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RealLyre

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  1. not related to the Oscars but the BAFTAs are increasing the nominations for certain categories and bringing back longlists.

     

     

     

    Quote

    Among the key changes to the BAFTA Film Awards 2021 are:

    - A new longlisting round of voting in all categories, making three rounds in total and giving members a longer time period to watch films. It will now also be compulsory for members to watch all longlisted films in the second round before voting. Following the nominations controversy in January, it was argued that many voters simply weren’t watching the lesser-known films.
    - In the acting categories, the number of nominees is being increased from five to six. Actors can also now not be longlisted more than once in a particular category, but can appear in separate categories for separate performances. (In 2020, Margot Robbie appeared twice in the best supporting actress category).
    - In the directing category, BAFTA’s directing chapter will rank the top 20, with the top eight female and top eight male directors making the longlist. A special jury will then select the final four directors for this longlist of 20, choosing two female and two male (from the next 10 ranked respectively). The number of final nominees will also increase from five to six.
    - In the outstanding British film category, the number of nominations has jumped from six to 10, a move that should help alleviate previous concerns where major Hollywood titles (such as 1917 and Rocketman) have taken up nomination slots over independent British features. “10 will reach down to some considerably smaller, but brilliant films,” said Samuelson, adding that some of the feedback had been that they wanted the ceremony to feel more distinctly British. “And we think this is a really key way of doing that.”
    - In an effort to prevent films with larger campaigning budgets from “dominating the conversation,” BAFTA will be discontinuing DVD screeners by 2020 and moving all films to its new BAFTA View digital platform, set to launch for the 2021 awards season. Distributor communication will also be further limited per title, with members now having to opt-in to receive DVDs, attend screening invites or receive trade publications during awards season.

     

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  2. 9 hours ago, Nerfy said:

    Kinda annoyed it sold out so fast at NYFF. Why can an online viewing sell out in the first place? :apocalypse:

    it's more so the distributor's/producer's decision. they do that to try and replicate a real festival's capacity. although I think Nomadland initially started with only 2000 virtual tickets on TIFF but added more online tickets as the festival went on due to high demand so maybe NYFF would do the same.

  3. 12 minutes ago, lorddemaxus said:

    I doubt Hopkins is locked. Competition for Best Actor seems pretty tight this year.

    I was skeptical about it and thought it would be close between him, lindo and Oldman but after watching The Father. Hopkin's performance is undeniable. it will be very hard for anyone else to beat him imo. also Hopkins hasn't won since The Silence of the Lambs in 1992 so he can have the comeback narrative for his 2nd Oscar (like Renee last year, although his performance is way better).

     

    The Father also might be the best film I've seen at TIFF overall and I would predict it to win the TIFF audience award if it wasn't only available for 3 hours to screen whereas everything else was open for the whole day so less people watched it.

    • Like 1
  4. unless News of the world disappoints. the lead actor race looks kinda finished to me

     

    1. Anthony Hopkins - The Father

     

    2. Gary Oldman - Mank

     

    3. Daniel Kaluuya/Lakeith Stanfield -  Judas and the Black Messiah (whoever goes lead, I heard it'll be Stanfield)

     

    4. Delroy Lindo - Da 5 Bloods
     

    5. Tom Hanks - News of the World

     

    edit: I forgot about Kingsley Ben-Adir in One Night In Miami. he'll def get nominated but I think they can put him in supporting. 

     

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  5. yeah Good Joe Bell sounds like the Green Book of LGBT Films :rolleyes:. it doesn't have a distributor yet but if it wins or finishes in top 3 at TIFF audience award it could be a contender now. weird choice to cast Mark Wahlberg for such a role. the kid seem to be getting a lot of praise.

     

     

     

     

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  6. On 9/12/2020 at 4:39 AM, SLAM! said:

    In other good awards news, excellent choices for submissions to the International category are starting to emerge from the festivals. Neon (Parasite) acquired the rights to Night of the Kings from Ivory Coast. Then there's Apples from Greece, which is a huge festival hit, and there's also Tove, which is a biopic from Finland. If the Oscars happen, the International category is likely to have a lot of good films in it. Will there be another Parasite? Not this year. But the foreign films will be remarkable nonetheless.

    speaking of the international category. Another Round by Thomas Vinterberg was among the best films I've seen so far at TIFF. great performance by mads mikkelsen.

    I think it  would surely get in the international feature race if Denmark submits it. Vinterberg/Mikkelsen's previous collaboration was nominated back in 2012 for The Hunt so that should help.

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  7. 2 hours ago, TMP said:

    One Night in Miami was pretty great. There are moments where it feels a bit stage-y and workmanlike, but King did a pretty solid job behind the lens; especially when it came to the pacing and directing the ensemble. The guy who plays Malcolm X was the MVP, really great performance.

    yeah it was very noticeable how stage-y it felt. the whole scenes in the hotel rooms in the house where characters were coming in and out as if it was a play (which maybe makes sense cus its based on a play) , but that wasn't as distracting as I thought it was gonna be because King had great blocking and it flew by smoothly. I think this could get 2 acting nominations, the guy who plays Malcolm X in lead and the one who played Sam Cooke in supporting. or they can put them both in supporting cus it's an ensemble. also the dialogue was really good. solid debut from King.

     

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  8. after watching Nomadland (which I really liked) it feels like the type of film that would normally get ignored by major awards and fly under the radar for being a quiet heavy nature drama (think Leave No Trace or a Kelly Reichardt film). so I'm glad it's already getting insane traction & buzz by winning the golden lion. Those kinds of films don't get enough attention. I hope it does well in best picture but I wouldn't be shocked if the academy sleeps on it cus it's not a typical Oscar movie. 

     

     

     Best Picture 
     

    1. Mank

    2. Trial of the Chicago 7

    3. Nomadland

    4. One Night in Miami

    5.  News of the World
    6. Ma Rainey's black bottom

    7. Soul
    8. Judas and the Black Messiah

    alt: 9. Da 5 Bloods/Respect/West Side Story

     

    best director

     

    1. David Fincher - Mank

    2. Chloe Zhao - Nomadland
    3. Aaron Sorkin - Trial of the Chicago 7

    4. Paul Greengrass - News of the World

    5. Regina King or Spike Lee 

    • Like 1
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