BrerJon
Well-Known Member
View attachment 84127
How about a caption contest?
"Powerful you have become. The dark side I sense in you."
View attachment 84127
How about a caption contest?
Looks like another decade of more of the same... new CEO can't get here quick enough.
Biggest upset of the night for me was BH6. Thought it was all about the Dragon.
Right, so how does a guy who didn't start with Disney until 1993 get credit for it. Something doesn't add up.
I mean this in the nicest way possible but you are not the gatekeeper of what constitutes the "highest quality" film.
The English (really theater) majors I went to college with pretty much hated anything that became popular. Back in my day, they loved Chariots of Fire, telling me I just had to see it. However, once it became popular, those same people belittled the movie because of its success.
That's not just elitist; that's stupid.
Today, some of those same theater majors are voting members of the Academy. You might even have heard of a few.
The Academy votes for the "Best" in various categories but what is "Best"?
As an actor, if you give the most amazing performance ever but then openly express that you're anti-X when X is the Hollywood's cause-of-the-day, you have a zero percent chance of winning the Oscar.
If you belittle something I believe in, I can't help but be affected when I judge your performance.
In my opinion, an actor or film should be judged solely by what's seen on the screen but that rarely happens.
Paul Newman, one of America's greatest actors, won his Oscar for probably his worst Best Actor nomination. He received the Oscar because he had lost 6 times before.
Just search the Internet for "best movies not to win Oscar" or "worst movies that won Best Picture".
Yes, I agree with what I think is your larger point that the most popular movie often is not the "best" movie, but very often neither is the one that wins "Best Picture".
And, by the way, I suspect that my artsy college friends working in today's Hollywood would not agree with you on what are the "highest quality films".
That's the phenomenon known as self loathing. And I have not bothered to see most of the dreck purporting to be movies these days, The Godfather was entertaining, The Sting was entertaining,
Sorry Hollyweird actors are usually self-centered boors and I don't see them working in schools and building houses unless the cameras are there unlike those evil small businessmen who actually contribute time and money to their communities.
Image from the Oscars some dude in diapers dancing around on stage, It's no wonder why the 21'st century will belong to the Chinese who still believe in hard work and scholarship while Hollyweird pushes it's message that the only thing that matters is a beautiful body and being 'sexy'.
I despise the anti-intellectual messages which emanate from Hollyweird, How many actors have a Masters or PhD?
They didn't pay anyone. The Academy just doesn't care about animation at all.
http://www.cartoonbrew.com/award-se...ters-are-clueless-about-animation-109456.html
Just listen to what this guy had to say:
I watch the Oscars every year, and every year I get bitter because some high quality popcorn movies (you know... the entertaining ones) rarely get a mention. Something like Guardians of the Galaxy was an excellent and entertaining movie yet all it gets is a couple of technical nominations.
Bill Simmons has a great idea about the Oscars... there should be a 5 year waiting period like the Hall of Fame. That allows us to see how the movie holds up over time. Look at the 2009 Oscars for example, Slumdog Millionaire wins best picture and it was a good movie. But The Dark Knight was the movie of the decade. Heath Ledger deservedly won the best supporting actor, but I'm willing to bet that he wouldn't have even been nominated if he didn't pass away the year the movie came out.
The Academy is far from perfect but get it right more than they get it wrong in my opinion. Often the “mistakes” the Academy makes are nothing more than not appreciating a film in the moment. Famously Ordinary People picked over Raging Bull for Best Picture and more recently Titanic (A box office success!) beating out LA Confidential, which now feels like the wrong choice.
I watch the Oscars every year, and every year I get bitter because some high quality popcorn movies (you know... the entertaining ones) rarely get a mention. Something like Guardians of the Galaxy was an excellent and entertaining movie yet all it gets is a couple of technical nominations.
Bill Simmons has a great idea about the Oscars... there should be a 5 year waiting period like the Hall of Fame. That allows us to see how the movie holds up over time. Look at the 2009 Oscars for example, Slumdog Millionaire wins best picture and it was a good movie. But The Dark Knight was the movie of the decade. Heath Ledger deservedly won the best supporting actor, but I'm willing to bet that he wouldn't have even been nominated if he didn't pass away the year the movie came out.
