Tag Archives: footnote

Jean Dujardin or Happy Joe Lucky: Who Has the Kid-Pleasingest Cigarettes?

This new Funny or Die bit featuring reigning Oscar king Jean Dujardin pushing a fictional brand of cigarettes in the suavest, most charming and youth-enticing way possible is pretty good (“And now in Cotton Candy and Snickers Bar!” I LOL’ed). Still, when it comes to animated/live-action smoke pushers, Dujardin and his partner in crime have pretty formidable competition in the infamous Happy Joe Lucky. Right down to the accordions! Who’s got the kid-pleasingest cigarettes around? Dujardin’s video calls for a rummage through the YouTube wilds, where we find the animated Lucky Strike mascot dueting with Your Hit Parade star Gisele MacKenzie. What an era! Smoke if you got ’em! BRB, etc. Jean Dujardin’s Cigarettes from Jean Dujardin Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Jean Dujardin or Happy Joe Lucky: Who Has the Kid-Pleasingest Cigarettes?

REVIEW: Israeli Comedy-Drama Footnote Makes Talmudic Scholarship Seem Almost Dynamic

Sometimes a movie demands attention more for its “How” than its “What,” and writer-director Joseph Cedar’s Footnote falls squarely in that category. A movie about feuding father-and-son Talmudic scholars isn’t a surefire way to pack ’em in at the box office. But Cedar approaches his subject with so much wit and verve that he almost – almost – makes you forget you’re watching a movie about a very small, cloistered subset of academic obsessives whose life’s work is about as visually undynamic as you can imagine. How do you get action and drama out of pages and pages filled with Hebrew lettering? Somehow Cedar – who was born in New York but who has lived in Jerusalem since the age of 5 – pulls it off. Footnote was the Israeli Academy Award nominee for 2011; it lost to Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation , which provided the bullying Iranian government with an unfortunate opportunity to declare artistic supremacy (in addition to every other kind) over Israel. But while Footnote is a very different movie – it doesn’t pack the emotional charge that A Separation does – its craftsmanship is exceptional. Cedar has made a picture about scholarly obsession that really moves, even when its characters – who spend a lot of time at their desks, surrounded by piles of papers and books adorned with wrinkled sticky-note flags – don’t. Eliezer Shkolnik (Shlomo Bar-Aba) has spent years, practically a lifetime, analyzing various versions of the Talmud, getting deep into minute differences in wording and phrasing. He makes a big research breakthrough, but just as he’s about to announce it, a rival professor (played by Micah Lewensohn) scoops him. Eliezer, an uncommunicative and taciturn sort, retreats deeper into his research, hoping that one day he’ll be appreciated and awarded the coveted Israel Prize. Meanwhile his son, Uriel (Lior Ashkenazi), also a Talmudic scholar, surpasses his father in both the respect and likability departments – he’s more of a born star, and he certainly likes the limelight. When it’s announced, finally, that Eliezer has been chosen for the Israel Prize, Uriel is relieved and happy for his father – until he learns exactly what Eliezer’s achievement will cost him, both professionally and personally. Between Uriel’s outright ambition and Eliezer’s naked need for recognition and respect, the relationship between father and son – which was never, it’s suggested, particularly warm to begin with – becomes increasingly tense. Cedar has cleverly organized his movie into chapter-like sections that somehow make analyzing reams of ancient text seem like an adventure, or at least something worth devoting your life to. He uses some lively effects, most of which are quite simple: He suggests the feverishness of scholarly devotion, for example, by showing sheafs of text whizzing across the frame, accompanied by the appropriate whooshing sound effects. The picture has a surprising agility, considering it really is about two guys with furrowed brows whose heads are generally buried in books. There is still the fact, though, that scholarship is just never going to be the jazziest subject on the planet, and even Cedar seems to know it. In places, Footnote strains to delineate the tension between father and son, re-embroidering their conflicts over and over again, long after we’ve gotten the point. Cedar – who previously made the 2007 Israeli war drama Beaufort – has taken great pains to add lots of emotional dappling and texture to this story, though in the end, what we take away from the relationship between these two characters is pretty simple: They’re victims of your garden variety criss-crossing jealousy and resentment. Still, the actors keep the drama believable and engaging: Bar-Aba, in particular, pulls off the tricky feat of making an impenetrable character sympathetic, albeit in a maddening, “Would it kill you to crack a smile?” way. And both Bar-Aba and Ashkenazi comfortably navigate the dry comic touches Cedar has added to the story: We don’t know whether to wince or laugh when, early in the film, Uriel publicly praises his father with a long-winded, backhanded story that essentially makes the guy sound like an uncommunicative jerk. Then again, that’s what he is. What Cedar captures here is the way a father and son can be bound so tightly they almost choke the air out of one another. You can’t exactly call it affection; it’s that far more complicated thing we call kinship. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Israeli Comedy-Drama Footnote Makes Talmudic Scholarship Seem Almost Dynamic

