"Great shots of Paris.  Who needs a star when you have Paris.  We'll always 
have Paris, won't we?"

Woody Allen has almost made a point of snubbing the Academy Awards. I find it 
interesting that the one time he did show up, which I think was in 2002, was to 
talk about New York City and how it was coming back and what a great place it 
was to do films. At that point, I believe that Melinda & Melinda and Anything 
Else were already both in pre-production. I don't believe he has made a movie 
in New York since then.

Actors seem to fall all over themselves at the mere possibility of working with 
Woody Allen, yet it seems to me that his original ideas burnt out long ago. 
Maybe they just seem fresh to his next generation casts like Will Ferrel, 
Scarlet Johannson or Owen Wilson. 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Kirby McDaniel 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 8:17 AM
  Subject: Re: [MOPO] The Oscars


  Agreed.  This was mid-level Woody Allen at best.  I couldn't understand what 
the fuss was about.  And the "American" family
  in that film - a bunch of right-wing bores - what a tired idea.  Would have 
been funnier to make them American lefties more liberal than thou!
  Still, it wasn't entirely boring.  Great shots of Paris.  Who needs a star 
when you have Paris.  We'll always have Paris, won't we?
  K.


  On Feb 27, 2012, at 10:07 AM, Posteropolis wrote:


    Franc, Woody got Best Original Screenplay, which I thought was weird, 
considering what a tired idea for a movie it was.

    Dave
      ----- Original Message -----
      From: Franc
      To: [email protected]
      Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 10:59 AM
      Subject: Re: [MOPO] The Oscars


      I actually thought it was one of the LEAST boring Oscar telecasts I've 
seen in a long time but then again I record the show on my DVR and only began 
to watch it at around 9.30 PM EST with a remote control in my hand. By the time 
11 o'clock rolled around I was completely caught up, having not listened to any 
of the acceptance speeches I wasn't interested in or the commercials. (You do 
the math on that one.) I thought Billy Crystal got it right almost all night. I 
thought some of the choices on the video packages were strange especially the 
In Memorial segment which featured almost all still photos, odd for an event 
celebrating motion pictures. I didn't miss having to sit through the two 
ghastly Best Songs but the package assembled for Best Movie of the Year was 
wrong-headed, intercutting the clips from the best films so that one never got 
a taste for any of the nine films, just a stupid idea. I wasn't too upset with 
the actual awards last night, although I wish Hugo had taken either Best Movie 
or Best Direction. I was frankly expecting an old guard backlash with the 
totally ordinary The Descendants and George Clooney winning top awards and I'm 
glad that didn't happen. I would have preferred Viola Davis or Michelle 
Williams rather than Meryl Streep winning for a strong performance in an 
absolutely ghastly film but I'm also glad Woody Allen didn't win for his latest 
warmed-over opus.  I guess I'm mellowing. FRANC  
        -----Original Message-----
        From: MoPo List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Joseph Bonelli
        Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 9:55 AM
        To: [email protected]
        Subject: Re: [MOPO] The Oscars


        Sorry to disagree, Bruce, but several of us thought that, though it 
wasn't the greatest, that last night's Oscar presentation at LEAST paid 
attention to the professionals, living and passed on, who make up the world of 
movies...unlike the last two years when the production tried to cater to the 
People's Choice and Teeny-bop Awards. We could actually see the entire audience 
in the beautiful theatre last night--  instead of having it decorated like a 
studio for a game show, complete with peanut gallerey screaming, "Pick me!"
        Sorry, but SOMEONE has to take the higher road.  I believe that OSCAR 
needs to be that someone. 
        There is a huge international audience for the Oscars which negates the 
necessity to cater to the US's Text-Sending Teeny-Set.  Don't worry about 
them.. Michael Bay & the Vampire Crew. will see to it that they are well 
entertained and spend lots and lots of mommy-daddy money at the concession 
stands...and the grownups can snooze with pleasure through an Oscar program 
that  honors "Hugo" rather than "Transformers".
        When Oscar becomes the People's Choice, excellence in film will be 
buried under a heap of poot jokes and CGI. 
        Sorry if my comments seem old-fashioned, but that's the way this movie 
fan sees it.

        Joe B in NOLA

        PS-- I thought the awards were well-apportioned on the whole.  This 
year was all about the Nomination being the thing--- an excellent year for film.
        PPS-- But the choice NOT to bestow special honors on the "Potter" 
series with it's decade-long history of excellence in everything, was 
unfortunate...the night's biggest failing in my estimation.
        Joe

         
        From: Bruce Hershenson <[email protected]>
        To: [email protected] 
        Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 6:55 AM
        Subject: [MOPO] The Oscars



        It's the morning after, and overall, I thought it was a real 
snoozefest, Billy Crystal was entertaining, but SO familiar in everything he 
did and said. And was I the only one who kept wondering if he might have looked 
and performed better if he hadn't had his very obvious plastic surgery? And 
isn't it a bad sign when the best segment was the circus art, which has zero to 
do with movies.

        It hit me when they did the "In Memorium" segment, and there were tons 
of behind the scenes people no one knows, with a few famous faces thrown in. 
They have successfully turned the Oscars into the Golden Globes, filled with 
insiders and inside jokes, where they pretty much ignore the viewing public, 
and give the awards to the movies THEY like. the kind that the critics fawn 
over, but which not many people actually see.

        Of course, this transformation has been going on for many years, but at 
least they used to pretend to care about the people who make it all possible, 
those who buy the tickets. And in a day when movies face more and more 
competition from all sorts of other kinds of entertainment, it may not be just 
the awards ceremony that sees its number of viewers continuing to fall in 
coming years.

        This was once must-viewing for me. and I have watched it every year, 
but I think I will skip it next year.

        Bruce

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        P.O. Box 874
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        Phone: 417-256-9616 (hours: Mon-Fri 9 to 5 except from 12 to 1 when we 
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