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#golden lion nominee
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Oscar Nominee of All Time Tournament: Round 1, Group A
(info about nominees under the poll)
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NANCY KELLY (1921-1995)
NOMINATIONS:
Lead- 1956 for The Bad Seed
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KATHARINE HEPBURN (1907-2003)
NOMINATIONS:
Lead- 1936 for Alice Adams, 1941 for The Philadelphia Story, 1941 for Woman of the Year, 1952 for The African Queen, 1956 for Summertime, 1957 for The Rainmaker, 1960 for Suddenly, Last Summer, 1963 for Long Day's Journey into Night
WINS:
Lead- 1934 for Morning Glory, 1968 for Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, 1969 for The Lion in Winter, 1982 for On Golden Pond
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lostgoonie1980 · 2 years
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182. Maborosi - A Luz da Ilusão (幻��光, 1995), dir. Hirokazu Koreeda
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devilsrecreation · 5 months
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Me and @sweetheart-weeb-33 came up with the best TLG au ever. Listen to this:
TLG Actor Au where all the animals in the Lion Guard is a Zootopia-esque actor
Imagine all the villains are actually super sweet irl and I do mean ALL of them
Kiburi’s an actual rapper who had a hand (claw) in helping write the villain songs, especially with Janja’s lyrics. Kiburi also wanted to do a solo in “Run this Dump” but his record label wouldn’t let him
-He probably writes his own version
He and Makuu are pretty good friends irl
Oh speaking of which, it’s one of the songs that won an award. Jasiri, Ushari, and Kiburi all collaborated on it and it was legit their greatest masterpiece
-The other songs that won an award were “Sisi ni Sawa” and “A New Way to Go” (both songs Jasiri wrote herself)
-They got the news during the shooting of a scene by someone shouting “WE FREAKING WON”. There was a huge party at Janja’s afterwards. Kiburi has picked up Makuu during the excitement
-Kiburi wasn’t allowed to speak during the ceremony due to the fact that he gloats to the other nominees. Reirei offers to do it instead
They got Kenge as a guest star from another show and he accidentally keeps mixing up the two. “Oops, wrong show” is something he says a lot
This one’s my favorite: Tamka is actually English as opposed to the New Yorker accent he does in the show
“Oh! How dreadful! I have been defeated!”
“Cut! Hey Tamka, can you say that in like a New York mobster kind of voice?”
“Oh, like this? OHHHHH! DE AGONY! YOU HAVE BEATEN ME!”
“Perfect.”
Believe it or not, Sumu’s really shy and introverted off-camera. He gets so awkward when someone recognizes him in public. He gets even more surprised when people are positive about it like “Wait, you LIKED my part? You think I’m a good villain? Really?”
-He’s even apologized profusely about what his character was about to do and if he was being too scary. He swears he would never sting out of malice
Bunga gets along well with his “enemies” offscreen. He and Ushari’s friendship is so wholesome and Mama Binturong freaking loves him. She is THE mom figure ever. You know how Danny DeVito took care of Mara Wilson during the filming of Matilda? That’s Mama with Bunga
Mama’s the mom figure to everyone, honestly. She’s interrupted filming just because Ushari or Janja didn’t have breakfast that morning
Ushari doesn’t need to act much he’s already done with everybody’s shit
He and Shupavu are married irl
Njano got a part due to being the director’s son. Yup, good ol nepotism. He sometimes needs help with his lines
Bunga’s the best with improv. 98% of his stunts are improvised
Makucha has a friendlier, higher pitched voice irl. Sometimes doing his gravelly voice hurts his throat
Ora plays his part so well, everybody’s genuinely scared of him
The cloud and fire used for Mufasa and Scar are done with special effects and puppets
The bloopers are golden. There’s a lot of cursing done backstage for a preschool show lmaoooo
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weclassybouquetfun · 7 months
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I love awards season, not just to see the films and series I love possibly be rewarded, but because it helps the year go by quickly. My last Oscar FYC event was the day before my first Emmy FYC event. My last FYC Emmy event was late August - my first film awards season FYC event will be this weekend.
Slowly but surely each studio will put forth their FYC slate. So far only a few have updated their page.
Amazon so far has up AIR, AMERICAN FICTION, BOTTOMS, THE BOYS IN THE BOAT, THE BURIAL, CASSANDRO
starring the always excellent Gael Garcia Bernal, with Bad Bunny
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GUY RITCHIE'S THE COVENANT, presumably titled as such in case we confuse it for this THE COVENANT.
