Sentences with phrase «picture winners looking»

Not exact matches

The best picture Oscar winner of 2016, this look inside the investigative newspaper team that uncovered the child sex abuse going on among Boston priests is a powerhouse of great acting and storytelling.
Suburban life is highlighted at its most dysfunctional in this best picture Oscar winner that looks at a father (Kevin Spacey) in a midlife crisis and the drama surrounding the rest of his family.
If you look at our picture, you will see that one of the photos belongs to an American priest, another shows the winner of the New York State Lottery.
Maybe Chec will not win Arsenal the League but looking at the picture of Sanchez after scoring the winner in South America I «d say HE will.
Why waste time holding an election when children can look at pictures and pick the winners?
The Academy Awards can stop looking, this is their winner for Best Picture 2011.
There's an old truism among Oscar observers that, in any given year, one can look at one of the winners of the Screenplay awards and spot the true best picture of the year, regardless of what the voters actually elected to the top spot.
Not ever Best Picture winner in the»90s holds up, and almost every year there were better options that might have won instead, but the»90s were a hugely pivotal decade that took Best Picture from Kevin Costner to Kevin Spacey, and... okay, well maybe that's not the feel - good progression we're looking for, but still.
If you look at recent past Best Picture winners, most were seen either at Telluride or at Venice and Cannes prior.
Moving on to Best Supporting Actor, let's look at how they're tied in with Best Picture nominees and winners in the era of the expanded ballot:
(«Oscar Winner: Best Picture» just looks better.)
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's 2015 Best Picture winner is set backstage at a big Broadway show, and cleverly edited to look like a single shot.
The top four contenders aren't just all possibilities here, they're also all legitimate contenders for Best Picture and looking at the recent trend of Best Picture winners, it's a screenplay win that is its closest ally.
An index of Winner & co.'s sense of film history: at the world premiere of the new Rudy Montague (Rudolph Valentino by way of Ron Leibman) picture, the image on the screen is blocked - up, ultracontrasty, and scratchy («Gee, didn't old movies always look like that?»).
Barry Jenkins» affecting adaptation of Tarell Alvin McCraney's play In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue won the Academy Award for Best Picture this year (after a brief fiasco in which La La Land was announced as the winner) and it was one one of the few occasions when the Oscars gave out a prestigious award to very little backlash.
Best Picture Oscar winner Moonlight is a dazzling look at the life of one young black man as he navigates the tumultuous currents of love, class, homophobia, and abuse.
Still, the current list of films that look like Best Picture candidates consists of biopics (Darkest Hour, The Current War), stories helmed by previous Best Picture / Director winners (Kathryn Bigelow's Untitled Detroit Riots project), World War II (Dunkirk), a gay coming of age story (Call Me By Your Name) and sci - fi (Blade Runner 2049).
Does that mean the make - up of Academy voters has pivoted so much that future Best Picture winners won't look like previous ones either?
«Lady Bird,» Greta Gerwig's delightful semi-autobiographical look at the relationship between an equally headstrong mother and daughter set over the course of the latter's senior year in high school, was named the winner of the Chicago Film Critics Association's award for the Best Picture of 2017 in a ceremony held tonight.
Synopsis: Winner of 4 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, and based on the first - hand experiences of Oscar - winning director Oliver Stone, Platoon is a movie «that regards combat from the ground level, from the infantryman's point of view, and does not make war look like fun» (Roger Ebert).
When you're looking for a Best Picture WINNER you're looking not for the razzle dazzle of the director, but something that is actor - driven, character - driven.
Looking at the Cannes lineup and winners this year it's unlikely anyone outside of Spike Lee, who was already a top contender, will factor in the upper tiers of Best Director predictions but I am adding Jury Prize winner Nadine Labaki, whose Capernaum was picked up by Sony Pictures Classics and Screenplay winner Alice Rohrwacher, whose Happy as Lazzaro was picked up by Netflix.
During the aftermath of the Oscars, I looked up how many Best Picture winners also managed to be my # 1 Movie Of The Year.
No one has ever accused Anderson of being a populist filmmaker; his personal top - grosser, 2007 Best Picture nominee and Actor winner Blood, looks like a fluke.
