Tag Archives: supporting

2012 Film Independent Spirit Awards — Winners List (Updated)

Movieline’s backstage at the Film Independent Spirit Awards, where Seth Rogen is hosting (and absolutely killing it) at the annual celebration of indie filmmaking, held in a tent on the beach in Santa Monica. Want the irreverent, no holds-barred celeb-skewering monologue that Billy Crystal most certainly will not deliver tomorrow night? Stay tuned for clips of Rogen to hit the airwaves tonight. Meanwhile, follow along on Twitter (at @movieline ) and check back here to see this year’s winners updated as they happen! Winners highlighted in bold below as they happen. BEST SUPPORTING MALE Albert Brooks Drive John Hawkes Martha Marcy May Marlene Christopher Plummer Beginners John C. Reilly Cedar Rapids Corey Stoll Midnight in Paris BEST FIRST SCREENPLAY Mike Cahill, Brit Marling Another Earth J.C. Chandor Margin Call Patrick DeWitt Terri Phil Johnston Cedar Rapids Will Reiser 50/50 BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Joel Hodge Bellflower Benjamin Kasulke The Off Hours Darius Khondji Midnight in Paris Guillaume Schiffman The Artist Jeffrey Waldron The Dynamiter BEST SUPPORTING FEMALE Jessica Chastain Take Shelter Anjelica Huston 50/50 Janet McTeer Albert Nobbs Harmony Santana Gun Hill Road Shailene Woodley The Descendants JOHN CASSAVETES AWARD Bellflower Circumstance Hello Lonesome Pariah The Dynamiter BEST MALE LEAD Demián Bichir A Better Life Jean Dujardin The Artist Ryan Gosling Drive Woody Harrelson Rampart Michael Shannon Take Shelter BEST DOCUMENTARY An African Election Bill Cunningham New York The Interrupters The Redemption of General Butt Naked We Were Here BEST SCREENPLAY Joseph Cedar Footnote Michel Hazanavicius The Artist Tom McCarthy Win Win Mike Mills Beginners Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, Jim Rash The Descendants BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM A Separation (Iran) Melancholia (Denmark/Sweden/France/Germany) Shame (UK) The Kid With a Bike (Belgium/France/Italy) Tyrannosaur (UK) ROBERT ALTMAN AWARD Margin Call BEST FIRST FEATURE Another Earth In the Family Margin Call Martha Marcy May Marlene Natural Selection BEST DIRECTOR Michel Hazanavicius The Artist Mike Mills Beginners Jeff Nichols Take Shelter Alexander Payne The Descendants Nicolas Winding Refn Drive BEST FEMALE LEAD Lauren Ambrose Think of Me Rachael Harris Natural Selection Adepero Oduye Pariah Elizabeth Olsen Martha Marcy May Marlene Michelle Williams My Week with Marilyn BEST FEATURE 50/50 Beginners Drive Take Shelter The Artist The Descendants

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2012 Film Independent Spirit Awards — Winners List (Updated)

Christopher Plummer Stokes Beginners Beef with Uggie: ‘Our Dog Had Soul’

Backstage at the Film Independent Spirit Awards , Christopher Plummer (who vies for the Oscar tomorrow) celebrated his Best Supporting Actor win for Beginners and gleefully stoked the fires of a pup vs. pup beef between his own co-star in the film, Cosmo, and The Artist ‘s award season favorite Uggie . “We had a little private talk,” he explained of scene-stealer Cosmo. “Now that you mention it, I think our Cosmo was much more human than Uggie. Uggie was just a trickster. Our dog had soul .” Fighting words!

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Christopher Plummer Stokes Beginners Beef with Uggie: ‘Our Dog Had Soul’