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MORE POTENTIAL OSCAR AND GOLDEN GLOBES NOMINEES
CREED III, FOE starring Saoirse Ronan and Paul Mescal,
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A GOOD PERSON, LANDSCAPE WITH INVISIBLE HAND, A MILLION MILES AWAY,
Emerald Fennell's follow-up to PROMISING YOUNG WOMAN, SALTBURN
starring Barry Keoghan and Jacob Elordi
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and the documentary SILVER DOLLAR ROAD.
For now Searchlight (a holding of Disney) has gone all in on Yorgos Lanthimos' POOR THINGS starring his THE FAVOURITE star Emma Stone.
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The film took the Gold Lion at The Venice Film Festival. While that is the only film they have a page for, their banner includes Taika Watiti's NEXT GOAL WINS, THEATER CAMP, FLAMIN' HOT, CHEVALIER and ALL OF US STRANGERS starring Andrew Scott and Paul Mescal.
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Sony has slim pickings for now with only DUMB MONEY, SPIDER-MAN ACROSS THE UNIVERSE and Ridley Scott's NAPOLEON (starring Joaquin Phoenix and Vanessa Kirby) on their site. Surely their big bet is on the latter two.
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Disney has ELEMENTAL, WISH, A HAUNTING IN VENICE, Gareth Edwards (ROGUE ONE: A STAR WARS STORY), THE CREATOR starring John David Washington, GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY 3, INDIANA JONES & THE DIAL OF DESTINY, THE LITTLE MERMAID, QUIZ LADY starring Sandra Oh and Awkwafina and Jeff Nichols' (MIDNIGHT SPECIAL) THE BIKERIDERS starring Tom Hardy, Austin Butler and Jodie Comer, alongside Mike Faist, Boyd Holbrook and Norman Reedus.
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WB hasn't updated their site and to me it's the biggest question mark of what their plans are. Surely the will put up BARBIE, but with DUNE PART TWO being pushed to 2024, the question is will they do the bare minimum qualifying run (releasing it in one of 6 cities by the end of the year) without cast promo or just do the campaign for the 2025 Golden Globes and Oscar season.
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derekfoxwit · 1 year
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The Best Picture Oscar My Way (1980-1999)
Here’s Part 2 of Best Picture My Way (as started here). All information about my approach with this category can be found on that linked first part.
For convenience sake, I’ll relay this message. Only the films I add onto here as nominees will have listed nominated producers next to the movie’s title. (Here’s the Wikipedia page for the rest.)
1980
The Empire Strikes Back - Gary Kurtz
Raging Bull
The Elephant Man
Coal Miner’s Daughter
Ordinary People
1981
Raiders of the Lost Ark
Das Boot - Gunter Rohrbach; Michael Bittins
Reds
On the Golden Pond
Chariots of Fire
1982
Tootsie
E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial
Fitzcarraldo - Werner Herzog; Willi Segler; Lucki Stipetic
Missing
Gandhi
1983
Fanny and Alexander - Jorn Donner
Terms of Endearment
Scarface - Martin Bregman
Mender Mercies
The Right Stuff
1984
Amadeus (still)
The Terminator - Gale Anne Hurd
Love Streams - Yoram Globus; Menahem Golan
Ghostbusters - Ivan Reitman
A Passage to India
1985
Back to the Future - Neil Canton; Bob Gale
The Color Purple
After Hours - Robert F. Colesberry; Griffin Dunne; Amy Robinson
Ran - Masato Hara; Serge Silberman
Witness
1986
Platoon (still)
Misery - Rob Reiner; Andrew Scheinman
Hannah and Her Sisters
A Room with a View
Blue Velvet - Fred C. Caruso
1987
The Last Emperor (still)
The Princess Bride - Rob Reiner; Andrew Scheinman
Broadcast News
Moonstruck
Fatal Attraction
1988
Who Framed Roger Rabbit - Frank Marshall; Robert Watts
Rain Man
Dangerous Liaisons
Mississippi Burning
The Last Temptation of Christ - Barbara De Fina
1989
Do The Right Thing - Spike Lee
Driving Miss Daisy
Dead Poets Society
My Left Foot
Cinema Paradiso - Giovanna Romagnoli
1990
Goodfellas
Dances with Wolves
