Life of Pi ended up taking home the most naked, gold men statuettes with 4, followed by Argo's 3. While Lincoln was an early award season favorite, Spielberg's epic finished with 2 awards. A bit disappointing for sure, but nonetheless, not surprising as Argo was sweeping up the award circuit in the past months. As it has been painstakingly noted to death, Argo is the only film since the 1989 film Driving Home Miss Daisy to win Best Picture without having a Best Director nomination. In the biggest surprise of the evening, a tie between Zero Dark Thirty and Skyfall for Best Sound Editing became only the sixth tie in Oscar history. The audience was so startled that equally stunned presenter Mark Walhberg said, "No BS, we have a tie." Ergo, nobody, I repeat NOBODY could have filled out a 100% correct Oscar ballot. So there.
One event that attracted attention was the post-Oscar protest of concerning Visual Effects. After being played off a bit early during the acceptance speech of Life of Pi Visual Effects winner, Ben Westenhofer, many people took to Twitter to point out the possible conspiracy. They claimed the Academy cut Westenhofer off early out of fear that he would mention the plight of VFX studios everywhere. It certainly is a problem, as Life of Pi (a film that based itself on visual effects) has been a big box office draw, yet the studio behind the visual effects, Rhymes & Hues had to file for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy. Westenhofer was able to get his message out, though, and in a statement he said:
"At a time when visual effects movies are dominating the box office, [the] visual effects companies are struggling. And I wanted to point out that we aren’t technicians. Visual effects is not just a commodity that’s being done by people pushing buttons. We’re artists, and if we don’t find a way to fix the business model, we start to loses the artistry. If anything, Life of Pi shows that we’re artists and not just technicians."While the hubbub has been dying out, this might become a bigger problem in the future, especially due to the fact that, as Westenhofer pointed out, visual effects are becoming more and more necessary in big box office films.
Here are the winners of the 85th Academy Awards:
Best Picture: Argo
Best Director: Ang Lee (Life of Pi)
Best Actor: Daniel Day-Lewis (Lincoln)
Best Actress: Jennifer Lawrence (Silver Linings Playbook)
Best Supporting Actor: Christoph Walz (Django Unchained)
Best Supporting Actress (Les Miserables)
Best Writing for an Adapted Screenplay: Chris Terrio (Argo)
Best Writing for an Original Screenplay: Quentin Tarantino (Django Unchained)
Best Animated Feature: Brave
Best Feature Documentary: Searching for Sugar Man
Best Documentary Short: Inocente
Best Foreign Language Film: Amour
Best Film Editing: William Goldenberg (Argo)
Best Cinematography: Claudio Miranda (Life of Pi)
Best Art Direction: Lincoln
Best Visual Effects: Life of Pi
Best Costumes: Jacqueline Durran (Anna Karenina)
Best Makeup: Lisa Westcott and Julie Dartnell (Les Miserables)
Best Production Design: Rick Carter and Jim Erickson (Lincoln)
Best Live Action Short: Curfew
Best Animated Short: Paperman
Best Original Score: Mychael Danna (Life of Pi)
Best Sound Editing: Per Hallberg and Karen Baker Landers (Skyfall) AND Paul N.J. Ottosson (Zero Dark Thirty)
Best Sound Mixing: Andy Nelson, Mark Paterson and Simon Hayes (Les Miserables)
You can view the complete list of Winners and Nominees here at the Oscar site.
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