I think Downey's nomination is more for his cumulative work this 
year. His work was good in Tropic Thunder(cringe inducing but good) 
but not really that much better than other comedic performances I saw 
last year.

--- In [email protected], keithbjohn...@... wrote:
>
> Interesting picks. Anyone seen Benjamin Button? Is it worth an 
Oscar nomination? I've heard mixed reviews, knew some people who said 
it was good, but certainly i've not heard buzz on this 
level.  "Slumdog Millionaire" certainly is worth the nomination, in 
my opinion. However, as always, I'm struck by this whole ridiculous 
end-of-year loading, where films released at the end of the year get 
the lion's share of nominations. For example, "The Visitor" is a 
fantastic movie, even earning a nod for its lead actor, but not 
chosen for Best Picture, which is odd. I don't understand the exact 
workings of the system, but it's really silly how the "best" films 
are held for year-end. Why can't Academy voters make picks throughout 
the year?
> 
> I also wonder about the focus on so-called star power sometimes. 
Angelina Jolie, for example, does a good job in "Changeling", but 
it's not what I'd call Oscar quality.  And while so much talk is on 
Jolie and Winslet and the usual suspects, of greater note to me are 
the selections of two black women for Best Supporting roles: Viola 
Davis in "Doubt", and Taraji P. Henson in "The Curious Case of 
Benjamin Button".  And also really noteworthy--and hardly mentioned--
is the come-from -nowhere nod to Melissa Leo for Best Actress 
in "Frozen River". I haven't seen the movie yet, but I've heard 
really great things about her performance, and I know she's a great 
actress (she played detective Kay Howard on "Homicide").  Yet all the 
news and entertainment shows I read today only focused on the same 
old stars. One entertainment show I watched even completely omitted 
Leo's name when they were reading the nominations!
> 
> Oh--and is Robert Downey, Jr. worth it for "Tropic Thunder"?
> 
> *********************************************************
> 
> `Button' rules Oscars, Batman's a bridesmaid 
> By DAVID GERMAIN 
> 
> AP Movie Writer
> 
> 
> BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" is 
the Academy Awards heavyweight with 13 nominations, yet the shadow of 
Batman loomed large with the absence of "The Dark Knight" in the best-
picture race. An epic romance that earned a best-actor nomination for 
Brad Pitt and a directing spot for David Fincher, "Benjamin Button" 
was joined in the best-picture category Thursday by the Richard Nixon 
tale "Frost/Nixon," the chronicle of gay-rights leader Harvey Milk 
in "Milk," the Holocaust-themed drama "The Reader" and the rags-to-
riches crowd-pleaser "Slumdog Millionaire."
> 
> The Batman blockbuster "The Dark Knight" had picked up so much 
momentum from honors by Hollywood trade unions that awards watchers 
generally thought it would land a best-picture nomination.
> 
> "Benjamin Button" producer Frank Marshall said "it was a bit of a 
surprise" that his movie would not be competing with "The Dark 
Knight" for the top prize.
> 
> "The fact that `The Dark Knight' did so well at the box office was 
probably a good thing and maybe a not-so-good thing," Marshall 
said. "People tend to think films as successful as that are not well 
made, but certainly, `Dark Knight' is exceptionally well made."
> 
> As expected, "Dark Knight" co-star Heath Ledger earned a supporting-
actor nomination on the one-year anniversary of his death from an 
accidental overdose of prescription drugs. If Ledger wins, he would 
become only the second actor to receive an Oscar posthumously, 
following Peter Finch, the best-actor recipient for 1976's "Network."
> 
> Josh Brolin, competing against Ledger with a supporting-actor 
nomination for "Milk," said the acclaim for Ledger was bittersweet.
> 
> "It's too bad, because every time I think of Heath, I'm split down 
the middle," Brolin said. "I think of his performance. I think of the 
work that he's done, and then the fact that this tragedy happened. 
It's an uncomfortable situation, for sure, but it makes sense to me, 
because I thought he did a bang-out job."
> 
> "The Dark Knight" picked up seven other nominations for technical 
achievement, among them cinematography and visual effects. Yet it 
missed out on other major categories, including directing and 
screenplay. The directors and writers guilds both had nominated "The 
Dark Knight" for their top honors, while the Producers Guild of 
America nominated it for the year's best film.