Edward Scissorhands - Tim Burton; Denise Di Novi
Ghost
The Godfather Part III
1991
The Silence of the Lambs (still)
Thelma & Louise - Ridley Scott
Beauty and the Beast
Boyz in the Hood - Steve Nicolaides
JFK
1992
Unforgiven (still)
A Few Good Men
Malcolm X - Spike Lee; Marvin Worth
Reservoir Dogs - Lawrence Bender; Harvey Keitel
Aladdin - Ron Clements; John Musker
1993
Schindler’s List (still)
The Piano
Philadelphia - Jonathan Demme; Edward Saxon
In The Name of the Father
The Fugitive
1994
The Lion King - Don Hahn
Forrest Gump
Pulp Fiction
The Shawshank Redemption
Eat Drink Man Woman - Kong Hsu; Li-Kong Hsu
1995
Toy Story - Bonnie Arnold; Ralph Guggenheim
Se7en - Phyllis Carlyle; Arnold Kopelson
The Postman (Il Postino)
Before Sunrise - Anne Walker-McBay
Braveheart
1996
Fargo
Trainspotting - Andrew Macdonald
Secrets & Lies
Jerry Maguire
The English Patient
1997
Titanic (still)
Good Will Hunting
L.A. Confidential
Princess Mononoke - Toshio Suzuki
Boogie Nights - Paul Thomas Anderson; Lloyd Levin; John S. Lyons; JoAnne Sellar
Lost Highway - Deepak Nayar; Tom Sternberg; Mary Sweeney
As Good as It Gets
The Full Monty
1998
Saving Private Ryan
Life is Beautiful
The Thin Red Line
The Big Lebowski - Joel and Ethan Coen
Mulan - Pam Coats
Central Station - Arthur Cohn; Martine de Clermont-Tonnerre; Robert Redford; Walter Salles
The Truman Show - Edward S. Feldman; Andrew Niccol; Scott Rudin; Adam Schroeder
Rushmore - Barry Mendel; Paul Schiff
Shakespeare in Love
1999
The Matrix - Joel Silver
American Beauty
The Green Mile
The Sixth Sense
Magnolia - Paul Thomas Anderson; JoAnne Sellar
The Straight Story - Neal Edelstein; Mary Sweeney
Man on the Moon - Danny DeVito; Michael Shamberg; Stacey Sher
Being John Malkovich - Steve Golin; Vincent Landay; Sandy Stern; Michael Stipe
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heavenboy09 · 7 months
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Happy Birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊 To You
1 Of The Oldest Living Actresses In Her Era
Born On September 19th, 1927
She is an English🇬🇧 actress. She is the recipient of such accolades as a Primetime Emmy Award, a Golden Globe Award, and a Tony Award, in addition to nominations for an Academy Award and a BAFTA Award. In 1986, Harris was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame.
Harris began her stage career in 1948, before making her Broadway debut in 1952. For her New York stage work, she is a four-time Drama Desk Award winner and nine-time Tony Award nominee, winning the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play in 1966 for The Lion in Winter. On television, she won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited Series or Movie for the BBC serial Notorious Woman, and the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Drama for the miniseries Holocaust (1978). In film, Harris portrayed Aunt May in Sam Raimi's Spider-Man (2002), Spider-Man 2 (2004), and Spider-Man 3 (2007). For her performance in Tom & Viv (1994), Harris received multiple nominations for the role, including Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.
Please Wish This Legendary English🇬🇧 Actress Of The Original Spider-Man 🕷 Trilogy A Very Happy Birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊
You Know Her & You Have To Love Her. Period
The 1 & Only
MS. ROSEMARY HARRIS🇬🇧 AKA THE ORIGINAL AUNT MAY 👵 OF THE ORIGINAL SPIDER-MAN 🕷 TRILOGY
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HAPPY 96TH BIRTHDAY 🎂 TO YOU MS. HARRIS & HERE'S TO YOU SEEING 100 #RosemaryHarris #AuntMay #SpiderMan2002
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‘Fabelmans,’ ‘Top Gun’ get boost with producers' group nods
LOS ANGELES
The Oscar chances for “Top Gun: Maverick” just went into hyperdrive. The high-flying blockbuster, along with Steven Spielberg’s “The Fabelmans,” “The Banshees of Inisherin,” “Everything Everywhere All At Once” and “Tár” have all been nominated for the Producers Guild of America’s top honor, the organization said Thursday.