While I agree with the two examples you mentioned, I think the Academy gets it wrong far more often than it gets it right.
Relatively few of the consensus "best movies of all time" won Best Picture. I think the Best Picture winners from the last fifteen years are particularly weak. I count one masterwork in that time span (No Country for Old Men). The others are good to mediocre to awful (Crash).
While I agree with the two examples you mentioned, I think the Academy gets it wrong far more often than it gets it right.
Relatively few of the consensus "best movies of all time" won Best Picture. I think the Best Picture winners from the last fifteen years are particularly weak. I count one masterwork in that time span (No Country for Old Men). The others are good to mediocre to awful (Crash).
Actually, I've been working on a post regarding FCPA in my free time over the past two days. From what I've been reading and this is all I will say for now, we are sitting under a powder keg.So what can we do to get wider press interested in Igergate? How do we make this a bigger story?
It should be a good one for many publications - the boss of Disney is on course for a bumpy opening for Shanghai that will make EuroDisney's first years look quite healthy in comparison, losing stockholders tons of money, and in the process $800M has disappeared, possibly into the pockets of Chinese officials.
The only article to give negative analysis on Shanghai gets shut down by Iger's wife, in a big breach of journalism ethics.
These events should be really interesting to Wall Street publications, and anyone doing corporate investigative journalism, but nobody seems to care except us. Has Iger really built such an impenetrable wall of love around him that nobody has the slightest interest in questioning him anymore?
So what can we do to get wider press interested in Igergate? How do we bring this to the public's attention like SaveDisney managed to with Eisner?
It should be a good one for many publications - the boss of Disney is on course for a bumpy opening for Shanghai that will make EuroDisney's first years look quite healthy in comparison, losing stockholders tons of money, and in the process $800M has disappeared, possibly into the pockets of Chinese officials.
The only article to give negative analysis on Shanghai gets shut down by Iger's wife, in a big breach of journalism ethics.
These events should be really interesting to Wall Street publications, and anyone doing corporate investigative journalism, but nobody seems to care except us. Has Iger really built such an impenetrable wall of love around him that nobody has the slightest interest in questioning him anymore?
You mean the film that Clint Eastwood walked out on and forced Bradley Cooper to finish?
The Russians and Chinese youth, the most impressionable audiences, are very familiar with American pop culture. Birdman has likely been torrented millions of times in PRC and RF. They know who NPH is through "How I Met Your Mother". Just because State-Owned media is trying to push a narrative does not mean it is being accepted by the public. You give the people of PRC and RF very little credit for free thought.
Hong Kong is not mainland China; and the Chinese government's presentation of America is more important than the conspicuous consumption (good book, btw) that exists within the Chinese country.
Well you know.. most voters for animated film do not even care.. unless it has the "disney" brand all stamped.Hey Guys? I hate to try and be the voice of reason but can we try and keep the politics out of our movie discussion, mostly in an effort not to derail the entire thread?
Biggest upset of the night for me was BH6. Thought it was all about the Dragon.
Honestly, there's no smoking gun...yet. Most of what has been talked about here isn't going to interest main stream media or Wall Street. If the SEC or some other federal agency starts a formal probe into TWDC's actions in China or if a Congressman calls for an investigation (like the child privacy one from a few years ago) that would be a major story. Right now the only story is that Iger and his wife got that story killed, but there's still really no smoking gun there either. We all know it happened, but without actual proof or at least a well connected source going on the record to confirm it major media probably won't touch it. The best anyone here can do is continue to talk about it and hope enough buzz is generated to encourage further investigation or possibly encourage a whistleblower if something highly illegal is really going on.So what can we do to get wider press interested in Igergate? How do we bring this to the public's attention like SaveDisney managed to with Eisner?
It should be a good one for many publications - the boss of Disney is on course for a bumpy opening for Shanghai that will make EuroDisney's first years look quite healthy in comparison, losing stockholders tons of money, and in the process $800M has disappeared, possibly into the pockets of Chinese officials.
The only article to give negative analysis on Shanghai gets shut down by Iger's wife, in a big breach of journalism ethics.
These events should be really interesting to Wall Street publications, and anyone doing corporate investigative journalism, but nobody seems to care except us. Has Iger really built such an impenetrable wall of love around him that nobody has the slightest interest in questioning him anymore?
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