Sunday 28 February 2016

Oscars 2016: Rylance knocks out Stallone, Rock rips into diversity issue




Source: REUTERS

Britain's Mark Rylance beat Sylvester Stallone to win the Academy Award for best supporting actor
on Sunday while host Chris Rock pulled no punches in taking aim at the #OscarsSoWhite controversy dominating Hollywood.
Stallone, 69, who never won an Oscar for his iconic "Rocky" movies in the 1970s and '80s, was the presumed front-runner for the honor for his performance in boxing movie "Creed."
But instead it was Rylance who won for playing an unflappable Soviet spy in Cold War drama "Bridge of Spies."

Swedish actress Alicia Vikander won the supporting actress Oscar for transgender movie "The Danish Girl," and coming-of-age film "Inside Out" won the best animated feature statuette.
Yet the early awards were almost a sideshow to the racial theme running through the televised ceremony, where black actors were inserted into scenes from movies like "Joy" and "The Martian."
Rock, the outspoken black comedian chosen to host Hollywood's biggest night months before the selection of an all-white acting nominee line-up for a second year, welcomed viewers to what he called "the white People's Choice awards."
He speculated on why the furor over diversity in the industry had taken root this year, rather than in the 1950s or 1960s, saying that black Americans had "real things to protest at the time."
"We were too busy being raped and lynched to care about who won best cinematographer," he added
Turning to the present day, Rock joked that things would be different at Sunday's Academy Awards, saying the traditional segment honoring stars who died in the past year is "just going to be black people that were shot by the cops on their way to the movies."
Director Spike Lee, who shunned the Academy Awards ceremony along with actor Will Smith, instead attended a New York Knicks basketball game on Sunday. However an Oscar boycott largely failed to gather steam as black celebrities including Kerry Washington, Whoopi Goldberg, Pharrell Williams and John Legend all showed up, many of them as presenters or performers.
The under-representation of people of color in the film and TV industry prompted pledges to bring more women and minorities into the industry and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which organizes the Oscars.
BEST PICTURE TOSS-UP
Leonardo DiCaprio, who brought his mother to the Oscars, is seen as certain to win his first ever Oscar for his role as an 1820s fur trapper bent on revenge in "The Revenant."
Rising star Brie Larson, 26, is the favorite to take home the best actress Oscar for her compelling depiction of an abducted young woman in indie movie "Room."
Yet going into Sunday's ceremony, there was no consensus on which of the eight best picture nominees will take home the top prize, to be announced at the end of the 3 -1/2 hour ceremony.
With a leading 12 nominations, a Golden Globe and a BAFTA, 20th Century Fox's (FOXA.O) "The Revenant" has the epic qualities that traditionally appeal to the 6,200 voters of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
If "The Revenant," directed by Mexican Alejandro Inarritu, wins best picture, it would mark the first time in Academy Awards history that a filmmaker directed two best picture winners in a row. Inarritu's "Birdman" won the 2015 best picture Oscar.
Open Road Films' (RGC.N) "Spotlight", which traces the journalism probe of sex abuse in the Boston Catholic Church, is also in the mix, along with Paramount's (VIAB.O) "The Big Short," pundits say.
"Spotlight" and "The Big Short" took home Oscars for original and adapted screenplays, respectively.
Warner Bros (TWX.N) well-reviewed "Mad Max: Fury Road" has 10 nominations and could turn out to be a rare action-adventure best picture winner. The film won a slew of early Oscars on Sunday including for costume, make-up, editing, and production design.

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