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Oscars Are Important


In honor of this weekend’s Oscar ceremony, we’ve rounded up all of Reverse Shot’s predictions, think pieces, and insider trivia about the awards that we’ve posted this season. Hold on, actually we don’t have any. We’re not saying that makes us special, or somehow above it all . . . wait a second . . . actually, yes, that does make us pretty special.

So rather than run down yet another list of “fearless” predictions about who will win the big prizes (Bigelow or her ex-husband?! Streep or a frosted-tipped gorgon?! Waltz or Waltz?! Mo’Nique or a flying pig just arrived from a frozen hell?!), we thought this year we’d pay tribute to our favorite past Oscar winners: you know, those movies that really make one appreciate the joy and magic of the Oscar season, when all is right with the world and everyone appreciates film as an art form. So, breaking with our own Oscar tradition, here are the five “greatest” Academy Award winners, one that perhaps The Blind Side, Precious, and Up in the Air can soon join, should they emerge victorious:


1. “I will sell this house today!”: American Beauty for Best Picture, 1999

Annette Bening doing her best Faye Dunaway impression stands out in our minds as the most blatantly horrendous thing about American Beauty, but there’s SO much to hate about the debut film from Sam Mendes, who has gone on to terrorize moviegoers with a succession of misogynistic, idiotic treatises on that fallow place called America. A real Alexis de Tocqueville, that one: Mendes’s crassness never fails to astonish, but never more so than in the glib Beauty, which was so “subversive” about contemporary American values and mores that it ends up making a savior of . . . a wealthy, straight, white American male. One whose regression into pot-smoking, responsibility-shirking infantilism is honored as transgressive. One whose real estate-hawking materialist demon wife (who slaps herself in the face over and over when she doesn’t excel at work) and sullen daughter hamper his happiness from every side. One who gets to die in a perfect moment of shotgun-assisted bliss, spiritually cleansed after deciding not to fuck the nubile, willing teenage girl on his couch (because she’s a virgin), and while staring at a framed photo of his baby girl. One whose death is manipulated into a distasteful faux murder mystery in which everyone who’s not him (a nonsensically gun-wielding shrew wife, a self-loathing gay neighbor, his black-cloaked outsider son) just might be a killer. To the unending blood-boiling of the smart few who at the time saw through this vacuous, perhaps unintentional upstander of traditional values, American Beauty is perhaps the single most hateful Best Picture winner, outdoing even the insipid Crash due to its Hollywood polish and sheen, which only make its transparencies all the clearer.

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Framed: “The Art of the Steal”

In 1922, a formerly blue-collar pharmacist named Dr. Albert C. Barnes used his newly acquired millions to create a most unusual art museum in South Merion, a small suburb near Philadelphia. With no previous exposure to the art world, Barnes made brave purchases based on his own tastes rather than those of the respected art institutions, acquiring artists unknown or unpopular among elite American society at the time, including Picasso, Monet, Manet, Matisse, and Cezanne. Barnes amassed what later came to be known as the largest and most significant collection of Impressionist, Postimpressionist, and Modernist art in the entire world. Unfortunately, the Philadelphia art scene failed to notice its importance, laughing his one public exhibition out of town, and leaving him with a lasting chip on his shoulder about “the man.”

Click here to read the rest of Farihah Zaman’s review of The Art of the Steal.

RS on Babelgum: Talkies #11 Christian Berger

Check out our Talkie with Academy Award-nominated, ASC-winning cinematographer Christian Berger. 