Oscar Index Special Edition: Predicting the 84th Academy Award Nominations

We’re a little more than half a day away from learning who and what will compete for the 84th annual Academy Awards — an elite class through which Movieline’s Institute for the Advanced Study of Kudos Forensics had combed for four months in its fail-safe, fool-proof and bracingly handsome Oscar Index . This calls for one last sweep through each of the Academy’s categories (with the exception of live-action, animated and documentary short, about which even our pointiest-headed Oscar wonk cannot speak yet with authority); check our team’s work against your own, and drop back by Movieline tomorrow morning at 8:30 a.m. ET/5:30 a.m. PT as we deliver nominations, reactions, analysis and more. [Nominees listed alphabetically by film] BEST PICTURE The Artist The Descendants The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo The Help Hugo Midnight in Paris Moneyball War Horse BEST DIRECTOR Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist Alexander Payne The Descendants David Fincher, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo Martin Scorsese Hugo Woody Allen Midnight in Paris BEST ACTRESS Rooney Mara, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo Viola Davis, The Help Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady Michelle Williams, My Week With Marilyn Tilda Swinton, We Need to Talk About Kevin BEST ACTOR Jean Dujardin, The Artist George Clooney, The Descendants Brad Pitt, Moneyball Michael Fassbender, Shame Gary Oldman, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Berenice Bejo, The Artist Shailene Woodley, The Descendants Jessica Chastain, The Help Octavia Spencer, The Help Melissa McCarthy, Bridesmaids BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Christopher Plummer, Beginners Albert Brooks, Drive Jonah Hill, Moneyball Kenneth Branagh, My Week with Marilyn Nick Nolte, Warrior BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Will Reiser, 50/50 Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig, Bridesmaids Woody Allen, Midnight in Paris Tom McCarthy and Joe Tiboni, Win Win BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, The Descendants Steven Zaillian, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Tate Taylor, The Help John Logan, Hugo Stan Chervin, Aaron Sorkin and Steven Zaillian, Moneyball BEST ART DIRECTION Laurence Bennett, The Artist Donald Graham Burt, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Stuart Craig, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Dante Ferretti, Hugo Maria Djurkovic, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Guillaume Schiffman, The Artist Jeff Cronenweth, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Robert Richardson, Hugo Emmanuel Lubezki, The Tree of Life Janusz Kaminski, War Horse BEST COSTUME DESIGN Mark Bridges, The Artist Michael O’Connor, Jane Eyre Sandy Powell, Hugo Jill Taylor, My Week with Marilyn Jacqueline Durran, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy BEST FILM EDITING Michel Hazanavicius and Anne-Sophie Bion, The Artist Thelma Schoonmaker, Hugo Kirk Baxter and Angus Wall, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Christopher Tellefsen, Moneyball Michael Kahn, War Horse BEST MAKEUP Albert Nobbs Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 The Iron Lady BEST ORIGINAL SCORE The Artist The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Hugo Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy War Horse BEST ORIGINAL SONG “Lay Your Head Down,” Albert Nobbs “Hello Hello” Gnomeo & Juliet “The Living Proof,” The Help “Life’s a Happy Song,” The Muppets “Man or Muppet,” The Muppets BEST SOUND EDITING The Adventures of Tintin The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Hugo Transformers: Dark of the Moon BEST SOUND MIXING Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Hugo Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides Transformers: Dark of the Moon War Horse BEST VISUAL EFFECTS Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Hugo Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides Rise of the Planet of the Apes Transformers: Dark of the Moon BEST ANIMATED FILM FEATURE Rango Puss in Boots The Adventures of Tintin Kung Fu Panda 2 Rio BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE Bill Cunningham New York Buck If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory Project Nim BEST FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FEATURE Bullhead , Belgium Footnote , Israel In Darkness , Poland Monsieur Lazhar , Canada A Separation , Iran [Top photo via Shutterstock ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Oscar Index Special Edition: Predicting the 84th Academy Award Nominations