PRESENTS
NOVEMBER 25, 2015 ACTRESSES/CRAFTS
SMALL WONDER Room’s modest beginning was no match for the powerful work of Brie Larson, Jacob Tremblay and Lenny Abrahamson
D
DEADLINE.COM/AWARDSLINE
AL02_Cover.indd 1
CATE BLANCHETT KATE WINSLET SAOIRSE RONAN JANE FONDA CAREY MULLIGAN
11/20/15 11:47 AM
FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION IN ALL
CATEGORIES INCLUDING
BEST CAST • BEST PICTURE
“WONDERFULLY HUMAN. TIMELY IN ITS PORTRAYAL.
A talented cast led by Bryan Cranston’s intelligent and confident performance. A deliciously malevolent Helen Mirren.”
LOS ANGELES TIMES
TIMES CHANGE. C O U R AG E I S F O R E V E R .
BleeckerStreetGuilds.com
Untitled-32 1
11/19/15 5:35 PM
CONTENTS
PUBLISHER
Stacey Farish EDITOR
Anna Lisa Raya
NOVEMBER 25, 2015
CREATIVE DIRECTOR
Craig Edwards
DEADLINE COEDITORS
Nellie Andreeva Mike Fleming Jr.
DEADLINE AWARDS COLUMNIST
Pete Hammond
DEADLINE CONTRIBUTORS
Anita Busch Anthony D’Alessandro Lisa de Moraes Jeremy Gerard Patrick Hipes Ali Jaafar David Lieberman Ross Lincoln Dominic Patten Erik Pedersen Denise Petski David Robb Nancy Tartaglione
AWARDSLINE CONTRIBUTORS
Antonia Blyth Chris Chapman Gabriel Goldberg Matthew Grobar Joe Utichi
2
FIRST TAKE Behind the scenes on Anomalisa
4-8
TABLE READ Composer Carter Burwell’s three chances for Oscar; Gold Derby actress charts; party pics and more
12 CHAIRMAN & CEO
Jay Penske
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT
George Grobar
EXECUTIVE V.P., BUSINESS AFFAIRS
Paul Woolnough
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT
ROOM AT THE TOP How Brie Larson, Jacob Tremblay and Lenny Abrahamson made cinematic alchemy with Room.
17
V.P., FINANCE
THE DIALOGUE Cate Blanchett Kate Winslet Saoirse Ronan Jane Fonda Carey Mulligan
V.P., TV ENTERTAINMENT SALES
28
Craig Perreault
GENERAL COUNSEL & S.V.P., HUMAN RESOURCES
Todd Greene
V.P., CREATIVE
Nelson Anderson Ken DelAlcazar Laura Lubrano
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE, FILM & TV
BEST ACTOR HANDICAP Pete Hammond highlights the stacked category’s best shots.
ACCOUNT MANAGER
30
DIRECTOR, FILM & TV
Carra Fenton
Tiffany Windju
Brianna Hamburger
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR
BEST ACTRESS HANDICAP This was a packed year for strong femme roles. Hammond makes his picks.
ADVERTISING INQUIRIES
32
AD SALES COORDINATOR
Malik Simmons
Natalie Longman
Stacey Farish 310-484-2553 sfarish@pmc.com
FOLLOW US! ★
f l
online
deadline.com/AwardsLine
THE VIZ BIZ The visual effects on The Martian, The Walk and Ant-Man keep things simple.
36
DOUBLE EXPOSURE A look at actress double nominees.
fa c e b o o k
facebook.com/DeadlineHollywood twitter
ON THE COVER: BRIE LARSON, JACOB TREMBLAY AND LENNY ABRAHAMSON PHOTOGRAPHED BY CHRIS CHAPMAN
i n s ta g r a m
THIS PAGE: CATE BLANCHETT PHOTOGRAPHED BY GABRIEL GOLDBERG
twitter.com/Deadline
instagram.com/Deadline
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_TOC.indd 1
1
11/20/15 12:29 PM
★ | first take
detailoriented OCT. 31, 20 14, B U R BA NK, CA
Anomalisa had its genesis in a theatrical collaboration between director Charlie Kaufman and composer Carter Burwell in 2005, a “sound play” that featured David Thewlis, Jennifer Jason Leigh and Tom Noonan in only two performances. The film version— which focuses on typically Kaufman-esque existential themes of loneliness and love, and was codirected by Duke Johnson—is a stop-animation wonder, with Thewlis, Leigh and Noonan voicing the life-like puppets now standing in for them. The puppets were approximately one-foot tall, or one-sixth scale, and the film was shot at 24 frames per second. On a typical day, a team of 15 to 20 animators each would produce about two seconds of footage, working against an ambitious 90-minute runtime. The project ultimately took two years to complete. Here, animator Dan Mackenzie gives us an idea of the scale and complexity of the project. —Matthew Grobar
2
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_FIrst Take.indd 2
PHOTOGRAPH BY
Chris “Toots” Tootell
11/20/15 11:24 AM
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_FIrst Take.indd 3
3
11/20/15 11:24 AM
★ | table read
CHARTED TERRITORY
Man of
Gold Derby’s Oscar Odds
Distinction izing their scores in exchange for the drama
BEST ACTRESS
onscreen, but Carter Burwell always leaves the moviegoer with a sense of time, place and mood, especially in such films as the Coen brothers’ Miller’s Crossing or Spike Jonze’s Being John Malkovich. There’s a legacy sound to
Todd Haynes, after Velvet Goldmine and the
Burwell’s canon that triggers emotional recall:
HBO miniseries Mildred Pierce. Burwell begins
You can’t imagine his music in any other film
by watching a rough cut of the film rather than
than the one it’s in.
first reading the script. “Especially with Todd’s
With Carol, Burwell has created an affec-
films, the script doesn’t tell me everything I
tive set of rhythmic cello, contemplative piano
need to know,” he says. “Todd’s such a visual
and woodwind to capture the tortured 1950s
stylist. The way he shoots through glass or
romance between two women of varying ages
into mirrors, the way the subject is clouded or
in this feature adaptation of Patricia High-
distorted, is characteristic of the film.”
smith’s novel, The Price of Salt. “The drama is largely internal and commu-
Burwell has an Emmy for his work on Mildred Pierce and received a Golden Globe nomination
nicated by the music,” he explains. “The music
for his Where the Wild Things Are score, but the
is forthright in telling you the importance of
Academy has yet to laud him despite his long
the emotions of what’s going on. Even if the
relationship with the Oscar-winning Coens.
theme doesn’t match what’s on screen, it
This year, however, Burwell’s odds are further
shows what’s in the eyes of these characters.”
bolstered by his music for three other awards
Carol marks the Long
contenders: Paramount’s adult animated
Island-based composer’s third
Anomalisa, Roadside Attraction’s Mr. Holmes
collaboration with director
and Universal’s British gangster epic Legend.
1á
Brie Larson (Room)
12
22
9/4
2á
Cate Blanchett (Carol)
4
21
4/1
3á
Jennifer Lawrence (Joy)
6
16
9/2
4á
Saoirse Ronan (Brooklyn)
0
22
13/2
5á
Charlotte Rampling (45 Years)
0
11
16/1
6â
Carey Mulligan (Suffragette)
0
5
33/1
7á
Lily Tomlin (Grandma)
0
6
33/1
8á
Charlize Theron (Mad Max Fury Road)
0
3
66/1
9á
Emily Blunt (Sicario)
0
2
80/1
Maggie Smith (The Lady In The Van)
0
1
100/1
10 á
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Head Case
IT’S HATS GALORE IN THE PERIOD PIC TRUMBO.
per, 1963
As much a character in Jay Roach’s Trumbo as Bryan Cranston’s titular Dalton Trumbo are Daniel Orlandi’s lavish period costumes, in particular the giant hats worn by Helen Mirren’s Hedda Hopper. In real life the Hollywood gossip columnist was known to buy over 100 hats a year, so Orlandi had his work cut out for him. “I think Hedda’s wardrobe was the most fun for Daniel,” Roach has said. “It may seem like an exaggeration, but Hopper really dressed like that, and it’s fantastic.” At right are some of our favorite toppers worn by Mirren’s Hopper in the film. —Matthew Grobar
Hedda Hop
4
ODDS
Some composers obsess over minimal-
ODDS
BY ANTHONY D’ALESSANDRO
EXPERTS PREDICT TO WIN EXPERTS PREDICT NOMINATION
CARTER BURWELL BRINGS HIS UNMISTAKABLE SOUND TO CAROL.
