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what about The Hurt Locker?
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Topic: what about The Hurt Locker? (Read 6177 times)
Liza
The Dark Lady
Gender:
Posts: 7963
You touch my heart and make me smile. Always.
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #105 on:
February 19, 2010, 05:19:11 AM »
Found this today...hope she wins!!
The Front Runner
By Radhika Jones Thursday, Feb. 18, 2010
Kathryn Bigelow, director of The Hurt Locker
Amanda Marsalis for TIME
There are two excellent reasons to watch the Academy Awards on March 7 through to the bitter end: 1) Kathryn Bigelow, 58, may be the first woman to win an Oscar for Best Director, and 2) if she does, she'll beat out her ex-husband James Cameron. These are possibilities that never crossed her mind when she was shooting her Iraq-war movie The Hurt Locker in Jordan in 2007, perspiring in the 115°F heat, her face covered in dirt.
Just shy of 6 ft. tall, exuding self-assurance and intelligence, Bigelow is both a receptive and commanding presence — the perfect combination for a person who makes thoughtful movies about tough guys, and things blowing up. She's known for her adrenaline-pumped action sequences in films like the vampire western Near Dark (1987) and the surfer-heist cult classic Point Break (1991); the subtitle of the Directors' Cuts volume of film criticism about her is "Hollywood Transgressor." With The Hurt Locker, she's transgressed her way right to the threshold of the industry's highest honor. Breaking the Oscars' glass ceiling after a career of original, uncompromising films would make the history-making that much more fun.
Bigelow was raised in Northern California. Her father managed a paint factory, and her mother was a librarian. Bigelow began painting at an early age; she enrolled as a college student at the San Francisco Art Institute and during her second year was accepted at the Whitney Museum of American Art's independent-study program. In 1971, at age 19, she set off for New York City.
It was much more Mean Streets than Manhattan. "You couldn't get a cab to take you down there," she recalls of her Tribeca neighborhood. But she fell in with a community of artists and made money fixing up loft spaces with Philip Glass, who was driving a cab by day and performing at night. "I would sand the floors and put up these Sheetrock walls, and [he] would do the plumbing," she says. "And I'd tell Philip, 'You have to sign these pipes. You're going to be really famous.' He was like, 'Aw, shut up.'"
She thought she'd be a professor of art history, until she took a detour into film: "I realized that the great opportunity in film was that it was kind of a populist medium that could cross all class and cultural lines." She made The Loveless (1982) — hailed as "the thinking man's biker movie" — then went to Los Angeles to teach a course on B filmmakers of the '40s and '50s. She's been bending genres in Hollywood ever since.
Tension is a hallmark of her films, as are provocative characters, and The Hurt Locker has both. But it marked a departure by giving her the chance to investigate an ongoing conflict, to be relevant. Which is why it perplexes her that some critics have characterized it as apolitical. "You have graphic depiction of innocent children killed by bombs," she says. "You have soldiers incapable of surviving a catastrophic event. And I think at the end of the day you look at the cost of this war on human lives and broken families."
Bigelow has often found herself at the center of discussions on gender and filmmaking; this year, as the fourth female director ever to be up for an Oscar, she is even more so. The topic sends her back to her art-world days. "I never thought of a particular artist or school of art in gender terms," she says. And yet she accepts the idea that she might be a role model and is sympathetic to the fact that, as she puts it, "the journey for women in many venues — be it politics, business, film — is a long and difficult struggle for equity." It's come up in her own career: before Oliver Stone agreed to produce her movie Blue Steel, she was having difficulty getting it made because it starred a woman (Jamie Lee Curtis) instead of a man as a police officer. Still, she says, "I long for the day when there's no need for the modifier."
Until that day arrives, there's a certain male director of a movie called Avatar ... Mention an Oscar battle of the exes — she and Cameron were married from 1989 to '91 — and you get a good-natured laugh and some context. "In the art world, there was a real community," she says. In L.A., not so much. "All of a sudden that incredible community that I fed off of was gone. So meeting other filmmakers was like oxygen." One was Stone; another was Cameron, with whom she remains friendly, and whose techno-thriller story Strange Days she made into a movie starring Ralph Fiennes in 1995.
Fiennes, who plays a small role in The Hurt Locker, says Bigelow is "incredibly wired with enthusiasm and excitement. It's physical, palpable, when she sees a shot or a moment that is working." Mark Boal, who wrote and co-produced The Hurt Locker, likens her to an athlete going onto the field: "She's pretty switched on when the cameras start going."
