Showing posts with label The Artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Artist. Show all posts

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Academy Awards Week: Best Original Score-Time for a Change Again!

Picking my favorite technical category is a Sophie's Choice for me. I love the imagery captured by the cinematography, the way the editing cuts to capture things at the right moment or helps narrate the focus of the story, and then there is always the visual effects and how they can create a brand new world.  There is one more category I left out, and it may be my favorite, but it depends on the day, and that is the original score.

Throughout the years the music or score for a film tends to be the glue to that holds the film together, or launches memories of film experience.  There are many films scores that are infamous, and have not only left an indelible mark on my film experience, but even fans who are not fans of these films can recognize the scores from certain films.  Here are a few examples:

Gone with the Wind (1939)

The Godfather (1972)

Star Wars (1977)

Raiders of the Lost Ark

The Lion King-Hans Zimmer (1994)

Titanic-James Horner (1997)

These are just 6 scores that come to mind as incredibly memorable by the masses.  The music in them can illicit fan boy gasps (Star Wars) or bring tears (Titanic).  Music has a powerful hold on people, thus explaining why a film's score can be one of the most important elements of a film.

Throughout the years this category has looked incredibly different at the Academy Awards, the name of this category has changed, the people who were nominated has changed, the category was broken between musicals and other films, and at one point between dramas and comedies.

When this category began in 1934 the music director not the composer was honored with the award for best music scoring (from 1934-1937).  From 1937 through 1945 every film that submitted in this category was considered a nominee.  There were years during this period where there were anywhere from 14 to 11 nominees.  From 1946 through 1961 the category was broken down into two categories, score of a dramatic or comedy picture and scoring for a musical picture.  From 1962 through 1967 the two categories were original music score, and scoring of a music adaptation or treatment. These little changes went back and forth incorporating adapted scores, musical scores etc until 1984.  In 1985 the category took on the title Best Original Score.  There was only one more short period of delineation from 1995-1998 when the category was broken down into best dramatic score and best score for a musical or comedy.  This changed back to the category that started in 1985 Best Original Score.

This award has evolved as music has evolved throughout film history.  When musicals and adapted scores were in high use this category changed to honor scores that represented the best in music.  During the 1960s and 1970s when musical films and adapted music was prominently used the Academy started to change the category around as they saw fit.  Recently they have done this with the Best Picture category, their adjustments for this have not worked, and they need to go back to the drawing board.  I think this category needs a good reboot or update as well.

 In recent years many scores have been ruled ineligible, partly because many scores rely heavily on pre-existing material in their score.  One example from this year is Drive, which is the best score of 2011.  Last year four films did not make the cut: Black Swan, The Fighter, The Kids are Alright, and True Grit.  The Black Swan and True Grit were both scores and should have been considered for this category.  2009 saw another one of the best score black balled.  Where the Wild Things Are was one of the best most unique scores of the decade and the Oscars ruling seems to raise a series of red flags.  I noticed this pattern start two happen when two more great scores were ruled ineligible in 2007.  Johnny Greenwood did the breathtaking score for There will be Blood and Eddie Vedder did the haunting score for Into the Wild. These snubs are unacceptable, and the Academy needs to take note of the scores that are being left behind by these rulings.  A lot of the rulings for ineligibility seemed to be associated with non traditional music composers.

Film scores are evolving. One of the trends happening here is that former successful musicians are breaking out from their traditional form of music and creating music for films that is not only creating an evolution for scoring, but for the emotional context of films.  Last year Trent Reznor won for scoring The Social Network with Atticus Ross.  This year the duo did the score for The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and were snubbed.  I feel as though this branch is feeling a bit protective and becoming a bit snobby.  

With several impressive score missing from this year, and in recent years this category has become boring.  Here are the nominees for Best Original Score this year:

The Adventures of Tinitin-John Williams
The Artist-Ludovic Bource
Hugo-Howard Shore
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy-Alberto Iglesias
War Horse-John Williams

(The clip below is a compilation of all this years scores)

Honestly there is no much debate about this years best score winner.  This is one award in the technical categories that will easily go to The Artist, the only spoiler could be Howard Shore's Hugo.  While I do not want to take anything away from these men there were numerous scores snubbed because they do not fit within the norm.  I think it's time for the Academy to make a change and adapt this category.

