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Academy Awards 2018: ALL the Winners! (And the Losers)

The 90th annual Academy Awards aired live from Los Angeles on Sunday night. And there was plenty for host Jimmy Kimmel to riff on during the ceremony, from Harvey Weinstein to softcore fish pornography to a certain President of the United States. Yes, Donald Trump was mentioned a few (dozen) times. But we’re not here to delve into any divisive political issues. We’re here rundown all the winners (and all the losers, too, namely those NOT listed below). Take a look here at the victors in each category and then weigh in on whether the deserving films, directors, writers and stars took home the gold… BEST PICTURE Call Me By Your Name Darkest Hour Dunkirk Get Out Lady Bird Phantom Thread The Post WINNER: The Shape of Water Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri BEST ACTOR Timothée Chalamet, Call Me By Your Name Daniel Day-Lewis, Phantom Thread Daniel Kaluuya, Get Out WINNER: Gary Oldman, Darkest Hour Denzel Washington, Roman J. Israel, Esq. BEST ACTRESS Sally Hawkins, The Shape of Water WINNER: Frances McDormand, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri Margot Robbie, I, Tonya Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird Meryl Streep, The Post BEST DIRECTOR Dunkirk, Christopher Nolan Get Out, Jordan Peele Lady Bird, Greta Gerwig Phantom Thread, Paul Thomas Anderson WINNER: The Shape of Water, Guillermo del Toro BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Mary J. Blige, Mudbound WINNER: Allison Janney, I, Tonya Lesley Manville, Phantom Thread Laurie Metcalf, Lady Bird Octavia Spencer, The Shape of Water BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Willem Dafoe, The Florida Project Woody Harrelson, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri Richard Jenkins, The Shape of Water Christopher Plummer, All the Money in the World WINNER: Sam Rockwell, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri View Slideshow: 2018 Academy Awards: Who Wore It Best? ADAPTED SCREENPLAY WINNER: Call Me By Your Name, James Ivory The Disaster Artist, Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber Logan, Scott Frank, James Mangold, Michael Green Molly’s Game, Aaron Sorkin Mudbound, Virgil Williams and Dee Rees ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY The Big Sick, Emily V. Gordon and Kumail Nanjiani WINNER: Get Out, Jordan Peele Lady Bird, Greta Gerwig The Shape of Water, Guillermo del Toro and Vanessa Taylor Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, Martin McDonagh PRODUCTION DESIGN Beauty and the Beast Blade Runner 2049 Darkest Hour Dunkirk WINNER: The Shape of Water CINEMATOGRAPHY WINNER: Blade Runner 2049 Darkest Hour Dunkirk Mudbound The Shape of Water COSTUME DESIGN Beauty and the Beast Darkest Hour WINNER: Phantom Thread The Shape of Water Victoria & Abdul SOUND EDITING Baby Driver Blade Runner 2049 WINNER: Dunkirk The Shape of Water Star Wars: The Last Jedi SOUND MIXING Baby Driver Blade Runner 2049 WINNER: Dunkirk The Shape of Water Star Wars: The Last Jedi ANIMATED SHORT FILM WINNER: Dear Basketball Garden Party Lou Negative Space Revolting Rhymes LIVE-ACTION SHORT FILM DeKalb Elementary The Eleven O’Clock My Nephew Emmett WINNER: The Silent Child Watu Wote/All of Us ORIGINAL SCORE Dunkirk Phantom Thread WINNER: The Shape of Water Star Wars: The Last Jedi Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri VISUAL EFFECTS WINNER: Blade Runner 2049 Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 Kong: Skull Island Star Wars: The Last Jedi War for the Planet of the Apes FILM EDITING Baby Driver WINNER: Dunkirk I, Tonya The Shape of Water Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING WINNER: Darkest Hour Victoria & Abdul Wonder BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM WINNER: A Fantastic Woman, Chile The Insult, Lebanon Loveless, Russia On Body and Soul, Hungary The Square, Sweden BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT Edith and Eddie WINNER: Heaven Is A Traffic Jam on the 405 Heroin(e) Knife Skills Traffic Stop BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE Abacus: Small Enough to Jail Faces Places WINNER: Icarus Last Man in Aleppo Strong Island ORIGINAL SONG “Mighty River,” Mudbound “Mystery of Love,” Call Me By Your Name WINNER: “Remember Me,” Coco “Stand Up For Something,” Marshall “This Is Me,” The Greatest Showman BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM The Boss Baby The Breadwinner WINNER: Coco Ferdinand Loving Vincent

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Academy Awards 2018: ALL the Winners! (And the Losers)

