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Movieline Liveblogs the 2012 Academy Awards (Plus: Complete Winners List!)

Hollywood’s biggest (and possibly most anticlimactic) night is upon us, which can only mean one thing: Movieline’s third annual Oscar Liveblog Extravaganza! Join your Movieline editors and loyal readers as we parse the Academy Awards to within an inch of their glamorous lives. The fun begins on the red carpet at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT, with the Oscarcast proper commencing at 8:30 p.m ET/5:30 p.m. PT. And in any case, keep abreast of this year’s Oscar class with our commentary after the jump. [ADVISORY 8 p.m. ET: The CoverItLive/Twitter interface is buggy for the time being; we’re working on a solution! Thanks for your patience!] [ADVISORY 8:20 p.m. ET: Many apologies to readers who had been checking out the livetweet module; technical difficulties on the Twitter interface made it impossible to continue. Please chime in with us in the comments!] 11:38 Well, thanks for playing along, and sorry for the technical difficulties. But enough about Harvey Weinstein’s high-five abilities! That is all. More Monday on Movieline. Go drinking! What are you still doing here? 11:35 And Tom Cruise announces The Artist as Best Picture winner. And give Uggie the Oscar! 11:33 Some really great plastic surgery in the last 3 minutes. 11:30 Meryl Streep wins Best Actress! Great? 11:26 “Rooney, you have no experience. Congrats, get the fuck out of here.” 11:24 Best Actress! Colin Firth is so eloquent. “Glenn! You are so Nobbsie. Hallo, Nobbsie! Well done, Glenn. You did Nobbsie. Nobbsie!” 11:20 VIOLIN LADY! 11:18 Congrats to Jean Dujardin! You’ll never work in this town again. 11:14 I have nothing left. Demian, George, Jean… what a way to introduce yourself to PUUUUUKE 11:08 Thank you to the Academy for elevating George Kuchar to roughly 10 dead-industry-people places below Elizabeth Taylor. 11:03 I DIED 10:58: VIOLIN LADY! 10:52 Best Director: Michel Hazanavicius. Obviously. 10:48 Oscar date: “Where is our dead people montage? Where is our dead people montage? ” Yeah, kinda. 10:45 Yayyyyy, photo-bombers Brandon Oldenburg and William Joyce take Best Animated Short. Congrats. Cocktail/smoke/heroin/sleep break… BRB. 10:42 Short winners: The Shore (dramatic) and Saving Face (documentary). Y’all are totally fucking up my Oscar pool. 10:39 Kristin Wiig, film size queen. May I suggest Margaret ? 10:33 Adam Sandler wants to get to the truth. By the time he’s 85. He might get there. 10:30 Woody Allen wins Best Original Screenplay. Let’s get to what affects Reese Witherspoon about Overboard . 10:26 Best Adapted Screenplay: Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash win it for The Descendants . Payne, insufferably, to his mother: “If I ever won another Oscar, I had to dedicate it to you.” Well, then. 10:18 Should I be saying something about these suits? The cymbals? Or that 1/2 of Flight of the Conchords just won an Oscar? Yes, that. 10:13 Ludovic Bource! Way to rape the Oscars ! 10:10 Uggie was on the Oscars. We did it . 10:04 VIOLIN LADY! 10:01 For Beginners , Christopher Plummer becomes the oldest actor ever to win an Oscar. Take it away, kid. 9:58 Melissa Leo, who are you wearing? “Penney’s” Oh. 9:56 Michael Bay and Roland Emmerich in the same Oscarcast? What did we do to deserve this? Oh, by the way, Hugo just won Best Visual Effects. 9:54 Emma Stone single-handedly saved at least the last half-hour of the Oscars. Thanks you, Emma! 9:47 Gore Verbinski is an Academy Award-winner. That is all. 9:45 Check out Movieline’s Best Documentary Feature roundtable here . 9:42 Robert Downey and Gwyneth Paltrow “introduce” Best Documentary Feature: Undefeated . Um, wow . Shocking upset over Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory . 9:40 The Oscars just jumped the circus elephant. 9:37 Thank you Miss Piggy and Kermit! Here’s my take on “What it Means to Go to the Bathroom.” 9:29 If the idea is that you power through the bullshit and montages and give the winners time to speak, then I am allllll for that. Oh, wait — Cirque Du Soleil coming up next. Never mind! 9:26 Hugo wins Best Sound Editing and Best Sound Mixing. My drinking games can’t keep up with this pace! Slow down, Tina Fey ! 9:24 Yay! Kirk Baxter and Angus Wall win Best Editing for The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo and have nothing to say. Nicely done, gentlemen. 9:22 The cults of the Oscars and Christopher Guest just died before my eyes. 9:17 Via @jenyamato at @movieline : “Is it too much to hope that one day the Oscars will get Keyboard Cat to play off the long-winded acceptance speeches?” AMEN, SISTER. 9:15 VIOLIN LADY! 9:14 Octavia Spencer wins Best Supporting Actress! Roll Tide! 9:10 Incidentally, what does Otis the Oscar Cat think this year’s awards so far? Ahem . 9:07 A Separation wins Best Foreign-Language Feature! Way to go, Iran! Imagine what you’ll do with nuclear weapons! 9:06 Loving Sandra Bullock right now. I needed Chinese by way of German, seriously. 9:01 Lovely film-fan montage. “I remember saying, ‘Can I please do that?'” No, Adam Sandler, you cannot. 9:00 OK, so the theme is to go to the movies. 8:58 “Ldkjhafdslkjfhakljdhfsalkjhdadjk!!!” Couldn’t have said it any better, Cameron and J-Lo! Oh, and The Iron Lady won Best Make-Up. 8:57 Another minute passed! This calls for the next shot. 8:56 Mark Bridges and The Artist win Best Costume Design. And first Harvey Weinstein mention! This calls for a shot. 8:54 Roland Emmerich was on the Oscars. Now I can die. #ConsiderEmmerich 8:52 We were off to such a nice, fast start! And now… this clip reel? “That’s when movies were actually made on film.” YOUR BEST CINEMATOGRAPHER SHOT DIGITAL, ASSHOLE. 8:46 Nice to see Donatella Versace make Italy 2-for 2. Is it a Hugo night? 8:44 Robert Richardson! Huge upset! I think? I’m drunk. Second 3-D winner in three years, though — not bad. Check out his Movieline chatwith Jeff Cronenweth here . 8:43 Big night for you, Carl! 8:41 Did I miss the Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close part of that song? Or was just the part where Crystal bombed? 8:39 Marty Scorsese’s daughter knows how pathetically weak this is. So much for the younger demographic! 8:37 How did we ever overlook the ” Chapter 11 Theater “? 8:35 I have no idea what is going on with this intro. Bourbon, please. 8:25 I feel like I’ve lived and/or worked a lifetime in the last 90 minutes. Only six hours to go!

