Oscars 2000:
Nominee Reactions

Best Picture
American Beauty
The Cider House Rules
The Green Mile
The Insider
The Sixth Sense


Directing
Sam Mendes for American Beauty
Spike Jonze for Being John Malkovich
Lasse Hallstrom for The Cider House Rules
Michael Mann for The Insider
M. Night Shyamalan for The Sixth Sense

Actor in a Leading Role
Russell Crowe for The Insider
Richard Farnsworth The Straight Story
Sean Penn for Sweet and Lowdown
Kevin Spacey for American Beauty
Denzel Washington for The Hurricane

Actor in a Supporting Role
Michael Caine for The Cider House Rules
Tom Cruise for Magnolia
Michael Clarke Duncan for The Green Mile
Jude Law for The Talented Mr. Ripley
Haley Joel Osment for The Sixth Sense

Actress in a Leading Role
Annette Bening for American Beauty
Janet McTeer for Tumbleweeds
Julianne Moore for The End of the Affair
Meryl Streep for Music of the Heart
Hilary Swank for Boys Don't Cry

Actress in a Supporting Role
Toni Collette for The Sixth Sense
Angelina Jolie for Girl, Interrupted
Catherine Keener for Being John Malkovich
Samantha Morton for Sweet and Lowdown
Chlo� Sevigny for Boys Don't Cry

Foreign Language Film
East-West (Est-ouest) from France
Caravan (Himalaya - l'enfance d'un chef) from Nepal
Solomon and Gaenor from UK
All About My Mother (Todo sobre mi madre) from Spain
Under The Sun (Under solen) from Sweden

Original Score
Thomas Newman for American Beauty
John Williams for Angela's Ashes
Rachel Portman for The Cider House Rules
John Corigliano for The Red Violin
Gabriel Yared for The Talented Mr. Ripley

Original Song
South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut - "Blame Canada" Trey Parker & Marc Shaiman
Music of the Heart - "Music of My Heart" - Dianne Warren
Magnolia - "Save Me" - Aimee Mann
Toy Story 2 - "When She Loved Me" - Randy Newman
Tarzan - "You'll Be in My Heart" - Phil Collins

Screenplay - Original
Alan Ball for American Beauty
Charlie Kaufman for Being John Malkovich
P.T. Anderson for Magnolia
M. Night Shyamalan for The Sixth Sense
Mike Leigh for Topsy Turvy

Screenplay - Adaptation
John Irving for The Cider House Rules
Alexander Payne & Jim Taylor for Election
Frank Darabont for The Green Mile
Eric Roth & Michael Mann The Insider
Anthony Minghella for The Talented Mr. Ripley

Art Direction
Luciana Arrighi; Ian Whittaker for Anna and the King
David Gropman; Beth Rubino for The Cider House Rules
Rick Heinrichs; Peter Young for Sleepy Hollow
Roy Walker; Bruno Cesari for The Talented Mr. Ripley
Eve Stewart; John Bush for Topsy-Turvy

Cinematography
Conrad L. Hall for American Beauty
Roger Pratt for The End of the Affair
Dante Spinotti for The Insider
Emmanuel Lubezki for Sleepy Hollow
Robert Richardson for Snow Falling on Cedars

Costume Design
Jenny Beavan for Anna and the King
Colleen Atwood for Sleepy Hollow
Ann Roth, Gary Jones for The Talented Mr. Ripley
Milena Canonero for Titus
Lindy Hemming for Topsy-Turvy

Documentary Feature
Wim Wenders for Buena Vista Social Club
Roko Belic for Genghis Blues
Nanette Burstein, Brett Morgen for On the Ropes
Kevin MacDonald for One Day in September
Paola di Florio for Speaking in Strings

Documentary Short Subject
Bert Van Bork for Eyewitness
William A. Whiteford for King Gimp
Simeon Soffer, Jonathan Stack for The Wildest Show in the South: The Angola Prison Rodeo

Film Editing
Tariq Anwar for American Beauty
Lisa Zeno Churgin for The Cider House Rules
William Goldenberg, Paul Rubell, David Rosenbloom for The Insider
Zach Staenberg for The Matrix
Andrew Mondshein for The Sixth Sense

Makeup
Michele Burke & Mike Smithson for Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me
Greg Cannom for Bicentennial Man
Rick Baker for Life
Christine Blundell and Trefor Proud for Topsy Turvy

Short Film - Animated
Peter Peake for Humdrum
Torill Kove for My Grandmother Ironed the King's Shirts
Aleksandr Petrov for The Old Man and the Sea
Paul Dreissen for Three Misses
Amanda Forbis, Wendy Tilby for When the Day Breaks

