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78th Academy Awards - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

78th Academy Awards

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

78th Academy Awards
Date Sunday, March 5, 2006
Site Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, California
Preshow Billy Bush
Chris Connelly
Cynthia Garrett
Vanessa Minnillo
Host Jon Stewart
Producer Gil Cates
Director Louis J. Horvitz
Duration 3 hours, 33 minutes

The 78th Academy Awards, honoring the best in film for 2005, were held on March 5, 2006 at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, California. They were hosted by The Daily Show host Jon Stewart. The ceremony was pushed back from its newly established February date because of the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.

The nominees were announced on January 31, 2006. Ang Lee's drama Brokeback Mountain, had the most nominations of the year's films, receiving eight. Its nominations included Best Actor, Best Director, and Best Picture. Paul Haggis' Crash, George Clooney's Good Night, and Good Luck, and Rob Marshall's Memoirs of a Geisha each received six nominations.

Contents

[edit] Major winners and nominees

This is a breakdown of only major winners. For a complete list of nominees and winners, see: 78th Academy Awards nominees and winners

[edit] Feature Films

Category Winner Producers/Country
Best motion picture of the year Crash Paul Haggis and Cathy Schulman
Best foreign language film Tsotsi Flag of South Africa South Africa
Best documentary feature March of the Penguins Luc Jacquet and Yves Darondeau
Best animated feature film of the year Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit Nick Park and Steve Box

[edit] Acting

Category Winner Movie
Best actor in a leading role Philip Seymour Hoffman Capote
Best actress in a leading role Reese Witherspoon Walk the Line
Best actor in a supporting role George Clooney Syriana
Best actress in a supporting role Rachel Weisz The Constant Gardener

[edit] Writing

Category Winner Movie
Original screenplay Paul Haggis and Bobby Moresco Crash
Adapted screenplay Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana Brokeback Mountain

[edit] Directing

Academy Award for Directing Ang Lee Brokeback Mountain

[edit] Special honors

[edit] Films with multiple nominations

Eight

Six

Five

Four

Three

Two

[edit] Films with multiple wins

The following films each won three Oscars.

[edit] Academy Award ceremony presenters and performers

Name Role Activity
Jessica Alba Presenter Co-presented with Eric Bana the Academy Award for Sound Mixing
Jennifer Aniston Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Costume Design
Lauren Bacall Presenter Introduced a tribute to Film noir (several of the clips featured Bacall)
Eric Bana Presenter Co-presented with Jessica Alba the Academy Award for Sound Mixing
Zach Braff Presenter Co-presented (as Chicken Little) with Joan Cusack (as Abby Mallard) the Academy Award for Animated Short Film
Sandra Bullock Presenter Co-presented with Keanu Reeves the Academy Award for Best Art Direction
Steve Carell Presenter Co-presented with Will Ferrell the Academy Award for Makeup
Stephen Colbert Narrator Narrated the spoof ads jokingly attacking nominees (did not appear in the ceremony).
George Clooney Presenter Introduced the In Memoriam segment
Russell Crowe Presenter Introduced a tribute to Biographical film
Joan Cusack Presenter Co-presented (as Abby Mallard) with Zach Braff (as Chicken Little) the Academy Award for Animated Short Film
Will Ferrell Presenter Co-presented with Steve Carell the Academy Award for Makeup
Jamie Foxx Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Morgan Freeman Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
Jennifer Garner Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Sound Editing
Jake Gyllenhaal Presenter Introduced a segment on epic films
Tom Hanks Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Best Director
Salma Hayek Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Original Music Score
Dustin Hoffman Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay
Terrence Howard Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject
Samuel L. Jackson Presenter Introduced a segment on political films
Tom Kane Announcer Announcer for the 78th Annual Academy Awards
Nicole Kidman Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Queen Latifah Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Best Song
Chris 'Ludacris' Bridges Presenter Introduced the performance of "It's Hard out Here for a Pimp"
Jennifer Lopez Presenter Introduced the performance of "In the Deep"
Rachel McAdams Host Hosted the Scientific and Technical Awards on February 18
Jack Nicholson Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Best Picture
Dolly Parton Performer Performed "Travelin' Thru", from Transamerica
Itzhak Perlman Performer Performed musical selections from the movies nominated for "Best Original Score"
Keanu Reeves Presenter Co-presented with Sandra Bullock the Academy Award for Best Art Direction
Will Smith Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
Jon Stewart Host Hosted the 78th Academy Awards
Ben Stiller Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Visual Effects
Meryl Streep Presenter Co-presented with Lily Tomlin the Honorary Academy Award to Robert Altman
Lily Tomlin Presenter Co-presented with Meryl Streep the Honorary Academy Award to Robert Altman
Hilary Swank Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Best Actor
Charlize Theron Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Documentary Feature
Three 6 Mafia Performers Performed "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp", from Hustle & Flow
Uma Thurman Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay
John Travolta Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Best Cinematography
Naomi Watts Presenter Introduced the performance of "Travelin' Thru"
Luke Wilson Presenter Co-presented with Owen Wilson the Academy Award for Live Action Short Film
Owen Wilson Presenter Co-presented with Luke Wilson the Academy Award for Live Action Short Film
Reese Witherspoon Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature
Kathleen York Performer Performed "In the Deep", from Crash
Ziyi Zhang Presenter Presented the Academy Award for Film Editing

