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Best Picture
THE WINNER:
I am always happy to see a good film gain a legions of admirers (as a Star Wars fan, I can relate). I like The Lord of the Rings films because they are a work of stunning vision and imagination employing the best production values to a story that is timeless. Jackson and his effects wizards created entirely new and magical places. But while I admire these epics, I am not among the series' more ravenous admirers. I liked the scope of its canvas but I find the characters a bit stiff and I find the movie (especially this one), a bit drawn out. Return of the King takes so long to get where it's going that I lost interest because the emotional involvement runs short of the running time. I was also impatient with the ending (there are six of them!!). While I realize that the book ended the same way, after sitting for three hours, I got a little impatient. |
THE WINNER:
I liked all of these performances almost equally but my favorite work by Penn would come the following year as Sam Bicke, a paranoid wreck of a human being who's madness leads to a plan to highjack a plane and crash it into the White House in Niels Mueller's The Assassination of Richard Nixon. Based on a real-life journalism scandal at The New Republic magazine in 1998 in which one of its writers turned out to be making up fiction and turning them in as fact, Shattered Glass focuses on Stephen Glass, a smart, charming puppy dog of a kid who has the ability to hold his peers spellbound, regailing them with stories that seem too good to be true. We see him in the board room and around the watercooler at the center of a crowd of smiling listeners. It is hard not to like him, especially in a business in which those around him would choose to hitch their wagon to his. His problems begin when two of his stories come under speculation when the hard facts become elusive. First he publishes a story about a gathering held by supporters of the Young Republics in a Washington D.C. hotel room who partied like Frat boys. A question arises about the validity of the facts including a mini-bar (and the information that the hotel doesn't have one), but his fatherly supervisor Mike Kelly (Hank Azaria) believes in him and doesn't pursue the story. The other story is the one that destroyed him. He turns an article called "Hacker Heaven" about a 12 year-old computer hacker who broke into the computer system of a major corporation and was then hired by a company called Jukt Micronics to help them keep other hackers out. Glass reports that the kid ended up hiring an agent. It is with this story that makes a writer from Forbes Digital suspicious. He doesn't think much of the elitist reporters of The New Repubic anyway and starts making phone calls to validate Glass' story. But the phone numbers to the company lead only to voice mails and the website for Jukt Micronics looks suspicously made-up (its all text) the cracks being to form. Now under the new management of Chuck Lane (Peter Sarsgaard), who doesn't know Stephen as well as Mike Kelly did, Lane wants to believe that the story is true and still sticks by his writer even when the fraud starts staring him in the face. As Lane discovers that the Sunday afternoon Hacker's Convention that Stephen reportedly attended turns out to be a fabrication (the building is closed on Sundays) and the restaurant where he claims to have had dinner turns out to have closed early on that day, Stephen comes apart emotionally. He tries to explain and justify his lies even when the truth becomes clear. What is amazing about Christensen's performance is the way he isn't afraid to look like a jerk. When caught in the headlights of his own lies, it becomes painful to watch. We've seen him charming his friends and co-workers and we can't help but feel betrayed when the lies come into light. We as the viewer have become a participant in his charming nature and it is painful to watch when he is caught in the headlights. What is special about Hayden Christensen is that he seems to shrink as the truth opens up. There's a nervousness, an insecurity that bubbles up very often as he tries to protect his own fragile ego, he keeps saying "Are you mad at me?" and "It's in my notes" and "I left that number at home" and "I didn't do anything wrong". There's a childish quality in Glass that seems to crave approval and it feeds his intellect but when it comes to the showdown when it is time to fess up, he can't face reality because he is afraid of disapproval. |
THE WINNER:
The movie is seen through the scope of Lee's experience. Men, for the most part, are predatory. We understand that from the very beginning men have rarely approached her as anything but sexual anger. We can't excuse her when she begins to let boys have sex with her but it helps us understand that it comes from a buried need to have some connection - and this seems to be the only one available to her. As a teenager, she begins turning tricks and quickly her life spirals into a staggering series of johns and booze because the scope of ther existance and the limitations put on her by her past seem to limit her opportunities. God, in her fevered brain, doesn't help, and she tells him that she's down to her last five bucks and that if he doesn't help her that she will kill herself. She enters a bar which she doesn't seem to understand is a lesbian bar and meets Selby (Christina Ricci), an 18 year-old who has been sent to a family in Florida to "cure" her lesbianism. Lee makes it abundantly clear that she has no interest but begins to realize that Selby may be the first person in her life that isn't approaching her for sex or forcing an egress. There's a sweetness to Selby's voice, a smile in her eyes that seems unselfish. Confronted by the first meaningful relationship in her life, something in Lee begins to turn - or at least as much as it can for her. She misses her first date with Selby when she kills a john who attempts to rape her in the back seat of his car. She decides to give up prostitution. She and Selby move in together but they need money, so Lee attempts to get a legitmate job - which turns out to be a disaster as we see in interviews where prospects all but laugh at her. Out of options, Lee developes a plan, she tells Selby that she is going back to prostitution but she's really going to use it as a trap to lure clients in and then kill them, stealing their money and their cars. This distorted attempt to try and build a real life for herself and for Selby, we know, can only end in disaster. Lee's mission to gain money and a temporary source of transportation gets more and more serious. The mission sounds easy but as the bodies continue to pile up things get complicated. She kills a man in the woods only to find out that he is a retired police officer, another man is a virgin and Lee doesn't have the heart to kill him. Finally she arrives at a man who only wants to help her but when he spots her gun she realizes that she can't let him live. Her circumstances deteriorate until the inevitable finally arrives. There is a specific manner that Theron has of carrying herself in Lee's skin. Her body jitters, it swaggers, unsettling. All of us have grown up learning the proper way to stand, to sit, to move, to smile but Lee seems to exist inside a mind that missed those lessons, her body always seems to be struggling with itself. We could excuse it if she were a drug addict but there's something strange about her mannerisms that suggest that her mind never really settled on a personality. There's an odd look about her, especially in her face. This is not a dig at Toni G's make-up, which is phenominal, but there's something about her face that doesn't look right, it doesn't seem to connect with the kind of look that we click to with our fellow human beings. She's very uncomfortable and all of the social protocol's that most people seem to share are absent in her eyes. None of this would work if we could see Theron acting it out - we never see her acting. The language, the steady eyes, the body language all seem to flow naturally from a character that she instinctivly understands. She doesn't play Lee so much as live in her skin. This is the story of a woman facing the first real love of her life and her pathetic attempts at having a normal relationship. What is most disturbing about Lee is that her life only really began to spiral downward after she found Selby. |
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