Monday, January 31, 2011

February Artist Of the month: Marsha Ambrosius



Marsha Ambrosius or Marsha is a former member of the English band duo Floetry. She is also a part of the songwriting team Knightwritaz and is expected to be releasing her first solo album Late Nights & Early Mornings on March 1, 2011.

Early career with Floetry Original members Marsha and Natalie met through their love of basketball and formed a friendship. Both Natalie and Marsha attended the Brit School for Performing Arts & Technology where Marsha studied business and finance and Natalie majored in Performing Arts, Media and Art. For college Ambrosius planned to attend the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, Georgia on a basketball scholarship but could not due to an injury. Stewart attended Middlesex University in London and later transferred to North London University. During these years, both women continued to keep in touch. Stewart was a founding member of the performance poetry group 3 Plus 1 which was rising to critical acclaim throughout London, Birmingham, and Manchester. After inviting Ambrosius to join her on stage to perform at a spoken word night, where they debuted a piece that they had written together called Fantasize, combining spoken word and singing, It seemed to make since to combine the two Floetry was born.

[edit] Group SuccessIn 2000, the duo travelled to the United States to perform on the poetry circuit. After frequenting spoken word/poetry spots in Atlanta, GA such as Yin Yang Poets' Cafe (to rave reviews), they moved on to Philadelphia. There they met Darren 'Limitless' Henson and Keith 'Keshon' Pelzer of DJ Jazzy Jeff's Touch Of Jazz studio and began recording. In 2002, they signed with DreamWorks Records and released their debut album Floetic, which featured the singles "Floetic", "Say Yes", and "Getting Late". The album was also released in the UK with additional tracks, one of which features British singer/songwriter and producer Sebastian Rogers.

[edit] Solo careerAmbrosius has been featured on many songs including Styles P's "I'm Black"; The Game's "Start from Scratch" and "Why You Hate The Game" (also featuring Nas); Busta Rhymes' "Get You Some" and "Cocaina"; Nas' "Hustlers" (also featuring The Game); and Hi-Tek's "Music for Life" and Jamie Foxx's "Freak'in Me". The group has also collaborated with Earth, Wind & Fire on their most recent album, Illumination, on the track "Elevated". She collaborated once again with Nas on his song "If I Ruled The World '09" & has also done a track with Slum Village called "Cloud 9". Recently, she has guested on Wale's "Diary".

Ambrosius was signed to Dr. Dre's record label, Aftermath Entertainment, as a solo musician/song-writer/producer. Parting ways with the label early 2009, Ambrosius pursued her song-writing/production career landing her placements with the some of the best in R&B and Hip Hop ranging from Alicia Keys, Jamie Foxx and Mario to Fabulous, Slum Village and Wale. Summer 2009, Ambrosius was approached by numerous record labels offering her a solo deal after a long awaited performance at NYC's infamous SOB's where a sold out crowd gathered to a show accompanied by The Roots and DJ Aktive. December 2009, Ambrosius signed to J Records and her solo debut Late Nights & Early Mornings will be released in January 2011.

In an interview with XXL Magazine Tech N9ne mentions a possible collaboration with Ambrosius, Lil Wayne, and Eminem on a track titled "This is Hip-hop" for his upcoming solo album 6's and 7's.

[edit] Discography[edit] AlbumsWith Floetry

2002: Floetic #19 U.S. (Gold)
2003: Floacism #74 U.S.
2005: Flo'Ology #7 U.S.
Solo

2007: Neo Soul is Dead (mixtape)
2008: Yours Truly (mixtape)
2010: Yours Sincerely (mixtape)[1]
2011: Late Nights & Early Mornings[2]
[edit] Singles This section does not cite any references or sources.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2010)
Year Title Chart positions Album
US Hot 100 US R&B
2002 "Floetic" - 29 Floetic
2003 "Say Yes" 24 8
"Getting Late" - 31
"Wanna B Where U R (Thisizzaluvsong)" (featuring Mos Def) - - Floacism
2005 "I'm Black" (Styles P featuring Floetry) - 94 Time is Money
"Supastar" (featuring Common) - 55 Flo'Ology
"Lay Down" - 102
2010 "Hope She Cheats On You (With A Basketball Player)" 88 22 Late Nights & Early Mornings