Prediction: The Artist
Spoiler: Hugo


Monday, February 20, 2012

Academy Awards Week: Best Cinematography

One of my favorite parts of a film is the cinematography.  Many people do not know what cinematography is, or how it is one of the most essential parts to a film.  Cinematography is the creation of film images.  The cinematographer will of use a movie camera with film or digital imagery to capture what they want to show the audience.

The American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) define cinematography as "a creative and interpretive process that culminates in the authorship of an original work of art rather than the simple recording of a physical event. Cinematography is not a subcategory of photography. Rather, photography is but one craft that the cinematographer uses in addition to other physical, organizational, managerial, interpretive and image-manipulating techniques to effect one coherent process."


At the advent of film history the cinematographer was the director, but as technology advanced these two roles became different.  The director was no longer the camera operator.  New technologies like color, and wide screen necessitated someone who was a specialist and their sole task was to capture the images and operate the camera.


As film has evolved from the silent era to present day the cinematographers continue to create visually beautiful images for the audiences to see.  During the silent era cinematographers had to work extra hard to make sure that without sound the visual created a cohesive element to the story.  As newer technologies present them self (or return) like 3D cinematographers have to work hard attain an image that captures the genuine emotional experience of the scene.


This year there were several films that did a fantastic job utilizing the brilliance of their cinematographer, here are my personal favorites.


1-The Tree of Life-Emmanual Lubezsi (director of photography)

tree-thumb-500x268-15697\

2-Drive-Newton Thomas Sigel (director of photography)

drive2

3-Hugo-Robert Richardson

Hugo62

4-Shame-Sean Bobbitt

Shame


5-Melancholia-Manuel Alberto Claro


Melancholia


6-The Artist-Guillame Schiffman

CA.1205.top.shots.
7-Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2-Eduardo Serra

Image Detail

8-The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo-Jeffrey Cronenwerth

Dragon Tattoo Snowy

9-Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy-Hoyte Van Hoytema

Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy


10-Take Shelter-Adam Stone

takeshelter1

These are just merely the top ten on my list there are many other films like Moneyball, Rise of the Planet of the Apes, Martha Marcy May Marlene, Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol and many more that could be included amongst this wonderful work.  The cinematographer is one of the hardest working film professionals today.  They have the responsibility to make the film's visual look and feel connect to the emotional aspects of the film.  No, they do not just have to make things look pretty, but in a sense they need to make things look as though each image tells a story.

So who made the cut for the Academy Awards:

The Artist
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Hugo
The Tree of Life 
War Horse 

This is a tough category to predict.  The ASC Guild Award went the the best cinematography of the year, The Tree of Life, but will this line-up at the Academy Awards?  I hope so, but I am not confident.  I think any of these five films could win, but I am pretty sure with little to no passion behind it War Horse is out.  I was a little surprised it made the Best Picture category.  While Dragon Tattoo has some beautiful cinematography it does not have a Best Picture nomination, do the two go hand in hand, not always, but I think the film will go home empty handed.  This leave three films open to three different scenarios come Oscar night.

1) The Artist has a clean sweep.  I do not think it will have a clean sweep, especially since the Academy is catching some flack for rubber stamping this film.  While I do agree the cinematography is one of the best parts of this film because it captures the silence so well, I do not think this film will capture this trophy on Oscar night.

2) Hugo sweeps the technical categories.  Hugo has 11 nominations and a lot of across the board support in the technical categories.  This is a beautiful film, and I would not begrudge the win.  At the moment I am torn between this and The Tree of Life.


3) Justice-The Tree of Life wins because, well it's the best cinematography of the year.  Even those people who did not love, or did not get this film still state the cinematography was amazing.

Will and Should Win: The Tree of Life
Very Close Second: Hugo
Spoiler: The Artist

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Michel Hazanavicius from The Artist wins the Directors Guild Award and Pops a Hole in the Balloon (Fun) for Awards Season

In a not so surprising outcome, Michel Hazanavicius from The Artist won the Director's Guild prize last night for feature film.  Prior to the Broadcast Film Critics Awards and the Golden Globes this award season looked to have some mystery, but then came The Artist.


First and foremost I have to say I gave The Artist four stars out of five, and I do not think it's a bad film.  Many people have compared its trajectory slightly to Te King's Speech from last year.  As in, how can you hate this film, it's the most heartwarming, and like able of all of the nominees.  The Artist pays homage to the early days of film, and people are suckers for nostalgia.  I do admire the film, I laughed a lot, felt connected to the couple in the film (even though the script used the  A Star is Born type relationship), and while I was afraid that using silence was going to be a gimmick, it was not, and done well.  


