Oscar Dozen: What this reviewer said about the winners
1.Best supporting actor
WINNER: JK Simmons for Whiplash
“J.K. Simmons (Break Point, JOBS, Dark Skies, The Words, long-running white-supremacist villain on HBO’s Oz) is devilish and supremely sadistic. He too is a musician and has been a conductor, which shows. Watch him terrify you and keep you rivetted in the second half of the film.”
2. Achievement in makeup and hairstyling
WINNER: The Grand Budapest Hotel
“Her (Tilda Swinton’s) make-up is incredible and the lipstick nothing less than 70 mm!”
3.Achievement in sound mixing
WINNER: Whiplash
“On the musical side, the film might serve as an initiation into jazz of the full-blooded orchestra type. (It served to make me more interested in the form, which I did not fancy too much).”
4.Achievement in visual effects
WINNER: Interstellar
“Breath-taking ice-scapes, dust-scapes, fire-scapes, mountain-scapes, sea-scapes, not to mention space-scapes.”
5.Best animated feature film
WINNER: Big Hero 6
“You cannot help but marvel at the technology that is, maybe, just 10 steps ahead of state-of-the-art today, and hence more credible than many alien and other CGI sci-fi flicks that tend to look eons ahead.”
6.Best production design
WINNER: The Grand Budapest Hotel
“In terms of detail, scenic splendour, costumes, make-up and free-wheeling narrative, The Grand Budapest Hotel is an exciting experience.”
7.Achievement in cinematography
WINNER: Birdman
“The long takes, simulated as a seamless continuation of previous shots, have been marvellously collated.”
8.Original screenplay
WINNER: Birdman
“Birdman was written over a period of two years, by Alejandro González Iñárritu, Nicolás Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris, Jr., Armando Bo. Every bit of the writing, planning and rehearsing has proven to be worth it for director Alejandro González Iñárittu--the Mexican maverick, who gave us Amores Perros, 21 Grams, Babel, and Biutiful. One can credit him with inventing a new style, a new genre. Alongside completely rational characters, he places Riggan, who has Birdman inside him and indulges in fantasy telekinesis.”
9.Adapted screenplay
WINNER: The Imitation Game
“Screenwriter Graham Moore makes his debut with this film as his first produced feature film screenplay. Yes, there is a well-researched book to base your screenplay on, and the hero of your story is a real person whose life is now well-documented. But, like the say in cricket, you still got to play the ball and place it in the right direction to score a sixer. It’s a fabulous debut, and we look forward to Moore sixers, Graham.
10.Best director
WINNER: Birdman
“Alejandro González Iñárittu--the Mexican maverick, who gave us Amores Perros, 21 Grams, Babel, and Biutiful. One can credit him with inventing a new style, a new genre. Watch Birdman and applaud Alejandro González Iñárritu, like you did in Babel, 2006, only more. This is a real large Bird feather in his cap.”
11. Best actor
WINNER: The Theory of Everything
“With tremendously talented Eddie Redmayne (Elizabeth: The Golden Age, My Week with Marilyn, Les Misérables and playing the inter-planetary menace in Jupiter Ascending) in the lead, the job is more than half done. Redmayne naturally gets all the audience sympathy, for his contortions, labored gait, slurring speech and academic genius, and all of it is extremely well-deserved.”
12.Best picture
WINNER: Birdman
“Watch Birdman and applaud Alejandro González Iñárritu, like you did in Babel, 2006, only more. This is a real large Bird feather in his cap.”
(These are excerpts from reviews, posted on this website. All these films earned ratings of *** to ****. Obviously, the list does not cover all the winners. Some of the films that won have not been mentioned here because they were not seen by me. A couple were not reviewed in significant detail for relevant excerpts to be included).