More 80th Academy Awards Prediction Contests

22 February 2008

For more details on Oscars prediction contests, read the Academy Awards Prediction Contests page. For the most recent Oscars posts, be sure to check out the Oscars/Academy Awards category page. There, you should find contests, predictions, and results.

Here are a handful of contests I have found since my previous post of contests. The Academy Awards Prediction Contests page has been updated accordingly.

  • JoBlo
    Prize: Apple 80 GB iPod classic Silver ($236 ARV)
  • AbsolutePunk
    Prize: Sports Night: The Complete Series DVD ($48 ARV)
  • York Daily Record
    Prize: $30 gift certificate to Regal Cinemas ($30 ARV)
  • Awards Daily
    Prize: Nothing ($0 ARV)

80th Academy Awards Prediction Contests

20 February 2008

Oscar

For more details on Oscars prediction contests, read the Academy Awards Prediction Contests page. For the most recent Oscars posts, be sure to check out the Oscars/Academy Awards category page. There, you should find contests, predictions, and results.

Make sure you know who's in the running for each category! Print the official Oscars printable ballot.

The Contests:

  • Oscars.com — ABC.com membership required
    Prize: One Women’s Right-hand ring from the Kwiat Star Collection, set in 18k white gold with 1.53cts or round brilliant and marquise cut diamonds.; One pair of Men’s Cufflinks from the Kwiat Men’s Solaris Collection, featuring black and white diamonds set in 18k white gold with 1.28cts or round brilliant diamonds. ($11,720 ARV)
  • CNN.com
    Prize: 47" Flat Screen HDTV ($1,500 ARV)
  • eFilmCritic — Unique method of entry for this one, as you can vote for multiple films in each category
    Prize: 50 DVDs (Est. $1,000 ARV)
  • DE Concierge
    Prize: $100 gift certificate to Burke Williams Day Spa in CA, a $100 restaurant gift certificate, and a $100 gift certificate to the Arclight Cinema in LA ($300 ARV)
  • AroundCinci
    Prize: Movie showings from Movies on Demand for an entire year — probably only redeemable by customers of Time Warner Cable in the Cincinatti region ($179.64 ARV)
  • the-numbers.com
    Prize: All five Best Picture Nominees on DVD. (Est. $100 ARV)
  • Kentucky.com
    Prize: $50 in movie tickets and a $50 gift certificate to a Lexington-area restaurant ($100 ARV)
  • Movie City News
    Prize: Stanley Kubrick Box Set of DVDS and an MCN Know It All tee ($87 ARV)
  • PredictTheOscars.com
    Prize: $50 VISA gift card ($50 ARV)
  • Scuba.com
    Prize: $50 scuba.com gift certificate ($50 ARV)
  • Fort Worth Public Library
    Prize: Two AMC movie passes, The Departed DVD, 2-liter bottle of Coca-Cola Classic, and a box of Orville Redenbacher's Microwave Gourmet Popping Corn (Est. $35 ARV)
  • web-goddess
    Prize: One Striking Writer sock monkey (Est. $30 ARV)
  • The Daily Camera and The Video Station
    Prize: Dinner and a movie for two (ARV unknown)
  • The Augusta Chronicle
    Prize: An entertainment prize package (ARV unknown)
  • The News Tribune
    Prize: Unknown
  • Practicalmadness
    Prize: Unknown
  • Box Office Mojo
    Prize: Nothing?
  • Variety
    Prize: Nothing ($0 ARV)
  • Entertainment Weekly
    Prize: "Bragging rights" ($0 ARV)
  • TheEnvelope.com (Los Angeles Times) (Coming soon???)
    Prize: $1,000

Good luck to you, and have fun! (And if you win a prize, please feel free to share it with me!)

Ben Stein Criticizes the Oscars

2 April 2006

This story is coming a bit late, but the day after the Academy Awards, Ben Stein wrote a scathing yet well-deserved review of the Oscars this year and Hollywood in general.