EXPERTS PREDICT TO WIN EXPERTS PREDICT NOMINATION
At press time, here is how Gold Derby’s experts ranked the Oscar chances in the Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress races. Get updated rankings and make your own predictions at GoldDerby.com
1á
Rooney Mara (Carol)
14
21
2á
Alicia Vikander (The Danish Girl)
5
22 10/3
3â
Kate Winslet (Steve Jobs)
2
20
9/2
4á
Jane Fonda (Youth)
1
13
10/1
5á
Jennifer Jason Leigh (The Hateful Eight)
0
10
16/1
6á
Joan Allen (Room)
0
9
20/1
7á
Elizabeth Banks (Love and Mercy)
0
5
40/1
8á
Rachel McAdams (Spotlight)
0
3
66/1
9â
Ellen Page (Freeheld)
0
3
66/1
Helena Bonham Carter (Suffragette)
0
1
100/1
10 á
11/5
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Table Read_Short Items.indd 4
11/20/15 11:42 AM
FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION IN ALL CATEGORIES INCLUDING
BEST PICTURE • BEST ACTOR EDDIE REDMAYNE BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS ALICIA VIKANDER
“E D D I E R E D M A Y N E G I V E S T H E GREATEST PERFORMANCE OF HIS CAREER. A C I N E M A T I C L A N D M A R K .” P E TER DEBR U G E, VAR IETY
“A L I C I A V I K A N D E R C O N J U R E S SOMETHING DAZZLING A N D U N E X P E C T E D. S H E I S S T U N N I N G A N D E X T R A O R D I N A R Y.” CHRIS NASHAWATY, ENTER TAINMENT WEEKLY
WITH LOVE COMES THE COURAGE TO BE YOURSELF
Untitled-33 1
11/19/15 5:36 PM
★ | flash mob
THE DANISH GIRL SCREENING, NOV. 19, LOS ANGELES (From left:) Deadline’s Dominic Patten, writer Lucinda Coxon, producer Anne Harrison and director Tom Hooper; Hooper with the movie’s poster; Harrison and Coxon during the Q&A.
SIVAS SCREENING, NOV. 16, LOS ANGELES (From left:) The Turkish film’s star Dogan Izci; director Kaan Mujdeci and Izci; Patten moderates the Q&A with Mujdeci, Izci and their translator.
DON’T BE BAD SCREENING, NOV. 11, LOS ANGELES (From left:) The Italian film’s cast and crew: Simona Giacci, Laura Tosti, Valerio Mastandrea, Camilla Nesbitt, Paolo Bogna and Simone Isola. Patten moderates the Q&A following the screening.
6
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Flash Mob.indd 6
11/20/15 11:36 AM
“Carey Mulligan is a revelation.” ANN HORNADAY, THE WASHINGTON POST
®
“It packs a punch. An Oscar -worthy performance from Carey Mulligan.” ANNE THOMPSON, INDIEWIRE.COM
FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION IN ALL CATEGORIES INCLUDING
BEST PICTURE • BEST ACTRESS CAREY MULLIGAN
For more on this film, go to www.FocusGuilds2015.com
Untitled-34 1
11/19/15 5:37 PM
pete hammond
his Beverly Hills mansion. Alas, the movie didn’t make the shortlist in that category. But the food was delicious. Spotlight and Beasts of No Nation also had parties thrown in their honor the day after the Governors Awards, just in case you didn’t get enough partying with the contenders the night before. New distributor Broad Green has had a few soirees at A.O.C. for its slate, including the documentary hopeful Song of Lahore, which took over Palihouse for a nice concert by the musicians featured in the film. Music events always are a good draw for Oscar voters, and when you have something like the Brian Wilson biopic Love & Mercy on your roster, you go for it, as Roadside Attractions did in staging a 40-minute concert from Wilson and his band at Vibrato Grill. Fox has come up with other ways to push their films. I went to The Palm for an afternoon cocktailer in which we all watched The Peanuts Movie director Steve PARTY PLANNER Mr. Holmes star Sir Ian McKellan has been feted all over town this awards season.
open season The long journey to the Oscars involves a calendar-crushing spate of lunches, brunches and other munches.
Martino spend three hours painting a perfect Snoopy on the fabled star-laden wall of the restaurant. I also got invited to witness the Hollywood Walk of Fame Star unveiling for The Martian director Ridley Scott followed by, you guessed it, a lunch in his honor. Of course, screenings and Q&As still dominate the season, with studios run-
November unquestionably has become the busiest, most
while they were in town for AFI and the
ning their candidates ragged from one
intensely populated campaign month of the entire six-month
Gov Awards. I would have attended but I
to another. And if a star isn’t available for
awards season. Why? Simple: Everyone still thinks they can win.
already had lunch and moderated a Q&A
a Q&A, no problem, as Focus proved by
The egos have landed. There are all the usual shindigs, including
with them.
satellite-ing in The Danish Girl star Eddie
the Governors Awards, AFI Fest, our The Contenders event and so
“Holiday parties” also have been big,
Redmayne from London, where he is on
on. But it goes way beyond that. A glance at my inbox tells the real
with many colliding into each other around
location on his next project. Beasts of No
story. There can be no other time of the year when I get emails that
the Governors Awards, when so many
Nation barely was a blip in theatres when
start, “Brunch with Sir Ian McKellan?” And it doesn’t stop there.
stars and directors are in town. Universal
it opened and closed within a two-week
I also have been invited to join the Mr. Holmes star for cocktails
spread good tidings with Straight Outta
period, but its movie theatre life has lived
and dinner, as well as a one-man show where he talks about all his
Compton and Steve Jobs at Ysabel while,
on with a series of hosted screenings from
female co-stars.
nearby, Fox Searchlight was feting Youth,
Sally Field and others, lending their names
Brooklyn and Me and Earl and the Dying Girl
to the Netflix cause of breaking into the
the likes of the cast and filmmakers of Carol, and 99 Homes star
at The District. Further up Sunset Boule-
Oscar race. Of course, there were recep-
Michael Shannon, who got a dinner, too. Brunches are necessary
vard, A24 was celebrating the warmth of
tions with those showings, as there are for
because there are precious few lunch slots left for a campaigner to
the season with Room, Amy and End of the
so many screenings these days. It is the
lock in. I have never been to Craig’s restaurant so much in my life. It
Tour. The latter film’s Jason Segel has gone
way to get voters’ attention. One former
isn’t normally open for lunch, but it’s been an afternoon haven for
rogue with his own parties thrown by the
Oscar-nominated actress told me she
so many hopefuls to woo Academy members, including those from
likes of Ted Danson and Mary Steenbur-
wanted to see a certain film but, “There
Sicario, Trumbo, Black Mass, Spectre, Spotlight and I’ll See You in
gen, as well as Maroon 5 front man Adam
was no party.” So she resisted and went to
My Dreams. That is not to say that Spago and Spaghettini haven’t
Levine, who opened up his own home for a
something else that had a menu attached.
been just as busy with meals for the likes of Room, The Hunting
Segel celebration. I went to a house party
Ground and Suffragette. Of course, dinners are always popular. IFC
for a documentary short on the Tuske-
translates into votes is something else
had one for 45 Years stars Tom Courtenay and Charlotte Rampling
gee Airmen that Lionel Richie threw at
altogether.
Brunches, in fact, have become a new addition this year for
8
It really is the season. Whether this
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Column_Pete Hammond.indd 8
11/20/15 11:43 AM
D i s c ov e r
PEOPLE’S CHOICE AWARD
Discover-Room.com
Untitled-31 1
11/19/15 5:34 PM
Untitled-36 1
11/19/15 5:38 PM
Untitled-36 2
11/19/15 5:38 PM
ROOM AT THE TOP Brie Larson, Jacob Tremblay and Lenny Abrahamson created gut-wrenching beauty onscreen that, on paper, was a risky proposition. Here’s the story of how the cast, writer and director of Room made cinematic alchemy. BY ANTONIA BLYTH
PHOTOGRAPHS BY CHRIS CHAPMAN 12
“YOU CAN IMAGINE the crass studio executive reaction to the pitch for Room: ‘Forget it,’ ” says director Lenny Abrahamson of his film that has commanded so much Oscar buzz since its September unveiling at the Telluride Film Festival. Yes, Room is a hard sell when boiled down: A young woman is trapped in a garden shed for seven years by a sexual predator— along with the five year old son she bore from him in captivity. It’s the epitome of bleak and claustrophobic fare. So how, then, does Room have moviegoers stumbling out of screenings in awe, reporting a powerful, uplifting emotional experience that lingers long after they’ve left the theater? Without giving too much away, there is a happy ending. And according to audiences and critics, Room is one of those films that does what art should: It changes you. “I saw grown agents crying,” Abrahamson says of early screenings. “Somebody said, ‘Have they not had their tear ducts surgically removed?’ No. If you, as a viewer, feel like you’re discovering it yourself, then it feels like a part of you, it’s personal. I think that’s why the film has so much power. Room also is about really fundamental things. It’s about love. It reminds you of your own childhood because it evokes the transition of that amazing state you’re in when you’re small, into this colder world we all live in as adults.”
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Cover Story.indd 12
11/20/15 1:08 PM
M AL02_Cover Story.indd 13
11/20/15 1:08 PM
We’re not going to invite anybody into the development process.” “There weren’t lots of executives keeping me at arm’s length,” Donoghue says. “It was me and Lenny around a kitchen table. Lenny’s just not scared by the odd aspects of the project. I remember him saying to me, ‘You know, we can get a mainstream audience for this film, but only if we do it fearlessly.’ ” “To be fair,” Abrahamson adds, “the people that we got onboard—Film Nation and A24—were people that absolutely loved the project. They didn’t want to change anything. Also, they weren’t pushing for big stars.”