In addition, previous Academy Awards hosts Billy Crystal, Chris Rock, Steve Martin, David Letterman and Whoopi Goldberg, as well as George Clooney, Mel Gibson and Halle Berry participated in a pre-taped comedy skit at the start of the broadcast. Tom Hanks, in addition to presenting an award, was also featured in a pre-taped skit about keeping acceptance speeches within the time limits.

[edit] Opening/Montages/Trivia

  • The opening featured former hosts who pretended to be declining to host again, with film-based settings including a quick parody of the tent scene from Brokeback Mountain, with Billy Crystal and Chris Rock; a family room in a house, with Steve Martin and some lookalike kids; a posh hotel room, with Whoopi Goldberg; David Letterman babysitting Steve Martin's "kids"; Mel Gibson on the set of his latest movie, Apocalypto; and even Mr. Moviefone. Cut to Jon Stewart being wakened (sharing a bed with Halle Berry) and falling asleep again, realizing it's a dream; then awakening again, sharing the bed with George Clooney, who advises Stewart it's not a dream, and to get up and get the show started.
  • The montage sequence after the opening shows western films with scenes involving male characters talking emotionally with perceived innuendo, a reference to Brokeback Mountain. Other montages in the ceremony saluted film noir, epic films, biographical films, and political commentary in film. Stewart later joked that there would be a montage on montages.
  • This was the first time Jamie Foxx, Jennifer Aniston, George Clooney, Luke Wilson, Steve Carell, Eric Bana, and Jessica Alba had ever presented an award.
  • This was the sixth time that Jack Nicholson had presented the award for Best Picture.
  • Presenter Jennifer Garner slipped and nearly fell on her way toward the dais, either from slippery soles or from getting tangled in her gown. She quickly righted herself and quipped at the mike, "I do my own stunts!" Later, she was asked what caused her to trip and she mentioned that as she was being fitted for her dress, she rushed through and it resulted it in being a little longer than it should have been.
  • Ben Stiller, in presenting the Visual Effects award, performed in a green-screen suit that was intended to render him "invisible" on screen; Stiller acted unaware that this special effect was ineffective (he would have to have been photographed offstage for the process to actually work). The entire presentation comprised a humorous reverse play on the technique of animated characters "appearing" on an otherwise unoccupied stage via a similar green-screen effect.
  • Will Ferrell and Steve Carell delivered their introductions to the Academy Award for Makeup in intentionally bad makeup; Ferrell in pasty-looking makeup and Carell was also wearing fake, thick eyelashes.
  • In addition to being a presenter, Tom Hanks performed in a pre-taped comedy skit about supposed Academy plans to rein in actors whose "Thank Yous" go on and on. Hanks' seemingly endless list is truncated when he is surrounded by musicians who beat him up with their instruments and "shoot" him with a tranquilizer dart.
  • Several spoof advertisements were shown, narrated by Stephen Colbert, a former correspondent from The Daily Show with Jon Stewart who currently hosts The Colbert Report. They attacked the candidacies of various nominees on behalf of other nominees, modeled on famous political ads. For example, in a parody of Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, "Dames for Truth" attacked Dame Judi Dench with absurd claims, such as that Dench poked a dame's eye out in a bar fight. The ad was capped with the disclaimer that Dames for Truth was "a shadow organization in no way affiliated with Felicity Huffman". In a parody of the Harry and Louise political ads (1993), an old couple complained about the "foreign" sounding names of the best actress nominees, other than Reese Witherspoon.