[edit] Appearances2001: "Butterflies" (Michael Jackson; Marsha on background vocals) (Invincible)
2002: "Cry Me A River" (Justin Timberlake; Marsha on background vocals) (Justified)
2002: "Take You High" (Glenn Lewis; Marsha on background vocals) (World Outside My Window)
2004: "Elevated" (Earth, Wind & Fire featuring Floetry) (Illumination)
2004: "Hear Me Cry" (Patti LaBelle featuring Floetry) (Timeless Journey)
2005: "Automatique" (Blackalicious featuring Floetry) (The Craft)
2005: "Im Black" (Styles P featuring Marsha) (Time is Money)
2005: "Start from Scratch" (The Game featuring Marsha) (The Documentary)
2006: "Get You Some" (Busta Rhymes featuring Q-Tip & Marsha) (The Big Bang)
2006: "Cocaina" (Busta Rhymes featuring Marsha) (The Big Bang)
2006: "Music For Life" (Hi-Tek featuring Marsha, Nas, J Dilla, Busta Rhymes & Common) (Hi-Teknology 2)
2006: "Hustlers" (Nas featuring The Game & Marsha) (Hip Hop Is Dead)
2006: "Why You Hate The Game" (The Game featuring Marsha & Nas) (Doctor's Advocate)
2007: "This Can't Be Real" (Freeway featuring Marsha Ambrosius) (Free at Last)
2007: "The Art Of Storytellin' Part 4" (DJ Drama featuring Outkast & Marsha Ambrosius) (Gangsta Grillz: The Album)
2007: "Reunion" (Ya Boy featuring Marsha Ambrosius) (Optimus Rime Mixtape)
2008: "What's Going On" (Marsha Ambrosius featuring The Game) (Single) / (Before L.A.X)
2008: "Wanna Go Back" (Solange featuring Marsha Ambrosius and Q-Tip) (SoL-AngeL and the Hadley St. Dreams)
2008: "The Light '08" (Common (artist) featuring Marsha Ambrosius)
2008: "Freak’in Me" Jamie Foxx feat. Marsha Ambrosius (Intuition)
2009: "If I Ruled the World '09" Nas feat. Marsha Ambrosius (Smirnoff: Signature Series)
2009: "Still Hurts" Macy Gray feat. Marsha Ambrosius (The Sellout)
2009: "Stay" Fabolous feat. Marsha Ambrosius (Loso's Way)
2009: "Take Me Away (With You)" Queen Latifah feat. Marsha Ambrosius (Persona)
2009: *Diary Wale Feat Marsha Ambrosius Attention: Deficit
2009 “A's & E's" Masta Ace & Ed O.G. Feat. Marsha Ambrosius (Arts & Entertainment)
2010: Be With You David Banner feat. Ludacris & Marsha Ambrosius
2010: All I Got To Give John Regan feat. Marsha Ambrosius (Sorry I'm Late)
Note
All the above written or co-written by Marsha Ambrosius.

[edit] Writing Credits 2001: "Butterflies" - Michael Jackson (Invincible)
2002: "Simple Things", "Beautiful Eyes", "Lonely", "This Love", "Take You High" - Glenn Lewis (World Outside My Window)
2006: "Circus" - Kelis (Kelis Was Here)
2007: "Go Ahead" - Alicia Keys (As I Am)
2008: "Wanna Go Back" - Solange featuring Marsha Ambrosius and Q-Tip (SoL-AngeL and the Hadley St. Dreams)
2008: "Love Me Or Leave Me" - Raven-Symoné (Raven-Symoné)
2008: "Welcome To The Alesha Show" - Alesha Dixon (The Alesha Show)
2008: "Do About It", "Mirror" - Girlicious (Girlicious)
2008: "Music (All I Need)" - Jazmine Sullivan
2009: "Matter" - Letoya - Lady Love
2009: "25 To Life" - JoJo - All I Want Is Everything

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

And The Nominees Are....



At This point the nominees should be no suprise they have been cleaning up with nominations during this award season... Here are the nominees for this years Oscar


Black Swan:
Only Darren Aronofsky could have taken this much emotional turmoil and turned it into a surprise holiday hit. Not that I'm complaining. With one brilliant acting performance, at least three other very good acting performances and a brilliant score that samples heavily from Tchaikovsky, Black Swan is, by all accounts, too sadistic and weird for most of America; yet, the whole thing somehow caught on to the point of a Best Picture nomination. Stranger things have happened, but barring two independent, out of nowhere epic scandals for The Social Network and The King's Speech, it's unlikely Black Swan has any real hope of winning. Still, it's got a better shot than seven other films, and something tells me no one involved is complaining about those odds.
[Read Our Review Of Black Swan]


