Tag Archives: black-swan

‘Winter’s Bone,’ ‘Black Swan’ Nab Independent Spirit Noms

‘127 Hours,’ ‘Greenberg,’ ‘The Kids Are All Right’ also up for best feature. By James Kuo Jennifer Lawrence in “Winter’s Bone” Photo: Anonymous Content Movie awards season is here again. And while most of the year’s big Oscar-buzz-generating films have yet to open, the indies, as usual, are a step ahead. On Tuesday (November 30), a day after “Winter’s Bone” won best feature at the Gotham Awards, the film garnered seven Independent Spirit Award nominations, including a nod for best feature. “Winter’s Bone,” directed by Debra Granik, is a dark drama about a girl (Jennifer Lawrence) looking for her father in a drug-riddled rural Arkansas community. Granik earned nominations for best director and best screenplay along with co-writer Anne Rosellini. Rounding out the nominations for Spirit’s best feature list was Danny Boyle’s “127 Hours,” Darren Aronofsky’s “Black Swan,” Noah Baumbach’s “Greenberg” and Lisa Cholodenko’s “The Kids Are All Right.” James Franco got a nod for best actor for his role as a hiker trapped in a canyon who must cut off his own arm to survive in “127 Hours.” His competition is John C. Reilly for “Cyrus,” Ben Stiller for “Greenberg,” Ronald Bronstein for “Daddy Longlegs” and Aaron Eckhart for “Rabbit Hole.” On the best actress side of Spirit nominees was Natalie Portman for her portrayal of a ballet dancer in “Black Swan,” Michelle Williams in “Blue Valentine,” Annette Bening in “The Kids Are All Right,” Greta Gerwig in “Greenberg,” Nicole Kidman in “Rabbit Hole” and Jennifer Lawrence in “Winter’s Bone.” The Independent Spirit Awards, given out by Film Independent, is a major event for films made outside of the major Hollywood studios with budgets of less than $20 million. The 2011 ceremony will be held on February 26 in Santa Monica and will be hosted by “Community” star Joel McHale. Check out everything we’ve got on “Black Swan.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Winter’s Bone,’ ‘Black Swan’ Nab Independent Spirit Noms

Gift Guide: These Pillowcases Tell a Story (Literally)

Scottish visual artist David Shrigley has worked in a variety of media from cartoons to music videos to spoken-word pieces. Now he can add “bedding” to the list, with the mordantly whimsical bedtime story he’s written for two pillowcases that make a perfect gift for bedtime readers and entertainment-starved insomniacs alike.

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Gift Guide: These Pillowcases Tell a Story (Literally)

Late Night Highlights: David Letterman Gives Natalie Portman Her Oscar Win

Do you know who really loved the Darren Aronofsky film Black Swan ? David Letterman. Last night, he grilled star Natalie Portman about her bone-breaking training for the film and predicted that she would win this year’s Oscar race . Elsewhere, Craig Ferguson declared legal war on his French copycat, Jay Pharoah showed off his Eddie Murphy and Will Smith impressions, and Conan O’B rien used his blimp to stalk Gary Busey.

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Late Night Highlights: David Letterman Gives Natalie Portman Her Oscar Win

Natalie Portman beach Photos

Natalie Portman, who has been a vegetarian since childhood and became a vegan in 2009 after reading Jonathan Safran Foer#39;s Eating Animals,is an advocate for animal rights. She does not eat animal products or wear fur, feathers, or leather. “All of my shoes are from Target and Stella McCartney,” she has said.In 2007, she launched her own brand of vegan footwear. Portman at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival, presenting Black Swan In 2007, Portman traveled to Rwanda with Jack Hanna,

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Natalie Portman beach Photos

Darren Aronofsky on Wolverine: ‘I’m Being Hired to Do What I Do’

After a week spent climbing back into Oscar contention for Black Swan , the last thing Darren Aronofsky can afford right now is to backslide into the swirling pit of hype and speculation around his big comic-book coming-out party The Wolverine . So, with trademark equanimity and cool, the filmmaker appears in a new video assuring skeptics that not only has he not sold out, but he’s just making a movie like any of his others. It just happens to have a mutant hero.

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Darren Aronofsky on Wolverine: ‘I’m Being Hired to Do What I Do’

Social Network, True Grit Surge in Movieline’s Oscar Index

Another busy cycle of hype, hurdles and more Oscar madness has come and gone, leading to an all-new edition of Moveline’s 2010 Oscar Index . This week, the Coen Brothers throw their weathered cowboy hats in the ring, The Social Network builds full steam toward Friday’s opening, and a handful of would-bes slide into the morass of also-rans. Read on, and let’s break it down.

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Social Network, True Grit Surge in Movieline’s Oscar Index

Darren Aronofsky Latest Director Rumored for Superman

The long list of eclectic directors in the running to helm the reboot of Superman has just gotten one name longer. According to 24 Frames, Black Swan director Darren Aronofsky has spoken to Warner Bros. and producer Christopher Nolan about getting behind the camera for the next incarnation of the Man of Steel. Just imagine the fun he could have with the whole Bizarro Superman subplot. [ LAT /24 Frames ]

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Darren Aronofsky Latest Director Rumored for Superman

Can Any Toronto Performances Possibly Eclipse Javier Bardem and Natalie Portman?