    • On March 2, 2006, Colbert used his "The Da Colbert Code" (a parody of Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code), a series of bizarrely random word associations, to accurately predict the Oscar winners for Best Supporting Actress, Best Actress, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actor, and Best Picture. The following show, on March 6, 2006, was marked by Colbert's proclamation that "I called it!" as balloons rained down from the ceiling. [1]
  • Three 6 Mafia was the first ever hip-hop act to perform at the Oscar ceremony. It is the second hip-hop song to win an Oscar, after Eminem's "Lose Yourself", from the film 8 Mile, won in 2002. Jon Stewart later commented on the "scorecard" at this point: Martin Scorsese had won zero Oscars; Three 6 Mafia had won one.
  • At the beginning of the ceremony, some political remarks were made satirizing and criticizing conservative America and the LBGT taboo (for instance, the montage on "gay" cowboy movies). Host Jon Stewart and winner George Clooney were among those most noted for their somewhat combative political remarks:
    • In Stewart's opening speech, he remarked, "Björk couldn't be here tonight... she was trying on her Oscar dress and Dick Cheney shot her." This was reference to the Dick Cheney hunting incident and the dress Björk wore at the 73rd Academy Awards.
    • As Clooney wrapped his acceptance speech upon his win, he remarked: "And finally, I would say that, you know, we are a little bit out of touch in Hollywood every once in a while. I think it's probably a good thing. We're the ones who talk about AIDS when it was just being whispered, and we talked about civil rights when it wasn't really popular. And we, you know, we bring up subjects. This Academy, this group of people, gave Hattie McDaniel an Oscar in 1939 when blacks were still sitting in the backs of theaters. I'm proud to be a part of this Academy. Proud to be part of this community, and proud to be out of touch." Commenting on how Hollywood sometimes break social taboos such as racism, homosexuality, and war. Some conservatives were offended by Clooney's remarks calling them rude and absurd (Clooney had earlier made a joke criticizing Jack Abramoff at the Golden Globes). Clooney's acceptance speech, perceived as being smug in tone by the writers of South Park, was referenced several times in the episode Smug Alert!.
  • Two of the films with multiple nominations, Munich and Syriana, feature elements which would eventually play a part in the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict. The former deals with Israel and its reaction to hostile terrorism. The latter is an epic examination of Middle East politics and features Hezbollah, a Lebanese militia which is a major element of the conflict.
  • The gag when Chicken Little rips off his khaki shorts in support of Abby Mallard's protest for "birds with no pants" and uses the envelope as a pair of shorts is reference to scenes in the film where Chicken Little's shorts get caught in a manhole cover therefore ripping. He later makes his own pair of shorts using notebook paper.
  • "And right now around the world, we're being watched by hundreds of millions of people, nearly half of whom are in the process of being adopted by Angelina Jolie. I'm waitlisted." Stewart on previous winner Angelina Jolie (who gave birth to Shiloh two months later) and the Oscars being televised in over 189 nations.

[edit] In Memoriam

George Clooney presented the annual tribute to those in the motion picture industry who had died during the previous year. Among those featured were: Teresa Wright, Pat Morita, producer Robert F. Newmyer, Dan O'Herlihy, Vincent Schiavelli, writer Joe Ranft, Moira Shearer, Fayard Nicholas, composer Joel Hirschhorn, Sandra Dee, John Fiedler, Anthony Franciosa, editor Stu Linder, Barbara Bel Geddes, producer Moustapha Akkad, Chris Penn, John Mills, recording sound mixer Robert Knudson, Simone Simon, producer Debra Hill, choreographer Onna White, makeup artist Robert J. Schiffer, cinematographer/director Guy Green, Brock Peters, writer Ernest Lehman, Shelley Winters, Anne Bancroft, production designer John Box, Eddie Albert, producer Ismail Merchant, director Robert Wise and finally, Richard Pryor.