SCREEN PRESENCE Despite this freedom, casting the film did present its share of hurdles. The film’s main characters, Ma and her son Jack, would be tough to get right. Then Abrahamson thought of Brie Larson as a possibility for Ma. “We were developing ideas about who we should approach, and then I saw Short Term 12,” Abrahamson says. “A really great actor has to have a heightened presence, that’s why they hold the screen. Brie has SELF-DEDICATED Novelist Emma Donoghue and director Lenny Abrahamson stuck to their guns in telling Room’s tough-on-paper, but ultimately moving story of familial love.
that star quality, but she’s able to fully integrate into the character, and I saw that in Short Term 12. There’s something incredibly vibrant and luminous about her, but she’s absolutely a real person in a real
The journey of Emma Donoghue’s best-selling novel from book to Oscar contender is a tale that is
world.” For Larson, the connection at her first
as much about the magic that happens between
meeting with Abrahamson was instant.
the right collection of people as it is about great
“It was supposed to be a 30-minute
storytelling.
coffee meeting,” she says. “It turned into a
Donoghue, for her part, made the decision to
four-hour-long talk. We just immediately
sit down and write the screenplay the moment she
went so deep into our families. We
finished the book, tackling a subject matter that was
were talking about mythology and our
far from easy film fodder.
favorite films, about complication and
“I was writing it for myself with nobody looking
contemporary society—all of these things
and the book hadn’t even been published,” she
that the allegory in this movie had a great
says. “That was an ideal way to begin. I borrowed 20
opportunity to explore, and how much
books on screenplay writing from my local university library, tried to absorb their insights
deeper we could explore it. I left that
and then plunged in. I thought, ‘There’s no point in making some company hire me to do
meeting feeling like it was in my marrow
the first draft if they really don’t want it.’ I will write it and then when I talk to filmmakers I
that I needed to do it. I felt comfortable
can say, ‘Look, here it is. Do you like us? Shall we proceed?’ ”
that Lenny would come from a place of
In fact, once the book became a roaring success the novelist had many directors lining up to adapt it. Abrahamson won out when he wrote Donoghue a 10-page letter. “I think all directors should use this technique because, first of all, he showed how intelligent he was. He just completely understood the book.” Once Abrahamson had convinced Donoghue he was determined to do the book justice,
love and not from a place of torture and gratuitous drama.” Casting a then-eight year old Jacob Tremblay, who previously was in Smurfs 2, was another triumph for Abrahamson.
the task of finding funding loomed large. The director was anxious to not allow financiers to
With the wrong boy, Room might have
dilute the creative process.
seemed cloying or forced.
“I didn’t have a profile in the States,” he says, “but I did already have a very strong
“The whole awards thing is a
working relationship with Film4, so that’s a great place to be; that’s a great place to say
fascinating thing,” Abrahamson says, “but
to a writer, ‘We will develop your film in a way that’s true to the essence of the novel.
it’s really hard for a little boy to get the
Then, when it’s ready, we’ll bring it to financiers and we’ll say, ‘Do you like this thing?’
sort of credit that he should get. Jacob
14
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Cover Story.indd 14
11/20/15 1:08 PM
Untitled-37 1
11/19/15 5:39 PM
demanded physical preparation. “I spoke with doctors and nutritionists about lack of vitamin D,” she says. “I figured Ma was constantly running around with Jack in that space, so I put on 15 pounds of muscle. Then I stayed home for about a month and had to stay out of the sun.” “There was a camaraderie that allowed us to make something that was kind of difficult to shoot,” Abrahamson says. “It also allowed us to go to really quite deep places, because everybody really trusted each other. Ultimately, with Brie and Jake and myself on the floor, we felt like it was sort of a family.” However, working in intense confinement for so long had its effects. “When we got out it was exactly as it is in the film,” Abrahamson says. “Suddenly we’re on the outside and we felt like Jack, going, ‘You know what? Maybe we’d be POWER DUO The mother-son bond forged by Brie Larson and Jacob Tremblay not only carried the emotion of Room, but also helped them through tough, confining days on set, below.
better off if we were back inside.’ ” William H. Macy, who plays Ma’s father, came to the set just as the shoot had left Room. “I walked on set telling jokes and
“To find a kid that age, who just about has enough stamina and confidence to deal with a huge role like this, was just amazing.”
whistling, and they had just been through is a brilliant actor and that’s a brilliant
first half takes place. In the film, Jack
a war,” he says. “I guess they shot four-
performance. To find a kid that age,
personifies every object as if it were a
and-a-half, five weeks in that room. The
who just about has enough stamina and
friend; so the room is Room, a lamp is
claustrophobia had almost overtaken
confidence to be able to deal with a huge
Lamp. Because the film was shot in a
them.”
role like this—to find a boy a little bit older
space as tiny as the story dictates—the set
who still looks five—was just amazing.”
was close to the 10-feet by 10-feet space
also started on the film after the Room
in the book—the audience effectively sees
scenes, but despite the toll the shoot had
performance is complemented by
not only the protective fairytale world
taken on the cast and crew, she knew they
Tremblay’s inquisitive, energetic Jack.
Ma carefully has curated for her son, but
were all part of something otherworldly.
The boy is remarkable, acting three years
also the physical and emotional restraint
“I had a very positive, hopeful feeling
younger than he was during filming, never
she must employ. “It was life imitating
because I believed in the way that Lenny
with an obvious tug on the heartstrings. As
art, being stuck in that small room,”
wanted to tell this story, and I believed in
Donoghue says, “Jacob was a revelation.”
Abrahamson says. “It’s as small as it’s
what Jake and Brie were doing. I was very
supposed to be.”
hopeful that it would turn out to be a film
Larson’s artfully pared down
Of playing a younger child, Tremblay, now nine, says: “I thought about when I
For Larson, Ma’s confinement
Joan Allen, who portrays Ma’s mother,
of the kind of caliber that it is.”
was a little kid that was five. I’d jump on the couch and run laps. I just remembered jumping around and getting bruises by accident.” The relationship between Ma and Jack is certainly the crux of the film. Larson and Tremblay initially had forged a bond through pizza and Lego. “We immediately clicked,” Larson says. “We love Star Wars and Ninja Turtles. I would go over to his apartment and we would sit and play Legos. Then we would build all the toys that you saw in Room. It’s a tough thing because we needed to connect, but you never want to put pressure (on someone), and a kid can smell it a mile away.”
CLOSE QUARTERS Part of the movie’s power lies in the confinement of the main set, where the
16
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Cover Story.indd 16
11/20/15 1:08 PM
D
THE DIALOGUE OSCAR SEASON 2015
CATE BLANCHETT
CAROL (THE WEINSTEIN CO.), TRUTH (SONY PICTURES CLASSICS)
“Robert Redford is extraordinary. We would have these situations where they’d be setting up for the shot and he’d just start talking to me, and I’d have a sense of deja vu. And then it’d suddenly dawn on me that he was running lines.”
KATE WINSLET
STEVE JOBS (UNIVERSAL)
“When I googled Joanna Hoffman, straight away I thought, ‘Of course they wouldn’t think of me. I’m a busty blonde and she’s a five-foot, two-inch Polish-Armenian who doesn’t look like Kate Winslet.’ ”
SAOIRSE RONAN
BROOKLYN (FOX SEARCHLIGHT)
“Brooklyn was the first time that I’ve ever experienced playing a character whose emotional journey was running parallel to mine. I actually found it a lot more challenging. There’s kind of nothing to hide behind.”
JANE FONDA
YOUTH (FOX SEARCHLIGHT)
“If you’re going to light me for how old I am or older, yeah, that’s how I look. I don’t want people to think that I’m not going to appear in a movie unless I only look really good. If that’s what it call for, I’ll go for it.”
CAREY MULLIGAN
SUFFRAGETTE (FOCUS FEATURES)
“I try not to read everything out there, but I lost my cool when one critic said that what happens in Suffragette, ‘isn’t real. It isn’t possible that this would happen to one person.’ That’s ironic because these things really did happen.”
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Dialogue Opener.indd 17
17
11/20/15 12:20 PM
Cate
and you almost lose your balance because it goes so quickly. I knew about the story but I did not know about the fallout.
BLANCHETT
★
★
★
★
What kind of research did you do? Did you go to 60 Minutes or to a newsroom? I didn’t. I’ve been in newsrooms and I’ve been sort of hauled over the coals in my own small way, so I know personally what
The Aussie actress is coming off a stellar year to make her presence doubly-known this awards season.
that feels like but in a much smaller, lesser degree than Mary experienced. So I felt like that was something I understood.
BY PETE HAMMOND And now you have Carol coming out a month later. You and Rooney Mara are so great together. She and I gravitate to similar filmmakers. She’s had such a great creative relationship
A
fter winning the Best Actress Oscar for Blue Jasmine less than two years ago, Cate Blanchett got busy. She had been spending much of her time doing theater projects in her native Australia or appearing in smaller parts in such blockbusters as The Hobbit trilogy and How to Train Your Dragon 2. But this year has been a virtual Blanchett-fest, starting in March with her role as the stepmother in Disney’s Cinderella, and contiuing this fall with leading roles in the 1950s lesbian romance Carol, and as 60 Minutes producer Mary Mapes in Truth. Both latter roles have won wide praise and yet present a quandary for Oscar voters. They are both leads—and Academy rules state that only one acting performance can be nominated in the same category, which means the votes for both roles could split. But this is a good problem to have, especially for someone who already has two Oscars on her mantle—the first won 10 years ago for her role as Katharine Hepburn in The Aviator. It’s been a great decade for today’s Great Cate.
with David Fincher and Steven Soderbergh and Todd (Haynes, Carol director), and she just worked with Joe Wright. So I felt like we were very sympatico creatively. That was an interesting period in our history, the early ’50s. What’s interesting about the film that Todd’s made, and also about Patricia Highsmith’s novel, is that in the end it’s about falling in love. And it’s as much about the age gap between the women as it is about the outsider nature of their love. And so he’s made a beautiful film about falling in love and heartbreak and maturity. How long do you have to make a film like this?