Short Film - Live Action
Henrik Ruben Genz, Michael W. Horsten for Bror, min bror
Mehdi Norowzian, Steve Wax for Killing Joe
Marc-Andreas Bochert, Gabriele Lins for Kleingeld
Marcus Olsson for Major and Minor Miracles
Barbara Schock for My Mother Dreams the Satan's Disciples in New York

Sound
The Green Mile
The Insider
The Matrix
The Mummy
Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace


Sound Effects Editing
Fight Club
The Matrix
Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace


Visual Effects
The Matrix
Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace
Stuart Little

Written by DAVID KEYES

February 17, 2000

The movie industry was put on ice Tuesday morning when the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced the nominees for this year�s annual Academy Awards ceremony. The event, a widely-anticipated press conference, is the official kickoff of a month-long debate between various analysts, critics and public figures as to whom, or what, will come out on top when the ceremony actually takes place; the list of nominees itself, naturally, brews up its own debate with surprise nominees and shutouts. Unlike previous years, however, the nominees announced this year were more of a depressing surprise rather than a pleasant one.

The 1999 film industry was more healthy than that of 1998, but by looking at the new Oscar ballot, one would not immediately be able to arrive at that conclusion. Of last year�s five Oscar nominees��Elizabeth,� �Life Is Beautiful,� �Saving Private Ryan,� �Shakespeare In Love� and �The Thin Red Line��four of them were, for the most part, deserving of their nods. This year, only two of the five share that honor: Sam Mendes� family drama �American Beauty,� and Michael Mann�s attack on the tobacco industry �The Insider.� The other three contenders��The Cider House Rules,� �The Green Mile� and �The Sixth Sense��are undeserving of their recognition. �The Green Mile� and �The Cider House Rules� were less of a shock (I had correctly predicted them as wild cards in the contention), but who on Earth could have foreseen the summer hit �The Sixth Sense� as the fifth Oscar candidate? I�m one of the few protesters of the movie, yes, but that�s beside the point; Academy Award nominees are usually based on a film�s recognition in various other award fields (i.e., the Golden Globes), and here is one that has been admittedly ignored by most other circles.

Whereas the numerous nominations to �The Cider House Rules� and �The Sixth Sense� came as a shock, the dismissal of other contenders was even more upsetting. It was hopeless to see my favorite film of 1999, �Eyes Wide Shut,� get a picture nomination to begin with--but what happened to the real strong contenders like �Magnolia� and �The Talented Mr. Ripley?� Paul Thomas Anderson�s �Magnolia,� a film I finally saw recently, got three nominations overall�one for Original Screenplay, another for Original Song (�Save Me�), and another for Supporting Actor (Tom Cruise). �Ripley� wasn�t that lucky, either; director Anthony Minghella�s thriller, the first picture he�s made since Oscar darling �The English Patient,� walked away with just four nominations, and not even in the major categories most expected (such as Director, Actor and Supporting Actress).

Also neglected were Disney�s �Toy Story 2� and George Lucas� �Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace.� The PIXAR follow-up to the computer-animated �Toy Story� was having such an amazing winning streak lately, many had hoped it would beat the odds and become the second animated picture ever nominated for the top prize. Meanwhile, Lucas� prequel to the �Star Wars� trilogy, a work of technical genius, was completely snubbed in Cinematography, Makeup, Costume Design, Film Editing, Original Score and Art Direction. The movie managed to pick up three nods (for the sound and special effects categories), but that�s far below what many (including myself) anticipated.

Other notable exclusions: Jim Carrey�s fine performance in �Man On The Moon� was ignored by the voters (his second in the past two years), and his spot in the Oscar race instead went to Sean Penn for his role in Woody Allen�s �Sweet And Lowdown.� Madonna�s hip and stylistic �Beautiful Stranger� was forgotten in the Original Song category�the voters took a big risk instead and nominated �Blame Canada� from �South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut.� Jocelyn Pook�s brilliant music for �Eyes Wide Shut� was snubbed for Original Score, and Stanley Kubrick didn�t get a nod for Best Director, either (as most suspected he would, essentially on a sympathy vote).

To the left is a recap of the nominees in all the Oscar categories. Expect my predictions for winners to be announced in mid-March.


� David Keyes, CINEMA 2000. To keep the content of these pages at near-perfect quality, please e-mail the author here if the above review contains any spelling or grammar mistakes.
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1