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Movieline Liveblogs the 2012 Academy Awards (Plus: Complete Winners List!)

And Now For A Sensitive Message from Tyler Perry About Loss, Mourning, and…

“I’ll keep this short and sweet because it’s been a rough 12 days for me, with what would have been my mother’s 67th birthday one day and the awful news about Whitney the next. I can’t even think about it… we’ll talk about that some other time, but for now I just want to be sure you’re planning on going to the movie theaters to see Good Deeds this weekend.” [ TylerPerry.com ]

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And Now For A Sensitive Message from Tyler Perry About Loss, Mourning, and…

Math-Based Oscar Predictions Not Too Different From Hype-Based Oscar Predictions

And why? Because they’re based on hype. But that’s OK, Ben Zauzmer — Harvard freshman, analytical whiz kid and proprietor of the new “matrix algebra”-based awards prognostication site Ben’s Oscar Forecast! Movieline’s Institute for the Advanced Study of Kudos Forensics has the science down and is soliciting interns for next year’s awards-season death march. Inquire within. According to his site, Zauzmer’s predictions derive quantities for each film’s Oscar nomination (or non-nomination) showing, representation at other awards shows, and Metacritic and Rotten Tomatoes data for the “major categories.” Next: With all of these numbers in the chart for each nominee in the category over the past decade, using a formula from linear algebra, Ben derived the best approximation of the relative factors of each award and critic score. These factors were applied to this year’s nominees – one formula for each category – and the percentage was calculated as a movie’s score out of the total scores. Pretty cool, except… uh: Best Picture Winner: The Artist (18%) Best Director Winner: Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist (28%) Best Actor Winner: Jean Dujardin – The Artist (28%) Best Actress Winner: Meryl Streep – The Iron Lady (24%) Viola Davis – The Help (24%) [ED: Davis and Streep are separated by 0.7%, surprise] Best Supporting Actor Winner: Christopher Plummer – Beginners (29%) Best Supporting Actress Winner: Octavia Spencer – The Help (27%) Best Writing – Original Screenplay Winner: Woody Allen – Midnight in Paris (27%) Best Writing – Adapted Screenplay Winner: Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, Jim Rash – The Descendants (24%) Best Animated Feature Winner: Rango (32%) Best Foreign Language Film Winner: A Separation – Iran (27%) …so on and so forth. Where have we seen these before? There’s no doubt something here, though — perhaps what’s missing is to factor in the average Academy voter’s age ? Oh, and the average weekly advertising outlay by The Weinstein Company. OH , and Uggie’s own age multiplied by the crucial tail wags-per-minute (TwPM) metric. Anyway, yeah. Needs work! But math is hard, etc. [ Ben’s Oscar Forecast ]

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Math-Based Oscar Predictions Not Too Different From Hype-Based Oscar Predictions

Why Ya Gotta Be So Hard on Gigli?

“It’s got Ben Affleck as a big, dumb mook, and, well, he’s pretty good at it. And it’s got Jennifer Lopez playing her most interesting character since Out of Sight But those two are the reason that Gigli arrived with such built-in hostility from moviegoers and critics, because this was the film where the duo met and fell into the PDA-heavy romance that become such a constant, unceasing annoyance in the months that followed. It was a classic example of buyer’s remorse — through tabloids and entertainment ‘news’ programs, we couldn’t get enough Bennifer coverage, and then, in the blink of an eye, we’d had enough, we were done with them, and we didn’t want to see anything that had anything to do with them.” Yeah! Sheesh. Actually, no , but still. [ Flavorwire ]