What a year you’re having between
It must have been interesting to work
There were times when we barely had time
Cinderella and Carol and now Truth.
with Robert Redford. This is the first
to do one take. Todd is like no other director
Yes, it’s funny. Truth we made really quickly;
time that you worked with him, right?
I’ve ever worked with. He’s a master making
it was like a freight train. I made Cinderella
Yeah, but hopefully it’s not the last. He’s
a student film, in the sense that he has that
two or three years ago, and Carol I made
extraordinary. We would have these situa-
sort of danger and hunger that a student
at the beginning of last year. So it’s sort of
tions on set where they’d be setting up for
filmmaker has but this incredible finesse
everything coming out at once.
the shot and he’d just start talking to me,
and expertise and facility and insight that
and I’d have this terrible sense of déjà vu,
an auteur has. And the intersection of those
Do you like that?
thinking, “We had this conversation before.”
two atmospheres is really unique.
It’s a little confusing. You hope that one film
And then it’d suddenly dawn on me that he
doesn’t end up getting lost because both
was running lines. We seemed to be talking
Actors are the only artists who can’t
Carol and Truth, I think, are really interesting
about things around the scene, and then
be nominated twice for an Oscar in the
stories by two very interesting filmmakers.
the lines would just be drip-fed in.
same category. You’re a member of the
I saw Truth in Toronto, where it was
What got you involved in Truth?
have two great performances this year.
well-received. I got to meet Dan Rather.
I had (the script) for a little while. My life is
I’m not a lobbyist, so I don’t get tied up in
Isn’t he something? Both he and Mary
very full with the amount of children that
those machinations. Perhaps that stuff
(Mapes) are cut from the same cloth in the
we have and my husband running a theater
matters more to producers than it does to
sense that they have this searing intel-
company. Often by the time I get into bed
me. To simply be in that dialogue is more
ligence, this fiery sense of fighting injustice
at night and read a script it’s like taking a
than enough, and, I mean, it seems a bit
and a hatred of hypocrisy, and they’re also
sleeping pill. I just fall asleep. It has nothing
hubristic to be having this conversation.
deeply emotional people. It’s a really inter-
to do with the writing and everything to do
The first port of call is that the films find
esting combination. I mean, no wonder they
with my age. But when I read this, I just ate it
an audience. So that’s the bit that I feel a
gravitated towards each other.
alive because you step on this conveyor belt,
responsibility towards. The rest is outside.
actor’s branch of the Academy and you
18
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Dialogue_Blanchett.indd 18
PHOTOGRAPH BY
Gabriel Goldberg
11/20/15 12:05 PM
AL02_Dialogue_Blanchett.indd 19
11/20/15 12:05 PM
Kate
make-up on… I was not comfortable with the sudden movie star status that
WINSLET
★
★
★
★
was being thrown at me. It was also largely created by the success of the film. I didn’t want to make big films. It wasn’t me. It was my instinctive response to the situation. I remember thinking then, “Wow, I can choose the roles I want to be in.” Up until then I had
Even with her pick of roles, the Brit fought hard for “the girl part” in Steve Jobs.
been running around to auditions with a backpack, and you were lucky to get the gig you could get.
B Y A N T H O N Y D ’A L E S S A N D R O Did you ever rack your brain wondering why the Academy passed over you five times in 13 years before they finally gave you an Oscar for
A
cademy voters relish a riveting behind-thescenes story when it comes to a contender. If there is one this season it’s about how Oscar-winning actress Kate Winslet—who, since her first nomination for Sense and Sensibility at the age of 21, has sifted through a sea of offers—fought for the role of Joanna Hoffman, Steve Jobs’ feisty PolishArmenian head of marketing at Apple Computer. During Winslet’s work on the Australian film The Dressmaker, she learned about “the girl part” in Danny Boyle’s Steve Jobs through her hair-andmakeup artist, and was promptly piqued. She googled Hoffman, found some black wigs, and emailed a photo of herself in character to producer Scott Rudin. Her agent told her there already was an offer out to another actress, but fate set in: Three-and-a-half weeks later, Winslet found herself in a rehearsal room in San Francisco.
The Reader? After being nominated the first time, that was completely surreal. It was so otherworldly, I never imagined that I would win it then and I was never disappointed (over not winning). You have to be a good loser. I don’t think it would have been good for me winning at a younger age. I would then feel the pressure of having done something and maintaining that level of a winning streak. Rather, I could keep working and trying hard. Also, walking into the room on each of those five occasions, you know if you’ll win or lose. You really do. Knowing that I wasn’t going to win made it quite sensible and practical
Regarding the great lengths you took
him, was another big fat box I could check.
to land the part of Joanna Hoffman,
Throw in Fassbender, and I gotta get in
But when The Reader came around, I
what made it worth the fight?
that room.
wanted to win that one because it was
As an actor, you constantly hear about
Joanna wasn’t just a hotheaded
and got me through those moments.
a difficult part. I did find it really hard
films that are in the works. It’s not unusual
Eastern European woman screeching
to sometimes give (the director or
at Jobs. She was a sister, his friend, and
producer) a nudge. It was about being in
a little bit of a mother. Her recognition
Jennifer Lawrence recently spoke
the room with those creative people, that’s
of who he was as a person and her
out about the pay discrepancy
the way you grow and change as an actor…
acceptance and love of him, warts and all,
between actresses and actors. Has
When I googled Joanna Hoffman, straight
was an admirable quality. I’ve spent time
this ever vexed you?
away I thought, “Of course they wouldn’t
with people like Jobs, and just because
I have never concerned myself with
think of me. I’m a busty blond and she’s a
people are tricky doesn’t mean they don’t
monetary matters. I almost feel like
five-foot, two-inch Polish-Armenian who
have a heart and soul. (The real) Joanna
I can’t comment on other people’s
doesn’t look like Kate Winslet.” When it
came into the rehearsal space and I got
comments, but I admire people who
came to throwing my hat in the ring and
to spend time with her. I didn’t want to try
publicly stand up for themselves. I’ve
emailing Scott Rudin my photos, I didn’t
and do an impersonation, but I wanted to
never been in the situation where I
have an ego about that. Lucky for me, a
honor the essence of her spirit.
feel the need to make those types of
script landed in my inbox a few hours later.
playing Hanna Schmitz.
comments. I’m fortunate. I have a nice After Titanic you made a point not to
life and career and I’m blessed to be
the script was that there weren’t that
be cast as the “It Girl” or ingénue in
40 years old and still doing it. However,
many people in it. How clever to make a
Hollywood films. Do you ever think
it reminds me of the comments that I
film about this man, who had achieved
differently about that decision?
made on women and body image. At 40,
everything, and to keep it as a play. The
After Titanic, as all of this was happening,
I’m still getting asked questions about
fact that Aaron Sorkin wrote these words
I just trusted my instinct. I always made
those statements that I made years
was an exciting prospect. Danny Boyle
sure that I marked my line in the sand.
ago. At 45, Jennifer Lawrence will still be
directing, even though I hadn’t worked with
I could go to the corner store with no
asked about the pay issue.
What intrigued me when I first read
20
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Dialogue_Winslet.indd 20
PHOTOGRAPH BY
Chris Chapman
11/20/15 12:01 PM
AL02_Dialogue_Winslet.indd 21
11/20/15 12:01 PM
Saoirse
it did. When it comes to being on set, Domhnall and I work in a more similar way, but
RONAN
★
★
★
★
with Emory and me, we work in very different ways. He does an awful lot of preparation for a role, and I don’t. Now I do, but I focus on the script and I don’t break anything down, whereas he tends to do that a bit more. It was great, ultimately, to have that yin and yang dynamic between us because the two characters needed to be different and
The Irish actress’s latest film, Brooklyn, hits close to home.
attracted to each other because of it.
BY M AT T H E W G R O B A R
Was there a day or scene that was more challenging than others to shoot? They were all pretty challenging. We had so much to do every day; we had 35 days to shoot everything. We would prob-
B
y age 13, Saoirse (pronounced “seer-shah”) Ronan had her first Oscar nomination for her role in the film version of Ian McEwan’s bestseller, Atonement. This year, another popular literary adaptation—Colm Toibin’s Brooklyn, scripted by Nick Hornby and directed by John Crowley—could bring Ronan back to Oscar’s door. Brooklyn is an age-old immigrant story—in this case, Ronan’s Eilis leaves Ireland for New York, where she starts anew and finds love, until she’s drawn back home—and it’s as timeless and timely now as during the 1950s when it takes place. The film rests squarely on Ronan’s shoulders; it’s through her expressive eyes and understated performance that Eilis and this well-loved story come to life.
ably do two or three big, heavy scenes per day, which is a lot. In Enniscorthy (Ireland), it was mad because that’s where we began the shoot, so we were still finding our feet. Locals would come out every single day to watch us work, so we’d have 50 to 100 people—which is a lot for Enniscorthy—on the side of the road watching us and looking out their windows when we were shooting. They were so excited that we were all there, but that was pretty intense because you were telling their story and they were there watching it happen. With the
How did you get involved with this
journey, and so many people have. I think
whole thing there was no letup. But we
project?
that’s where the real responsibility came
knew (the film) was something that was
I had read the book in my mid-teens. I
from. It’s that you knew you were repre-
special to us, so that was what got us
loved Colm Toibin’s writings, especially of
senting millions of stories, whether they
through it. By the end it just felt like we
women. The script came to me—it was
were Irish or not.
were running a marathon.
