Search

Oscar Surprises, Part 3: Films That Made Out Big, Plus: Foreign Invasion!

George CLooney in Michael Clayton courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

And now to the films that made out like bandits:

There's Juno, of course, and Paul Thomas Anderson's bleak There Will Be Blood, based on Upton Sinclair's muckraking 1927 novel Oil!, was nominated for best picture, best actor (Daniel Day-Lewis), best director and best adapted screenplay. The quietly effective Paul Dano, of last year's indie favorite Little Miss Sunshine, was passed over for best supporting actor. Lewis was widely considered a shoo-in, but the rest of the nominations were less than givens, despite critical raves for this lengthy (158 minutes), epic examination of greed, false prophets and near-biblical retribution.

Thinking-man's thriller Michael Clayton scored big with critics without exciting much attention among moviegoers. It's nominated for best picture, with star George Clooney recognized in the best-actor category. Costars Tilda Swinton and Tom Wilkinson were both nominated in the supporting categories and first-time director Tony Gilroy got a nod both for direction and for his original screenplay. Way to go! Let's hope that the multiple nominations get moviegoers to take a look when it goes back into theaters this Friday.

The Coen brothers' grim No Country for Old Men, adapted from Cormac McCarthy's novel of the same name, also took a best-picture nod, along with best supporting actor recognition for Javier Bardem as a sociopathic killer and double recognition for Joel and Ethan Coen in the directing and adapted screenplay categories. Apparently my feeling that there's far less to this gloomy, Texas-set thriller than meets the eye is very much the minority one.

A WWI-era drama with a vicious sting in its tail, Atonement - based on Ian McEwan's novel - came away with only two major nominations: best picture and best supporting actress for 14-year-old Saoirse Ronan. That's not too shabby, but it falls short of expectations. Perhaps it looked too much like a highbrow soap opera for Academy members, though it's much more than that and anyway, highbrow soap operas have a tradition of doing just fine come Oscar time.

On the other hand, three French-language films found themselves in the spotlight outside the best foreign-language film ghetto: The animated Persepolis, based on the autobiographical graphic novels by Iranian writer Marjane Satrapi (nominated for best animated feature); painter turned filmmaker Julian Schnabel's The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (which nabbed him a best-directing nomination and screenwriter Ronald Harwood recognition for adapting the late Jean-Dominique Bauby's heartbreaking memoir Le Scaphandre et le Papillon); and La Vie en Rose, which earned star Marion Cotillard a best-actress nomination for her no-holds-barred performance as tragic French singer Edith Piaf.

Perhaps it is a small world after all, even in Hollywood!

" Oscar Surprises, Part 1: Juno and Tommy Lee Jones
" Oscar Surprises, Part 2: Blanchett, Mortensen and Hal Holbrook
Advertisement
TV Guide Exclusive Videos
091206photogallery_redcarpet_cindycrawford1

Red Carpet Hits and Misses

Like Cindy Crawford's look? Vote on it and more of the best and worst celeb fashion statements

Shop

Buy Music From the Motion Picture Atonement: Arranged for Piano Solo from Amazon.com

From Hal Leonard Corporation (Paperback)
Average Customer Review: nostarnostarnostarnostarstar
Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy New: $14.78 (as of 1:01 AM EST - more info)

Buy Two Stage Plays: Denzill Herbert's Atonement; Bondage from Amazon.com

From Kessinger Publishing, LLC (Paperback)
Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy New: $20.48 (as of 1:01 AM EST - more info)

Buy Sean O'Casey: Critical Guide / Three Dublin Plays: The Shadow of a Gunman, Juno and the Paycock, The Plough and the Stars (Faber Critical Guides) from Amazon.com

From Faber & Faber (Paperback)
Average Customer Review: nostarnostarstarstarstar
Usually ships in 1 to 3 weeks
Buy New: $10.20 (as of 12/05/09 4:53 PM EST - more info)