The commentary appeared in The American Spectator on March 6, 2006:

. . . there was not one word of tribute, not one breath, to our fighting men and women in Iraq and Afghanistan or to their families or their widows or orphans. There were pitifully dishonest calls for peace — as if the people we are fighting were interested in any peace for us but the peace of the grave. But not one word for the hundreds of thousands who have served and are serving, not one prayer or moment of silence for the dead and maimed.
Basically, the sad truth is that Hollywood does not think of itself as part of America, and so, to Hollywood, the war to save freedom from Islamic terrorists is happening to someone else. It does not concern them except insofar as it offers occasion to mock or criticize George Bush. They live in dreamland and cannot be gracious enough to thank the men and women who pay with their lives for the stars' ability to live in dreamland. This is shameful.
The idea that it is brave to stand up for gays in Hollywood, to stand up against Joe McCarthy in Hollywood (fifty years after his death), to say that rich white people are bad, that oil companies are evil — this is nonsense. All of these are mainstream ideas in Hollywood, always have been, always will be. For the people who made movies denouncing Big Oil, worshiping gays, mocking the rich to think of themselves as brave — this is pathetic, childish narcissism.
. . .
Hollywood is above all about self: self-congratulation, self-promotion, and above all, self-protection. This is human and basic, but let's not kid ourselves. There is no greatness there in the Kodak theater. The greatness is on patrol in Kirkuk. The greatness lies unable to sleep worrying about her man in Mosul. The greatness sleeps at Arlington National Cemetery and lies waiting for death in VA Hospitals. God help us that we have sunk so low as to confuse foolish and petty boasting with the real courage that keeps this nation and the many fools in it alive and flourishing on national TV.

There's plenty more great commentary within, so head over and read the entire article.

For those who are unfamiliar with ::wikipedia("Ben Stein")::, he first achieved popularity for the monotone teacher in ::amazon("B00001MXXH", "Ferris Beuller´s Day Off"):: and a similar character in ::amazon("6305053987", "The Wonder Years")::. He later obtained his own game show, Win Ben Stein's Money. Before all that, however, he was a speechwriter for Nixon and Ford, and he received the 2003 Pro-Life Award.

My 2006 Academy Awards Prediction Results

5 March 2006

Oscar and his friendsAnd the winners are . . .

I made my annual Oscars predictions again. For the second year, I am opening myself up and showing exactly how horribly I do on these predictions. Last year, I went 13 of 24. This year, I improved my record by one: 14 of 24!

I missed many of the odd categories, as do most people. I also missed the huge upsets that many, many others missed. I missed on my upset predictions, too, which didn't help much.

  1. Incorrect PickBest Picture
    Winner: Crash
    My Pick: Brokeback Mountain
  2. Correct PickBest Actor
    Winner: Philip Seymour Hoffman, Capote
  3. Correct PickBest Actress
    My Pick: Reese Witherspoon, Walk the Line
  4. Incorrect PickBest Supporting Actor
    Winner: George Clooney, Syriana
    My Pick: Paul Giamatti, Cinderella Man
  5. Correct PickBest Supporting Actress
    My Pick: Rachel Weisz, The Constant Gardener
  6. Correct PickBest Director
    Winner: Ang Lee, Brokeback Mountain
  7. Correct PickBest Original Screenplay
    My Pick: Crash
  8. Correct PickBest Adapted Screenplay
    My Pick: Brokeback Mountain
  9. Correct PickAnimated Feature
    My Pick: Wallace & Gromit in the Curse of the Were-Rabbit
  10. Correct PickArt Direction
    My Pick: Memoirs of a Geisha
  11. Incorrect PickCinematography
    Winner: Memoirs of a Geisha
    My Pick: Brokeback Mountain
  12. Correct PickCostume
    My Pick: Memoirs of a Geisha
  13. Correct PickDocumentary Feature
    My Pick: March of the Penguins
  14. Incorrect PickDocumentary Short Subject
    Winner: A Note of Triumph: The Golden Age of Norman Corwin
    My Pick: God Sleeps in Rwanda
  15. Correct PickFilm Editing
    My Pick: Crash
  16. Correct PickForeign Language Film
    My Pick: Tsotsi
  17. Correct PickMakeup
    My Pick: The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
  18. Incorrect PickOriginal Score
    Winner: Brokeback Mountain
    My Pick: Memoirs of a Geisha
  19. Incorrect PickOriginal Song
    Winner: "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp," Hustle & Flow
    My Pick: "Travelin' Thru," Transamerica
  20. Incorrect PickShort Film, Animated
    Winner: The Moon and the Son: An Imagined Conversation
    My Pick: The Mysterious Geographic Explorations of Jasper Morello
  21. Incorrect PickShort Film, Live Action
    Winner: Six Shooter
    My Pick: Ausreisser
  22. Correct PickSound Editing
    My Pick: King Kong
  23. Incorrect PickSound Mixing
    Winner: King Kong
    My Pick: Walk the Line
  24. Incorrect PickVisual Effects
    Winner: King Kong
    My Pick: The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

I would also like to report that I was able to (intentionally) incorrectly guess 22 of the 24 categories. I accidentally picked the winners for Original Song and Animated Short Film.