Nick Hornby, so of course, you’re immedi-
By the time we made the film, I had
ately interested. I knew this was the first
moved to London and so I was really
You have several close-ups in the film
Irish project that I wanted to do. It was
homesick. It was the first time that I’ve
that convey a lot, like in the Christmas
really important for me to find the right
ever experienced playing a character
scene. Did you work with Crowley on
first one, and it would have to be strong
whose emotional journey was running
those or work instinctively?
and mean something to me. A couple of
parallel to mine, and that was really differ-
It’s a combination of both. At that stage
weeks after that, John (Crowley) flew over
ent for me. With something like this, you
we were shooting in Montreal, so we were
to Dublin to meet me, and we chatted
may think it would be easier because it’s
about five weeks in and had found our
about it in relation to his life and moving
a similar kind of story to your own, or the
rhythm. John and I knew how the other
away from home, and I was just about to
feeling of it is, but actually I found it a lot
one worked and were very much a team.
move away from home. It’s been one of
more challenging. There’s kind of nothing
He was always the leader and so any
those things that has become more and
to hide behind.
notes he would have, of course, I would
more personal as it’s gone on.
go with them. But when (singer) Iarla You had two romantic leads in this
O’Lionaird, who is famous back home,
You were born in New York and raised
film—Emory Cohen and fellow Irishman
gets up to sing (in the scene)—that was
in Ireland. Was that personal connec-
Domnhall Gleason. What was that like?
something. We were all away from home,
tion to the film purely coincidental?
I knew Domhnall before. There were a few
the hair and makeup girls, the crew. For all
It was absolutely coincidental, but initially
things we were trying to work on together,
of us to be there on this film—to be tired
that was the attraction for me. The two
and also the community back home is so
and just trying to make sure we got every-
locations that make up the film are the
small that you kind of know everyone any-
thing in the one day—and then have him
two locations that make up me, and so it
way. The first time I met Emory was during
singing in the middle of it, just silenced us.
was personal straightaway, just because
rehearsals. They didn’t do chemistry reads or
It was overwhelming. It was easy to get
mom and dad had made such a similar
any of that stuff, so it just had to work, and
into that space.
22
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Dialogue_Ronan.indd 22
PHOTOGRAPH BY
Gabriel Goldberg
11/20/15 12:46 PM
AL02_Dialogue_Ronan.indd 23
11/20/15 12:03 PM
Jane
people will come to see J.Lo and they will either rediscover me, or, if they’re young,
F O N DA
★
★
★
★
they’ll discover Fonda,” which is absolutely what happened. And then you did TV. It was Newsroom. It was Aaron (Sorkin), bless his heart, giving me the role of Leona Lansing that kind of said, “She’s back.”
The film and TV superstar brings her wattage to a tailor-made role in Youth. BY PETE HAMMOND
And there’s that line in Youth about your character Brenda going into TV, which used to be verboten. If you wanted to be a movie star you never could do television. But for reasons that you know as well as or better than I do, it’s kind of where you want to be now, especially if you’re an older woman, because
A
fter more than 50 years in the biz, Jane Fonda is looking, and, I suspect, feeling more youthful than ever. So it seems entirely appropriate that Italian director Paolo Sorrentino’s perfectly titled Youth should bring her roaring back into the Oscar conversation. It’s been almost two decades since Fonda’s last nomination in 1986 for The Morning After, in which she played an actress—just as she is in Youth. Fonda’s Brenda Morel, a ball-buster who nearly steals the show in just eight-a-half-minutes of screen time, blew everyone away when the film first showed in Cannes. Fonda won two Oscars in the 1970’s (Klute and Coming Home) and has been nominated seven times. Youth could bring an eighth nom, but Fonda doesn’t like to talk about that prospect, just the role itself. It’s one she knew she was born to play.
it’s much more forgiving. We wrapped our second season of Grace & Frankie last night—at midnight. We shot a nine-page scene that should be in a Broadway play. Some people cried and then it was really, really funny. It just felt really good. In the opening shot in Youth your character has a classic screen entrance. Yeah, she’s looking at that terrible piece of sculpture on the wall. What did you think about the knife? You know, I liked that. It was me. Paolo had me doing some-
What was your reaction when this role
Does acting still do that for you? You
thing different and I said, “You know, us
was offered to you?
gave it up for a long time…
women—when we’re waiting for some-
Well, I had heard about the film from Al
Oh, it totally disappeared for me as some-
body—sometimes just kind of check our
Pacino, who said there’s this role that feels
thing I cared for or was passionate about.
teeth in a knife.” And he liked that, so we
like it’s written for you, so I immediately
I took a 15-year break. I was 49 and I was
did it.
called my agent. It had already been cast
really unhappy. I remember I was making a
with Shirley MacClaine. I have not confirmed
film with De Niro called Stanley and Iris in
What did you think about the way the
this with her. A few weeks went by and then
Canada. I sat on the edge of my hotel room
film was shot? In person, you don’t
we heard that she was no longer attached.
bed and I was trying to envision a future
look anything like Brenda. Is that a
I said to my agent, “Go after it.” When Paolo
for myself, and I couldn’t. I thought, “I can’t
startling thing to see on screen?
offered the role to me I was just ecstatic,
keep doing this.” I can’t act if I’m miser-
Well, if you’re purposely going to light me
without having read it.
able and so I thought, “Well, I’m just going
for how old I am or older, yeah, that’s how
to stop.” I bought some property in New
I look. It’s all in the lighting. I loved what
Did you base Brenda on anyone?
Mexico and I was going to become a full-
they did—I had a wig that really looks like
No. I mean, I came into the business just at
time environmental activist. And then Ted
a wig, and you see all my wrinkles. I don’t
the tail end of the era of the women that
Turner came into my life. People think I gave
want people to think that I’m not going to
she was talking about. But I didn’t base it on
up acting because of him. The fact is that I
appear in a movie unless I only look really
anybody. I just tried to be her.
was on the way out. I had 10 years with him
good. If that’s what it calls for, I’ll go for it.
that were fabulous and then I had five years There’s no punches pulled with her…
writing my memoir, which was very cathar-
Actresses you knew, some who had
She knows what she wants.
tic. It’s hard to know who you want to be
worked with your father, like Barbara
if you don’t know who you’ve been. At the
Stanwyck and Bette Davis, came to
And you seem to know what you want.
end of that process I got offered Monster-
mind, seeing you in this role.
You have that passion that seems to be
in-Law. I was now 62. Even though it was a
When you know those great divas, and I
in all phases of your life.
popcorn movie it was transformative for me
did, without saying I’m going to base the
Right, but I don’t know what tomorrow will
in terms of my career. It was the only strate-
character on anyone, they’re kind of in your
bring. I just want to stay curious.
gic career thing I ever did. I thought, “Hmm,
DNA. Do you know what I mean?
24
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Dialogue_Fonda.indd 24
PHOTOGRAPH BY
Gabriel Goldberg
11/20/15 12:14 PM
AL02_Dialogue_Fonda.indd 25
11/20/15 12:14 PM
C a re y
that they had to fight against a law that dictated, “You can’t vote.” To hear that
MULLIGAN
★
★
★
★
in places like Saudi Arabia women can’t exercise their right to vote is a novelty, and it’s a real reminder to these young girls to take the right seriously. How did Jennifer Lawrence’s statement on the discrepancy in pay
The British actress’s latest period role is anything-but-dainty in Suffragette. B Y A N T H O N Y D ’A L E S S A N D R O
between male and female actors ring with you? I think it’s a good thing for someone like Jennifer to speak out; it means an awful lot to women. Sure, there’s been cynicism toward her speaking out and the fact that she makes a lot of money, but she is completely and selflessly rising above that. (The discrepancy) is inherently unfair and
I
n the wake of receiving her first Best Actress Oscar nomination for 2009’s An Education, Carey Mulligan realized that she had the fortunate opportunity to choose roles. She easily could play a leading man’s foil in any Hollywood blockbuster—in fact, she beat out a slew of actresses for the highly coveted role of Daisy Buchanan opposite Leonardo DiCaprio’s Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby. However, since coming to Hollywood’s attention, the British actress largely has balanced a resume of socially-conscious parts—her Tony-nominated turn in Broadway’s Skylight is more about the British class system than the fling between an older man and younger woman—and lost herself in a canon of edgy damsels. When Mulligan first heard about Abi Morgan’s script for Suffragette, about the women’s suffrage movement in Great Britain, she dismissed the 1900s period drama. “I naively had this idea it was teadrinking ladies chatting, but by page three I was so invested and shocked by all the things that these women did,” she says.
she has an enormous platform to speak out against it. Men in Hollywood look up to her because she is powerful. She’s using that platform to correct something that isn’t right. It’s a long overdue conversation and it’s admirable what she has done. This is an age-old issue that’s in every part of society. Have there been movies purporting to be about female empowerment that weren’t? There are, and young people today are bombarded with images that I didn’t have when I was growing up. There are some that pertain to female empowerment and others that do not. Young kids are looking to these characters as some sort of a role
While you play a fictionalized char-
Are you finding in your travels with
model. However, there are great ones,
acter in Suffragette you largely drew
the film that different nations define
such as Jennifer Lawrence’s character
inspiration from Hannah Mitchell.
feminism differently?
in The Hunger Games. What she does
My mom found Hannah and brought her
Sarah (Gavron, the film’s director) has
with that role is incredible in terms of the
story to my attention. She was born into a
traveled with the film more than I have. I’ve
subject for young adults. For teenagers
farming family in the northern part of Eng-
been between America and London with it
that character is an incredibly strong
land and was taught to read by her father.
and I don’t think the definition of feminism
female role model.