Oscars 2012 Predictions: Best Supporting Actor

Christopher Plummer is a shoo-in for his affecting turn in ‘Beginners.’ By Eric Ditzian Christopher Plummer in “The Beginners” Photo: Focus Features Let’s begin this discussion of the 2012 Oscar nominees for Best Supporting Actor by pouring one out for “Drive” co-star Albert Brooks, who seemed to have a nod all locked up until he didn’t, leaving movie fans around the country to scratch our heads and wonder, Whappened? While we’re at it, big shout-out to Patton Oswalt, whose scenes in “Young Adult” were not only the most consistently entertaining but whose post-Oscar snub tweets proved the comedian is hilarious even in defeat. And Uggie — the only thing I truly loved about “The Artist” — was either ineligible due to his being a Jack Russell terrier or else cruelly discriminated against. Either way, he didn’t nab a nom. But we’re supposed to be past the point of whining about snubs, aren’t we? We’re supposed to be focused on celebrating the efforts of five fine supporting actors in five fine films, are we not? The thing is, this category is truly hard to get excited about. We’re not going to go so far as to call the nominees boring as a whole, but we will point out a) approximately 11 people saw “Beginners” in a theater; b) “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close” is a wretched bit of magical realism lazily draped onto a very raw episode in American history; and c) it would have been way cooler had Kenneth Branagh been honored for helming “Thor” than for anything that occurred in “My Week With Marilyn.” And it is with this high praise and these high hopes that we edge toward the Best Supporting Actor category at this year’s Oscar. Here are our picks. Who Will Win : OK, OK, this is an easy category to mock, especially since the median age of its nominees is 106. But we must say this: “Beginners,” despite no one actually having seen it, is a beautiful movie. It is sweet and moving and complexly told not for complexity’s sake but because life itself is so damn complicated. Christopher Plummer’s turn as an elderly man who finally comes out of the closet following the death of his wife (only to die himself shortly thereafter) is an affecting one. If I don’t exactly see why this supporting performance is being held up as the finest of the year, if I can point to past Plummer roles more deserving of Oscar love (his recent portrayal of Tolstoy in “The Last Station,” for instance), I certainly can’t begrudge the 82-year-old his win. There’s no doubt that after a lifetime of service in Hollywood, he deserves it. Who Should Win : Not Branagh and not “Moneyball” star Jonah Hill. I remain ambivalent about their movies. And certainly not Max von Sydow, who could have delivered the greatest performance in the history of performances and still not rescued the superlatively grating “Extremely Loud.” Then there’s Nick Nolte, whose last Oscar nod came in 1998. He’s never won, and “Warrior” kicked a whole lot of ass. Who are we kidding, though? Given this collection of nominees, the only just choice is the man who’s a lock to actually win Best Supporting Actor: Mr. Christopher Plummer. The MTV Movies team has the 2012 Oscars covered! Stick with us for everything you need to know leading up to the awards show, and on Sunday, February 26, tune into MTV.com at 5 p.m. ET for our two-and-a-half-hour red-carpet live stream and updates on the night’s big winners. To join the live conversation, tweet @MTVNews with the hashtag #Oscars. Related Videos 2012 Oscar Nominees

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Oscars 2012 Predictions: Best Supporting Actor

Report: Uggie a No-Go For Oscars

Noooooooooooooo : “But get this — there’s another MIA actor that’s getting far more attention for the fact that he’ll be missing the ceremony this year. In fact, our source says it’s who most inquiries are about these days: The Artist ‘s Uggie. Yep, our sources confirm the pooch is out for the grand ceremony. And that breaks our hearts! Heck, the dog probably is more deserving of a Best Supporting Actor nomination that Jonah Hill, but that’s just our humble opinion.” Preach it , boys, preach it . [ E! ]

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Report: Uggie a No-Go For Oscars

Pregnant or Lesbian? Watch Bérénice Bejo Ask the Tough Questions in 1997 Short Film

Today, of course, we know Bérénice Bejo as The Artist ‘s irrepressible movie sensation Peppy Miller and as a contender for this year’s Best Supporting Actress Oscar. But back in 1997, she was just another young actress paying her dues in France. Which apparently led to… this . David Poland points us today to the short film Enceinte Ou Lesbienne? , featuring Bejo as a daughter who tests her family’s domestic idyll with that tough question perennially on every young lady’s lips: Pregnant or lesbian? It’s your typical early-career case of everyone involved doing the best they can with what they have; Bejo’s fine. But as a coming-out method, I can’t say I’d recommend it? But you tell me. [via The Hot Blog ]

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Pregnant or Lesbian? Watch Bérénice Bejo Ask the Tough Questions in 1997 Short Film

Hey, Kids: Bridesmaids Cast to Present at Oscars

This year’s Oscars may have average nominee ages of 47, 61 and 62 in such categories as Actor, Director and Supporting Actor (respectively), but trust producers Brian Grazer and Don Mischer to rope in the youngs where they can. To wit: If the Academy won’t nominate the four-quadrant blockbuster Bridesmaids for Best Picture, then at least the cast can drop by to present an award. Hence this morning’s news from AMPAS: Six actresses – Rose Byrne, Ellie Kemper, Melissa McCarthy, Wendi McLendon-Covey, Maya Rudolph and Kristen Wiig – from the hit comedy Bridesmaids will be presenters at the 84th Academy Awards, telecast producers Brian Grazer and Don Mischer announced today. McCarthy received her first Oscar nomination this year for her supporting role in the film, and Wiig also became a first-time nominee for the film’s original screenplay. All six will be making their first Oscar show appearances. No word yet on which category they’ll present or how Bruce Vilanch will work very relevant and timely sink-defecation jokes into their shtick. Suggestions welcome below. [ AMPAS ]