> 
> "Benjamin Button" leads a bold batch of best-picture candidates, 
among them Golden Globes champ "Slumdog Millionaire," which came in 
second at the Oscars with 10 nominations. Based on an F. Scott 
Fitzgerald story, "Benjamin Button" stars Pitt as a man aging 
backward toward infancy, caught in a tragic romance with the love of 
his life (Cate Blanchett) as she ages in the opposite direction.
> 
> The Oscars will be a family affair for Pitt, whose romantic partner 
Angelina Jolie has a best-actress nomination for the missing-child 
drama "Changeling."
> 
> The honors for "Benjamin Button" include a directing nomination for 
David Fincher and supporting actress for Taraji P. Henson, playing 
the black foster mother who raises Pitt's wizened white character.
> 
> "What I identified with on the first reading was, she understands 
love and how unconditional it is and should be. At the beginning of 
the film, she's barren and can't have children, then stumbles on this 
funny-looking creature on her doorstep," Henson said. "She's able to 
look past race and how odd he looked. She just knew he was a human 
being."
> 
> Marshall and producing partner Kathleen Kennedy spent 18 years 
trying to make "Benjamin Button" and have been rewarded with a 
critical and commercial hit as the film crossed $100 million at the 
box office last weekend.
> 
> The film is "about perseverance, about life, about how you can 
control your own destiny. That's kind of what happened here. Finally, 
a time came when all the right people came together at the right time 
to make the movie," Marshall said. "Live your life forward or 
backward, we just hope you live it well. Now to have the audience 
respond to the movie has been thrilling."
> 
> "Slumdog Millionaire" has found similar acceptance, its poor-boy-
makes-good theme mirroring its success among fans and critics.
> 
> Shot on a modest $14 million budget, "Slumdog Millionaire" tells 
the alternately heartwarming and horrific tale of a street orphan in 
Mumbai whose pursuit of love carries him to triumph on India's 
version of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire."
> 
> "Slumdog Millionaire" swept all four categories for which it was 
nominated at the Golden Globes, where it won best-picture over a 
field that included "Benjamin Button." The film's cast of unknowns 
was overlooked for acting nominations, but its Oscar categories 
include best-director for Danny Boyle and adapted screenplay for 
Simon Beaufoy.
> 
> "I just have to keep remembering that the film nearly went straight 
to DVD," Beaufoy said, referring to a distribution hitch that nearly 
left the film without a theatrical run to qualify for the 
Oscars. "There was a week or two when it might never have appeared on 
a big screen in the United States, and the fact that it did, and 
Americans have taken it to their hearts is just fantastic."
> 
> The best-picture field includes two 1970s tales of fallen political 
figures. "Frost/Nixon" stars best-actor nominee Frank Langella as the 
disgraced president in his battle of wits with TV interviewer David 
Frost. "Milk" features best-actor contender Sean Penn as the slain 
gay-rights pioneer.
> 
> Along with Langella, Penn and Pitt, best-actor picks are Richard 
Jenkins in the cross-cultural drama "The Visitor" and Mickey Rourke 
in the sports-comeback story "The Wrestler."
> 
> Joining Jolie in the best-actress field were Anne Hathaway for the 
family drama "Rachel Getting Married," Melissa Leo for the smuggling 
saga "Frozen River," Meryl Streep for the Roman Catholic tale "Doubt" 
and Kate Winslet for "The Reader."
> 
> Winslet plays a woman having a fling with a teenager who encounters 
her again years later as she is on trial for Holocaust atrocities. At 
the Globes, Winslet was a dual winner, as dramatic actress 
for "Revolutionary Road" and supporting actress for "The Reader." But 
the Academy saw Winslet's turn in "The Reader" as a leading role, and 
one worthy of nomination. It was Winslet's sixth nomination. If she 
loses, she will tie the record of Deborah Kerr and Thelma Ritter for 
most nominations by an actress without a win. Stephen Daldry, a 
directing nominee for "The Reader," suspects Winslet will be going 
home with an Oscar.
> 
> "I'm delighted for Kate," Daldry said. "I think she did two 
astonishing performances in 'Revolutionary Road' and in 'The Reader.' 
Whichever one the academy went for, I think it's her year. I think 
it's her turn."
> 
> The 81st Oscars will be presented Feb. 22 at Hollywood's Kodak 
Theatre and broadcast on ABC.
>


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