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| THE WINNER: Jeff Bridges (Crazy Heart) The Nominees: George Clooney (Up in the Air), Colin Firth (A Single Man), Morgan Freeman (Invictus), Jeremy Renner (The Hurt Locker) MY CHOICE: Jeff Bridges (Crazy Heart) My Nominees: Nicholas Cage (Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans), Nicholas Cage (Knowing), Patton Oswalt (Big Fan), Jeremy Renner (The Hurt Locker)
His laid-back style is at the center of Scott Cooper's Crazy Heart which is easily the best performance of Jeff Bridges' distinguished career. He occupies a character that should be riddled with cliches, but isn't - a drunken country singer. He plays Bad Blake, a once-great country star who's best days are long gone. Once he filled stadiums to thousands of screaming fans and now he spends his Saturday nights occupying whatever stage will have him - as the movie opens he's playing a gig at a bowling alley. Blake's life is a sad country song. At 57, he is a drunk, a veteran of four failed marriages and the father of a kid he hasn't seen in 20 years. He still gets noticed by his older fans, and to those fans, he is gracious. He has lived a hard life that has left regret and a lot of broken hearts in its wake. He chooses to keep his first name anonymous. When a journalist asks for it he tells her "I'm Bad Blake. My tombstone will have my real name on it. Until then, I'm just . . . Bad" Everyone calls him Bad. In a way, I think the name is penance, a constant reminder of the heartache that he has caused in his life. Blake may be a drunk with a sagging career but he isn't bitter. We expect a man in his condition to be angry old SOB, but he is actually a very nice guy; sweet, vulnerable and a little bit needy. His face tells us what we need to know. Here is a very sad man, a regretful soul with sad eyes that reveal a weary heart. His heavily-lined face shows the years of booze and hard living and his voice is a low growl rubbed raw by gallons of whiskey. We rarely see him without a bottle in his hand, he is an alcoholic and it is his addiction that has left him lonely and destitute - he doesn't appear to have a home and lives in a string of unkempt motel rooms. His lifestyle is also causing a strain on health. He not only drinks but has chain smoked himself into emphysema. Blake is not a bad guy, but he is a picture of self-destruction. An opening scene, in which he exits his 1978 Suburban with a milk jug filled with urine and empties it onto the ground (he travels a lot), is incredibly symbolic - this man is, literally, pissing his life away. What comes out in his songs are a sort-of Greek chorus to the life he lives off-stage. He sings songs like "Somebody Else" which contains the lyrics "I saw you shed a single tear. Still I can't peal away the years". The movie wouldn't work without songs like this, they tell us that his life comes through his music. It also wouldn't work if Bridges couldn't sing. He has a natural voice in which he doesn't just sing the lyrics but actually believes what he is singing. Blake's craggy voice, beaten raw by booze, gives those songs a kind of authentic feel. The relief of Crazy Heart is that this is not a portrait of blind self-destruction, it is the story of a man weighed down by regret who wants to find some form of redemption. That redemption comes - as all stories like this must - from the heart of a good woman. She is Jean Craddock (Maggie Gyllenhaal), a journalist who interviews Blake for a local magazine. There is an unexpected charm about this poor soul and it captures her heart, especially when he breaks away from the monotony of the standard interview questions and tells her "I want to talk about how bad you make this room look." This charm breaks Jean's journalistic integrity and is made curious by the fact that she admits that she is a magnet for men who don't treat her right (from her failed marriage has come a son named Buddy). She's young yet, she has been burned by men but still hasn't acquired the thick skin that she needs to resist them. Blake wouldn't seem to be any different, his irresponsible life should indicate that she is setting herself up for another heartbreak (she eventually gets one) but Blake has an open heart and she falls for him anyway. The rest of the story finds Blake attempting to reform his hard-living while trying to establish broken ties and reestablish his damaged career. Blake's pride is as much to blame for his self-destruction as anything else as when he gets an offer to write songs for Tommy Sweet (Colin Ferrell), a kid that Blake once mentored who is now a rising young country music star. The look on Blake's face when he is asked to be the kid's opening act is one of damaged pride and the realization of how far he has fallen. What amazes me most about Crazy Heart is how far the screenplay is willing to go to avoid cliche. Stories like this have been written over and over since the beginning of the movies, but Cooper's screenplay (from a novel by Thomas Cobb) manages to create real characters who are not manipulated by the plot. We expect that Blake's drinking will lead to the standard scenes in which he is stumbling on the stage but, aside from a moment when he must excuse himself to make use of the back alley garbage can, he remains a wonderful presence on the stage. Blake's fate is expected but his journey getting there is not. When he makes a serious mistake involving Jean's son Buddy there are consequences but not what we expect and it leads him into a kind of redemption that - in a lesser film - would have seemed tacked on. When we get to the end, it is hard to believe that Blake is going to be able to sustain a clean life but we sense that he is smarter about the damage that he has caused to others and to himself. |
| THE WINNER: Sandra Bullock (The Blind Side) The Nominees: Helen Mirren (The Last Station), Carey Mulligan (An Education), Gabourey Sidibe (Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire), Meryl Streep (Julie and Julia) MY CHOICE: Gabourey Sidibe (Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire) My Nominees: Shohreh Aghdashloo (The Stoning of Soraya M), Sandra Bullock (The Proposal), Isla Fisher (Confessions of a Shopaholic), Sasha Grey (The Girlfriend Experience), Ellen Page (Whip It), Meryl Streep (Julie and Julia), Tilda Swinton (Julia)
