Paris Je T’aime

Date: January 12
Location: Clifton Living Room

It’s been a good year for short films, from Wes Anderson’s quirky Hotel Chevalier to Pixar’s comic alien abduction film, Lifted and most notably, this collection of 18 short film by 21 directors, each set in a different Parisian neighborhood. Every one is worthy, and some are close to divine. My favorites were Tom Twyker’s hyperactive look at a young romance starring Natalie Portman, Alfonso Cuaron’s one-take street conversation with a twist starring Nick Nolte and Ludivine Sagnier, and Alexander Payne’s deadpan love letter to Paris by a clumsily-accented American mail carrier abroad. The Coen Brothers, Gus Van Sant, Walter Salles and a bunch of directors I’m not familiar with also turn in memorable films. The film works best as a sort of mix-CD of wonderful short films — and taken as a whole it’s a splendid travelogue for the City of Lights (almost as effective as Ratatouille in that regard).

Writers and Directors Guild nominees


Over the past few days, the writers and directors have chimed in with their nominees for outstanding work in 2007. The director nominees often match up closely with the Oscars… the writers not so much.

One curious bit of information: A mistake by the writers guild led them to post the nominees in order of total votes, so the lists below reflect the descending degree of passion in the guilds for those titles. Good news for Diablo Cody and the Coen Brothers.

At this point, it looks like No Country for Old Men, Michael Clayton and There Will Be Blood are positioned very well for Best Picture nominations. Juno, too, is likely to show up there.

Oscar nominations will be announced on Jan. 22. I will solicit contest entries about a week before then.

ORIGINAL SCRENPLAY
Diablo Cody – Juno
Tony Gilroy – Michael Clayton
Tamara Jenkins – The Savages
Judd Apatow – Knocked Up
Nancy Oliver – Lars and the Real Girl

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
The Coens – No Country For Old Men
Paul Thomas Anderson – There Will Be Blood
Ronald Harwood – The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
Sean Penn – Into The Wild
James Vanderbilt – Zodiac

DIRECTION
Paul Thomas Anderson – There Will Be Blood
The Coen Brothers – No Country for Old Men
Tony Gilroy – Michael Clayton
Sean Penn – Into the Wild
Julian Schnabel – The Diving Bell and the Butterfly

The Savages

Date: January 9
Location: Clifton Living Room

A sharp, downbeat little film that features two of the best actors working today, The Savages is easy to appreciate but hard to love. Phillip Seymour Hoffman turns in his third award-worthy performance of 2008 as a son dealing with his father’s deteriorating mental health. Laura Linney, as his sister, is equally good in the showier role. These two should be in every movie released — they’re that good. As for the film itself, I respected what it was doing and I found it very real and often quite powerful. But I can’t imagine ever popping it into my DVD player again, and that hurts it a bit in my rankings.

Juno

Date: January 1
Location: Muvico Boynton Beach

I remember reading the Entertainment Weekly Fall Preview a few months back and at the end of the section for each month they had a little “Also coming out this month” blurb where they listed a bunch of titles not deemed worthy of more expansive coverage. Tucked away in there was Juno, wchich caught my eye because it starred three of my favorite actors — Michael Cera, Jennifer Garner and Jason Bateman. ‘That’s interesting,’ I thought. ‘Will probably have to catch up with it on DVD.’

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