The Yin of Yang: “A Brighter Summer Day”

Those of us who get easily swept up in the tender, boundless empathy of Yi Yi may find it difficult to remember (or, due to the general lack of availability of Edward Yang’s other films, may not even realize) that much of this great Taiwanese director’s career sprang from his bitter sense of irony. While Yang’s final masterpiece suggested an artist beginning to make peace with an unjust world, his other major works were made in a spirit of indignant protest against a culture he felt was actively suppressing its own history and cheating its youth.  Now that the World Cinema Foundation’s newly restored print of the 1991 epic A Brighter Summer Day is finally making its stateside debut as part of this year’s Film Comment Selects slate, Yang fans will get a stronger dose of the anger that only occasionally disrupted Yi Yi’s chastened world-weariness and Ozu-like tranquility. Where Yi Yi was dominated by brightly lit compositions contrasted with a handful of melancholy nighttime sequences, A Brighter Summer Day traps its audience in a permanently murky atmosphere—one that seems intended to precisely capture the political anxiety of its historical moment, but that also renders our relationship to time and space unstable. Read Andrew Chan’s review of A Brighter Summer Day.

Babelgum Partners with Reverse Shot

Reverse Shot has announced a partnership that brings their curated video interview series to a global audience via Babelgum’s online platform and its free applications for Apple’s iPhone & iPod Touch and Google’s Android devices. Babelgum will be the new home of Reverse Shot’s “Talkies” and “Direct Address” videos, which feature candid, off-the-cuff interviews with celebrated and emergent figures in film.  When we decided to branch out from printed criticism into video we wanted to set a new standard for web-based interview content.  We couldn’t imagine a better home for the Talkies and Direct Address than Babelgum, which has proven itself a leader in publishing and promoting innovative online video content. So bookmark it now!

BABELGUM PARTNERS WITH REVERSE SHOT TO PRESENT EXCLUSIVE CONTENT ONLINE & VIA MOBILE

Reverse Shot Branded Channel Launches February 25th with exclusive interviews, including:

Acclaimed Actor Michael Fassbender (Inglourious Basterds, Fish Tank)

and
Academy Award Nominee Christian Berger (The White Ribbon)

Said Karol Martesko-Fenster, SVP & General Manager of Babelgum’s Film Division, in the press release announcing this news, “We are thrilled to partner with Reverse Shot, one of the sharpest, most vital sites for online film reviews and now video, on developing and hosting this new series. As journalism increasingly moves from text to image, the Talkies and Direct Address formats raise the bar high, tapping into the specialty and indie creative talent pool with intelligence and professionalism, while retaining an unusual degree of creativity with respect to location, form, and conversational interest.”

Starting today, Reverse Shot Talkies and Direct Address videos will be available online on at http://www.reverseshot.com and at http://www.babelgum.com/reverseshot, and via the free Babelgum mobile apps at http://www.babelgum.com/mobile.

In case you don’t know, Reverse Shot Talkies, previously featured on indieWIRE, is a series of unconventional, site-specific video interviews with filmmakers, actors, programmers, critics, and more.  Informal, playful, and always revealing, Talkies are not just antidotes to the traditional Q&A format but also unique, self-contained short films. Past Talkies installments have featured internationally renowned filmmakers such as Pedro Almodóvar, Cedric Klapisch, Richard Linklater, and Atom Egoyan, as well as emerging indie auteurs like Andrew Bujalski, So Yong Kim, and Bradley Rust Gray.  The latest episodes feature conversations with Academy Award winner James Marsh (Man on Wire, Red Riding), Academy Award–nominated cinematographer Christian Berger (The White Ribbon), and actor Michael Fassbender (Inglourious Basterds, Fish Tank). Earlier segments were featured by indieWIRE.  Future segments will feature Claire Denis and Mathieu Amalric.

Reverse Shot’s Direct Address series, on the other hand, gives the viewer up-close access to some of international cinema’s most fascinating figures. Direct Address challenges interviewees to address the camera in tight close-up; these intimate videos expose subtle flickers of expression and reveal remarkable minds at work. Past episodes have featured Sally Potter (Rage) and Michael Haneke (The White Ribbon), and in-depth interviews with Catherine Breillat (Bluebeard) and Bruno Dumont (Hadewijch) are forthcoming.

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