Ugh, yes, I actually didn't mean to write «not nominated for Best Picture» but instead a movie not nominated for a whole swag of other awards, but as I was looking at the list of winners I forgot that Dark Knight wasn't nominated for BP.
What looked like a fairly straightforward split between the nomination leader / technical masterpiece / likely Best Director winner The Shape of Water and the hit - a-nerve acting / story showcase / likely Best Picture winner Three Billboards got thrown into chaos when Martin McDonagh, the Three Billboards director, was left off the Best Director ballot.
Most Caldecott winners and Honor books have looked like picture books — they've been 32 pages or so, and generally taller than they are long — and many are appropriate for preschool audiences.
Several recent movies have looked at Iran, including Argo, which was the Academy Award Winner for Best Picture in 2013 and centered on the Iran Hostage Crisis - precipitated by the Iranian Revolution - and For Neda, an HBO documentary about a young woman killed while she was protesting the contested election in 2009.
Winner: The Transformer Prime, for not making you look like a grainy, plague - ridden zombie when video chatting, and for producing pictures you can actually show off without embarrassment.
Pictured to the left is John Watson (on the left in the picture) who was the winner of the 2013 Divemaster Competition and he's pictured with Dive School owner Timothy Lawrence (centre) and Head Instructor and one of the team that looks after our Divemaster Trainees Chris Smith Pictured to the left is John Watson (on the left in the picture) who was the winner of the 2013 Divemaster Competition and he's pictured with Dive School owner Timothy Lawrence (centre) and Head Instructor and one of the team that looks after our Divemaster Trainees Chris Smith pictured with Dive School owner Timothy Lawrence (centre) and Head Instructor and one of the team that looks after our Divemaster Trainees Chris Smith (right).
Dumbstruck (2010)(Documentary) Director: Mark Goffman Truly Indie Maneater Mini-series (2009) Director: Timothy Busfield Lifetime Television Gym Teacher: The Movie TV Film (2009) Director: Paul Dinello Nickelodeon Original Movies The Memory Keeper's Daughter TV Film (2008) Director: Mick Jackson Lifetime Television Cashmere Mafia Series (2008) Producers: Darren Starr, Cathy M. Frank, Gail Katz ABC Jake In Progress Series (2006) Producer: Jeff Morton, Austin Winsberg ABC Kitchen Confidential Series (2006) Producers: David Hemingson, Darren Star FOX Icon TV Film (2005) Director: Charles Martin Smith The Hallmark Channel King Solomon's Mines TV Film (2004) Director: Steve Boyum The Hallmark Channel Oliver Beene Series (2003) Producers: Carter Bays, Jim Berstein FOX Soul Survivors Film (2001) Director: Stephen Carpenter Artisan Entertainment Cowboy Up Film (2001) Director: Xavier Koller Destination Films Anatomy Of A Hate Crime TV Film (2001) Director: Tim Hunter MTV Hendrix TV Film (1999) Director: Leon Ichaso Showtime / MGM Execution Of Justice TV Film (1999) Director: Leon Ichaso Showtime / Paramount Don't Look Under The Bed TV Film (1999) Director: Kenneth Johnson The Disney Channel Splendor Film (1999) Director: Gregg Araki Samuel Goldwyn Films Permanent Midnight Film (1998) Director: David Veloz Artisan Entertainment Brave New World TV Film (1998) Producers: Todd Sharp, Michael Joyce NBC The Winner Film (1997) Director: Alex Cox Artisan Entertainment Bad Moon Film (1996) Director: Eric Red Morgan Creek Productions Stephen King's Thinner Film (1996) Director: Tom Holland Paramount Pictures Hellraiser: Bloodline Film (1996) Director: Kevin Yeager Dimension Films A Woman Undone TV Film (1996) Director: Evelyn Purcell Showtime Zooman TV Film (1995) Director: Leon Ichaso Showtime The Hard Truth TV Film (1994) Producers: Gary DePew, Carol Rossi HBO
Yep, there will be winners and losers (especially in the short term) but remember, we have to look at the bigger picture.
• The night in pictures — a photo gallery from the evening • The winners in pictures — a photo gallery of the awards presentations • The awards as they happened: take a look back at our live blog • Law Firm of the Year: why we selected the firms on the shortlist
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