All five got top Directors Guild nominations just Wednesday. “The Fabelmans” and “Banshees” also won big at the Golden Globes earlier this week.
The Producers Guild nominates 10 films annually for the Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures. Also nominated were “Avatar: The Way of Water,” “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” “Elvis,” “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” and “The Whale," all films still hoping to be in the best picture race come Oscar nomination morning on Jan. 24.
PGA picks are generally a good predictor of the Oscars best picture nominees and winners. Last year, the group gave out awards to the producing teams behind “CODA,” “Encanto” and “Summer of Soul,” which all went on to win Oscars in their respective categories.
Like the Directors Guild group, all 10 of the PGA-nominated films this year were directed by men, overlooking acclaimed features from female directors like “The Woman King” and “Women Talking.” Damien Chazelle's “Babylon" also missed the cut.
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In the animation category, nominees are “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio,” “Marcel the Shell with Shoes On,” “Minions: The Rise of Gru,” “Puss in Boots: The Last Wish” and “Turning Red.” Documentary nominees included Oscar-shortlisted films like “Descendant,” “Fire of Love,” “Navalny” “All That Breathes,” “The Territory” and “Retrograde.” Notably missing, however, was Laura Poitras’s Golden Lion winner, “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed.”
The PGA also recognizes television programs, including series, anthologies, documentaries, talk shows, children’s programs and game shows. Television dramas nominated included “Andor,” “Better Call Saul,” “Ozark,” “Severance” and “The White Lotus.” Comedies were “Abbott Elementary,” “Barry,” “The Bear,” “Hacks” and “Only Murders in the Building.”
Feature films nominated under the television and streaming banner were “Fire Island,” “Hocus Pocus 2,” “Pinocchio,” “Prey” and “Weird: The Al Yankovic Story.”
The PGA, a nonprofit trade organization, represents over 8,500 producers working in film, television and new media.
Awards will be handed out at an untelevised ceremony in Los Angeles on Feb. 25, where Tom Cruise will be honored with the David O. Selznick Achievement Award.
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Like Old Times... Animated Oscar Predictions
The last time I did these was in late 2020... And the time before that? In early 2018 for the films of 2017. In 2020, I had predicted that SOUL, WOLFWALKERS, THE CROODS: A NEW AGE, FARMAGEDDON: A SHAUN THE SHEEP MOVIE, and OVER THE MOON were going to be the nominees... I got 4 out of 5 right!
Let’s see how I do this time...
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I’m thinking this is how things go down this year... It might be a little tricky for me to predict... Maybe not...
The Golden Globe animated movie nominations are now out, and those usually give one a decent idea of what the Oscar line-up could look like... The predictions I had before publishing this mostly came true with the GG line-up...
They have nominated...
INU-OH
MARCEL THE SHELL WITH SHOES ON
PINOCCHIO
PUSS IN BOOTS: THE LAST WISH
TURNING RED
I got all of those except INU-OH, a GKIDS-released anime feature, a surprising inclusion given that the Globes don’t often nominate these kinds of features. Usually they go for the lowest-hanging fruit, the most mainstream even. Remember how they nominated Disney’s 99.9%-CG remake of THE LION KING for Best Animated Feature of 2019?
First off, yes, a definite lock is Guillermo del Toro and Mark Gustafson’s PINOCCHIO. It’s a critical darling, a stop-motion film (usually a hit with these people), a passion project for del Toro. An Oscar-winning auteur no less, and let’s not sleep on Gustafson either, he is also very much the director of this picture. In fact, he was “animation director” on Wes Anderson’s FANTASTIC MR. FOX, Oscar nom for 2009. The campaign is already pushing it for several categories including Best Picture itself. Definite lock. Possibly the winner, too, first time since SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDER-VERSE, a non-Disney-released film taking home the Oscar.
With a Golden Globe nom, another definite lock is PUSS IN BOOTS: THE LAST WISH. The belated Joel Crawford-directed sequel to DreamWorks’ SHREK spin-off, a picture boasting a unique art style and stylized CG, making the Shrek world go full SPIDER-VERSE. Early reactions are raving about it... Plus SHREK, SHREK 2, and the first PUSS IN BOOTS were all nominated in their respective years. Universal and DreamWorks are putting their all into this one, the first SHREK or SHREK-adjacent movie in 11 years... I think it’s definitely getting it...