26th Razzie Nominations

31 January 2006

The Razzie

Now that the real nominations have been presented, allow me to give you the scoop on the Razzie nominations.

If you're not familiar with the Razzies yet, the Razzie is an award given as a sort of anti-Oscar for the worst achievements in film.

Some may remember that I was upset about the Razzie's blatant political agenda last year, but with the lack of any popular political mockumentaries, the same problem couldn't have been repeated.

And the Razzie nominees are . . .

Worst Picture

  • Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo
  • Dirty Love
  • Dukes of Hazzard
  • House of Wax
  • Son of the Mask

Worst Director

  • John Asher - Dirty Love
  • Uwe Boll - Alone in the Dark
  • Jay Chandrasekhar - The Dukes of Hazzard
  • Nora Ephron - Bewitched
  • Lawrence Gutterman - Son of the Mask

Worst Actor

  • Tom Cruise - War of the Worlds
  • Will Ferrell - Bewitched and Kicking & Screaming
  • Jamie Kennedy - Son of the Mask
  • The Rock - Doom
  • Rob Schneider - Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo

Worst Actress

  • Jessica Alba - Fantastic Four and Into the Blue
  • Hilary Duff - Cheaper by the Dozen 2 and The Perfect Man
  • Jennifer Lopez - Monster in Law
  • Jenny McCarthy - Dirty Love
  • Tara Reid - Alone in the Dark

Worst Supporting Actor

  • Hayden Christensen - Star Wars III
  • Alan Cumming - Son of the Mask
  • Bob Hoskins - Son of the Mask
  • Eugene Levy - Cheaper by the Dozen 2 and The Man
  • Burt Reynolds - The Dukes of Hazzard and The Longest Yard

Worst Supporting Actress

  • Carmen Electra - Dirty Love
  • Paris Hilton - House of Wax
  • Katie Holmes - Batman Begins
  • Ashlee Simpson - Undiscovered
  • Jessica Simpson - The Dukes of Hazzard

Worst Screenplay

  • Bewitched - Nora Ephron, Delia Ephron & Adam McKay
  • Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo - Rob Schneider, David Garrett & Jason Ward
  • Dirty Love - Jenny McCarthy
  • The Dukes of Hazzard - John O'Brien
  • Son of the Mask - Lance Khazei

Worst Remake Or Sequel

  • Bewitched
  • Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo
  • Dukes of Hazzard
  • House of Wax
  • Son of the Mask

If you thirst for more horrible movies from 2005, check out IMDB's Worst of 2005 list, based on votes by IMDB members.

When Star Wars Costumes Attack

28 May 2005

No commentNo comment.

I have seen Star Wars III, but I'm no Star Wars geek. (I'm a different type of geek.)

Regardless of your thoughts on Star Wars, you really must view The Parade of Unfortunate Star Wars Costumes. As I'm sure you are aware, there are plenty of Star Wars nerds and geeks out there who await the next Star Wars con so they can dress up as their favorite Star Wars character, regardless of whether their body shape happens to coincide with the character or not. Granted, most of the homemade costumes you see at cons are often pitiful, especially considering the hours you can be sure went into making them.

I haven't laughed this hard in a week or so. Be sure to keep with it, as there are a string of so-so pictures followed by some truly great entertainment.

If you want to laugh at more Star Wars nerds and geeks, watch the classic Triumph the Insult Comic Dog clip where he visits the nerds standing in line for days waiting for the premiere. That one always gets me rolling, too.

Von Trier Bashes Bush

22 May 2005

Lars Von Triers called our President names and uttered anti-American sentiments. Is anyone surprised?

Mr Bush is an a**hole. So much in Denmark is American. We are a nation under influence.

America fills about 60 per cent of my brain. So, in fact, I am American.

But I can't go there to vote and I can't change anything, because I am from a small country. So that is why I make films about America.

Oh, come on in, Lars. Go ahead. Since you think about America so much, you're allowed to vote in our elections! That's perfectly fine. Of course, if he moved here, he'd probably move to a state with few electoral votes, and then he'd say that he can't change anything because he is from a small state, and that is why he makes films about America.

The entertaining line from this article is that his comments "shocked crowds" at Cannes. I'm not familiar with contactmusic.com, but clearly this author is not very familiar with the movie industry, politics in Cannes, or Lars Von Trier. I'm sure that roughly 0% of the crowd was shocked. Of course, I always wonder how the American actors and directors present react to these comments. Granted, most of the American movie industry are anti-Bush, America-hating celebrities to begin with — especially those who are present at Cannes — so there probably isn't much response from them.

Posted by Novac in All, Hollywood, Liberals, Media, Movies, People, Politics