tagged with Oscar


“And I just want to thank Roy but also I want to thank — because I really understand I’ll never be up here again — I really want to thank all my colleagues, all my friends. I look out here and I see my life before my eyes, my old friends, my new friends and really this is such a great honor but the thing that counts the most with me is the friendships and the love and the sheer joy we have shared making movies together. My friends, thank you, all of you, departed and here for this inexplicably wonderful career. Thank you so much. Thank you.”

Meryl so often hits acceptance speeches out of the park that I had a few people remark to me that her Oscar speech wasn’t as impressive as the occasion warranted. But really, take a minute to read the end of the speech (quoted above.)
Amid cries year after year that she’s long overdue, it takes 20 years for the Academy membership to finally relent and reward Meryl with a second Best Actress Oscar. Her name gets called, she glides up on stage, endures a passionate, forceful standing ovation from some of the most famous and (at least superficially) influential people in the world, all of whom know that the name Meryl Streep is metonymy for acting genius, and all she has to say is that, after all this time and all this fervor, the award doesn’t mean nearly as much to her as it did to the rest of us. Once again, Meryl upstages the rest of us, reminding the half billion people watching around the world that as nice as a second Oscar is, all she really cares about - all that ever really matters for anyone - are the people we meet in life. 
One’s life must matter, indeed.
Happy Meryl Streep Day.

“And I just want to thank Roy but also I want to thank — because I really understand I’ll never be up here again — I really want to thank all my colleagues, all my friends. I look out here and I see my life before my eyes, my old friends, my new friends and really this is such a great honor but the thing that counts the most with me is the friendships and the love and the sheer joy we have shared making movies together. My friends, thank you, all of you, departed and here for this inexplicably wonderful career. Thank you so much. Thank you.”

Meryl so often hits acceptance speeches out of the park that I had a few people remark to me that her Oscar speech wasn’t as impressive as the occasion warranted. But really, take a minute to read the end of the speech (quoted above.)

Amid cries year after year that she’s long overdue, it takes 20 years for the Academy membership to finally relent and reward Meryl with a second Best Actress Oscar. Her name gets called, she glides up on stage, endures a passionate, forceful standing ovation from some of the most famous and (at least superficially) influential people in the world, all of whom know that the name Meryl Streep is metonymy for acting genius, and all she has to say is that, after all this time and all this fervor, the award doesn’t mean nearly as much to her as it did to the rest of us. Once again, Meryl upstages the rest of us, reminding the half billion people watching around the world that as nice as a second Oscar is, all she really cares about - all that ever really matters for anyone - are the people we meet in life. 

One’s life must matter, indeed.

Happy Meryl Streep Day.

If it’s something you happen to be interested in, the National Film Board of Canada has its two Oscar nominated shorts online for free streaming. One, Dimanche (or Sunday in English), is about a little boy’s attempts to make his dreary church- and relatives-filled Sunday more entertaining. It’s decent. The other is called Wild Life and is about a British young man who migrates to live on the Canadian prairies. It’s phenomenally good; the script is fresh, the animation is very reminiscent of The Sweater (perhaps an homage), and it’s also a little bit of history lesson. I would definitely recommend watching both - free! - right here. Hopefully one of them wins come Oscar night.

Just as an aside, if you’ve never heard of the National Film Board of Canada, it’s a really interesting entity. The world’s first national film board, it’s won 12 competitive Oscars and, if I remember correctly, was given an honorary Oscar for its contribution to cinema. Their website is filled with movies you can stream for free, many of them REALLY GOOD documentaries. It’s an excellent way for Canadians to get in touch with their own country, and for non-Canadians to learn about Canada without (or with very few) mentions of hockey or peace keeping.

(That being said, a good place to start when learning about Canadian film and Canadian culture is with The Sweater; the film, and the book, are so iconic that there is a quotation from them on our $5 bill. It will give you a stilted image of Canada, and especially of rural Quebec before the Quiet Revolution, but if you’re going to sow our flag on your backpack, you may as well do a little research and watch it. You can do that for free right here.)

I saw two real life Academy Award statuettes today. No bigs.

The first is Grace Kelly’s Best Actress Oscar from 1955 for The Country Girl. The second is the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film, awarded to Canada in 2003 for Les Invasions barbares

FINALLY

I managed to find a copy of Ludovic Bource’s score for The Artist. You guys, it’s so good. Like, it sounds like it should be from a classic film in the 30s. I bet it’ll him an Oscar this year. I’d be shocked if he wasn’t nominated. SHOCKED I TELL YOU. 

The Office, 6x13 - Secret Santa

The Office, 6x13 - Secret Santa