Loading

 

Martin Scorsese and The Departed Prevail on Anticlimactic Evening

 


Forest Whitaker
Photo Date: 2007-02-25
Photo by Michael Caulfield - ’ WireImage.com - Image courtesy WireImage.com

 

Academy Award Recap - 2006
by Kam Williams
 

Perennial also-ran Martin Scorsese can never complain again about being snubbed by the Oscars, finally prevailing in his eighth try with the Best Director award for The Departed, which also won for Best Picture, Best Screenplay Adaptation and Best Editing. Peter O’Toole was not so fortunate, failing again in his own eighth bid.

The veteran Irish actor lost out to prohibitive-favorite Forest Whitaker (The Last King of Scotland) who was both gushy and gracious in delivering the most emotional acceptance speech of the evening. Collecting himself while fighting back tears, Forest reminisced about his childhood. ’When I was a kid, the only way I saw movies was from the back seat of my family's car at the drive-in,’ he began. ’It wasn't my reality to think I would be acting in movies. So, receiving this honor tonight tells me it is possible for a kid from East Texas, raised in South Central L.A. and Carson, who believes in his dreams, commits himself to them with his heart, to touch them and to have them happen.’

After explaining that he took to acting, ’because of my desire to connect to everyone’ and a belief that through it ’we can create a new reality,’ he proceeded to try to connect with just about everybody on the planet on the spot, thanking his wife, Keisha, his kids, his parents, his fellow cast members, the people of Uganda, DNA and Channel 4. As a black man it was no surprise that he also thanked God and even invoked the spirit of his ancestors who ’continue to guide my steps.’

By comparison, Best Actress-winner Dame Helen Mirren (The Queen) was relatively-reserved in a speech which paid homage to the icy, titular monarch she’d impersonated. Effervescent Supporting Actress-winner Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls) continued her trophy-collecting, coming-out tour, although co-star Eddie Murphy lost out to Alan Arkin (Little Miss Sunshine) in the Supporting Actor category, just as I had predicted last week. Eddie had been the early favorite, but the ill-timed release of Norbit before the Academy had finished voting doomed his chances.


Beyonc’ Knowles, Anika Noni Rose, Jennifer Hudson

Photo Date: 2007-02-25
Photo by Michael Caulfield - ’ WireImage.com - Image courtesy WireImage.com

 

Faithful readers [read original predictions] will note that 9 of my 11 prognostication panned out, including all 8 of the major categories. This was no mean feat, given that the oddsmakers felt that Little Miss Sunshine and Eddie Murphy would prevail, and they said that several other races were too close to call.

Unfortunately, Ellen Degeneres, was a flop as a host, failing to bring any of her TV talk show's usual pizzazz to the nearly four hours-long marathon. I knew we were in for a long night when she couldn't even generate any excitement in the room by doing her trademark dance moves during the monologue. Her self-effacing, tongue-in-cheek brand of humor was worse, obviously cautiously scripted to not offend any of the Hollywood royalty in attendance. And when she entered the audience or went backstage periodically to interact with celebs like Jack Nicholson, Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, again all the jokes fell flat because the tame tete-a-tetes simply lacked any daring.

Most of the luminaries lured onstage engaged in boring bits, such as Al Gore who pretended to be on the verge of announcing his candidacy for the presidency when his words were drowned out by the orchestra. He later returned to accept the Oscar for Best Documentary for An Inconvenient Truth, but his reappearance felt a little anticlimactic, a recurring theme for the evening.

The ever-overenunciating Jack Black joined a frizzed-out Will Ferrell for an annoying song about how comedians always get snubbed, that ended up in the audience. The most-likable luminaries also happened to be the youngest, Oscar-nominee Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine) and Jaden Smith (son of Wiill and Jada), who were adorably cute together reading the winners for Best Shorts from electronic cue cards.
Perhaps the most bizarre incident of the evening involved the announcement which misleadingly promised a ’one-time only reunion of the cast of Dreamgirls' that never materialized. After an interminable wait, instead of original Broadway showstoppers Jennifer Holliday, Loretta Devine and Sheryl Lee Ralph, the stars of the current screen adaptation, Jennifer Hudson, Beyonce’, Anika Noni Rose, emerged to perform the three tunes nominated for Best Song, none of which ended up winning anyway. Talk about bait and switch!


Will Smith
Photo Date: 2007-02-25
Photo by Michael Caulfield - ’ WireImage.com - Image courtesy WireImage.com

Overall, The Departed (4) garnered the most Academy Awards, as this clairvoyant critic envisioned, followed by Pan's Labyrinth (3). Dreamgirls (2) was undoubtedly the big loser, given Eddie's precipitous fall from grace, the reunion faux pas, and the musical's trio of tunes being beaten by one from Al Gore's documentary.


COMPLETE LIST OF OSCAR WINNERS

PICTURE "The Departed"

DIRECTOR Martin Scorsese, "The Departed"

ACTOR Forest Whitaker, "Last King of Scotland"

ACTRESS Helen Mirren, "The Queen"

SUPPORTING ACTOR Alan Arkin, "Little Miss Sunshine"

SUPPORTING ACTRESS Jennifer Hudson, "Dreamgirls"

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY "Little Miss Sunshine," Michael Arndt

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY "The Departed," William Monahan

ORIGINAL SCORE "Babel," Gustavo Santaolalla

ORIGINAL SONG "I Need to Wake Up," Melissa Etheridge (from "An Inconvenient Truth")

FILM EDITING "The Departed," Thelma Schoonmaker

VISUAL EFFECTS "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest," John Knoll, Hal Hickel, Charles Gibson, Allen Hall

CINEMATOGRAPHY "Pan's Labyrinth," Guillermo Navarro

DOCUMENTARY FEATURE FILM "An Inconvenient Truth," Davis Guggenheim, director; Laurie David, Lawrence Bender, producers

FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM "The Lives of Others," Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck

ANIMATED FEATURE "Happy Feet," George Miller, director

COSTUME DESIGN "Marie Antoinette," Milena Canonero

DOCUMENTARY SHORT FILM "The Blood of Yingzhou District," Ruby Yang, Thomas Lennon

ANIMATED SHORT FILM "The Danish Poet," Torill Kove, director

LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM "West Bank Story," Ari Sandel, director

SOUND EDITING "Letters From Iwo Jima," Alan Robert Murray, Bub Asman

SOUND MIXING "Dreamgirls," Michael Minkler, Bob Beemer, Willie Burton

ART DIRECTION "Pan's Labyrinth," Eugenio Caballero, art direction; Pilar Revuelta, set decoration

MAKEUP "Pan's Labyrinth," David Marti, Montse Ribe



 

Related Links

Dreamgirls Lands Most Nominations But Snubbed for Best Picture
http://aalbc.com/reviews/dreamgirls_snubbed_for_best_picture.htm

Dreamgirls (2006)- Reviewed by Michael Dequina
http://reviews.aalbc.com/dreamgirls1.htm

Jennifer Hudson Interview on AALBC.com
http://www.aalbc.com/reviews/jennifer_hudson.htm

Eddie Murphy Interview on AALBC.com
http://aalbc.com/reviews/eddie_murphy.htm

Movie Website
http://www.dreamgirlsmovie.com/

NYFCO Movie Awards - Jennifer Hudson Award Winner