[edit] Voting trends and reaction

For the second consecutive year, the field of major nominees did not include a bona fide blockbuster at the U.S. box office, with the nominees for Best Picture performing even more poorly than those of one year earlier.

None of the five Best Picture nominees was among the year's top 40 releases in box office at the time of the nominations, likely the most disappointing box-office performance of any Best Picture field in history; the film chosen as best Documentary Feature, March of the Penguins, earned more ($77.4 million) than any of the dramatic nominees, the first such occurrence in Academy history. As of January 31, Crash was the highest earner among the Best Picture nominees with $55.4 million in domestic box office receipts, and ranked as the 47th highest grosser of 2005. It was followed by Brokeback Mountain at $51 million (53rd) and Munich at $40.1 million (67th); Good Night, and Good Luck. ($25.1 million) and Capote ($15.3 million) rounded out the field. (By the time of the awards, Brokeback Mountain would surpass Crash with $78.9 million, benefitting from its position as Oscar frontrunner.) Of the top 50 releases of 2005 in U.S. box office through January, only Crash, Walk the Line (19th) and Cinderella Man (41st) received nominations for directing, acting or writing. The top 18 films in box office received a total of only 14 nominations, with a majority of these in the categories of Visual Effects, Sound Mixing and Sound Editing.

For the first time in five years, a majority of the Best Picture nominees were rated R (under 17 requires accompanying adult); it had been seven years since as many (four) of the nominees had earned that rating. Of the 85 nominations awarded to non-documentary feature films (apart from the Foreign Film category), a slight majority of 43 went to R-rated films, 25 to films rated PG-13, 16 to PG-rated films and 1 to a G-rated film. There was a remarkable rating-related division among the nominations: R-rated films captured 32 of the 40 nominations for Best Picture, directing, screenwriting and acting, while non-R-rated films received 34 of the 45 nominations in the remaining categories, primarily those in "below the line" areas (the music and editing categories accounted for 9 of the 11 nominations for R-rated films).

Also, the nominations were more widely dispersed than usual; it marked the first time in six years that no film received more than eight nominations. This was also the first time in 17 years that less than 5 songs were nominated in the Best Original Song category.

This year the awards ceremony started at 5:00 P.M. PST, 30 minutes earlier than the previous seven ceremonies. The pre-show was extended from its original thirty minutes to a full hour before the ceremony. The Barbara Walters Special, usually airing before or after the ceremony (depending on time zone) was for the second time, since 2003, aired on different days this time before the actual day of the ceremony, March 1 to accommodate these time changes.

As has become standard practice in recent years (since the ceremony in 2004 following the Janet Jackson Super Bowl controversy), the broadcast aired on a time delay in order to allow the network to censor offensive material. This occurred during the performance of "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp" when several words were blanked out at the start of the song, and later one phrase was bleeped during Three 6 Mafia's acceptance speech. One phrase in the chorus that was supposed to be sung as "bitches talking shit" was replaced with the less-offensive phrase "witches jumping ships".

As with tradition, last year's acting winners present an acting award for the opposite sex. Cate Blanchett won Best Supporting Actress the previous year but was contractually signed to star in a play in New York City, therefore unable to present the award for Best Supporting Actor; Nicole Kidman was recruited to fill in.

[edit] "Gay Oscars"?

Many news organizations labeled this ceremony "The Gay Oscars",[4][5] as movies such as Brokeback Mountain, Capote, and Transamerica featured prominent gay or transgender characters and were strong candidates for the popular Best Picture, Best Actor, and Best Actress categories.

Tom O'Neill of InTouch Weekly declared on CNN Saturday Night, "I think we could have the all-gay Oscars. Brokeback for best picture; Capote for best actor; Transamerica for best actress."[2] Ultimately, in these three categories only Capote won its potential award.

