Not exact matches
The full - time awards pundit predicts nominees, sometimes even
winners, months before a
film has even left the
editing room («Could it be two in a row for Eddie Redmayne?!»)
Winner of the 2015 Grand Jury Documentary prize at Sundance this past January, this
film — produced and
edited by women, and with a mostly - female crew — tells the story of the six young Angulo brothers, who were raised in New York City with little to no contact with the outside world.
With inept directing and
editing and an incoherent script, this
film utterly wastes any chance to create a charming little movie around the
winner of 2012's Britain's Got Talent competition.
As previously announced, award winning filmmaker Nancy Meyers will receive the ACE Golden Eddie Filmmaker of the Year Award presented to her by long - time friend and frequent collaborator, Steve Martin, and
winners for best
editing will be announced in ten categories of
film, television and documentaries.
Winner: Alicia Vikander, Burnt, The Danish Girl, Ex Machina, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Seventh Son, and Testament of Youth (for acting) Runner - Up: Sean Baker, Tangerine (for producing, directing, screenwriting,
film editing, cinematography, camera operation, and casting)
A special seven - member jury convened in Berlin and, based on the EFA Selection list and the additional
film entries, decided on the
winners in the categories cinematography,
editing, production design, costume design, hair & make - up, composer and sound design.
Designed to resemble a
film shot with one continuous take, voters recognized the skill of the
film's innovative
editing tricks and techniques, naming it the winner of Best Film E
editing tricks and techniques, naming it the
winner of Best
Film EditingEditing.
The adaptation was a smashing success in every respect, performing very well at the box office for its exciting thriller elements, while its writing, directing,
editing and cinematography would earn it eight Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture, a first for an R - rated
film (although 1969's X-rated Best Picture
winner, Midnight Cowboy, had been re-rated to an R in 1971).
From the costumes and production design to the cinematography to the
film editing (done by End of Watch alum Roman Vasyanov), not to mention the score (from last year's category
winner Steven Price), sound effects, and visual effects, it's all top notch.
A
film by Laura Poitras
WINNER: DGA Award for Best DocumentaryACE Eddie Awards for Best
Edited Read More →
That could also keep two - time
winner Janusz Kamiński's work on The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (practically an entire
film made up of trick shots, and certainly an easy choice for those who vote «most cinematography,» a la «most sound» and «most
film editing») in the race as well.
By contrast, the frenzied rhythms of American Hustle's
editing, though stylistically derivative of the Martin Scorsese
films to which the crime caper owes a significant debt, fit the mold of previous
winners rather comfortably.
THE 85TH ANNUAL ACADEMY AWARD
WINNERS And the winners are: BEST PICTURE Argo BEST DIRECTOR Ang Lee, Life of Pi BEST ACTRESS Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook BEST ACTOR Daniel Day - Lewis, Lincoln BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Quentin Tarantino, Django Unchained BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Chris Terrio, Argo BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM Brave BEST ANIMATED SHORT FILM Paperman BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Claudio Miranda, Life of Pi BEST COSTUME DESIGN Jacqueline Durran, Anna Karenina BEST DOCUMENTARY Searching for Sugar Man BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT Inocente BEST FILM EDITING William Goldenberg, Argo BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM Amour BESTRead
WINNERS And the
winners are: BEST PICTURE Argo BEST DIRECTOR Ang Lee, Life of Pi BEST ACTRESS Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook BEST ACTOR Daniel Day - Lewis, Lincoln BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Quentin Tarantino, Django Unchained BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Chris Terrio, Argo BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM Brave BEST ANIMATED SHORT FILM Paperman BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Claudio Miranda, Life of Pi BEST COSTUME DESIGN Jacqueline Durran, Anna Karenina BEST DOCUMENTARY Searching for Sugar Man BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT Inocente BEST FILM EDITING William Goldenberg, Argo BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM Amour BESTRead
winners are: BEST PICTURE Argo BEST DIRECTOR Ang Lee, Life of Pi BEST ACTRESS Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook BEST ACTOR Daniel Day - Lewis, Lincoln BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Quentin Tarantino, Django Unchained BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Chris Terrio, Argo BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
FILM Brave BEST ANIMATED SHORT
FILM Paperman BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Claudio Miranda, Life of Pi BEST COSTUME DESIGN Jacqueline Durran, Anna Karenina BEST DOCUMENTARY Searching for Sugar Man BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT Inocente BEST
FILM EDITING William Goldenberg, Argo BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE
FILM Amour BESTRead More →
THE 88th ACADEMY AWARD
WINNERS The Complete List of Winners... and some commentary BEST PICTURE Spotlight BEST DIRECTOR Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, The Revenant BEST ACTOR Leonardo DiCaprio, The Revenant BEST ACTRESS Brie Larson, Room BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Alicia Vikander, The Danish Girl BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Josh Singer, Tom McCarthy, Spotlight BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Charles Randolph, Adam McKay, The Big Short BEST EDITING Margaret Sixel, Mad Max Fury Road BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM Son of Saul, Hungary BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Emmanuel «Chivo» Lubezki, The Revenant First to win three back to back Oscars in this ca
WINNERS The Complete List of
Winners... and some commentary BEST PICTURE Spotlight BEST DIRECTOR Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, The Revenant BEST ACTOR Leonardo DiCaprio, The Revenant BEST ACTRESS Brie Larson, Room BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Alicia Vikander, The Danish Girl BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Josh Singer, Tom McCarthy, Spotlight BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Charles Randolph, Adam McKay, The Big Short BEST EDITING Margaret Sixel, Mad Max Fury Road BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM Son of Saul, Hungary BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Emmanuel «Chivo» Lubezki, The Revenant First to win three back to back Oscars in this ca
Winners... and some commentary BEST PICTURE Spotlight BEST DIRECTOR Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, The Revenant BEST ACTOR Leonardo DiCaprio, The Revenant BEST ACTRESS Brie Larson, Room BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Alicia Vikander, The Danish Girl BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Josh Singer, Tom McCarthy, Spotlight BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Charles Randolph, Adam McKay, The Big Short BEST
EDITING Margaret Sixel, Mad Max Fury Road BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE
FILM Son of Saul, Hungary BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Emmanuel «Chivo» Lubezki, The Revenant First to win three back to back Oscars in this category.
Two - time Academy Award ®
winner Alan Murray (Best Sound
Editing) joins us to discuss his 37th
film in collaboration with director Clint Eastwood, for which he has received his ninth Oscar nomination.
He's
edited feature - length documentaries, such as The LEGO Brickumentary with Academy Award
winner Daniel Junge, short documentaries with Rocky Mountain PBS and Academy Award nominee Henry Ansbacher, and feature - length
films like The Creep Behind the Camera from Emmy Award
winner Pete Schuermann.
The
film was shot by District 9 cinematographer Trent Opaloch;
edited by Pietro Scalia, two time Academy Award
winner for Black Hawk Down and JFK; with sound effects and sound effects
editing by Per Hallberg, two time Academy Award
winner for The Bourne Ultimatum and Braveheart as well as Michael Mann's Heat; production design by Jan Roelfs (Gattaca, Alexander; and costume design by Sammy Sheldon (V for Vendetta, Kick - Ass, X-Men: First Class, Black Hawk Down).