Listen, I’m with you on the hype thing: There can never be too little, especially this early in what’s generally accepted as the dawn of awards season, pretty much before anyone’s seen anything and studio money talks. But you know what? Let me put it this way: Everything you’ve heard about Javier Bardem and Natalie Portman’s extraordinary performances in Biutiful and Black Swan is true, and if festivalgoers see anything better this week in Toronto, then all of us are in for one hell of a bounty in the months ahead.

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Can Any Toronto Performances Possibly Eclipse Javier Bardem and Natalie Portman?

The Gawker Guide to Fall Movies [Fall Preview]

Fall is the best time for movies. All the serious awards-contenders strut their stuff, the thrillers are darker and grittier, and the romances tend to be weepies. Here’s a guide to what’s coming out from now until the new year. More

Film Festival Buzz: Natalie Portman, James Franco, Joaquin Phoenix And More

New movies from Ben Affleck, Casey Affleck, Danny Boyle and others are drawing attention at this year’s Telluride and Venice film festivals. By Eric Ditzian Natalie Portman at the Venice Film Festival last Wednesday Photo: Danny Martindale/ Getty Images Around this time last year, George Clooney’s “Up in the Air” opened at the Telluride Film Festival and rode that initial buzz to six Academy Award nominations. A year later, another crop of high-profile films have premiered at Telluride and the Venice Film Festival, including new work from Danny Boyle (director of 2009’s Oscar winner “Slumdog Millionaire”), Darren Aronofsky (“The Wrestler”) and Ben Affleck (“Gone Baby Gone”). Which films will we be feting in the weeks and months to come? Here’s a look at the most buzzed-about movies from both fests. “Black Swan” Just days before Aronofsky jetted off to Venice to present his follow-up to “The Wrestler,” the director confessed to MTV News that he gets very nervous before one of his film’s premieres. “When ‘The Wrestler’ showed at Venice the last time, I walked out in the middle,” he said. “I couldn’t handle it. I snuck back in the end. It was not a pleasant experience.” Aronofsky may have been nervous, but “Black Swan” was indeed well-received, with rapturous praise reserved for star Natalie Portman that immediately makes her a Best Actress Oscar front-runner. Pete Hammond of Deadline Hollywood dubbed her turn a “dazzling tour de force.” The film follows Portman as a ballerina ready to take over the lead role in her company’s production of “Swan Lake,” until a rival dancer (Mila Kunis) shows up and begins to drive Portman toward madness. ” ‘Black Swan’ is a brilliant mind f—,” wrote Peter Sciretta of SlashFilm . “It is one of the boldest films I’ve seen produced by a Hollywood studio in years.” “127 Hours” Danny Boyle debuted “Slumdog” at Telluride in 2008, a decision that came to be seen as a wise one, and the critical darling went on to sweep the Oscars months later. Boyle’s back now with a true story about a hiker (James Franco) who becomes trapped under a boulder in the wilderness and must saw off his own arm to escape. Like Portman, Franco is being discussed as a potential Oscar nominee. “[Franco] pulls off a virtual one-man show,” said Stephen Farber of The Hollywood Reporter . “The actor already has demonstrated tremendous versatility, and just this year, viewers have seen him as one of Julia Roberts’ lovers in ‘Eat Pray Love’ and as Beat poet Allen Ginsberg in ‘Howl.’ Here he manages to create a radically different character — an extroverted adventurer who is forced to turn reflective. Expect Oscar to come calling next year.” “The Town” Ben Affleck’s heist drama does not premiere until Wednesday (September 8), but anticipation is high based on the director’s past work and the new film’s impressive ensemble, including Jon Hamm, Blake Lively, Jeremy Renner, Rebecca Hall and Chris Cooper. “It’s hard to disavow a movie when you’ve written, directed and acted in it,” Affleck told The New York Times . “This is an emblem of the person I want to be going forward.” “The King’s Speech” British director Tom Hooper might not be well- known on American shores, but his new film just might be the buzziest one to debut at Telluride or Venice. Colin Firth stars as member of the British royal family who overcomes numerous obstacles to become King George VI. He’s joined by Helena Bonham Carter, Geoffrey Rush and Guy Pearce, among others. “After several additional screenings and a rare standing ovation Sunday night as part of a companion tribute to Firth … the film has provoked talk of widespread awards recognition,” said The Hollywood Reporter . “While other films also attracted partisans, ‘The King’s Speech’ was seen as having the broadest support across a broad array of awards categories.” “I’m Still Here” The questions began early in 2009: Just what the heck was going on with Joaquin Phoenix , with that bushy beard and the unhinged public appearances? Phoenix and Casey Affleck filmed the entire unraveling, and now audiences are starting to decide for themselves: documentary or mockumentary? Trouble is, not everyone is convinced they’ve come to the right conclusion. ” ‘I’m Still Here’ finally addresses the question of whether Joaquin Phoenix’s decision to give up acting to pursue a hip-hop career was on the level or a setup. The answer seems to be: a bit of both,” reports Variety . Affleck, of course, is not exactly setting the record straight, which only amps up anticipation for the film. “Elliptically, I would say … I sincerely don’t want to influence people’s interpretation,” Affleck told reporters in Venice, according to The Associated Press . “I can tell you there is no hoax. It makes me think of ‘Candid Camera’ or something.”

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Film Festival Buzz: Natalie Portman, James Franco, Joaquin Phoenix And More