Jordan Peele Makes Black History with Oscar Win

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  It’s crazy to think that in 2018 we are still doing ‘first’ and making black history but we are.  That being said Jordan Peele made history by becoming the first African-American to win an Oscar for ‘Best Original Screen Play’ for ‘Get Out’ at the 90th annual Academy Awards. Although he didn’t take home any other Oscars due to being shut out by ‘The Shape of Water’ that didn’t stop Peele from making it a memorable night.  In his speech Peele revealed that this film almost didn’t happen because he didn’t believe that anybody would pick it up and that he stopped writing the screen play ‘about 20 times’.  Not only was this film picked up but it ended up grossing a massive $252,434,250 worldwide and becoming a cultural phenomenon. If somehow you missed this movie at the box office catch it on demand or rent it! [ione_media_gallery src=”https://mycolumbuspower.com” id=”3265559″ overlay=”true”]

Jordan Peele Makes Black History with Oscar Win

Amandla Stenberg Says She Walked Away From ‘Black Panther’ Auditions To Give Darker Skinned Actresses The Space

Amandla Stenberg Says She Backed Out Of “Black Panther” As you know, Black Panther has become a celebration of representation , with many applauding the way the film showcased the natural beauty of brown and darker-skinned Black women , in particular. But it appears that was pretty close to not completely being the case. Actress Amandla Stenberg , known for roles in films like “The Hunger Games,” “Colombiana,” and “Everything, Everything,” was almost a part of the cast as well. However, she chose to duck out of it due to her look. While chatting with Essence at their Black Women In Hollywood Event today, Amandla revealed that she was pretty close to snagging the role of T’Challa’s sister, tech genius Shuri — but realized her light-skinned-with-loose-curl-pattern presence in the film might not be all that appropriate a fit for the monumental imagery that ultimately accompanied the story: “I was in the audition process for it, then I decided to not continue with the process because I thought that it wouldn’t be right for me as a biracial, light-skinned American to be playing [the role].” I don’t think visually it [would’ve] make sense and it wasn’t appropriate for me to go after that role. Black Panther is one of the only films that we have that has darker-skinned representation. That’s what was so beautiful about it.” She has a point. Folks are still going in on the fact that we’ve never gotten a non-mixed-race Storm on screen, for instance. Not to mention, mixed-race/light-skinned actresses have long gotten preferential casting treatment in all sorts of acting roles meant for Black women overall. Given the big moment that ‘Black Panther’ became for representation, do you agree that Amandla made the right choice? Getty Images

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Amandla Stenberg Says She Walked Away From ‘Black Panther’ Auditions To Give Darker Skinned Actresses The Space

Editorial: Bruce Willis’ ‘Death Wish’ Movie Is NRA Propaganda Made To Get Black People Killed

Sometime between when the first trailer for Bruce Willis’ Death Wish film that hit the internet last August and the new batch of trailers that came out this year, it became clear that the folks over at MGM realized they f*cked up. The most recent trailers have shown Bruce Willis as a man on a mission, avenging his family and killing mostly-white thugs in the path. Pretty innocuous, right? The first trailer, however, is an orgy of gun fetishizing, gas lighting and Zimmerman-esque vigilanteism. It has all the makings of a movie that encourages buying guns and using them to kill black people in the name of “justice.” In fact, the trailer encourages it. The trailer, and movie, has all the alt-right NRA talking points. We start with Sway ( we need answers about this, Sway ) talking about violence in Chicago, which is as much of a dog whistle as anyone can pull off. As you probably know, racists like to point to Chicago violence as a stand-in for “black on black” crime to deflect any time black people bring up actual anti-black violence. In fact, your own president has echoed those same sentiments. Then we have Bruce Willis in a LITERAL hoodie – get it? A hoodie, guys! – shooting people in his brand of justice. Of course, he’s on this revenge quest because of a home invasion that leaves his wife dead and daughter in a coma – the huge fireworks endorsement of the gun enthusiasts’ need to arm themselves in the first place. Then we get Bruce buying a gun at the store, a reminder that anyone can get guns to seek revenge on (black) people whenever they want. And then he does just that, gunning down black people in broad daylight. The kicker? His therapist tells him that whatever he’s doing, it seems to be good for his mental health, with the insinuation being that gunning down black folks thanks to the ability to buy guns at the grocery store is chicken soup for the racist white man’s soul. In the months since that first trailer – and the strategic pushing back of the movie’s release date that followed, Death Wish’s marketing team has tried its hardest to remove any and all killing of black people by a hooded white man from its promotion. Because, again, they knew they f*cked up. But the marketing course correction doesn’t make up for what the movie is in whole: a commercial for buying guns and using them on black people in the name of fictionalized fears based on centuries of white supremacists portrayal of said people. I don’t care what Eli Roth or Bruce Willis say the movie is about, it’s about a time-honored American tradition of arming white men with weapons to kill black people. It’s a cinematic portrayal of the NRA’s blatant racism. Death Wish will probably bomb, especially under the ecliptic power of Black Panther , but any person who lays eyes on the movie is one too many. Because the film wasn’t just made to celebrate white anti-black vigilanteism, it was made to encourage that violence. Movies like this shouldn’t be made. This isn’t even a censorship debate, either, because censorship is about silencing work that is offensive. Death Wish isn’t offensive. It’s deadly. It is less a movie as it is an advertisement for racist violence. Not only should Death Wish not be supported, but we should have a list of everyone involved in the flick – black and white – and vow to never support any of them again.