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Hey, Kids: Bridesmaids Cast to Present at Oscars

Bruce Springsteen Announces First Leg Of Wrecking Ball Tour

Stateside portion of first tour since Clarence Clemons’ death begins March 18 in Atlanta. By James Montgomery Bruce Springsteen Photo: Mike Coppola/Getty Images Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band had been teasing a lengthy run of U.S. shows in support of the upcoming Wrecking Ball album, and on Tuesday (January 24), they finally revealed the first leg of dates. Kicking off March 18 in Atlanta, the first stateside portion of the Wrecking Ball World Tour sees Bruce and the Band playing arenas in cities like Tampa, Boston, Philadelphia, East Rutherford, New Jersey — of course — New York, Detroit and Los Angeles, before coming to a close with a May 2 gig in Newark. Select dates go on sale as early as Friday. For more information, check out the Boss’s . The shows mark Springsteen’s first U.S. gigs since the death of founding E Street member Clarence Clemons last year. Much like the title of the tour implies, they’ll be playing songs from the upcoming Wrecking Ball album , which hits stores on March 6. Just last week, Springsteen premiered the first single off the album, a surging slice of Americana called “We Take Care of Our Own,” and early reports seem to indicate that the new disc may very well be a heavy, heady thing, featuring guests like Rage Against The Machine’s Tom Morello and Pearl Jam’s Matt Chamberlain, and tackling issues like economic injustice. The first leg of Bruce Springsteen’s Wrecking Ball Tour, according to a spokesperson:

Oscar 2012 Nominations: Biggest Snubs And Surprises

‘Harry Potter,’ Albert Brooks passed over, while Gary Oldman finally gets his due. By Kevin P. Sullivan Melissa McCarthy in “Bridesmaids” Photo: Universal We now have the answer to one of awards season’s biggest questions: We know who has been nominated for the 2012 Academy Awards . All we need to know now is who wins. This year’s Oscar nominations didn’t offer any enormous surprises, but a few of the snubs have some people gasping. Right off the bat, it must be addressed. Albert Brooks was not nominated for his delightfully evil turn in “Drive.” Both Brooks and the film have a passionate following, so Max von Sydow’s nomination for “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close” over Brooks can’t come as welcome news for the movie’s many fans. Brooks hilariously responded to the snub over Twitter, saying, “I got ROBBED. I don’t mean the Oscars, I mean literally. My pants and shoes have been stolen.” That’s it, Al. Kill them with laughter. But let’s not focus on the negative. A great injustice was righted with the nominations. Gary Oldman’s nod for “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy” didn’t come as a complete surprise, but it was a welcome one. Shockingly, the famed British actor had never been nominated before now. After decades of memorable characters, Oldman has finally gotten his due. He and the Best Actor category’s other surprise, Demi

Common On Drake Battle: “I’m A Warrior At Heart” [EXCLUSIVE]

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Veteran MC/actor Common stopped by Hot 107.9 today and spoke to Emperor Searcy and MZ Shyneka about his ongoing battle with Drake . “I felt like mostly everything I said needed to be said,” said Common. “I said it on record. If he had anything that he wanted to address me, he can say it to me man-to-man. I’m right there.” Common also discussed his 9th studio album The Dreamer, The Believer , his memoir One Day It’ll All Make Sense , his acting career and who his favorite MC of all time is. Listen below! RELATED: Common On Drake: “I Like His Music” Birdman On Drake’s Beef With Common: “We’re Supporting Him 100%” [VIDEO] Common Fires Back At Drake On “Stay Schemin Remix” [AUDIO] Common On Serena Williams: “It’s A Solid Booty” [EXCLUSIVE]

Common On Drake Battle: “I’m A Warrior At Heart” [EXCLUSIVE]

Floyd Mayweather Offers Pacquiao 50/50 Split To Fight

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In his latest bid to schedule a fight with Manny Pacquiao, boxer Floyd Mayweather reached out and touched Pacman to make the match happen. According to ESPN 50 Cent’s  BFF called the Philippines to negotiate the May 5th super bout. What Happens In Vegas, Stays In Vegas “Floyd wants to fight Manny Pacquiao on May 5 and he went as far as to reach out to Manny Pacquiao personally last night,” said Mayweather’s adviser Leonard Ellerbe. “Floyd has shown more than a willingness to get this fight done and this is really, really what he wants to do and what he wants to give to the fight fans.” RELATED POSTS: Floyd Mayweather Challenges Pacquiao On Twitter Floyd Mayweather Goes IN On Victor Ortiz, Talks Rematch Entertainment’s Most Famous “Bromances”

Floyd Mayweather Offers Pacquiao 50/50 Split To Fight