She left home at a young age and became
is different between the two locations.
a seamstress. She had an inherent feeling,
Recently, it has felt like a new word…
Following your Oscar nomination
unlike my character Maud, that something
People are afraid of labels and I think this
you’ve exercised the power to choose
wasn’t right (in society). She met other
year they’re starting to reclaim what the
roles and you’ve selected smart
suffragettes who inspired her in the move-
word originally meant, in a positive way
material. That said, have there been
ment. She had a marriage breakdown and
that’s interesting.
opportunities to star in tentpoles and franchise films?
lost her family, and her life became this movement. I try not to read everything
You’ve mentioned that girls are going
Those films have come my way in the
out there (about me), but I lost my cool
to see Suffragette in packs in the U.K.
past. The style doesn’t appeal to me. The
when one critic said that what happens in
I’m happy to see that what the film meant
Marvel films—while I enjoy watching these
Suffragette, “isn’t real. It isn’t possible that
to me also speaks to these young girls.
movies—the material doesn’t speak to me.
this would happen to one person.” That’s
Life was incredibly hard then. Women had
With these types of franchise films there’s
ironic because these things really did hap-
to fight for every single thing they had. To
always the conversation of starring in
pen. There was a lot of sexual abuse in the
have a reminder of that, to recognize that
more than one film and I’m not interested
workplace. Some women were sectioned.
and be grateful for that—these girls are
in playing the same character in more than
Suffragettes faced violent and illegal reac-
seeing the strength of women who took
one film. What’s appealing to me is playing
tions, and Hannah went through it all.
pride in being women and all that power
different characters.
26
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Dialogue_Mulligan.indd 26
PHOTOGRAPH BY
Gabriel Goldberg
11/20/15 12:22 PM
AL02_Dialogue_Mulligan.indd 27
11/20/15 12:23 PM
★ | oscar handicaps
BEST
ACTOR
Every year this category is overstuffed with potential nominees. Who stands to make the cut this season? By Pete Hammond
Two years ago the Best Actor race
in To Kill a Mockingbird and James
was so crowded that such surefire
Stewart in Mr. Smith Goes to Wash-
contenders as Robert Redford (All
ington. But guess what? What hap-
Is Lost) and Tom Hanks (Captain
pened to Hanks two years ago could
Phillips) saw their hopes dashed
repeat itself. His work is so stoic and
right out of the gate when both
understated that it easily could be
were overlooked for even a nomina-
overlooked against more obviously
tion. Competition was lethal, as it
flashy contenders. That would be a
has been for the past few years in
shame. Still, he is definitely up there
this category. Unlike what is usu-
in the first tier of contenders, one
ally the case in the Best Actress
where several Best Actor candidates
race—though not this year—it seems
with past nominations—but no
there are just too many great male
wins—could make a strong case for
performances fighting for one of
themselves.
those five coveted nominee slots.
28
LEONARDO DICAPRIO The Revenant
JOHNNY DEPP Black Mass
That list is led by four-time nomi-
This year, in fact, Tom Hanks is back
nee Leonardo DiCaprio, who goes
with another heralded turn in Steven
through the ringer, physically and
Spielberg’s Cold War spy drama,
emotionally, in Alejandro Gonzalez
Bridge of Spies. Critics praised this
Inarritu’s The Revenant. DiCaprio is
subtle and striking role as one of the
well-respected by his fellow actors
two-time Oscar winner’s best ever,
and almost certainly would have won
even comparing it to Gregory Peck
two years ago for The Wolf of Wall
WILL SMITH Concussion
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Handicaps_Best Actor.indd 28
11/20/15 12:37 PM
Street had he not run into the Math-
jumped to the top of many pundit’s
Tom Courtenay (Doctor Zhivago,
hew McConaughey juggernaut from
prediction charts. However, weak
The Dresser), who is outstanding in
Dallas Buyers Club.
boxoffice for the film and portray-
45 Years as a husband with a secret
Another frequent visitor to the
ing a roundly unsympathetic person
that now threatens his four-decade
category who is back in the run-
makes him a slight question mark.
marriage to his wife, played by
ning is Johnny Depp; his chilling
Still, the performance is awesome
Charlotte Rampling. Courtenay could
turn as Whitey Bulger in Black Mass
and he also might be able to impress
make the cut as a dark horse, espe-
is making waves—and not just for
voters with the upcoming Macbeth.
cially if voters see this penetrating
the make-up job. Depp’s portrayal
EDDIE REDMAYNE The Danish Girl
Oscar winner for his Good Will Hunt-
pop up as the three-time nominee’s
ing screenplay, Matt Damon has
race could be Emmy- and Tony-
best shot at the gold in years. The
been making a steady climb toward
winning Bryan Cranston for his
hang-up might be that some voters
the magic five, right in concert
searing role as blacklisted screen-
think he has been squandering his
with the enormous success of The
writer Dalton Trumbo in the biopic
talent in tentpoles like Pirates of the
Martian. Damon spends 90% of his
Trumbo. Mixed reviews out of the
Carribean and the upcoming Alice
time in the film alone on screen and
Toronto International Film Festival
in Wonderland sequel. But Depp’s
makes it funny, poignant, suspense-
dampened enthusiasm for the film
Bulger should remind anyone of the
ful and entirely satisfying. Damon
among some pundits, and middling
great actor he is.
could be a sleeper.
boxoffice in a limited run could hurt,
Stirring the pot and making the
but my gauge is that the industry
Best Actor race all that more inter-
seems to really enjoy the film and
find himself front and center again
esting is a trio of British veterans,
the ever-likeable Cranston.
for his dead-on portrayal in Concus-
all Sirs, getting a rare lead role in
sion of Dr. Bennet Omalu, whose
the autumn of their careers. With
the list include Son of Saul’s Geza
work linked football injuries with
perhaps the best chance to break
Rohrig, who is devastating as a Hun-
brain damage. Smith is winning high
into the top five is two-time winner
garian Jew forced to help the Nazis
praise—even if the film has received
Michael Caine (Hannah and Her
during World War II. The film was a
more mixed reviews—and has a
Sisters, The Cider House Rules), who
sensation in Cannes and is Hungary’s
secret weapon in Omalu, who has
is going for his seventh nomination in
entry into the Foreign Language
roundly endorsed his performance.
Youth, portraying a retired com-
Film race. Distributor Sony Pictures
poser/conductor on a spa vacation
Classics is going to qualify the pic in
Oscar win for his role as Stephen
in Switzerland. Youth is an English-
other categories including this one,
Hawking in The Theory of Everything,
language film from Italian director
where Rohrig, a non-pro actor who
Eddie Redmayne is back as a trans-
Paolo Sorrentino, who won last
lives in Brooklyn and also is a poet,
gender pioneer in The Danish Girl.
year’s foreign language film Oscar
has a compelling life story to sell on
The transformative nature of the role
for The Great Beauty. Caine’s 1966
the campaign circuit.
is rich stuff for voters, and some are
breakthrough role in Alfie gave him
predicting Redmayne could be the
his first Best Actor nom, although
ham Attah, is a longshot here for
first actor in 20 years to win back-
both his wins came for the two times
the intense Netflix hopeful, Beasts of
to-back Oscars. Who did it last? You
he was nominated in a supporting
No Nation. Out of the large ensemble
guessed it: Tom Hanks, for Philadel-
role.
cast of Quentin Tarantino’s western,
phia and Forrest Gump. Also back from last year is Steve MATT DAMON The Martian
Past two-time nominee Ian
Other possibilities further down
Another film novice, young Abra-
The Hateful 8, Samuel L. Jackson
McKellen is only in his 70s yet
is hoping to rack up his first and only
Carell, who was a standout in
superbly plays the 90-something
nomination since 1994’s Pulp Fic-
Foxcatcher and is again in The Big
Sherlock Holmes in the summer
tion. Joseph Gordon-Levitt nailed
Short, as a Wall Street operator who
indie hit, Mr. Holmes. This would be
a difficult challenge in playing the
finds himself in the heart of the 2008
his second trip to the lead category
French-born tightrope walker Phillipe
economic collapse. With a cast that
following 1998’s Gods and Monsters,
Petit in The Walk. And, finally, it might
includes Brad Pitt, Ryan Gosling and
which also was directed by Mr.
be nice to remember Jake Gyl-
Christian Bale (all excellent), it is
Holmes helmer Bill Condon. In Gods
lenhaal’s striking performance as
Carell who is being campaigned in the
McKellen played the director James
a troubled boxer in July’s Southpaw.
lead category and has the best shot
Whale in his 70s, even though the
Gyllenhaal was clearly robbed last
to repeat for a second year in a row.
actor was only in his 50s then. It
year for his brilliant work in Night-
seems like adding 20 years to his age
crawler, another season that was
has been a blessing for Sir Ian.
impossibly crowded with Best Actor
Nominated once previously for 12 IAN MCKELLEN Mr. Holmes
One other major possibility in this
(Ali, The Pursuit of Happyness) could
Coming back from last year’s big
MICHAEL FASSBENDER Steve Jobs
marital drama.
digs way beneath the surface to
Two-time nominee Will Smith
STEVE CARELL The Big Short
Two-time acting nominee, and an
Years a Slave, Michael Fassbender, in the titular role in Steve Jobs, has
Then there is two-time nominee
prospects. Just like this one.
