Tag Archives: Cuba Gooding Jr

Selma review

Director: Ava DuVernay

Starring: David Oyelowo, Carmen Ejogo, Tom Wilkinson, Oprah Winfrey, Giovanni Ribisi, Tim Roth, Andre Holland, Tessa Thompson, Common, Dylan Baker, Michael Sheen, Nigel Thatch, Cuba Gooding Jr

The biographical drama Selma was proclaimed as the great snub of the awards season. While it was a big hit at the Golden Globes (Best Drama, Best Director, Best Actor) the Oscars only awarded it Best Song and a Best Picture nomination. This triggered some political unease due to the predominantly white male Academy vetoing a rare African American female candidate for Best Director. We’ll be reviewing the film’s status of the one that the Oscar’s forgot too easily.

Alabama, 1964. Martin Luther King (Oyelowo) has successfully campaigned for the right for African Americans to vote in but in practice they are still prevented from registering by discriminating white registrars. When President Lyndon B Johnson (Wilkinson) rejects King’s new campaign, he rallies the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and the residents of Alabama to a demonstrative march from Selma to the neighbouring town of Montgomery.

Its hard to overlook a film that’s defined by one of the most unforgettable film performances in recent memory. The Brit David Oyelowo (best known for supporting roles in Interstellar and A Most Violent Year) is only just showcasing one of his first major leading roles. It’s a bold and charismatic piece to watch and in the rousing speech scenes the words authentically roll of his tongue in a convincing southern drawl.

There’s some equally impressive work from the supporting cast  Fellow Brit Carmen Ejogo impresses as King’s put upon wife Coretta. The Butler/The Colour Purple star Oprah Winfrey too gives a very understated performance as activist Annie Lee Cooper, in only her second live action role since the 1990s. Andre Holland, Tessa Thompson and off screen rapper Common also fill up the cast of the Civil Rights movement and the star cameos of Giovanni Ribisi, Cuba Gooding Jr and Martin Sheen add some class to the procedings.

Some of the standout supporting performances come from the likes of Tom Wilkinson as the condescending President Johnson and Tim Roth as the scheming Alabama governor George Wallace but the one issue of writers DuVernay and Paul Webb’s work is that the white politicians come across slightly as caricatures  but besides that the duo have done some excellent work.

By homing in the narrative to just one campaign of the many in King’s life it’s far less loosely paced and unfocused than the likes of The Imitation Game, Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom or The Theory of Everything. Like Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln, it approaches one story with depth of character as oppose to a whole lifetime. Most importantly the dialogue sizzles, particularly in the speech sequences in which DuVernay has had to recraft every line and yet still keep a convincing MLK tone.

DuVernay’s brilliant directorial eye really comes to life in the terrifying depiction of the police and public brutality of the time with the savage assaults and beatings of both the aforementioned parties. Overall, given recent events in Ferguson and across America, this is probably the most timely film in the Oscars race. Issues of egotism (Birdman), whimsy (The Grand Budapest Hotel) and coming of age (Boyhood) will always be around but this politically charged, anti-prejudice drama is the most important film to see this year.

8/10

“I’ll be damned if history puts me with the likes of you.”

68th British Academy Film Awards Live

Welcome to our BAFTA hub for 2015. Tonight is the biggest night of the British film calender as the esteemed academy elects its triumphant films, directors and stars. Keep on refreshing the page for the latest updates.

If you’re not preoccupied before the ceremony, try out our prediction game. Rank the nominees for Best Film, Director, Actor/Actress, Supporting Actor/Actress, Cinematography, British Film and Rising Star from 1-5. If your number one pick is correct you receive five points, number two gets four, number three gets three and so on. Comment your score from a maximum of 59. Unsure where to start? Try our own predictions as a primer. Get the full nominations list here.

The red carpet lineup is amassing: Benedict Cumberbatch! Eddie Redmayne! Keira Knightley! Steve Carell! Ralph Fiennes! Ethan Hawke! Mike Leigh! Jack O’Connell! Michael Keaton! Mark Strong!

Here we go!

Stephen Fry begins his annual interrogation of the esteemed audience members. Rosamund Pike! Julie Walters! Edward Norton!

Outstanding British Film:

The Theory of Everything
Pride
Under the Skin
The Imitation Game
’71
Paddington

Beckham awards the first win of the night. Does that put Theory in the front seat for Best Film?

Special Visual Effects:

Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
Interstellar
X-Men: Days of Future Past
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies
Guardians of the Galaxy

It missed out on the main categories but it made up here. Jones and Hawking’s humour shining through again.