Off set, she's switched on too, reminiscing warmly about an Iraqi actor who appears in the film and is now living in the U.S., whom she's put in touch with a casting agent. Her next project is directing a pilot for an HBO series called The Miraculous Year. After that comes another collaboration with Boal, a movie about the drug trade in South America. And in the near future there are the Oscars. She fields a question the other Best Director nominees probably aren't being asked: What's she wearing? She doesn't know yet, but she has one guideline: nothing showy. "I'm used to being behind the scene," she says, "not in the spotlight."
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1966465,00.html
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Liza
"i carry your heart with me, i carry it in my heart" ~ e.e. cummings
"Keep this man safe; give him all kindness," ~ Shakespeare "Julius Caesar"
Liza
The Dark Lady
Gender:
Posts: 7963
You touch my heart and make me smile. Always.
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #106 on:
February 22, 2010, 05:08:53 AM »
trug found this today.
Congratulations!!
http://www.theage.com.au/news/entertainment/film/hurt-locker-wins-best-picture-at-the-baftas/2010/02/22/1266687035766.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap2
Winners of the 2010 Orange British Academy Film Awards:
Film - The Hurt Locker
British Film - Fish Tank
Director - Kathryn Bigelow, The Hurt Locker
Actor - Colin Firth, A Single Man
Actress - Carey Mulligan, An Education
Supporting Actor - Christoph Waltz, Inglourious Basterds
Supporting Actress - Mo’nique, Precious:
Rising Star - Kristen Stewart
British Debut - Director Duncan Jones, Moon
Original Screenplay - The Hurt Locker
Adapted Screenplay - Up in the Air
Film Not in the English Language - A Prophet
Music - Michael Giacchino, Up
Cinematography - The Hurt Locker
Editing - The Hurt Locker
Production Design - Avatar
Costume Design - The Young Victoria
Sound - The Hurt Locker
Visual Effects - Avatar
Makeup and Hair - The Young Victoria
Animated Feature - Up
Short Film - I Do Air
Short Animation - Mother of Many
Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema - Camera technician Joe
Dunton
Academy Fellowship - Vanessa Redgrave
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Liza
"i carry your heart with me, i carry it in my heart" ~ e.e. cummings
"Keep this man safe; give him all kindness," ~ Shakespeare "Julius Caesar"
Liza
The Dark Lady
Gender:
Posts: 7963
You touch my heart and make me smile. Always.
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #107 on:
March 06, 2010, 04:45:41 AM »
Here's a good review
Best of luck at the Oscars!!
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2010/030510a.html
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Liza
"i carry your heart with me, i carry it in my heart" ~ e.e. cummings
"Keep this man safe; give him all kindness," ~ Shakespeare "Julius Caesar"
Liza
The Dark Lady
Gender:
Posts: 7963
You touch my heart and make me smile. Always.
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #108 on:
March 08, 2010, 06:39:07 AM »
Congratulations to Kathryn Bigelow and everyone involved in The Hurt Locker, including our Mr. Fiennes!
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Liza
"i carry your heart with me, i carry it in my heart" ~ e.e. cummings
"Keep this man safe; give him all kindness," ~ Shakespeare "Julius Caesar"
doryka
She Who Must Be Named
Gender:
Posts: 548
Meg kell hogy feleljek a te szép magyar szívednek!
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #109 on:
March 08, 2010, 01:32:12 PM »
Huge congrats to Kathryn Bigelow and The Hurt Locker!!!
First female director ever to win a Best Director Oscar!
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"Let it happen, don't make it happen". (Ralph on acting)
Chelly
Admin
She Who Must Be Named
Gender:
Posts: 735
What's better than a big juicy steak?
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #110 on:
March 08, 2010, 04:45:24 PM »
I may be nit-picking, but was I the only one who thought Kathryn Bigelow could have mentioned Ralph and Guy Pearce in her acceptance speech when she thanked the cast? Especially if it's true that Ralph was so instrumental in getting backing for the film.
And this may be the wrong place to post this, it's not about the Hurt Locker, but it's about the Oscars. I was somehow very irked by the fact that Christoph Waltz won for supporting actor for playing a Nazi. His voice even reminded me of Ralph's, Amon Goeth.
Am I just being my usual overly sensitive self, or did anyone else feel that way, too?
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trugannini
Faith Healer
Gender:
Posts: 1036
I feel safe with you
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #111 on:
March 09, 2010, 12:11:00 AM »
No Chelly, you are not being over sensitive. KB, in my opinion, should
have mentioned Guy Pierce and Ralph Fiennes, for the reasons you gave. I saw that article about the backers of THL and having Ralph in it was one of their requirements.
This is why the Oscars give me the Sh
Every Year! Even if Ralph ever does win an Oscar, it will not thrill or excite me because they are years and years too late...........