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Handicaps_Best Actor.indd 29
29
11/20/15 12:38 PM
★ | oscar handicaps
BEST
ACTRESS
This year the women give the Best Actor category a run for its money with an abundance of strong, award-worthy performances. By Pete Hammond
A quick look at how the Best
home the Oscar in 2013 for Silver
Actress race is shaping up this year
Linings Playbook; her latest role as
reveals one of the clearest divides
the title character—a highly success-
between young and veteran stars
ful businesswoman—looks like pure
ever. What’s more, this contest is
Oscar material. Add in the fact that
rivaling the Best Actor race for a
she is once again working with direc-
change, offering some of the stiffest
tor David O. Russell (responsible for
competition the category has ever
two of her three previous nomina-
had. Usually voters are struggling to
tions) and you have the recipe for
find even five women to fill out the
success. Unless, at age 25, Lawrence
list of nominees, but this year the
might be considered too young to
choices include several intriguing
own two Oscars.
possibilities. On top of all this is the
head of this impressive class of
Best Actress Oscar winners vying to
women is Room’s Brie Larson. She
compete again.
turned in a powerful and emotional
30
performance that is winning raves
is Jennifer Lawrence, who is looking
as Ma, a young mother held captive
for her fourth nomination for Joy. I say
who, under dire circumstances, tries
“possibly” because, as of press time,
to make a beautiful life for her five
the film still is in post-production
year old son.
and remains unseen. Lawrence took
BRIE LARSON Room
Also vying from a perch at the
fact that there also are several past
Possibly at the head of this class
JENNIFER LAWRENCE Joy
Add to the mix of frontrunners
SAOIRSE RONAN Brooklyn
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Handicaps_Best Actress.indd 30
11/20/15 12:50 PM
Saoirse Ronan, who earned a Sup-
sticky. There are several deserving
be no match in that department
porting Actress nomination when
veteran stars, with performances
for previous Best Actress winner
she was just 13 for Atonement. Now,
of a lifetime, that could trigger
Charlize Theron’s explosive work
at 21, she looks to break into the big
the sentimental factor. Charlotte
in Mad Max: Fury Road. Theron kicks
race with the lovely romantic drama
Rampling really is drumming up
ass—and more—in this summer hit
Brooklyn.
serious Oscar talk for her transcen-
that brilliantly revived the Mad Max
dent performance in 45 Years, as a
series. It might be her best role since
this list of young stars trying to
woman celebrating her 45th wed-
grabbing that Oscar, and every other
woo Oscar is former Best Actress
ding anniversary just as a dark secret
award in sight, for Monster.
nominee and BAFTA winner (for An
from her husband’s past emerges.
Another former winner, Sandra
Education), Carey Mulligan, who
She won the Silver Bear at the Ber-
Bullock, is looking for a third nomina-
this time is a rock-solid reason to see
linale and is nominated in the Best
tion for her complex, funny and right-
the period women’s rights drama
Actress category at the European
on political consultant in Our Brand Is
Suffragette.
Film Awards. The incredible fact that
Crisis. Sadly, the fact is that this pas-
Rampling never has been nominated
sion project was a box office bust not
pair of young stars looking to crash
for an Oscar probably will help her
helped by mediocre critical response.
the party: Alicia Vikander in The
gain further traction.
That could dim Bullock’s chances.
Also not to be overlooked among
CAREY MULLIGAN Suffragette
Complicating the race is another
Danish Girl and Rooney Mara in
ALICIA VIKANDER The Danish Girl
ROONEY MARA Carol
ation of having so many deserving
blip at the box office might not mat-
award in Cannes over her co-star
vets in the running, including two-
ter, but it just makes the mountain
Cate Blanchett, and the Swed-
time Oscar winner Maggie Smith,
a little steeper to climb. Also on that
ish sensation Vikander is an equal
highly amusing in the true story The
uphill battle: Sarah Silverman as
partner to Eddie Redmayne in
Lady in the Van; Blythe Danner in
a depressed suburban housewife
her film. The Hollywood Foreign
her first-ever leading role in the indie
in I Smile Back; Jennifer Connelly
Press Association has ruled both
hit I’ll See You in My Dreams; the irre-
as a homeless woman encounter-
women as contenders for the Lead
sistible Lily Tomlin as the irascible
ing romance and personal troubles
Actress in a Drama category for this
title character in Grandma, looking
in Shelter; the terrific Patricia
year’s Golden Globes, but there’s a
for her second Oscar nomination
Clarkson as a newly-divorced
problem—their respective studios
40 years after her first for Nashville;
woman learning life lessons from Sir
instead are campaigning both in the
and Helen Mirren, hoping to add
Ben Kingsley in the lilting Learning
Supporting Actress race. This could
another Oscar to her mantle as an
to Drive; and the wonderful Brazilian
cause confusion for Academy of
Austrian looking to reclaim a famous
star Regina Case as a live in-house-
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
painting the Nazis stole from her
keeper whose daughter suddenly
voters, who could split their votes
family. Her film, Woman in Gold,
shows up to complicate her life and
and thus knock Mara and Vikander
requires some memory-jogging on
job in The Second Mother. The lat-
out in both categories.
the part of voters—the film opened
ter’s foreign language status is not
way back in April, but remains the
something that has traditionally hurt
Blanchett has her own problem,
top independently-released movie
actresses from being nominated
albeit a nice one. She has two lead
so far this year.
here. Consultants just have to make
roles, in Carol and Truth, and is
But we’re not done yet. The list of
sure voters pop that screener into
excellent in both films, which are
Best Actress possibilities goes on in
being campaigned equally by their
this banner year for women, old and
distributors. However, Academy rules
young. If voters are in the mood for
pened last year when past Oscar
state that she only can be nomi-
comedy—which they rarely seem to
winner Marion Cotillard (La Vie en
nated for one role in the Best Actress
be—then look out for Amy Schumer
Rose) picked up a surprise nom for
category. It is a dumb rule that has
from the summer hit Trainwreck. A
the Belgian film Two Days, One Night.
outlived its time, especially since the
comedy actress Golden Globe win
The popular French star is back in
restriction doesn’t apply in any other
could boost her chances considerably,
contention this year for Macbeth,
category. Nevertheless, voters will
but Schumer more likely could land a
playing opposite Michael Fass-
have to make a Solomon-like choice
writing nom instead for her screenplay.
bender. The combination of a great
between these two fine Blanchett
CHARLOTTE RAMPLING 45 Years
In a less competitive year, being a
Carol. Mara won the Best Actress
On the other hand, Cate
CATE BLANCHETT Carol & Truth
But she has to deal with the situ-
Emily Blunt is looking for her first
their DVD players. In fact, that is exactly what hap-
Shakesperean role like Lady Macbeth
turns, and, by splitting votes
Oscar nomination as the idealistic
and the Academy’s demonstrated
between them, the great Cate could
FBI agent introduced to the horrors
admiration for Cotillard could pro-
be left with nothing. Except the two
of the drug wars in Sicario. It’s one of
duce yet another surprise in a race
Oscars she already has, of course.
the more physically challenging roles
promising much more suspense
Now here is where it really gets
in the category this year, but it might
than usual.
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Handicaps_Best Actress.indd 31
31
11/20/15 12:51 PM
★ | crew calL
VISUAL EFFECTS
THE
VIZ BIZ
In a banner year for showy, VFX-heavy tentpoles, several films stood out for keeping things simple. By Ross Lincoln
It’s been a transformative year for the art of visual effects, demonstrated not only by the increasingly ordinary and realistic depiction of advanced technology or destructive superpowers, but also the elaborate recreation of mundane details like office curtains, or space station floor tiles. Two-time Oscar nominee Richard Stammers was tasked with both the mundane and fantastic as visual effects supervisor on Fox’s The Martian. Kevin Baillie faced entirely different difficulties for Sony’s The Walk, using an enormous number of effects to recreate normal life in the 1970s. Meanwhile, Industrial Light and Magic’s Russell Earl, a three-time Oscar nominee, had the opposite job of delivering highly visible effects for two critical scenes as VFX supervisor on Marvel’s Ant-Man.