I think my problem is not with the film itself but with the actual award shows themselves.  It seems as though many of them are afraid to pick something different.  In the last few years films match up and win straight through award season, and by the time the Oscars roll around things are way too predictable.  This makes me want to skip the award show.  Yes, I said it, the person who loves award shows, wants to skip them.  Where's the drama? The Excitement?  Every voting body can not think think that The Artist was the best film, that's some heard mentality going on there.  Has Mrs, Eleanor Shawn Iselin (the Lansbury verson) played cards with all of these voters?


I know I sound snotty, and I do not want to take anything away from Hazanavicius; his direction is solid, while  not the best this year, he did good work.  I think the voters get lazy, and feel as though sending this film through bolsters their ego and makes voting bodies feel as though they are a part of making something happen. Stop!  Pick, what you honestly think is the best.  I will step away from this now (for today).


Here is the official list of winners:



Best Director for a Feature Film
Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist
Feature Documentary
James Marsh, Project Nim
Drama Series
Patty Jenkins, The Killing, “Pilot” (AMC)
Comedy Series
Robert B. Weide, Curb Your Enthusiasm, “Palestinian Chicken” (HBO) (Great Win)!!
Movies for Television and Miniseries
Jon Cassar, The Kennedys (Reelz Channel)
Reality Series
Neil P. Degroot, The Biggest Loser, “Episode #1115” (NBC)
Musical/Variety Series
Glenn Weiss, 65th Annual Tony Awards (CBS)
Daytime Serials
William Ludel, General Hospital, “Intervention” (ABC)

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

The 84th Annual Academy Award Nominations: The Good, the Bad, the Ugly, Surprising, and Seeing into the Future

Today at 8:30 am EST/5:30 PST the Academy Award nominations were announced by Academy Award nominee from last year Jennifer Lawrence (Winter's Bone) Tom Sherak the President of the Academy of Motion Picture Art and Sciences (AMPAS) or the Academy.

The Good

The Tree of Life and 3 nominations-Whether you love it, hate it, or well no matter what you feel, this film deserves respect.  While I myself stated it was a bit self indulgent for about 10 minutes, the film is still amazing.  Tree was largely ignored by many of the guilds, and the globes.  The only group who actually included it were the critics, way to go!  This was the best thing I saw this morning.

Hugo leading the nominations with 11-There is a lot of support for this film and it scored one more nomination than The Artist.  While I respect The Artist, I do not love it, it reminds me of The King's Speech last year (but better).  Scorsese took things in a different direction, and I am proud of his success.

Rooney Mara, Melissa McCarthy, Gary Oldman-These three names may not have been expected, sure they had some love from the Globes and SAG, but they were not locks.  Oldman did not have much of anything.  I have to say I love Mara's performance.  McCarthy is breath of fresh air, even with her leg up in the air.  These two woman could not be more different, and their performances are on completely different spectrum, but I am happy for them both.  Oldman stole Fassbender's spot, which is sad, but he is great in Tinker Tailor.

A Separation and Margin Call in the screenplay categories- The screenwriters know good work, and I glad they picked these films.  This year has not had the strongest screenplays.  The funny thing is that this year's original screenplays were much stronger than the adapted screenplays.

The Bad

No Dragon Score-The exclusion of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo from Best Picture and Director does not bother me.  While the film is solid I would not place it as of the 10 best films of the year.  The film had a lot of strong technical aspects like the cinematography and editing (which it was nominated for), but the score was ignored?  Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross provided one of the best scores of the year, and took home the trophy last year for The Social Network.  How did this fail?

No Swinton, or Fassbender-Swinton is amazing in We Need to Talk About Kevin, and her in over Close is something I would challenge.  While I have not seen Close's performance she looks wooden and unemotional.  Fassbender had four amazing roles this year, but his best work was in Shame.  These are two performances the Academy will be kicking themselves for not nominating in the future.

The Ugly

War Horse and Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close-Proof that the new Academy Awards system is a joke!  Before I say anything I have to say I have to say these are the only two Best Picture winners I have not seen.  A friend of mine has seen both and told me War Horse is not bad, it is just one of the best films of the year, and Loud is just not good and overwrought.  I do not want to see Loud at all, I think the film looks manipulative. I am choosing the word manipulative because the film appears to try and control your emotional experience more than in any other film.   I will see these films at some point, and prove myself right.