The Fighter:
The Fighter has rubbed a lot of people the wrong way. The complaints have ranged from questionable handling of the boxing scenes to overacting to lack of a charismatic main character, but those who truly got on board, me included, found plenty of reasons to root for David O. Russell's film. There's a certain charm amidst all the haymakers and crack smoking. Like its hero, The Fighter languished in development for years, but when it did emerge, it was with the right director and the right cast. It may very well clean up in the acting categories, but it's pretty behind on points in the Best Picture race.
[Read Our Review Of The Fighter]


Inception:
Even though pundits have been predicting a Best Picture nod for months now, most of us well aware of the academy's propensity to bypass summer blockbusters can finally breathe a sigh of relief. It's not just that Inception delivered in a way most big budget action films don't, it's that it was every bit as careful, thought out and interesting as it was fast-paced, exciting and spectacular. If the people had a say, we could go ahead and knock up Inception into legitimate contender status, but as it stands, the nomination itself is the cause for celebration.
[Read Our Review Of Inception]


The Kids Are All Right:
Not quite a real contender but far from a surprise this morning, The Kids Are All Right recently took home the Golden Globe for Best Musical or Comedy, as well as an acting statue for star Annette Bening. She has a better chance of repeating at the Oscars than the film itself, but for a four million dollar flick about a lesbian couple, their sperm donor and two upperclass kids, it's hard to find any disappointment here.
[Read Our Review Of The Kids Are All Right]


The King's Speech:
The most realistic of all the contenders, The King's Speech may currently sit in second place, but it is a clear second place. If anyone can mount an assault on Mark Zuckerberg, it's King George V's stammer-ridden speech patterns. Never underestimate Harvey Weinstein's aggressive Oscar campaigns. Even if he fails to gain any traction though, the movie's numerous nominations and almost 100 million in worldwide grosses have to be considered a coup for a British art film made on a measly fifteen million.
[Read Our Review Of The King's Speech]


127 Hours:
For all the talk about voters shying away from 127 Hours because of the arm cutting scene, the drama apparently didn't end up mattering. At this point, you'd have to think the rest would sit down and watch, right? Even if they don't, the real prize here will come from regular Joes making it out to the theater to finally see this. All of the other films on this list were, to an extent, box office successes, but more was expected from 127 Hours, especially after critics started buzzing about James Franco's brilliant acting performance. Maybe those expectations will finally be matched.
[Read Our Review Of 127 Hours]


The Social Network:
Barring any unforeseen circumstances, it would be a shock if The Social Network didn't take home the ultimate prize at this year's Academy Awards. Many initially questioned whether the film had been released too early, but with buzz still as strong as when David Fincher's film first hit theaters in early October, most of the naysayers are fast re-evaluating their early slanders. The Social Network won't sweep the top categories like Silence Of The Lambs, but as far as sure things go, this category is probably the closest.
[Read Our Review Of The Social Network]


Toy Story 3:
It is an absolute travesty Toy Story 3 has absolutely no chance at winning. With another nomination in the Best Animation category, it'll go home with a statue on awards' night, but frankly, that's not enough. The highest grossing film of the year was deserving of every cent it earned. With a nostalgic, sad beginning, a fun, adventurous middle and a heartbreaking closer, Toy Story 3 was a revelation. It may not have been the best film of the year, but it was close, close enough to be drawing real heat about whether it would be the first animated film ever to take home the coveted Best Picture. Never underestimate the animation bias.
[Read Our Review Of Toy Story 3]


True Grit:
Perhaps a little too close to the original for plenty of John Wayne-loving Oscar voters, True Grit is nonetheless a brilliantly executed film by two brothers fast settling among Hollywood's most steady and reliable visionaries. One needs to look no further than the brilliant horse haggling scene to understand just how effortless the Coen's can make it look. No word out of place, no camera angle without reason. True Grit has been pushing aside more expensive and more publicized efforts for weeks now at the box office, and while it's unlikely to do the same with The Social Network, it'll likely get an impressive share of first place votes.
[Read Our Review Of True Grit]


Winter's Bone:
Debra Granik's wonderful independent may not have the polish of the other nominees, but that doesn't mean it's any less moving. Most of these other films talk at you. They floor viewers with their sophisticated camera techniques and multi-layered scripts, but Winter's Bone is a lot quieter than that. It immerses itself in its surroundings, making you work to understand the subtle nuances of life in remote Appalachia, rather than cutting corners to make a more audience-friendly, fabricated product.
[Read Our Review Of Winter's Bone]