Third... Because they’re Disney, they’re likely going to lock a slot... But just one this time. For TURNING RED, Domee Shi’s feature directorial debut for Pixar. Critically acclaimed and not a story about white characters or creatures for once. Also helps that Shi’s BAO, attached to 2018′s INCREDIBLES 2 in theaters, won for best animated short film of that year. I feel Disney’s other animated offerings this year underwhelmed in the critical and box office categories a little too much to be considered (box office does play a part in wins/noms, believe it or not), those films being Angus MacLane’s Pixar spin-off LIGHTYEAR and Don Hall’s Disney Animation sci-fi adventure STRANGE WORLD. Disney and Pixar are also pushing for a Best Picture nomination for TURNING RED. UP and TOY STORY 3 successfully got such a nom a decade ago. I doubt anything here, even PINOCCHIO, gets a Best Picture nom, though...
The fourth and fifth slots... I feel it could still be a toss-up between the following...
Cartoon Saloon is usually a shoe-in, as this year, they have Nora Twomey’s MY FATHER’S DRAGON, streaming on Netflix. I have yet to see it, but I hear it’s fantastic like their other productions. Twomey previously directed THE BREADWINNER, which was nominated for best animated film of 2017. The studio’s other films - Tomm Moore’s Irish triptych trilogy of THE SECRET OF KELLS, SONG OF THE SEA, and WOLFWALKERS - were nominated in their respective years. However, on Netflix, the film feels nonexistent much like Henry Selick’s divisive WENDELL & WILD was... That *could* cost it a slot... It feels like Netflix is giving all the love to PINOCCHIO. I feel they should be backing Pinoke, this, WENDELL & WILD, *and* THE SEA BEAST as well. Very solid year for them in terms of animation. APOLLO 10 1/2: A SPACE AGE CHILDHOOD is a strong contender, too, being a Richard Linklater picture, but it may not make it as well. I feel all the effort is being channeled into PINOCCHIO for both BAF and BP.
Now that it’s eligible once more, Dean Fleischer Camp’s MARCEL THE SHELL WITH SHOES ON, based on Camp’s own short films about the titular talking seashell, could make it in. Though it had its world premiere over a year ago, it is in the running for this year’s Oscar and got the GG nom. Also a critical darling, an A24 release at that - their first animated feature, it has a great shot but also it feels like it could possibly miss. I say that with caveats, though.
Universal has another potential front-runner with THE BAD GUYS, Pierre Perifel’s DreamWorks adaptation of the Scholastic book series by Aaron Blabey. This could be a situation where one film (PUSS IN BOOTS 2) gets all the love and this gets the shaft, but given how well it performed critically and how it did fine at the box office, it might have a chance. I suspect the Oscar brigade might find it too slight and too silly to be taken seriously as a frontrunner, though. Then again, THE BOSS BABY and SHARK TALE from this same studio were nominated in their respective years, so who really knows. Plus, Universal isn’t really pushing too hard for it, nor their Illumination entry this year, MINIONS: THE RISE OF GRU.
There could be some slight hope for something like INU-OH, because GKIDS often gets into the race, but it seems like that one’s existence is strangely muted. Despite all the all that went into BELLE last year, it didn’t get nominated. Another possible candidate that could somewhat sneak in would be ERNEST & CELESTINE 2: A TRIP TO GIBBERITIA, given that the first film was nominated for 2013.
So I’m thinking... It’s gonna be a race between.
MARCEL THE SHELL WITH SHOES ON
MY FATHER’S DRAGON
PINOCCHIO
PUSS IN BOOTS: THE LAST WISH
TURNING RED
We shall see, come this winter...
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deadlinecom · 2 years
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recentanimenews · 2 years
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The Manga Review, 4/29/22
Back in March, Titan Comics announced that it would launching its own manga imprint, Titan Manga, with the publication of a new “director’s cut” of Takashi Okazaki’s Afro-Samurai. This week, Titan announced two more acquisitions: Kamen Rider Kuuga and Atom: The Beginning, both of which will debut in October. The deal is part of a new partnership with StoneBot Comics. In other licensing news, Seven Seas just unveiled its latest acquisitions, which include Malevolent Spirits: Monogatari, Let’s Buy the Land and Cultivate It in a Different World, Anti-Romance, and Night of the Living Cat, a horror-comedy in which “a virus transforms humans into cats.” The mode of transmission? Snuggling with an infected kitty! (Seriously, did my cats write this?!!)
