__________________________________________________________________________
Best Picture
| THE WINNER:
He shopped his script around Hollywood for years but couldn’t drum up any interest until he was given his chance by United Artists. The payoff was an enormous success at the box office and a film that today remains a crowd-pleasing favorite. It was also a breakthrough for Sylvester Stallone who would spend the next 15 years as one of Hollywood’s biggest stars (he would play Rocky five more times) before a string of box office failures turned his name into a punchline. Today, Stallone’s movie career seems to be made up of attempts to breathe life back into his career. Travis instinctively knows that he can't wipe all the scum off the streets but he sets about to rob this ugly landscape of two of it's victims. First is Betsy, who works on the campaign of a politician named Palatine that Travis thinks is dirty. The other is Iris (Jodie Foster), a 12 year-old prostitute who ran away from home and works for a pimp named Sport (Harvey Keitel). He makes it his mission to kill one or both of these men. Attempting to save both women doesn't work because his approach to them is the same as his approach to everyone else, they reject him and something off-putting in his personality makes them instinctively shy away from him. That may have to do with the fact that neither Iris nor Betsy want his help. Eventually, he arrives at a point mentally where he prepares himself for battle. Buying guns, working out, and of course practicing in the mirror to an imaginary assailant. "You talkin' to me? Well I'm the only one here." That second line speaks for his entire nature. He goes on a rampage, shooting pimps and perverts that keep Iris locked in her nightly pursuits and afterwards he is deemed a hero in the press. Yet even in the end when he is accepted (some assume that it is all a fantasy in his comatose brain) by those closest to the young girl he saved. It is a redemption, but only a temporary one. We are given a note at the end that reveals that this man is a time bomb who will keep going off. He smiles at the end but we sense that this scenario is starting all over again. This is the portrait of a lonely soul, a man who simply doesn't possess the tools to be able to communicate effectively with other human beings. It gives him an unhealthy outlook. He says it best: "Loneliness has followed me my whole life. Everywhere. In bars, in cars, sidewalks, stores, everywhere. There's no escape. I'm God's lonely man" |
__________________________________________________________________________
Best Actor
THE WINNER:
His place in popular culture will live forever in the image of Howard Beale, sitting behind a newsdesk soaking wet and urging his viewers to stick their heads out the window and yell “I’m as mad as Hell and I’m not going to take this anymore!” Sadly, everything else about Finch has more or less passed out of common knowledge. Admittedly, I’ve often mistaken him for Albert Finney. Time and again he tries to understand human contact and time and again he fails. As his story progresses and he sees that connecting with his world doesn’t work, he goes over the edge. The dividing line of his sanity comes in a brilliant scene in which he is watching coverage of a political rally on television and is rocking the TV stand with his foot. Further and further he tips the TV stand until finally, the table tips over and the TV crashes to the floor. It is a signal to us that the film is going to another level. No one really understands Travis Bickle, no one really understands what goes on in his ticking mind. That is one of the reasons that he is hailed as a hero in the end. He is seen as a man who saw a problem and dealt with it, but no one really understands that this is man who's mind is a pressure cooker. In the end, there is a moment when he drives away from Betsy, he looks in his rear view mirror and thinks there is something there. The timebomb is ticking again. |
__________________________________________________________________________
Best Actress
THE WINNER:
If Dunaway doesn't do it for me as an actress, I can say the opposite about Sissy Spacek who had her breakout role in Brian De Palma's Carrie, the role that would make her a star. This is one of those eerie meshings of reality and fantasy, like The Exorcist, wherein it grounds it's story in a reality so that when the spooky stuff starts to happen, it is a little more jolting. Spacek plays Carrie White, a painfully shy high school teenager who is boney and underdeveloped, who hides her face behind her books and behind her long, stringy ginger hair. On the ladder of the high school food chain she remains at the very bottom, she has no friends and is often the target of bullying at the hands of the other girls. At home we understand why. Her mother is a clinging and unyielding, hiding her sexual frustration behind a lot of religious paranoia where she instills in her daughter the information that the world is evil and everything everything is a pathway to Hell. For her daughter's transgressions, she punishes Carrie by locking her in "the prayer closet" surrounded by gruesome religious symbols. She instills all fear of burning in Hell but gives her no information, no real mental tools to deal with the outside world. Carrie is flowering into womanhood and her mother constantly reminds her that her very nature makes her the vessel of the devil. She isn't allowed any friends and dating a boy is out of the question. Closing off the house from everyone else and making their home into a panic room, she refuses Carrie any of the useful information that she needs to carry on into adulthood. The movie opens with Carrie taking a shower after gym class when she suddenly has her first period. Not understanding what has happened, she sees all the blood and begins to panic, making her a target of the other girls. Carrie's life is, to say that least, a series of inner turmoil and abuse. But added to that pedigree, she also has to get a handle on the idea that she may have telekinesis - the ability to move objects with her mind. She sees things happen, like a mirror that breaks and then repairs itself. An ashtray flies off the principal's desk when she mispronounces her name. It becomes the best weapon against her mother as she throws her mother against the couch during on of their fights. A teacher, Miss Collins, takes pity on Carrie and when the girls in her gym class abuse her, she punishes the girls. One of the girls, Sue Snell feels sorry for her and gets her boyfriend to ask Carrie to the prom but Chris (Nancy Allen), one of the girls who was punished, wants revenge. She and her boyfriend Billy (John Travolta) fix it so that Carrie will be crowned prom queen and they can dump pig blood all over her. The prank works but it turns ugly as Carrie, onstage uses her mind to lock the door and set on a huge electrical fire that kills nearly everyone. Returning home, she gets into a battle with her mother (who correctly warned her that "They're all gonna laugh at you") and they're battle ends with both dead. What works in Carrie is that it presents the elements of a fairly standard high school melodrama, then around the edges it creates a sad horror scenario about a girl with a strange, deadly power. The two stories run parallel throughout the film and only really meet at the end. That's what makes great horror, the idea of a realistic playing field onto which is thrown an impossible situation. For Sissy Spacek, this would be her breakthrough role, she would continue over the next two decades to prove herself as an actress and we are happy to see that the promise she showed here was not a one-time thing. |
|
|---|
This site is neither endorsed nor affiliated with The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences The opinions expressed are purely those of the author. |