Drive gets one nomination-Is this a joke?  The Academy has pulled some dumb things, but only giving Drive one nomination in Best Sound Editing, and even snubbing Albert Brooks for Max Von Sydow is a huge mistake.

Take Shelter gets nothing! This film was flawless and has my pick for Best Actor and Supporting Actress this year.  Michael Shannon should have received a nomination, and Jessica Chatain should have been nominated for this film instead.

The Surprising


The Help gets only 4 nominations-  I expected The Help to have 8 nominations.  The nominations I expected but it did not receive were in screenplay, song, editing, and costume design.  The Help has three acting nominations, and a nomination for Best Picture.  This proves that support of this film is waning.   The Help is tied with The Descendants, Midnight in Paris.

Damien Bichir and Max Von Sydow-Even though Bichir had a SAG nomination for Best Actor, I figured that was a fluke.  I am excited to see the film, it looked wonderful.  Von Sydow is a veteran and well respected but received no pre-cursor nominations, I was shocked to see his nomination.

Looking ahead with the nominations announced, and bypassing my own bias, what happens next?  Who wins, will there be any surprises?

Hugo and The Artist appear to have the most support.  If Martin Scorsese wins the DGA, then Hugo will be a real threat.  Hugo has the most nominations this year with 11, and statistically speaking the film with the most nominations wins Best Picture.  For example The King's Speech had the most last year, but this is not always the case.  Many films have won without this statistic like A Beautiful Mind, The Departed and even Slumdog Millionaire (in recent years).  The Artist has ten nominations, and with such strong support for two films there will bound to be smaller win totals for the actual Best Picture winner.  Right now the The Artist is out front.

In the acting categories I think Best Actor is between Clooney Dujardin and Brad Pitt is a spoiler.  The Screen Actor's Guild will clear up this race.  The unknown Bachir and Dujardin may cancel each other out.  It seems as though each of them has a decent base of support but neither of them will take down the Clooney.

I have been predicting Viola Davis to win Best Actress at the Screen Actor's Guild Awards.  The Help received the most nominations, and has a great deal of support.  Many people thought it would be a threat in the Best Picture race.  Today's nominations prove that to not be true.  Where does this leave Viola Davis.  I am putting Davis out ahead slightly; she is in a Best Picture nominee, but look for Streep to provide a lot of challenge.

Today's Best Picture nominations prove that this system is out of touch, and two weak nominees weigh down the fact that great things did happen.  I am not thrilled with this year's nominees, but here's to hoping the Academy picks wisely.

Saturday, January 21, 2012

The Artist Inches Closer to Winning Best Picture with a win at the Producer's Guild

Tonight Hollywood made a declaration, the declaration was one of silence.  The silent film The Artist was named the best theatrical feature by the Producer's Guild of America (PGA). In the 22 year history of the award  15 of those winning films went on to win Best Picture.  The Artist winning this award tonight proves to provide it with some pretty good odds as the Academy Awards draw nearer.  The interesting thing about the more recent years is that from 2000 to the present four films did not match up (Moulin Rouge,The Aviator, Brokeback Mountain, and Little Miss Sunshine).  This Guild has however matched exactly since 2007.  I think The Artist is going to win this award easily this year.  I will say the film's name is not engraved on the statue, heck the nominations have not even been announced, but I predict it will do well.

Listed Below is the list of winners in the film and television categories:

Theatrical Feature: The Artist
Animated Feature: The Adventures of Tintin
TV Drama: Boardwalk Empire
TV Longform: Downton Abbey
TV Comedy: Modern Family
TV News: 60 Minutes
TV Sports: ESPN’s 30 for 30
TV Variety: The Colbert Report
TV Documentary: American Masters
TV Reality: The Amazing Race

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

BAFTA Award Nominations Highlight The Artist, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, and Hugo

Today the British Academy of Film Television Arts (BAFTA) announced their nominations.  BAFTA is the UK's version of the Academy Awards. These awards typically help give a good perspective on the Academy Awards.  


British films/actors typically are always given nominations, and these nominations do not always follow to the Oscars, like Judi Dench's nomination for My Week with Marilyn, which is a throw away nomination.  Meanwhile BAFTA also picks some pretty great surprises with Brit Lynne Ramsey nominated for Best Director for We Need to Talk About Kevin.