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Why Ya Gotta Be So Hard on Gigli?

Women Film Journalists Favor Artist, The Help, Bridesmaids

Awards! So many awards — this time around it’s the Alliance of Women Film Journalists passing along the EDA Awards, their annual choices for the best, worst, weirdest and otherwise noteworthy films of 2011. Find an old standby at the top of the list, along with a few of the Alliance’s customarily female-forward and refreshingly cheeky (“Most Egregious Love Interest Age Difference Award,” anyone?) accolades. Congrats to all the winners! EDA ANNUAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS Best Film : The Artist Best Director : Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist Best Screenplay, Original : Midnight in Paris – Woody Allen Best Screenplay, Adapted : (TIE) The Descendants – Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash; Moneyball – Steven Zallian and Aaron Sorkin Best Documentary : Buck Best Animated Film : Rango Best Actress : Viola Davis as Abileen in The Help Best Actress in a Supporting Role : (TIE) Janet McTeer as Hubert Page in Albert Nobbs ; Octavia Spencer as Minny Jackson in The Help Best Actor : Michael Fassbender as Brandon Sullivan in Shame Best Actor in a Supporting Role : Christopher Plummer as Hal Fields in Beginners Best Ensemble Cast : Bridesmaids Best Editing : Hugo – Thelma Schoonmaker Best Cinematography : The Tree of Life – Emmanuel Lubezki Best Film Music Or Score : (TIE) The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo – Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, Original Score; Hanna – The Chemical Brothers, Original Score Best Non-English-Language Film : A Separation – Ashgar Farhadi, Iran EDA FEMALE FOCUS AWARDS Best Woman Director : Lynne Ramsey – We Need To Talk About Kevin Best Woman Screenwriter : Kristen Wiig and Annie Mumolo – Bridesmaids Kick Ass Award For Best Female Action Star : (TIE) Rooney Mara as Lisbeth Salander in Girl With The Dragon Tattoo ; Saoirse Ronan as Hanna in Hanna Best Animated Female : Isla Fisher as Beans in Rango Best Breakthrough Performance : Elizabeth Olsen as Martha in Martha Marcy May Marlene Female Icon Award : Glenn Close as Albert Nobbs in Albert Nobbs Actress Defying Age and Ageism : Helen Mirren as Rachel Singer in The Debt This Year’s Outstanding Achievement By A Woman In The Film Industry : Jessica Chastain for performances in four highly acclaimed films AWFJ Award For Humanitarian Activism : Angelina Jolie for UN work and making In The Land of Blood and Honey to raise awareness about genocide. EDA SPECIAL MENTION AWARDS AWFJ Hall Of Shame Award : The Hollywood Reporter for failing to invite any women to join the Directors Roundtable Actress Most in Need Of A New Agent : All actresses in New Year’s Eve Movie You Wanted To Love But Just Couldn‘t : Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy Unforgettable Moment Award: The Artist – The sound of the glass clinking on the table. Best Depiction Of Nudity, Sexuality, or Seduction : (TIE) Melancholia – Justine in the moonlight; Shame – Opening sequence on the subway train. Sequel Or Remake That Shouldn’t Have Been Made Award : The Hangover Part II Most Egregious Love Interest Age Difference Award : (TIE) Albert Nobbs – Glenn Close (64) and Mia Wasilkowska (22); Twilight: Breaking Dawn Part I – Bella (18) and Edward (Over 100) [ AWFJ ]