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Editorial: Bruce Willis’ ‘Death Wish’ Movie Is NRA Propaganda Made To Get Black People Killed

Editorial: Bruce Willis’ ‘Death Wish’ Movie Is NRA Propaganda Made To Get Black People Killed

Sometime between when the first trailer for Bruce Willis’ Death Wish film that hit the internet last August and the new batch of trailers that came out this year, it became clear that the folks over at MGM realized they f*cked up. The most recent trailers have shown Bruce Willis as a man on a mission, avenging his family and killing mostly-white thugs in the path. Pretty innocuous, right? The first trailer, however, is an orgy of gun fetishizing, gas lighting and Zimmerman-esque vigilanteism. It has all the makings of a movie that encourages buying guns and using them to kill black people in the name of “justice.” In fact, the trailer encourages it. The trailer, and movie, has all the alt-right NRA talking points. We start with Sway ( we need answers about this, Sway ) talking about violence in Chicago, which is as much of a dog whistle as anyone can pull off. As you probably know, racists like to point to Chicago violence as a stand-in for “black on black” crime to deflect any time black people bring up actual anti-black violence. In fact, your own president has echoed those same sentiments. Then we have Bruce Willis in a LITERAL hoodie – get it? A hoodie, guys! – shooting people in his brand of justice. Of course, he’s on this revenge quest because of a home invasion that leaves his wife dead and daughter in a coma – the huge fireworks endorsement of the gun enthusiasts’ need to arm themselves in the first place. Then we get Bruce buying a gun at the store, a reminder that anyone can get guns to seek revenge on (black) people whenever they want. And then he does just that, gunning down black people in broad daylight. The kicker? His therapist tells him that whatever he’s doing, it seems to be good for his mental health, with the insinuation being that gunning down black folks thanks to the ability to buy guns at the grocery store is chicken soup for the racist white man’s soul. In the months since that first trailer – and the strategic pushing back of the movie’s release date that followed, Death Wish’s marketing team has tried its hardest to remove any and all killing of black people by a hooded white man from its promotion. Because, again, they knew they f*cked up. But the marketing course correction doesn’t make up for what the movie is in whole: a commercial for buying guns and using them on black people in the name of fictionalized fears based on centuries of white supremacists portrayal of said people. I don’t care what Eli Roth or Bruce Willis say the movie is about, it’s about a time-honored American tradition of arming white men with weapons to kill black people. It’s a cinematic portrayal of the NRA’s blatant racism. Death Wish will probably bomb, especially under the ecliptic power of Black Panther , but any person who lays eyes on the movie is one too many. Because the film wasn’t just made to celebrate white anti-black vigilanteism, it was made to encourage that violence. Movies like this shouldn’t be made. This isn’t even a censorship debate, either, because censorship is about silencing work that is offensive. Death Wish isn’t offensive. It’s deadly. It is less a movie as it is an advertisement for racist violence. Not only should Death Wish not be supported, but we should have a list of everyone involved in the flick – black and white – and vow to never support any of them again.

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Editorial: Bruce Willis’ ‘Death Wish’ Movie Is NRA Propaganda Made To Get Black People Killed

Wakanda Bae: Which ‘Black Panther’ Star Caused The Thirstiest Tweets?