Two films received a major boost here, Drive, and Tinker Tailor  Soldier Spy.  Spy has the second most nominations with 11 including Best Picture.  Meanwhile Drive garnered 4 nominations, including the Best Picture race too.


The Artist has solidified its front runner status with a total of 12 nominations.  Meanwhile The Descendants which won at the Globes only received 3 nominations setting this film back a bit.  The other big surprise in the world of frontrunners is that Hugo received 9 nominations and no Best Picture nomination.  Hugo is still a serious threat but this weakens its chances. At the middle ground My Week with Marilyn (a British film) received 6 nominations The Help had 5, and War Horse had 5 nominations.


This award show tends to have an impact or helps to predict the winners, it can also help predict some surprise nominations because many of the members of the Academy are British.  Here is the complete list of nominations:



BEST FILM
  • THE ARTIST – Thomas Langmann
  • THE DESCENDANTS – Jim Burke, Alexander Payne, Jim Taylor
  • DRIVE – Marc Platt, Adam Siegel
  • THE HELP – Brunson Green, Chris Columbus, Michael Barnathan
  • TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY – Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Robyn Slovo
DIRECTOR
  • THE ARTIST – Michel Hazanavicius
  • DRIVE Nicolas – Winding Refn
  • HUGO – Martin Scorsese
  • TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY – Tomas Alfredson
  • WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN – Lynne Ramsay
LEADING ACTOR
  • BRAD PITT – Moneyball
  • GARY OLDMAN – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
  • GEORGE CLOONEY – The Descendants
  • JEAN DUJARDIN – The Artist
  • MICHAEL FASSBENDER – Shame
LEADING ACTRESS
  • BÉRÉNICE BEJO The Artist – Film
  • MERYL STREEP – The Iron Lady
  • MICHELLE WILLIAMS – My Week with Marilyn
  • TILDA SWINTON – We Need to Talk About Kevin
  • VIOLA DAVIS – The Help
SUPPORTING ACTOR
  • CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER – Beginners
  • JIM BROADBENT – The Iron Lady
  • JONAH HILL – Moneyball
  • KENNETH BRANAGH – My Week with Marilyn
  • PHILIP SEYMOUR HOFFMAN – The Ides of March
SUPPORTING ACTRESS
  • CAREY MULLIGAN – Drive
  • JESSICA CHASTAIN – The Help
  • JUDI DENCH – My Week with Marilyn
  • MELISSA MCCARTHY – Bridesmaids
  • OCTAVIA SPENCER – The Help
OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM
  • MY WEEK WITH MARILYN – Simon Curtis, David Parfitt, Harvey Weinstein, Adrian Hodges
  • SENNA – Asif Kapadia, James Gay-Rees, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Manish Pandey
  • SHAME – Steve McQueen, Iain Canning, Emile Sherman, Abi Morgan
  • TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY – _Tomas Alfredson, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Robyn Slovo, Bridget O’Connor, Peter Straughan
  • WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN – Lynne Ramsay, Luc Roeg, Jennifer Fox, Robert Salerno, Rory Stewart Kinnear
OUTSTANDING DEBUT BY A BRITISH WRITER, DIRECTOR OR PRODUCER
  • ATTACK THE BLOCK – Joe Cornish (Director/Writer)
  • BLACK POND – Will Sharpe (Director/Writer), Tom Kingsley (Director), Sarah Brocklehurst (Producer)
  • CORIOLANUS – Ralph Fiennes (Director)
  • SUBMARINE – Richard Ayoade (Director/Writer)
  • TYRANNOSAUR – Paddy Considine (Director), Diarmid Scrimshaw (Producer)
DOCUMENTARY
  • GEORGE HARRISON: LIVING IN THE MATERIAL WORLD – Martin Scorsese
  • PROJECT NIM – James Marsh, Simon Chinn
  • SENNA – Asif Kapadia
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
  • THE ARTIST – Michel Hazanavicius
  • BRIDESMAIDS – Annie Mumolo, Kristen Wiig
  • THE GUARD – John Michael McDonagh
  • THE IRON LADY – Abi Morgan
  • MIDNIGHT IN PARIS – Woody Allen
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
  • THE DESCENDANTS – Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, Jim Rash