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Women Film Journalists Favor Artist, The Help, Bridesmaids

John Logan on Skyfall, Rango, and the Secret of Successful Screenwriting

Ryan Gosling and Jessica Chastain have each had a well-documented great year, each no fewer than three well-received films — and all their corresponding buzz — arriving in theaters in 2011. Investigate slightly below the radar, however, and you’ll find screenwriter John Logan faring just as well — if not better.

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John Logan on Skyfall, Rango, and the Secret of Successful Screenwriting

Rango/Rum Diary Mashup Seems Like Definite Improvement Over Rum Diary

Movieline at the Midpoint: Who Are 2011’s Oscar Contenders to Date?

Ever since Sundance, we’ve been contemplating the crop of of films, performances and various other contenders shaping up for this fall’s awards-season harvest. But what of those worthy releases from the first part of the year — the critical and/or commercial darlings who may enjoy some longevity when it comes time for Oscar voting? There are at least a couple every year; now, at 2011’s midpoint , join Movieline in parsing out the likeliest among their ranks.

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Movieline at the Midpoint: Who Are 2011’s Oscar Contenders to Date?

2011 Johnny Depp Declares, ‘I’m A Belieber." 1991 Johnny Depp Weeps Uncontrollably

Justin Bieber made a surprise cameo at the Rango press conference today at the Beverly Hills Four Season, saying that he just had to see Johnny Depp when he heard they were in the same building. Depp then declared himself a big fan of the Biebs, saying that he’s “a Belieber.” Okiedoke, I’m calling it! So long, stirringly artistic, fiercely individual Johnny Depp! And hello star of Pirates of the Caribbean 13: The Search For Curly’s Gold .

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2011 Johnny Depp Declares, ‘I’m A Belieber." 1991 Johnny Depp Weeps Uncontrollably

‘They Just Made a Mistake’: Blue Valentine Director Derek Cianfrance on the MPAA

Parents around the nation breathed a sigh of relief last week when the MPAA overturned their initial NC-17 certification of Blue Valentine and replaced it with the more family-friendly R-rating. OK, maybe not. Though a great injustice was rectified, and just in time, too: The now-viable Blue Valentine has been picking up steady awards momentum from critics circles, and received two Golden Globe nominations earlier this morning for stars Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams. Does director Derek Cianfrance blame the MPAA for putting his nearly decade-in-the-making bit of awards-bait in peril?

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‘They Just Made a Mistake’: Blue Valentine Director Derek Cianfrance on the MPAA