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Marvin Hamlisch, 68

Posted on 07 August 2012 by William Gatevackes

If you saw a film or attended a Broadway play in the 1970s or 1980s, odds are you heard his music. He has created numerous songs that have become modern day standards. He is one of eleven people who have won the competitive “EGOT”–An Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony and he is only one of two people who added a Pulitzer Prize to that list (the other was Richard Rodgers).

His name was Marvin Hamlisch, and he passed away yesterday.

Hamlisch was a child prodigy, and entered the Julliard School  Pre-College Division at age six in 1951. Just over twelve years later, he got a job as Barbara Streisand’s rehearsal pianist during her involvement with the Broadway musical Funny Girl, starting a working relationship the pair would revisit a number of times in the future.

The first film Hamlisch provided music for was a 1968 Burt Lancaster vehicle, The Swimmer. From then, he would provide music for over 40 films, receiving 12 Oscar nominations, and winning three awards in 1974, one for The Sting (for Best Music, Scoring Original Song Score and/or Adaptation) and two for The Way We Were (for Best Music, Original Dramatic Score and Best Music, Original Song for the title song, an honor he shared with Alan and Marylin Bergman). He worked on three films with Streisand (The Way We Were, Funny Girl, and The Mirror Has Two Faces) and numerous concert specials with the singer, which garnered him multiple Emmys. He also scored two early Woody Allen films, Take the Money and Run and Bananas. Other films of note Hamlisch worked on were The Spy Who Loved Me, Ordinary People, Sophie’s Choice, and Three Men and a Baby. The last film he worked on was 2009′s The Informant! for director Steven Soderbergh.

Hamlisch also composed the music for the Broadway musical A Chorus Line, for which he won his Tony and the Pulitzer Prize. At the time of his death, he was working with Jerry Lewis to bring the latter’s The Nutty Professor to Broadway.

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Oscar Nominations: Who Will Make The Cut

Posted on 29 January 2010 by William Gatevackes

It’s that time of year again. This Tuesday, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will announce the nominees for the 82nd Annual Academy Awards.

Every year there are snubs and surprises, thrills and controversies. There is no way of knowing who will be nominated, but we here at FilmBuffOnLine, who believe the day nominations are announced should be a National holiday, are going to try and handicap the process for you.

We will try to tell you who we think are Almost Certain to get a nomination, who Definite May Be nominated, and whose nomination is a Outside Shot in the major categories (the four acting categories, Best Director, and Best Picture). We are trying to cover all bases, but don’t come to us if you lose money on your Oscar Nomination pool.

Best Actor:

Almost Certain:

Jeff Bridges, Crazy Heart; George Clooney, Up in the Air; Colin Firth, A Single Man;  Jeremy Renner, The Hurt Locker

Definite May Be:

Morgan Freeman, Invictus;

Outside Shot:

Robert Downey Jr, Sherlock Holmes; Matt Damon, The Informant!; Tobey Maguire, Brothers

Four of the five spots should be locked up, as Clooney, Firth, Bridges, and Renner have been nominated for all the other awards this season and have pretty much split up the winnings. Freeman should be nominated, but could also have some backlash headed his way. Downey Jr. won the Golden Globe for comedy acting, and there is some buzz for Damon.

Best Actress:

Almost Certain:

Sandra Bullock, The Blindside; Gabourey Sidibe, Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire; Meryl Streep, Julie and Julia

Definite May Be:

Helen Mirren, The Last Station; Carey Mulligan, An Education

Outside Shot:

Amy Adams, Julie and Julia; Emily Blunt, The Young Victoria; Ellen Page, Whip It; Hilary Swank, Amelia

Bullock seems to have set off a siren with critics and her fellow actors as per her acting ability. Sidibe’s debut won raves and that should make her a lock for a nomination, Mulligan has won her fair share of awards, but will Oscar nominate two relative unknowns in the same year? The Academy should just make a rule that Streep is automatically nominated whenever she puts a movie out. Julia and Julia seem more Oscar worthy than It’s Complicated. But I wouldn’t be surprised if her co-star from the former gets a nod. Amelia was a poorly received Oscar bait, but the Academy seems to like Swank.