NEWS AND FEATURES
Young Jump just published the final chapter in Satoru Noda’s bloody revenge saga Golden Kamuy. Not to worry: Noda’s ice-hockey drama Supinamarada! will take its place. [Anime News Network]
CLAMP fans rejoice: the collective will resume work on xxxHolic-rei, though they haven’t announced a date for its official return. [Anime News Network]
Also in the news is Moto Hagio, who is one of this year’s Eisner Hall of Fame nominees. [Comic-Con International]
Kodansha just announced its May digital manga releases. The most promising of the lot: When a Cat Faces West, a new series from the creator of Mushishi. [Crunchyroll]
Are you a parent, teacher, or librarian looking for kid-friendly manga recommendations? Brigid Alverson’s got you covered with a helpful list of titles that are suitable for pre-teen and young teen readers. [ICv2]
The librarians at No Flying No Tights compile a list of their favorite cute comics, from Umi Sakurai’s A Man and His Cat to Claire Belton’s I Am Pusheen the Cat. (Warning to dog lovers: this list cants heavily towards cat comics.) [No Flying No Tights]
Bill Kartalopoulos files a lengthy report on the 49th Angoulême International Comics Festival. Among the highlights was a special exhibit honoring the legacy of Kitaro creator Shigeru Mizuki. [The Comics Journal]
Kelli Ewing offers a sneak peak at Hen Kai Pan, the latest series from Eldo Yoshimizu (Ryuko). [Panel Patter]
Wondering what to read next? Masha Zhdanova takes a look at this month’s new VIZ Media titles. [Women Write About Comics]
REVIEWS
Over at Anime News Network, Rebecca Silverman declares Sakamoto Days a “fun” series with a “well executed premise,” while Lynzee Loveridge argues that Sensei’s Pious Lie “does a lot of interesting, if uncomfortable, things that make it worth a read.” AiPT’s Eric Alex Cline gives high marks to Island in a Puddle, a new thriller from Kei Sanbe (Erased), while Megan D., host of The Manga Test Drive, takes Kaoru Mori’s Shirley for a spin.
Bungo Stray Dogs Wan!, Vol. 1 (Demelza, Anime UK News)
Chainsaw Man, Vol. 10 (Josh Piedra, The Outerhaven)
Cheeky Brat, Vol. 2 (Justin and Krystallina, The OASG)
Cherry Magic! Thirty Years of Being a Virgin Can Make You a Wizard?!, Vol. 4 (Sarah, Anime UK News)
Cross-Dressing Villainess Cecilia Sylvie, Vol. 1 (Renee Scott, Good Comics for Kids)
Crueler Than Dead, Vol. 2 (Nick Smith, ICv2)
Death Note Short Stories (Nick Smith, ICv2)
Even Though We’re Adults, Vol. 4 (Jaime, Yuri Stargirl)
Getting Closer to You, Vol. 1 (Erix Alex Cline, AiPT!)
Goodbye, Eri (Elvie Mae Parian, Women Write About Comics)
Hiraeth: The End of the Journey, Vol. 1 (Danica Davidson, Otaku USA)
Ima Koi: Now I’m in Love, Vol. 1 (Danica Davidson, Otaku USA)
Ima Koi: Now I’m in Love, Vol. 1 (Carrie McClain, Women Write About Comics)
Karakuri Odette, Vol. 2 (Thomas Zoth, The Fandom Post)
Lady Murasaki’s Tale of Genji: The Manga (Nick Smith, ICv2)
The Lion and the Bride, Vols. 1-3 (Krystallina, Daiyamanga)
Love After World Domination, Vol. 2 (Justin, The OASG)
Miss Me? (SKJAM, SKJAM! Reviews)
The Music of Marie (Josh Piedra, The Outerhaven)
Orochi (Danica Davidson, Otaku USA)
Ragna Crimson, Vol. 4 (Grant Jones, Anime News Network)
Sakura’s Dedication, Vol. 1 (King Baby Duck, The Boston Bastard Brigade)
Sasaki and Miyano, Vol. 5 (Sarah, Anime UK News)
Sex Ed 120%, Vol. 3 (Erica Friedman, Okazu)
Spy x Family, Vol. 7 (Josh Piedra, The Outerhaven)
Wave, Listen to Me!, Vol. 8 (HWR, Anime UK News)
The Way of the Househusband, Vol. 7 (King Baby Duck, The Boston Bastard Brigade)
By: Katherine Dacey
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tcmparty · 3 years
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@tcmparty live tweet schedule for the week beginning Monday, March 29, 2021. Look for us on Twitter…watch and tweet along…remember to add #TCMParty to your tweets so everyone can find them :) All times are Eastern.
