Leave it to the Academy; they want to save their ratings, so they bring back the host whose two shows got such awful ratings that it plunged them into a hostless ceremony. And this is coming from someone who likes the guy! (I do understand playing it safe after what happened last year, though)
Didn't he just get attacked by twitter weirdos over his 'racist' Emmy hosting? It looks like they are inviting controversy to get ratings.
For some context, Kimmel was dragged on the stage flat on his back by Will Arnett while actress Quinta Brunson from Abbott Elementary accepted her Best Comedy Series writing Emmy (her first ever Emmy, she's first ever black woman to win the award). Brunson had to walk over Kimmel's prone body, where he then laid on-stage for the entirety of her speech and ensuing commercial break. Completely moved the spotlight from the winner to himself, and given the landmark win that Brunson's was, it definitely ignited some controversy then. If anything, it's a serious ding in audiences belief that he's respecting the creatives for the very ceremonies he's hosting; it's strange that he's back as Oscar host. I feel like we need Kimmel in a "Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend" format - stripped down, authentic and genuinely gut-busting. The gig 'Host of the Academy Awards' provides none of this.
Kimmel renewed his contract in Sept for another 3 years. I view this booking as an extension of that. I also wonder if it's a gig in Hollywood nobody else wants as award shows have been bad after Gervais Globes January 2020. Kimmel, doing the entire gig in "Weekend at Bernie's" mode might be funnier than him telling jokes, as shown by that Emmy incident.
It’s funny, the older I get the less I care about these shows. I haven’t myself turned on an awards show in years.
And it only took eight posts in a thread about an award show for someone to post a response saying that they don't care about award shows. I'm not trying to be confrontational or start an argument, I just never understand the motivation. I'm not a fan of the Grateful Dead (along with many other bands discussed here), but I don't go to threads that feature discussions about them just to say that I don't care about them.
We USED to like the award shows and now we don't, plus tv ratings are a fraction of what they were a decade ago. 2 ways your Dead analogy fails. There are 3-4 ways they could help bring back viewers, but getting a host like Kimmel is not among them.
Are you a "Twitter weirdo" for opposing his love of performing in blackface? The Academy Awards have become so irrelevent and no longer have the cachet that they once had. Kimmel and the Oscar's deserve each other.
I watch the Oscar's every year even though more often than not a bunch of no-name films get nominated. It's just the spectacle of the thing that keeps me coming back. It would be nice if something like The Batman or The Secrets of Dumbledore gets nominated, but I wouldn't bet on it.
After further digging you're right. "Thanksgiving", the winning episode from Master of None was co-written with Aziz Ansari - Brunson is the first solo win but Waithe was the first overall. Definitely worth clarifying, thanks (was pulling from Brunson's wiki, should have double checked)
It will be interesting to see what the contenders are over the next few weeks. I’m not generally in favour of having more than 5 Best Picture nominees, but I’ve seen two really good independent movies this week that might be contenders under a longer list, Banshees of Inisherin with Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleason, well directed, and Living, a 1950’s period piece which has a great lead turn by Bill Nighy that ought to be worth a best actor nod. Also plan to see Triangle of Sadness, a comedy which has had good reviews (and maybe won at Cannes ?).
Of those already released in 2022, the only popcorn movie that has a shot at Best Picture is "Top Gun: Maverick". Not counting the new "Black Panther" that just came out today, but I'm avoiding reviews of it so I don't know where it stands. The "Avatar" sequel could have a shot, too, depending on how it goes. "The Batman" was fairly well-regarded but not impactful enough for BP consideration. And "Dumbledore" was essentially a box office flop that got mediocre reviews - which it deserved, as it's blah like the 1st 2 "Beasts" movies. It doesn't deserve BP attention at all.
I used to make a special dinner for my wife because she liked the awards show so much. A few years ago she said, "I am going to DVR this and just fast forward to the stuff I like. It should take me about a half hour. You don't have to do anything special." It may not be the AA awards show in itself that has fallen from its pedestal but rather a casualty resulting from movies in general have lost some magic or luster that it once had and that affects the attractiveness to celebrations around the celluloid industry. Going to the show or renting a movie used to be a marked occasion but now it has become ordinary. Access to movies is so easy and common that it may have tarnished the glitter of the AA night.
It does seem they keep shooting themselves in the foot. The altered nomination rules they enacted a couple of years ago have already bit them and sure aren't bringing in viewers.