Best Supporting Actor:

Almost Certain:

Christoph Waltz,Inglourious Basterds

Definite May Be:

Matt Damon, Invictus; Woody Harrelson, The Messenger; Stanley Tucci, The Lovely Bones

Outside Shot:

Ben Foster, The Messenger; Christian McKay, Me and Orson Welles; Christopher Plummer, The Last Station

It’s Waltz’s Oscar to lose, so he’s pretty much guaranteed a nomination. Damon, Harrelson and Tucci have received enough acclaim elsewhere that they should be nominated. Plummer has received a number of nominations, but Foster and especially McKay were strong in their roles and could surprise.

Best Supporting Actress:

Almost Certain:

Mo’Nique, Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire

Definite May Be:

Penelope Cruz, Nine; Vera Fermiga, Up in the Air; Anna Kendrick, Up in the Air; Samantha Morton, The Messenger

Outside Shot:

Mariah Carey, Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire; Diane Krueger, Inglourius Basterds; Julianne Moore, A Single Man; Sigourney Weaver, Avatar

Like Supporting Actor, Mo’Nique is enough of a front runner that a nod is a given. However, her performance isn’t the only surprisingly good one in the film, so a nod for Mariah Carey is not outside the realm of possibility. Both women from Up in the Air should be nominated, but Kendrick has the edge if they only choose one. The Academy loves Cruz, so she should get a nomination for a poorly received movie. And I can’t see Avatar not getting one acting nod, and the most likely candidate is Weaver.

Best Director:

Almost Certain:

Kathryn Bigelow, The Hurt Locker; James Cameron, Avatar; Jason Reitman, Up in the Air

Definite May Be:

Lee Daniels, Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire; Clint Eastwood, Invictus; Quentin Tarantino, Inglourious Basterds

Outside Shot:

Tom Ford, A Single Man; Pete Docter & Bob Petersen, Up

The big three of Bigelow, Cameron (who were once married to each other–keep an eye on each other’s face if the other wins) and Reitman should get nods. Daniels and Tarantino have other nominations to their credit and the Academy loves Eastwood. But Docter and Petersen are more than worthy.

Best Picture:

Almost Certain:

Avatar, The Hurt Locker, Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire, Up in the Air

Definite May Be:

An Education, Inglourious Basterds, Invictus, A Single Man, Up

Outside Shot:

(500) Days of Summer, The Blindside, Crazy Heart, District 9, The Fantastic Mr. Fox, The Hangover, Julie and Julia, The Messenger, Nine, A Serious Man, Star Trek, The Young Victoria

Since this is the first time in decades that more than five films will be nominated for Best Picture, this has become one of the most unpredictable categories. Any film nominated for Best Director should have a good chance at making the ten, but what about sci-blockbusters like Star Trek and District 9? How about comedies like The Hangover? Do poorly received films like Nine and The Blindside have a chance? This all adds up to a test year for the new system and the list of nominees being anybody’s guess.

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Want To Read Some Oscar Hopeful Screenplays?

Posted on 23 December 2009 by Rich Drees

screenplaysIf you’re looking for a little reading over the holidays, you may want to check out some of the screenplays that the studios are flogging for Academy Awards consideration this year. More and more studios are placing their Oscar hopeful scripts online for the voting members of the Academy to peruse and hopefully vote for a nomination for either Best Original or Best Adapted Screenplay. It’s much cheaper than sending out copies to everyone and has the great side effect of making them also available to anyone to read. All the scripts are in .pdf format and will probably only be available through the awards season. (So click and save if you’re interested in having a copy to read later on down the road.)