  • THE HELP – Tate Taylor
  • THE IDES OF MARCH – George Clooney, Grant Heslov, Beau Willimon
  • MONEYBALL – Steven Zaillian, Aaron Sorkin
  • TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY – Bridget O’Connor, Peter Straughan
FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
  • INCENDIES – Denis Villeneuve, Luc DĂ©ry, Kim McGraw
  • PINA – Wim Wenders, Gian-Piero Ringel
  • POTICHE – François Ozon, Eric Altmayer, Nicolas Altmayer
  • A SEPARATION – Asghar Farhadi
  • THE SKIN I LIVE IN – Pedro AlmodĂłvar, Agustin AlmodĂłvar
ANIMATED FILM
  • HE ADVENTURES OF TINTIN: THE SECRET OF THE UNICORN – Steven Spielberg
  • ARTHUR CHRISTMAS – Sarah Smith
  • RANGO – Gore Verbinski
ORIGINAL MUSIC
  • THE ARTIST – Ludovic Bource
  • THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO – Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross
  • HUGO Howard – Shore
  • TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY – Alberto Iglesias
  • WAR HORSE – John Williams
CINEMATOGRAPHY
  • THE ARTIST – Guillaume Schiffman
  • THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO – Jeff Cronenweth
  • HUGO – Robert Richardson
  • TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY – Hoyte van Hoytema
  • WAR HORSE – Janusz Kaminski
EDITING
  • THE ARTIST – Anne-Sophie Bion, Michel Hazanavicius
  • DRIVE – Mat Newman
  • HUGO – Thelma Schoonmaker
  • SENNA – Gregers Sall, Chris King
  • TINKER TAILOR SOLIDER – SPY Dino Jonsater
PRODUCTION DESIGN
  • THE ARTIST – Laurence Bennett, Robert Gould
  • HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS – PART 2 – Stuart Craig, Stephenie McMillan
  • HUGO – Dante Ferretti, Francesca Lo Schiavo
  • TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY Maria Djurkovic, Tatiana MacDonald
  • WAR HORSE – Rick Carter, Lee Sandales
COSTUME DESIGN
  • THE ARTIST – Mark Bridges
  • HUGO – Sandy Powell
  • JANE EYRE – Michael O’Connor
  • MY WEEK WITH MARILYN – Jill Taylor
  • TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY – Jacqueline Durran
SOUND
  • THE ARTIST – Nadine Muse, GĂ©rard Lamps, Michael Krikorian
  • HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS – PART 2 – James Mather, Stuart Wilson, Stuart Hilliker, Mike Dowson, Adam Scrivener
  • HUGO – Philip Stockton, Eugene Gearty, Tom Fleischman, John Midgley
  • TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY – John Casali, Howard Bargroff, Doug Cooper, Stephen Griffiths, Andy Shelley
  • WAR HORSE – Stuart Wilson, Gary Rydstrom, Andy Nelson, Tom Johnson, Richard Hymns
SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS
  • THE ADVENTURES OF TINTIN: THE SECRET OF THE UNICORN – Joe Letteri
  • HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS – PART 2 – Tim Burke, John Richardson, Greg Butler, David Vickery
  • HUGO – Rob Legato, Ben Grossman, Joss Williams
  • RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES – Joe Letteri, Dan Lemmon, R. Christopher White
  • WAR HORSE – Ben Morris, Neil Corbould
MAKE UP & HAIR
  • THE ARTIST – Julie Hewett, Cydney Cornell
  • HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS – PART 2 – Amanda Knight, Lisa Tomblin
  • HUGO Morag – Ross, Jan Archibald
  • THE IRON LADY – Marese Langan
  • MY WEEK WITH MARILYN – Jenny Shircore
SHORT ANIMATION
  • ABUELAS – Afarin Eghbal, Kasia Malipan, Francesca Gardiner
  • BOBBY YEAH – Robert Morgan
  • A MORNING STROLL – Grant Orchard, Sue Goffe
SHORT FILM
  • CHALK – Martina Amati, Gavin Emerson, James Bolton, Ilaria Bernardini
  • MWANSA THE GREAT – Rungano Nyoni, Gabriel Gauchet
  • ONLY SOUND REMAINS – Arash Ashtiani, Anshu Poddar
  • PITCH BLACK HEIST – John Maclean, Gerardine O’Flynn
  • TWO AND TWO – Babak Anvari, Kit Fraser, Gavin Cullen
ORANGE WEDNESDAYS RISING STAR AWARD
  • ADAM DEACON
  • CHRIS HEMSWORTH
  • TOM HIDDLESTON
  • CHRIS O’DOWD
  • EDDIE REDMAYNE