Saturday, April 03 at 4:15 p.m. CAGED (1950) A young innocent fights to survive the harsh life in a women's prison.                                        
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timbeylake · 4 years
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lostgoonie1980 · 2 years
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224. O Covarde (কাপুরুষ, 1965), dir. Satyajit Ray
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christophfanalways · 3 years
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Today, October 9, 2021 marks 25 years ago The Roy Black Story made its debut by Christoph !!
He also won the  Bavarian TV Award,  Baden-Baden TV Film Festival, ROMY Nominee, and Golden Lion Nominee for his outstanding performance!! 
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aliveandfullofjoy · 3 years
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Hey! I figure you're the exact right person to ask this question: do you happen to have a list of every movie based on a play/musical to have ever been nominated for an Oscar (in any category)?
hi! i’m very flattered you thought to ask me. i don’t have a list like this handy unfortunately, but there are SO many!
this is not exhaustive but it’s an attempt!
plays:
abe lincoln in illinois (1940)
agnes of god (1985)
amadeus (1984) - best picture winner, best actor winner!
anna christie (1930)
anne of the thousand days (1969) - best picture nominee!
august: osage county (2013)
auntie mame (1958) - best picture nominee!
the bad seed (1956)
barefoot in the park (1967)
becket (1964) - best picture nominee!
the best man (1964)
blithe spirit (1946)
born yesterday (1950) - best picture nominee, best actress winner!
brief encounter (1946)
bus stop (1956)
butterflies are free (1972) - best supporting actress winner!
cactus flower (1969) - best supporting actress winner! 
cat on a hot tin roof (1958) - best picture nominee!
children of a lesser god (1986) - best picture nominee, best actress winner!
come back little sheba (1952) - best actress winner!
the country girl (1954) - best picture nominee, best actress winner! 
crimes of the heart (1986)
the crucible (1996) 
cyrano de bergerac (1950) - best actor winner! 
dangerous liaisons (1988) - best picture nominee! 
the dark at the top of the stairs (1961)
death of a salesman (1951)
the diary of anne frank (1959) - best picture nominee, best supporting actress winner!
doubt (2008)
driving miss daisy (1989) - best picture winner, best actress winner!
the entertainer (1960) 
equus (1977) 
the father (2020) - best picture nominee!
fences (2016) - best picture nominee, best supporting actress winner!
a few good men (1992) - best picture nominee!
the front page (1931) - best picture nominee! 
frost/nixon (2008) - best picture nominee!
glengarry glen ross (1992)
the great white hope (1970)
hamlet (1948) - best picture winner, best actor winner! 
harvey (1950) - best supporting actress winner! 
a hatful of rain (1957)
hedda (1975) - based on hedda gabler
the heiress (1949) - best picture nominee, best actress winner! 
holiday (1930)
i never sang for my father (1970)
inherit the wind (1959)
judy (2019) - best actress winner! based on end of the rainbow
la cage aux folles (1979) - best director nominee! 
lenny (1974) - best picture nominee!
the lion in winter (1968) - best picture nominee, best actress winner! 
the little foxes (1941) - best picture nominee! 
long day’s journey into night (1962)
ma rainey’s black bottom (2020) - best actor nominee, best actress nominee! 
a majority of one (1961) 
a man for all seasons (1966) - best picture winner, best actor winner!
the man in the glass booth (1975)
a midsummer night’s dream (1935) - best picture nominee! 
the miracle worker (1962) - best actress winner, best supporting actress winner! 
mister roberts (1955) - best picture nominee, best supporting actor winner! 
mourning becomes electra (1947)
moonlight (2016) - best picture winner, best supporting actor winner! 