500 Days Of Summer (FOX Searchlight)
9 (Focus Films)
Broken Embraces (Los Abrazos Rotos) (Sony Classics)
The Blind Side (Warner Brothers)
Coraline (Focus Films)
Crazy Heart (Fox Searchlight)
The Damned United (Sony Classics)
An Education (Sony Classics)
The Fantastic Mister Fox (Fox Searchlight)
Funny People (Universal)
Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince (Warner Brothers)
The Hurt Locker (Summit Entertainment)
The Imaginarium Of Dr. Parnassus (Sony Classics)
The Informant! (Warner Brothers)
Inglorious Basterds (Weinstein Company)
It’s Complicated (Universal Studios)
The Last Station (Sony Classics)
The Men Who Stared At Goats (Overture Films)
Moon (Sony Classics)
Nine (Weinstein Company)
Precious: Based On The Novel Push By Sapphire (Lionsgate)
Public Enemies (Universal Studios)
The Road (Weinstein Company)
A Serious Man (Focus Films)
Sin Nombre (Focus Films)
A Single Man (Weinstein Company)
Sugar (Sony Classics)
Sunshine Cleaning (Overture Films)
Where The Wild Things Are (Warner Brothers)
The White Ribbon (Das Weiss Band) (Sony Classics)

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New Releases: September 18

Posted on 17 September 2009 by William Gatevackes

CloudyWithAChanceOfMeatballsPoster1. Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs (Sony/Columbia, 3,119 Theaters, 90 Minutes, Rated PG): Wow, there is a lot of movies coming out this week. I thought the fall was when movies were supposed to taper off. I guess not.

This film is based in the popular children’s book about a scientist who comes up with a cure for the world’s food problems–he can create food out of thin air. Unfortunately, the thin air in question is in the upper atmosphere and the result is food raining down upon the Earth.

This film has one eclectic voice cast. Take a look at this: SNLers Bill Hader, Andy Samburg, Will Forte and Laraine Newman (doing “Additional Voices”), Anna Faris, James Caan, Lauren Graham, Benjamin Bratt, Bruce Campbell, Al Roker, Neil Patrick Harris and Mr. T.

Yes, I said Mr. T. Yes, THAT Mr. T.

This cast seems like it would be more at home in an episode of The Love Boat written by Hunter S. Thompson.

JennifersBodyPoster2. Jennifer’s Body (Fox, 2,701 Theaters, 102 Minutes, Rated R): It’s not every Oscar-winning screenwriter who chooses as her sophomore effort a teen horror flick about a demonically possessed cheerleader. But not every Oscar-winning screenwriter who is Diablo Cody.

It is a bold choice to follow up Juno with a film of this sort. Juno succeeded because behind the at time too hip for its own good dialogue there was a lot of heart. The only kind of heart you find in a horror movie is ones that have been plucked from the chest of an unsuspecting teenager. So it is natural to expect sort of a letdown.

And a let down is what we’ll get if the final product is anything like the script FilmBuffOnline Head Honcho Rich Drees reviewed here. I hope for the best because I am one of the few not hoping for a Diablo Cody backlash, but it doesn’t look good.

InformantPoster3.The Informant! (Warner Brothers, 2,505 Theaters, 108 Minutes, Rated R): Boy, don’t the trailers to this one look good? It seems like it will be a goofy caper comedy about a less than bright informant trying work undercover at his place of business.

Problem is, I got the same feeling when I saw the trailer for Burn After Reading–that it would be a wacky caper comedy about a bunch of less than bright people trying to blackmail a government employee. But that film was only partly that before taking a dark turn in the second half and finishing with one of the worst endings to any movie of all time.

This one is directed by Steven Soderburgh, an auteur on the level of the Coen Brothers, but written by someone else. So there is a good chance this will remain consistent in tone and won’t end with two people in a room discussing what happened to the characters we spent two hours watching.

LoveHappensPoster4. Love Happens (Universal, 1,898 Theaters, 109 Minutes, Rated PG-13): Okay, we have a kid flick, a horror film, and a comedy. Now all we need is a nice romance film to make the week complete.

Well, look what we have here! A romance! How convenient!

It is a little depressing to see Jennifer Aniston, on of my “Top 5″, starring in an adult aimed romance. But I guess we all mature eventually, don’t we?

The film is about a widowed self-help guru who meets a new woman with whom he’s is attracted to. However, this new romance stirs up some unresolved feeling regarding his deceased wife.

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