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Source: Kevin Mazur / Getty A major debate has popped off on Twitter that has left folks breathless, sweaty, and searching for the nearest gallon of water. As you might know,  Black Panther  was released last week and it accomplished many things. Not only did it smash box office records , but it also gained praise from critics and fans alike. But possibly more important, the film solidified certain stars as sex symbols, leaving people’s regular decorum in shambles. Three guys in particular had the Twitter-verse parched. Chadwick Boseman  as Black Panther Chadwick Boseman covers the latest issue of @RollingStone #BlackPanther #WakandaForever pic.twitter.com/76iOr7FXv9 — Matthew T'Cherry (@MatthewACherry) February 19, 2018 Michael B. Jordan  as Killmonger   And newcomer Winston Duke  as M’Baku   Folks were not ready. Michael B. Jordan, Chadwick Boseman and Winston Duke really walk this earth knowing they fine as hell and I can’t take it. Whew lord. pic.twitter.com/E2EFqeFxCE — killmonger stan account (@thispIacehoteI) February 21, 2018 Friendships were questioned as people hotly debated which Black Panther bae deserved to be king of Wakanda (or king of the collective fantasy). Swipe through to peep the thirstiest tweets for each BP  star. Warning: Some arguments resulted in some NSFW confessions.

Wakanda Bae: Which ‘Black Panther’ Star Caused The Thirstiest Tweets?

Black Panther Screener Positivity: The Kool Kids Store Provides Tickets For Kids In LA [Video]

Students enrolled in The New Black Era (@thenewblackera) program at Inglewood ICEF Middle Charter Academy received sponsored tickets from The Kool Kid Store for the Black Panther movie this past weekend at the Cinemark 18 in Los Angeles, California. The organizer, Dj L-double-E (@LEADNREW11), owner of The Kool Kid Store, initially donated 20 tickets to the program, who were then fundraised for the remaining 20 tickets and transportation for the show. Media, social influencers, students, sponsors and other attendees met at an hour before the show to share ideas and thoughts of the film’s expectations. As one of the attendees, expectations were met and then some. Videographer/Director of Visuals : Duke Visions http://www.DukeVisions.com Instagram @DukeVisions Organizer: Dj L-double-E http://www.TheKoolKidStore.com Instagram/Twitter @LEANDREW11 Partners : The New Black Era http://www.TheNewBlackEra.com Instagram @TheNewBlackEra Milan Carter (Actor/Writer) Instagram @MilanKCarter Lady On The Rocks (Bartender) Instagram @LadyOnTheRocks_ Dj A-Tron (Celebrity DJ) Instagram @Dja_tron

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Black Panther Screener Positivity: The Kool Kids Store Provides Tickets For Kids In LA [Video]

Fresh Cuts Finalist – Shae Harmony’s Full Audition Video (WATCH)

In episode 3 of Fresh Cuts, Shae Harmony competed against The Silent Celeb for a chance to perform at the Fresh Cuts Showcase in Atlanta. Watch the video above to see her full audition and tune in on March 1st to see her showcase performance and if she won the grand prize package.   Check out the past episodes of this season: Ep. 1 – Celeb Judges Select The Semi-Finalists  Ep. 2  – Beauty (Genré vs. Imani Scott)  Ep. 3 – Black Love (The Silent Celeb vs. Shae Harmony)  Ep. 4 – 2018 Anthem (Joe Spiff vs. Terri Triumph) 

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Fresh Cuts Finalist – Shae Harmony’s Full Audition Video (WATCH)

Seen On The Scene: Spike Lee Hosts 30th Anniversary ‘School Daze’ Screening In Atlanta

Paras Griffin/Getty Images Spotted… Spike Lee Hosts School Daze Screening Spike Lee celebrated the 30th anniversary of one of his iconic films in Atlanta. Earlier this week the film director held a special screening of “School Daze” at Atlanta’s Fox Theater. HBCU grads and members of Black Greek Letter organizations flooded the theater to watch the film starring Tisha Campbell, Laurence Fishburne and other black stars at Mission College. Paras Griffin/Getty Images Others in attendance included Big Tigger… Paras Griffin/Getty Images and Atlanta’s new Mayor Kiesha Lance Bottoms who presented Lee with a key to the city. Paras Griffin/Getty Images Hit the flip for more. Continue reading

Michelle Obama & Other Celebs Give Final Verdict On ‘Black Panther’

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Source: Marla Aufmuth / Getty Black Panther weekend is finally coming to an end with Presidents Day being the last day to bring in big numbers. The movie is getting praise from critics and fans alike with major celebrities chiming in on the film’s impact. Our former U.S. first lady Michelle Obama definitely made a visit to Wakanda, and she gave her thoughts via Twitter. Congrats to the entire #blackpanther team! Because of you, young people will finally see superheroes that look like them on the big screen. I loved this movie and I know it will inspire people of all backgrounds to dig deep and find the courage to be heroes of their own stories. — Michelle Obama (@MichelleObama) February 19, 2018 Michelle was not the first big name to express praise for the movie. Scroll through to find out what folks like Kevin Hart, Idris Elba , and more had to say about the film!

Michelle Obama & Other Celebs Give Final Verdict On ‘Black Panther’