32
NASA-Approved
says Stammers. “Mars... is so much
The Martian
more subjective.” While there are thousands of photographs taken of
Adapting Andy Weir’s novel The
different parts of the planet, they
Martian came with challenges
were all shot with different cameras
beyond hitting narrative beats. The
over decades, and the film was given
story of stranded astronaut Mark
widely different treatments when
Watney (Matt Damons), struggling
developed. The result is that despite
to survive the harsh Mars environ-
the documentation, a clear idea of
ment for three years while awaiting
what it’s like on the planet is difficult
rescue, is notable for its rigorous
to nail down with precision.
scientific accuracy. That’s something
“Even simple questions like,
the film’s VFX team strived to live up
‘What color is Mars’ sky?’ (were diffi-
to, consulting with NASA scientists
cult),” says Stammers. “Mars has an
and other experts in creating plau-
atmosphere that is laden with dust
sible depictions of Mars and of the
and, depending on how you treat the
future of space travel. “Getting there
photographs, that sky can be yellow,
involved a number of challenges,”
sometimes gray, sometimes almost
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Crew Call.indd 32
11/20/15 12:32 PM
Untitled-38 1
11/19/15 5:41 PM
★ | crew calL
VISUAL EFFECTS
blue.” Ultimately the decision came from director Ridley Scott to split the
needed to match for the sky.” Less technically challenging for
difference between strict accuracy
The Martian VFX team was creating
and audience expectations and
the Hermes space ship that rescues
opt for more familiar red and gold
Watney. “The references we could
colorations.
call upon there are more tangible,”
“That gave us a better starting
Stammers says. “We know what the
point,” Stammers says, citing as
International Space Station looks
a reference the Jordanian desert,
like, we’ve seen so many differ-
where several weeks of establishing
ent pictures taken there. Creating
photography took place. “The color
a realistic or plausible view with
is very similar to some of the ground
scientific accuracy that is worthy of
on the Mars photos. Once we could
NASA approval is probably the most
match the ground, it told us what we
rewarding part.”
A Tiny Blockbuster
up to immense size. “Here you have
Ant-Man
these weird things where it doesn’t feel like he’s shrinking or moving. You
The effects team at Industrial Light
completely lose that whole sense of
and Magic came to Ant-Man well
perspective you would get. It’s hard
Recreating History
image on the screen supporting the
after filming was completed, called
to wrap your head around it, and
The Walk
story rather than being the story.”
in to create the effects for two of the
once we got into laying out the shots
film’s most iconic scenes: the battle
it became apparent that it was a
Kevin Baillie has spent much of
“built 1974 New York from the ground
between Ant-Man (Paul Rudd) and
very tricky thing to sell.”
his career making super-charged
up—every hot dog vendor and so on
effects on such franchise films
had this sort of hand-touch.”
Falcon (Anthony Mackie), and the
The battle with Falcon, in
To accomplish this, he and his team
trippy “Quantum Realm” scene,
which Ant-Man grows and shrinks
as Pirates of the Caribbean and
which was an exciting prospect for
multiple times, required different
Transformers, but for The Walk he
the tiny details. Photos from the
veteran Russell Earl. “For us, that
techniques. Mostly, Earl’s team
and his team instead worked to
lifespan of the buildings were exam-
was a big opportunity to try different
drew from the aesthetic of macro-
make those effects as invisible as
ined, along with original blueprints,
things, to create something people
photography—which captures tiny
possible. The task not only was to
yet the VFX team quickly discovered
haven’t seen before,” he says.
objects at larger-than-life-size—to
recreate 1970s New York City, but
that if the blueprints were followed
create the scene’s look and feel.
also its most iconic buildings: the
exactly, the resulting digital recre-
so small that he essentially falls
“Everyone’s familiar with shots of
World Trade Center’s Twin Tow-
ation looked obviously fake. “There
between the cracks in the universe.
insects, or close-ups on flowers,” he
ers. The film is about the real-life
is a certain amount of humanity in
“Ant-Man is shrinking but also travel-
says. “How you do that is you take a
story—also told in James Marsh’s
architecture,” Baillie says, adding
ing towards the camera,” Earl says. “If
bunch of photos and rack through
Oscar-winning documentary
that it’s due to everything from the
you were making size and perspec-
the focus on the camera because
Man on Wire—of how Frenchman
time of day a component was made
tive a part of it, he would be further
the macro lenses can only take so
Philippe Petit walked a tightrope
to the technique of a given construc-
away the smaller he got, and as he
much detail at such small distance.
he illegally hoisted between the
tion worker. The production factored
grew he would get larger.” Ordinarily,
Those pictures then get combined
then-unfinished buildings in
various imperfections, as well as
scale would be created by depth of
and you layer them together to get
1974. “Recreating the Towers was
such mundane details as the drapes
field or using ordinary objects blown
the sharp image.”
one of the most nerve-wracking
and couches in the World Trade
things we had to do because of
Center offices—visible, incidentally,
the cultural and emotional hold
only in the 3-D version of the film—to
they have for people,” Baillie says.
make the rendering of the buildings
In the scene, Ant-Man becomes
Another overarching challenge was to achieve realism in
34
The process even extended to
feel real. “In order to make you feel some-
The Walk without the effects
thing, you can’t draw attention to
becoming a distraction for the
the fact that it’s fake,” Baillie insists.
audience. Citing films from his
“It was a unique pleasure being in a
childhood that used effects more
place to not only create seamless
sparingly than is the norm now,
visuals, but also have the film so
Baillie says his goal for The Walk,
completely transport people that
“was to let (the effects) live in the
they’re reacting and getting sweaty
background... It’s all about the
palms while watching.”
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Crew Call.indd 34
11/20/15 12:33 PM
FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION
BEST ACTRESS OLIVIA WILDE
2015 OFFICIAL SELECTION
HAMPTONS INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
“Olivia Wilde is electrifying. She delivers the finest acting performance of her career.” -Clayton Davis, AwardsCircuit.com
“Wilde’s turn in Meadowland deserves to be talked about for years to come. It’s the best work she has done yet... and it’s nothing short of remarkable.” -Kate Erbland, FilmSchoolRejects.com
A FILM BY REED MORANO
MEADOWLAND /MEADOWLANDFILM
Untitled-38 1
@MEADOWLANDFILM
@MEADOWLANDFILM
#MEADOWLAND
11/19/15 5:41 PM
★ | final frame
DOUBLE EXPOSURE While rare, an actor receiving dual Oscar nominations in both lead and supporting categories has occurred more frequently among women than men (eight incidents to three, respectively). The first double nominee was Fay Bainter in 1938, nommed for lead in White Banners and supporting for Jezebel, which she won. The most recent female double nominee was Cate Blanchett in 2007—lead for Elizabeth: The Golden Age, supporting for I’m Not There. It so happens that Blanchett again is the most talked about candidate for double noms this year for her inspired turns in Truth and Carol, the latter of which reunited the actress with her I’m Not There director Todd Haynes. Will Haynes be her lucky charm again this year? We’ll see. In the meantime, here are the other members of this exclusive women’s club. —Matthew Grobar 2007 CATE BLANCHETT Lead Actress: Elizabeth: The Golden Age Supporting Actress: I’m Not There 2002 JULIANNE MOORE Lead Actress: Far From Heaven Supporting Actress: The Hours 1993 HOLLY HUNTER Lead Actress: The Piano* Supporting Actress: The Firm 1993 EMMA THOMPSON Lead Actress: The Remains of the Day Supporting Actress: In the Name of the Father 1988 SIGOURNEY WEAVER Lead Actress: Gorillas in the Mist Supporting Actress: Working Girl 1982 JESSICA LANGE Lead Actress: Frances Supporting Actress: Tootsie* 1942 TERESA WRIGHT Lead Actress: The Pride of the Yankees Supporting Actress: Mrs. Miniver* 1938 FAY BAINTER Lead Actress: White Banners Supporting Actress: Jezebel*
Cate B lanche t t Carol
*Oscar win
36
D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
AL02_Final Frame.indd 36
I L L U S T RAT I O N BY
Bram Vanhaeren
11/20/15 12:35 PM
Untitled-37 1
11/19/15 5:40 PM
“AS ENLIGHTENING AS IT IS ENTERTAINING, AS SOBERING AS IT IS EXHILARATING, ‘STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON’ REMINDS VIEWERS NOT ONLY WHO N.W.A WERE AND WHAT THEY MEANT, BUT ALSO WHY THEY MATTERED–AND STILL DO.”
“‘STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON’ AIMS TO CROSS CULTURES ANDITSANCTIFY THE WISDOM OF THE STREET. MAKES A UNIVERSAL UNDERDOG STORY AND IT SUCCEEDS ON A VISCERAL LEVEL. AMONG THE MOST POTENT RAGS-TO-RICHES SHOWBIZ MOVIES EVER MADE.”
“AN EXULTANT RAP-TO-RICHES STORY. IT’S A STORY DRIVEN BY CLASSIC TENSIONS: STRUGGLE AND
TRIUMPH, DIVISION AND CONQUEST, GROUP AND INDIVIDUAL.”
“A POWERFUL, ENGAGING AND COMPELLING STORY OF HOW AMERICA CHALLENGED AND CHANGED
FIVE YOUNG BLACK MEN, AND HOW THEY IN TURN CHALLENGED AND CHANGED AMERICA. IT NEVER LACKS FOR SOMETHING TO SAY OR TO SHOW US.”
FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION
BEST PICTURE Untitled-39 1
© 2015 UNIVERSAL STUDIOS
universalpicturesawards.com
11/19/15 5:42 PM