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Senneifinn
The Mesmerizer
Gender:
Posts: 967
Restless, hopeful, in silence I wait
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #112 on:
March 09, 2010, 01:32:06 PM »
Since people seem to be peeved at RF not getting mentioned, here's an article in which he
does
:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/oscars/7401269/Hurt-Locker-why-Oscar-loved-Kathryn-Bigelows-film.html
"Ralph Fiennes, the only other recognisable face, does not last long either, snipered into silence after only a few beautifully delivered lines."
Pithy,
I thought!
"Hollywood’s persistently slack approach to factual accuracy."
Hear hear!
"At one point, they collide with a group of British mercenaries, led by Fiennes, and are immediately pinned down by Iraqi snipers. The British, true to Hollywood convention, prove to be useless and are bumped off one by one, including Fiennes. The Americans, of course, survive."
That just about sums up why voters plumped for this movie instead of that other one with the imperialistic Americans and their nasty commander.
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zsuzsanna
She Who Must Be Named
Posts: 650
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #113 on:
March 09, 2010, 03:03:27 PM »
I don't want to hurt anybody but IMHO I think we haven't to mix high politics into our estimation of Ralph. By the way: he always mentions that he has his own political principles but never speaks against anybody or any nation. He didn't deny that he voted for the Labour Party but I read not long ago an article where he was mentioned as a conservative.
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Senneifinn
The Mesmerizer
Gender:
Posts: 967
Restless, hopeful, in silence I wait
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #114 on:
March 09, 2010, 09:28:25 PM »
Quote from: zsuzsanna on March 09, 2010, 03:03:27 PM
I don't want to hurt anybody but IMHO I think we haven't to mix high politics into our estimation of Ralph. By the way: he always mentions that he has his own political principles but never speaks against anybody or any nation.
I can't find any mention of politics and nations in this discussion so I presume you misunderstood my usage of "voters". I hereby clarify that I'm referring to the people who voted for the Best Picture Academy Award. Having made this clear, I fail to see how this mixes "high politics into our estimation of RF" who had nothing to do with the Academy voting process as I understand it. Perhaps you'd like to enlighten us.
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doryka
She Who Must Be Named
Gender:
Posts: 548
Meg kell hogy feleljek a te szép magyar szívednek!
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #115 on:
March 10, 2010, 02:53:34 PM »
IMHO we shouldn't think that Amon Goeth and Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz in IB) are the same just because they were both Nazis. The two characters are completely different as I see them. Goeth is utmost, truly wicked, while Landa is a real tactical mastermind. Landa is first of all a detective and he is able to adapt to the changing circumstances.
I'm running low on battery for my laptop, will continue later.
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"Let it happen, don't make it happen". (Ralph on acting)
Chelly
Admin
She Who Must Be Named
Gender:
Posts: 735
What's better than a big juicy steak?
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #116 on:
March 10, 2010, 03:22:36 PM »
Doryka
, I really wasn't comparing the two characters. What I
was
comparing, were the two performances. I'm not saying Christoph Waltz wasn't good, (though his voice really did remind me of Ralph as Amon Goeth). I was just a little annoyed that they thought Christoph Waltz's performance was worth rewarding, but not Ralph's.
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ralphybugs
The Taste of Sunshine
Posts: 69
Oscar for Ralph
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #117 on:
March 10, 2010, 08:17:20 PM »
Quote from: Chelly on March 10, 2010, 03:22:36 PM
I was just a little annoyed that they thought Christoph Waltz's performance was worth rewarding, but not Ralph's.
You are not alone, Chelly. The moment I was informed of Christoph Waltz's winning, I was stirred by the disparity in treatment.
Why make fish of one and flesh of another?! Did they just get tired of usual loyal Nazis and find a opportunist more appealing?!
BTW, Ralph was mentioned at BAFTA, but not by KB...
«
Last Edit: March 10, 2010, 08:18:53 PM by ralphybugs
»
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I regard medicine as my lawful wife and literature as my mistress, who is dearer to me than a wife.
wanderer
Quiz Kid
Posts: 12
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #118 on:
March 12, 2010, 09:58:30 AM »
Liza... you are a Miracle! Your signature signs...
carry us off to a world of miracles...
«
Last Edit: March 12, 2010, 10:01:37 AM by wanderer
»
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Liza
The Dark Lady
Gender:
Posts: 7963
You touch my heart and make me smile. Always.
Re: what about The Hurt Locker?
«
Reply #119 on:
March 12, 2010, 12:44:55 PM »
Thanks wanderer!
It helps a bit that Mr. Fiennes is just THAT cute!
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Liza
"i carry your heart with me, i carry it in my heart" ~ e.e. cummings
"Keep this man safe; give him all kindness," ~ Shakespeare "Julius Caesar"
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