If the Academy wanted to be controversial and get great ratings then Dave Chappelle should be the host. Golden Globes went with Gervais and that was a hit. With Chappelle, everybody wins. We get a good show and the thin skinned morality police on the social sites get to whine about Dave's jokes for months.
Requirements for a good awards show host: 1. They have to be classy. It's a big, fancy night, they have to know how to keep it reigned in. 2. They have to be fast on their feet. If something funny happens, or something goes wrong, they have to know how to handle it. 3. They have to have a presence on stage. Just because you are a big name movie or TV actor doesn't mean you know what to do standing on a stage in front of hundreds of people. I think since Billy Crystal did such a good job, producers think that stand-up comics are automatically a good choice. They can be, but it seems they tend to go off-script more often than not. I'm beyond the point of caring, though. I haven't watched or cared about the academy awards in years.
To each their own. I really loved the first two Fantastic Beasts movies and thought this third one was even better. I know it's set before Voldemort and Harry Potter show up, but the story it tells with Newt Scamander and his awesome creatures, not to mention his friends and Dumbledore himself is equally as good as anything in the Harry Potter series. Just my opinion of course.
Of course. But even without my opinion, it just had no shot at an Oscar BP nom. It might get some attention for effects or costumes, though even there, probably not since it came out early-ish in the year and didn't do good business. The movie got iffy reviews, didn't sell tickets at a level expected of a big budget franchise movie and didn't seem especially well received by fans. I think "The Batman" might've had a shot at some Oscar love if it came out later in the year, though still probably not BP. However, it came out early enough that voters will probably have forgotten it by early 2023. As I noted, a BP nod for "Maverick" is a possibility, and maybe "Wakanda" and/or "Avatar 2". Unless there's a big blockbuster yet to come over the next 7 weeks that doesn't rise to mind, those seem like the only potential BP noms for popcorn flicks.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/oscar-noms-2023-1.6723623 Here are the nominees: Best picture All Quiet on the Western Front Avatar: The Way of Water The Banshees of Inisherin Elvis Everything Everywhere All At Once The Fabelmans Tár Top Gun: Maverick Triangle of Sadness Women Talking Actor in a leading role Austin Butler, Elvis Colin Farrell, The Banshees of Inisherin Brendan Fraser, The Whale Paul Mescal, Aftersun Bill Nighy, Living Actress in a leading role Cate Blanchett, Tár Ana de Armas, Blonde Andrea Riseborough, To Leslie Michelle Williams, The Fabelmans Michelle Yeoh, Everything Everywhere All at Once Directing Martin McDonagh, The Banshees of Inisherin Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, Everything Everywhere All At Once Todd Field, Tár Steven Spielberg, The Fabelmans Ruben Östlund, Triangle of Sadness Cinematography All Quiet on the Western Front Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths Elvis Empire of Light Tár Actress in a supporting role Angela Bassett (Black Panther: Wakanda Forever) Hong Chau (The Whale) Kerry Condon (The Banshees of Inisherin) Jamie Lee Curtis (Everything Everywhere All At Once) Stephanie Hsu (Everything Everywhere All At Once) Actor in a supporting role Brendan Gleeson, The Banshees of Inisherin Brian Tyree Henry, Causeway Judd Hirsch, The Fabelmans Barry Keoghan, The Banshees of Inisherin Ke Huy Quan, Everything Everywhere All At Once Animated feature film Pinocchio Puss in Boots: The Last Wish Marcel the Shell with Shoes On The Sea Beast Turning Red Achievement in costume design Babylon Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Elvis Everything Everywhere All At Once Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris Animated short film The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse The Flying Sailor Ice Merchants My Year of Dicks An Ostrich Told Me the World Is Fake and I Think I Believe It Live action short film An Irish Goodbye Ivalu Le Pupille Night Ride The Red Suitcase Makeup and hairstyling All Quiet on the Western Front The Batman Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Elvis The Whale Music (original score) All Quiet on the Western Front Babylon The Banshees of Inisherin Everything Everywhere All at once The Fabelmans Sound All Quiet On the Western Front Avatar: The Way of Water The Batman Elvis Top Gun: Maverick Writing (adapted screenplay) All Quiet on the Western Front Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery Living Top Gun: Maverick Women Talking Writing (original screenplay) Everything Everywhere All At Once The Banshees of Inisherin Tár The Fabelmans Triangle of Sadness The 95th Academy Awards will air on March 12, 2023.