I dunno. Both? I think The Social Network is a masterpiece (and I don't throw that word around) and The King's Speech is a good film with three great performances in it (by Firth, Rush and Guy Pearce). I don't think there was anything in it to warrant a "Best Picture" award from anyone, it's much more slight, bland, predictable and forgettable than not only TSN, but several other contenders from that year. But hey, it's feel good and inspiring, so they decided to stop their great 4-year run of awarding more risky and ambitious material than usual (from Departed to Hurt Locker) and go back to safe and conventional. Anyway, I need to stop, I feel like I'm beating a dead horse here.Speaking of unconventional, I'm not the biggest fan of Silence of the Lambs and I don't know if it's the best film of that year for me, but simply awarding 5 major Oscars to a serial killer thriller was one of the most inspired, unbiased decisions the Academy ever made. A shame that Se7en didn't follow in its footsteps, it deserved a lot more nominations than editing (Picture, Director, Original Screenplay, Supporting Actor (Spacey) and Cinematography, at least).