Meanwhile, Lee Daniels' devastating drama Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire seems to do everything right that The Blind Side does wrong. The key is the casting and none is better than my choice for Best Actress of 2009, Gabourey Sidibe in her debut performance in the title role. Aided by a wonderfully written Oscar winning script by Geoffrey Fletcher, Sidibe finds the perfect note to play a character who sometimes seems damaged beyond repair. Her performance takes place between the lines, between the spoken words. It is all there in her sad eyes Sidibe plays Clareece Precious Jones - known simply as Precious - a shy, overweight 16 year-old whose life a sad story of physical, emotional and sexual abuse. She has been in this chaos since she was an infant. Her mother, Mary (Supporting Actress winner Mo'Nique) is a mean, violent woman who has been beaten down by life and takes it out on her daughter. Mary made the choice long ago to simply stew in her anger. She sits on her couch, collects welfare checks and demands that her daughter do the same. The household that Precious inhabits is a snake pit of abuse. We sense that there hasn't been a happy moment in many years. Precious' life with her mother is something akin to living with a pit bull. She wants so badly to make her way in the world get out of her mother's line of sight. She barely says a word to her mother (she hardly gets a chance) and there are moments when the two circle on another like angry dogs. Precious' function is simply to move to her place of safety to get away from her. The best example takes place early in the film when Mary tries to hit Precious with a frying pan and she ducks out of the way just in time to avoid being hit. Something about Precious' quick reflex tells us that she has trained her reflexes over many years. The tension between Mary and Precious comes from Mary's insecurity. Precious is young and has a goal in life. She is a very smart girl who succeeds at school. Mary stews in jealousy and her response is to beat her daughter verbally, making her think that she is stupid and ugly. She blames Precious for getting pregnant by her man, despite the fact that she was raped by him. Mary knows that her ability to get another man is limited and blames Precious for trying to steal him away. Underneath her sad, withdrawn exterior we sense that Precious wants something else out of life. Having been raped twice by her father, she has two children - one who has down syndrome and the other with whom she is currently pregnant. The child that she has a daughter with down syndrome. She lives with a relative and only comes to the house to make Mary seem more affectionate when the lady from the welfare office comes around. Precious is determined to get her children out of this mess. She can see that getting the most out of her education is the best way to give them a future. She can see their future in the life she tries to build for herself. She wants to further her education to give them a chance so they won't fall into the kind of hornet's nest that Mary has provided for their mother. Precious is buried in deep insecurity, she is overweight, illiterate and painfully shy. When she speaks, it often comes out in a low mumble. In her mind though, she dreams of being admired. We see her fantasies of being on stage, of being glamorous. She dreams of dating the cute guy up the street, and having him come by to pick her up on his motorcycle. She even dreams of being white. At one point, when she looks in the mirror, we see the reflection is a pretty white girl - a fantasy she has of herself. School is an ordeal. It is for most people but for a shy, overweight girl who never speaks, it can be Hell. With these barriers set in place for Precious, it seems that life will be an uphill struggle. It is made worse when her second pregnancy gets her suspended from school. Her principal recommends and alternative school where she become the student of Ms. Rain, an inspiration to Precious who inspires her to learn to read. Ms. Rain's class is full of other young girls who seems to be in a similar situation as Precious. Another inspiration comes into Precious' hemisphere, Ms. Weiss, a social worker that Precious occasionally meets with. It is through Ms. Weiss that Precious is able to finally break her silence about the things going on at home. What she gets from these two women is the confidence to believe that a better life awaits herself and her children. Pulling her son and daughter out of her mother's world is the only way to break the legacy of destruction and abuse. I am always excited when I see a new talent and Gabourey Sidibe, at 26, has many notes to play. Her performance is understated, even in the heavy dramatic scenes. There is a cold defensive shield to Precious that has been built on years of abuse and neglect. Yet, under that exterior, we can see a charming girl. Fantasies occasionally appear in Precious' point of view as a means of escape and we can see in those scenes, in which Precious appears glamorous - Sidibe is really a very beautiful girl. There are seams that break once in a while, especially as Precious narrates her story, that tells us how she thinks. Sitting with Ms. Rain and her friend, Precious comments "They talk like TV channels I don't watch". Often she seems somewhat poetic: "Some folks have a lot of things around them that shines for other people. I think that maybe some of them was in tunnels. And in that tunnel, the only light they had, was inside of them. And then long after they escape that tunnel, they still be shining for everybody else." What we get from Precious is something more than the sum of her situation. No matter how much her mother tells her that she is nothing, Precious never really believes that. Something inside of her tells her that she was meant for something more. She was meant to have more in life than the small space that her mother tries to push her into. When she escapes her mother's wrath, it becomes clear that a stronger person has emerged. She hasn't completed her journey, but we sense that Precious is well on her way. |
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Jerry’s Armchair Oscars or . . . They Wuz Robbed. Oscars. 2009. Alternate Oscars. Jerry Dean Roberts. Selk. Academy Awards. Nominees. My Nominees. Movie Reviews. Movies. Film. Motion Pictures. Best Picture. Best Actor. Best Actress. Best Actor in a Leading Role. Best Actress in a Leading Role. Best Supporting Actor. Best Supporting Actress. The Hurt Locker (2009). A Serious Man (2009). Avatar (2009). Kathryn Bigelow. Sita Sings the Blues (2008). Sita Sings the Blues (2009). Nina Paley. Ramayana. Ravana. Jeff Bridges. Crazy Heart (2009). Bad Blake. Sandra Bullock. The Blind Side (2009). John Lee Hancock. Quinton Aron. Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire (2009). Mo’Nique.