The label of "Gay Oscars" resembles the "Black Oscars" label of the 74th Academy Awards when two African-Americans, Denzel Washington and Halle Berry, won the best actor and actress Oscars, respectively. [6] It should be noted that several gay and transgender themed characters and films have won major Oscar awards in previous years, including Tom Hanks' character in Philadelphia and Hilary Swank's character in Boys Don't Cry.

[edit] Winners

The awards were unusually divided; for the first time in 58 years, no film won more than three awards, with Brokeback Mountain, Crash, King Kong, and Memoirs of a Geisha each receiving that many. Crash was the first Best Picture winner since Rocky 29 years earlier to win only three awards; it was also the first Best Picture winner since Chariots of Fire 24 years earlier to not win for its directing nor for any of its performers. For the first time in 49 years, Best Picture, Best Director and the four acting awards went to six different films; and for the first time ever, none of these films won for cinematography either. King Kong and Memoirs of a Geisha became the first films since The Bad and the Beautiful 53 years earlier to win (or tie for) the most awards without being nominated for Best Picture.

For the first time in 44 years, each of the acting winners was a first-time nominee. With Philip Seymour Hoffman winning for his performance as Truman Capote, and Reese Witherspoon honored for her role as June Carter, it marked the fifth time that both lead acting awards went to performers playing real people. Ang Lee became the first Asian and non-Caucasian director to be honored. Paul Haggis was the evening's only multiple winner, with awards for producing and writing Crash. March of the Penguins was the first nature documentary in 35 years (since The Hellstrom Chronicle in 1971) to win the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature.

[edit] Commentary

  • The New York Times declared that the selection of Crash as best picture was a "stunning twist", due to the fact that Brokeback Mountain received the top prizes at other large award shows such as the Golden Globes and the BAFTA Awards. They also suggested that Crash won as the "hometown favorite", being set in Los Angeles, where most Academy voters live.[3] Crash was indeed the second Best Picture winner in a row to be set primarily in Los Angeles, following Million Dollar Baby, also written by Paul Haggis; however, no Best Picture winner prior to the two had ever been primarily set there, suggesting that such a hometown bias has historically played little role in the voting. Also, residents of Los Angeles were divided over the film, some believing it presented an unfairly negative portrayal of the city [7] [8].
  • Los Angeles Times film critic Kenneth Turan also observed that some Academy members displayed "discomfort" with the subject matter of Brokeback Mountain. He suggested that these voters might have instead voted for Crash so that they could still "feel like they were good, productive liberals", hence Crash's victory.[4] Indeed, two voting members had publicly refused to view Brokeback Mountain.
  • In a commentary in The Guardian, Annie Proulx—the author of the short story on which Brokeback Mountain was based—harshly lashed out at the selection of Crash, labeling it Trash and denouncing Academy voters as "living cloistered lives behind wrought-iron gates or in deluxe rest-homes, out of touch not only with the shifting larger culture and the yeasty ferment that is America these days, but also out of touch with their own segregated city"; calling the attendees a "somewhat dim LA crowd," she suggested that "Next year we can look to the awards for controversial themes on the punishment of adulterers with a branding iron in the shape of the letter A, runaway slaves, and the debate over free silver." [9].

[edit] TV Ratings

The ceremony attracted 38.59 million viewers with 26.57 million households watching. This makes this year's ceremony the lowest viewed ceremony in terms of Nielsen Ratings after the one in 2003. This is partially due to the lack of box office hits being nominated. Still, only the Super Bowl drew a higher television audience in the U.S., as is typically the case.[5]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Colbert Report predicts the oscars (Da Colbert Code!) at YouTube
  2. ^ "Gay Oscars" from a transcript of CNN Saturday Night accessed February 18, 2006 from [1]
  3. '^ Crash' Walks Away With the Top Prize at the Oscars from the New York Times accessed March 6, 2005 from [2]
  4. ^ "Breaking no Ground" from the LA Times accessed March 5, 2006 from [3]
  5. ^ McCarthy, Sean. "Box Office Blues; Low Oscar ratings reflect lack of blockbuster flicks", The Boston Herald, Boston Herald Inc., 2006-03-07, p. 003. Retrieved on 2006-03-30.

[edit] External links

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