the night of the iguana (1964) 
on golden pond (1981) - best picture nominee, best actor winner, best actress winner! 
one night in miami (2020) - best supporting actor nominee!
othello (1965) 
our town (1940) - best picture nominee!
a passage to india (1984) - best picture nominee, best supporting actress winner! 
period of adjustment (1962)
picnic (1955) - best picture nominee!
the prime of miss jean brodie (1969) - best actress winner!
pygmalion (1938) - best picture nominee!
rabbit hole (2010)
the rainmaker (1956)
richard iii (1956)
richard iii (1995)
romeo and juliet (1936) - best picture nominee!
romeo and juliet (1968) - best picture nominee! 
the rose tattoo (1955) - best picture nominee, best actress winner! 
separate tables (1958) - best picture nominee, best actor winner, best supporting actress winner! 
shadowlands (1993)
six degrees of separation (1993)
a soldier’s story (1984) - best picture nominee! based on a soldier’s play
a streetcar named desire (1951) - best picture nominee, best actress winner, best supporting actor winner, best supporting actress winner! 
the subject was roses (1968) 
summer and smoke (1961)
sunrise at campobello (1960)
the sunshine boys (1975) - best supporting actor winner! 
sweet bird of youth (1962) - best supporting actor winner! 
a thousand clowns (1965) - best picture nominee, best supporting actor winner! 
the trip to bountiful (1985) - best actress winner! 
12 angry men (1957) - best picture nominee! 
war horse (2011) - best picture nominee! 
watch on the rhine (1943) - best picture nominee, best actor winner! 
who’s afraid of virginia woolf? (1966) - best picture nominee, best actress winner, best supporting actress winner! 
witness for the prosecution (1957) - best picture nominee!
you can’t take it with you (1938) - best picture winner! 
musicals:
annie (1982)
annie get your gun (1950)
bells are ringing (1960)
the best little whorehouse in texas (1982)
the boy friend (1971)
brigadoon (1954)
bye bye birdie (1963)
cabaret (1972) - best picture nominee, best actress winner, best supporting actor winner, best director winner! 
call me madam (1953)
camelot (1967)
carmen jones (1954) - best actress nominee!
chicago (2002) - best picture winner, best actress nominee, best supporting actor nominee, best supporting actress winner!
a chorus line (1985) 
damn yankees (1958)
dreamgirls (2006) - best supporting actress winner! 
evita (1996)
fiddler on the roof (1971) - best picture nominee! 
finian’s rainbow (1968) 
flower drum song (1961)
funny girl (1968) - best picture nominee, best actress winner!
a funny thing happened on the way to the forum (1966)
grease (1978)
guys and dolls (1955)
gypsy (1962)
hello, dolly! (1969) - best picture nominee 
into the woods (2014)
irma la douce (1963)
jesus christ superstar (1973)
the king and i (1956) - best picture nominee, best actor winner!
kiss me, kate (1953)
les misérables (2012) - best picture nominee! 
li’l abner (1959) 
a little night music (1977)
man of la mancha (1972) 
the music man (1962) - best picture nominee!
my fair lady (1964) - best picture winner, best actor winner!
oklahoma! (1955)
oliver! (1968) - best picture winner!
on the town (1949) 
pal joey (1957)
the phantom of the opera (2004)
porgy and bess (1959) 
1776 (1972)
show boat (1951)
the sound of music (1965) - best picture winner! 
south pacific (1958)
sweeney todd: the demon barber of fleet street (2007)
sweet charity (1969)
tommy (1975)
the unsinkable molly brown (1964)
west side story (1961) - best picture winner, best supporting actor winner, best supporting actress winner! 
the wiz (1978) 
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vanessakirbyfans · 3 years
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From award-winning director Kornél Mundruczó (WHITE GOD) and executive producer Martin Scorsese, PIECES OF A WOMAN is a deeply personal, searing, and ultimately transcendent story of a woman (Vanessa Kirby -  Best Actress Winner, Venice Film Festival 2020) learning to live alongside her loss.
In Select Theaters December 30, 2020. And on Netflix globally January 7, 2021.
VENICE FILM FESTIVAL 2020 Winner - Best Film - Arca CinemaGiovani Award Winner - Best Actress - Vanessa Kirby Nominee - Best Film - Golden Lion
TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2020 Nominee - Best Canadian Feature Film
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