Supporting Actor:

Steve Carell – Foxcatcher
Edward Norton – Birdman
Ethawn Hawke – Boyhood
Mark Ruffalo – Foxcatcher
JK Simmons – Whiplash

Witherspoon on her way to Leading Actress as she awards J Jonah Jameson a BAFTA.

Next two British greats award a third.

Outstanding Contribution to British Cinema:

BBC Films (Revolutionary Road, We Need to Talk About Kevin, Jane Eyre, Made in Deganham, Notes on a Scandal, Billy Elliott, Coriolanus, Pride, An Education, Quartet, In the Loop, Philomena, Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa)

The Butler’s Cuba Gooding Jr dishes out the second acting category.

Supporting Actress:

Rene Russo – Nightcrawler
Emma Stone – Birdman
Keira Knightley – The Imitation Game
Patricia Arquette – Boyhood
Imelda Staunton – Pride

A rising star and Bilbo himself award Birdman’s first win.

Cinematography:

Mr Turner (Dick Pope)
The Grand Budapest Hotel (Robert Yeoman)
Interstellar (Hoyte Van Hoytema)
Ida (Lukasz Zal)
Birdman (Emmanuel Lubezki)

The ever sharply suited Loki and MI6 Head celebrate a great career beginning.

British Debut:

’71
Northern Soul
Lilting
Kajaki
Pride

A fitting tribute to a true great, Lord Richard Attenborough, from Prince William and Robert Downey Jr.

Best Actress favourite Julianne Moore arrives.

Best Original Screenplay:

Richard Linklater – Boyhood
Wes Anderson, Hugo Guinness – The Grand Budapest Hotel
Alejandro Gonalez Inarritu, Alexander Dinelaris, Nicolas Giacobone, Armando Bo -Birdman
Damien Chazelle – Whiplash
Dan Gilroy – Nightcrawler

Two JJ Abrams collaborators on stage. Shared universe? It’s all a conspiracy!

Foreign Language:

Leviathan
The Lunchbox
Two Days, One Night
Ida
Trash

He’s semi-bald! Future Lex Luthor Jesse Eisenberg and Noomi Rapace turn up.

Best Adapted Screenplay:

Gillian Flynn – Gone Girl
Anthony McCarten – The Theory of Everything
Graham Moore – The Imitation Game
Jason Dean Hall – American Sniper
Paul King – Paddington

We taking a minute off to honour the In Memoriam section.

X-Men’s James McAvoy arrives – we forgot he was Scottish again.

EE Rising Star:

Gugu Mbatha Raw
Miles Teller
Shailene Woodley
Jack O’Connell
Margot Robbie

Your new one to watch is Jack O’Connell, one of the many protogee’s of E4’s Skins who’s starred in the acclaimed likes of Starred Up, Unbroken and ’71.

Brick is back.

Director:

Alejandro Gonzale Inarritu – Birdman
Richard Linklater – Boyhood
Damien Chazelle – Whiplash
James Marsh – The Theory of Everything
Wes Anderson – The Grand Budapest Hotel

Only God Forgive’s Kristen Scott Thomas compliments her opposite number.

Leading Actor:

Eddie Redmayne – The Theory of Everything
Michael Keaton – Birdman
Benedict Cumberbatch – The Imitation Game
Jake Gyllenhaal – Nightcrawler
Ralph Fiennes – The Grand Budapest Hotel

Another crossover in the work: Superman V Captain America!

Leading Actress:

Felicity Jones – The Theory of Everything
Amy Adams – Big Eyes
Julianne Moore – Still Alice
Reese Witherspoon – Wild
Rosamund Pike – Gone Girl

That was a surprise: Tom Cruise!

Film:

The Imitation Game
The Theory of Everything
Boyhood
Birdman
The Grand Budapest Hotel

Fellowship:

Mike Leigh (Mr Turner, Life is Sweet, High Hopes, Career Girls, Abigail’s Party, All or Nothing, Topsy Turvy, Secrets and Lies, Naked, Vera Drake, Happy Go Lucky, Another Year)

Here comes the quickfire awards.

Original Music:

Alexandre Desplat – The Grand Budapest Hotel

Documentary:

Citizenfour

Makeup and Hair:

The Grand Budapest Hotel

Production Design:

The Grand Budapest Hotel

British Short Film:

Boogaloo and Graham

British Short Animation:

The Bigger Picture

Editing:

Whiplash

Sound:

Whiplash

Animated Film:

The Lego Movie

Costume Design:

The Grand Budapest Hotel

We managed 53/59 so comment how you did. Here’s the winners leaderboard.

The Grand Budapest Hotel – 5
Boyhood, The Theory of Everything, Whiplash – 3
Ida, Interstellar, The Lego Movie, Pride, Citizenfour, Still Alice, Birdman – 1