or not it gets a Best Picture nomination is a better question.

     

    I think Zootopia is the best CGI animated movie by Walt Disney Animation Studios by far in my opinion, which is quite an accolade in its own right. It think it absolutely deserves a nomination. But after what I saw happen with The Lego Movie, and after seeing all of the competition laid out for this year, I'm extremely nervous. Maybe I'm being an idiot, but I believe the chance is there that Moana's a classic, Kubo's a classic, Finding Dory's a classic, and 2016 animated movie after 2016 animated movie end up being classic enough to stand next to the classic that is Zootopia. If there's like 7 or 8 critically-acclaimed 'classics' this year, something's going to have to give. I believe the chance is there for a shocking snub, but I think Zootopia's probably fine in reality.

     

    I'm going to laugh really hard at myself in 10 months, aren't I?

  5. 1 hour ago, cannastop said:

    It's Disney. There's no way the Academy will ignore it.

     

    Edit: Now that you've seen Zootopia, do you think it will win? I do.

    It has an honest shot. It's such a surprisingly cinematic, crowd-pleasing allegory on modern culture itself, that I think it has an honest shot.

     

    It'll just have to make the nomination hump. This is a very competitive year in animation with many big names, so something's going to have to give, but if Zootopia is one of the chosen five, it can surely contend for the win.

  6. On 2/26/2016 at 11:10 PM, Impact said:

    Deadpool for the win ;)

     

    I think Ryan Reynolds will have a real shot at Best Actor in a Comedy at the next Golden Globes for Deadpool.

     

    Anyways, my picks for the Oscars thus far:

     

    Casey Affleck (Manchester by the Sea)

    Tom Thanks (Sully)

    Michael Keaton (The Founder)

    David Oyelowo (A United Kingdom)

    Michael Fassbender (Light Between Oceans)

  7. I just noticed that A24 also bought Morris From America as well. The question is, though: is the movie another End of the Tour, or will the performances (namely Craig Robinson and Markers Christmas) actually be represented at awards shows like the Oscars?

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