Best Director Nominees
Darren Aronofsky for Black Swan:
There was perhaps no film released this year that felt more like its director than Black Swan. With a torrent of brilliant, award-winning independents like Requiem For A Dream, Pi and The Wrestler, Darren Aronofsky was truly the only man who could have pulled this off. True, he got some help from Natalie Portman, but the final forty minutes of Black Swan is a clinic on fear-drive momentum. This is his first nomination, though it could be argued he's deserved at least two more.
[Read Our Review Of Black Swan]


David O. Russell for The Fighter:
The Fighter languished in development hell for years. At one point, fellow nominee Darren Aronofsky was even attached to directed it, but it turns out David O. Russell was the right man for the job. Previous efforts like Three Kings, Flirting With Disaster and I Heart Huckabees showed some promise, but none of that prepared audiences for his superb work here. He was likely last into the party for this category, but it's hard to argue with the Academy's decision.
[Read Our Review Of The Fighter]


Tom Hooper for The King's Speech:
Tom Hooper for The King's Speech: Thirty-eight year old Tom Hooper may be short on film credits, but he's been nominated for a slew of awards for his groundbreaking work in television. American audiences probably know him best for the HBO John Adams miniseries, but after picking up his first Oscar nomination, it's likely he'll move into features full time.
[Read Our Review Of The King's Speech]


David Fincher for The Social Network:
With a pretty solid resume including Se7en, Fight Club and Zodiac, David Fincher has been well regarded as a gutsy and capable director for years. He picked up his first Oscar nomination for The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button, but none of that prepared us for this stunning masterpiece. Fincher has to be considered the favorite here, though he's by no means a shoe-in.
[Read Our Review Of The Social Network]


The Coen Brothers for True Grit:
This is the Coen's third Best Director nomination and the first that has come with any shred of surprise. Fargo and No Country For Old Men both took the Academy by storm, but as much as True Grit won with fans at the box office, the Coen's future at the Oscars was a bit unknown after the film was completely shut out at the Golden Globes. It's unlikely the pair has any real shot at winning, but as the only previous winners, they're far more than also-rans.
[Read Our Review Of True Grit]



Best Actor Nominees
Javier Bardem for Biutiful: Bardem’s inclusion is something of a surprise here, he didn’t have much buzz going in and this is otherwise a pretty strong category. Still it’s nice to have him recognized here even if he has no realistic chance of beating the likes of Jesse Eisenberg, James Franco, or Colin Firth.


Jeff Bridges for True Grit:
Arguing tit for tat on whether Bridges surpassed John Wayne's Oscar-winning role is a conversation for another paragraph. In some ways, it's not even relevant. Bridges was wonderful as Rooster, and when measuring it against the other nominees, talk of Wayne should be excluded. Alas, there's no keeping the Duke down and most voters will likely shy away from voting for the same character they already honored once. Still, this is nomination number 6 for Bridges, one year removed from his victory in the same category for Crazy Heart.
[Read Our Review Of True Grit]


Jesse Eisenberg for The Social Network:
Perhaps penalized a bit because some audience members found it hard to relate to his character, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, Jesse Eisenberg still secured his first nomination and arguably has the only real shot at taking down Colin Firth. As pronounced as Firth's performance was in The King's Speech, Eisenberg's was mostly understated. No less impressive but perhaps a bit less memorable.
[Read Our Review Of The Social Network]


Colin Firth for The King's Speech:
Two years, two Best Actor nominations for Colin Firth. The affable British actor had quietly built himself a reputation in supporting roles for years, but with a likely Oscar win coming for The King's Speech on top of last year's nomination for A Single Man, we may well see him become one of the more classy and reliable actors working today. I wouldn't mortgage the house on impending victory, but I would certainly take him against the field.
[Read Our Review Of The King's Speech]


James Franco for 127 Hours:
Before 127 Hours, Franco was largely known as a pretty good, not great actor that could seamlessly vault between dramatic and comedic roles. One only has to look to his recent cameo in The Green Hornet to see that whimsical side, but this nomination propels Franco into another category. He's now more than just a likeable face. Only time will tell whether this was a one-off shot at greatness or a sign of things to come.
[Read Our Review Of 127 Hours]



Best Actress Nominees

Annette Bening for The Kids Are All Right:
Many critics left early screenings of The Kids Are All Right wondering which actress would get the biggest push. Both were given meaty, emotional roles, Bening’s a little more centered and Moore’s a little more flightly. Personally, I preferred Bening’s, but I tend to like understated better than in your face. The dinner scene in particular was what won me over. This is her fourth nomination. Thankfully for her, Hilary Swank was not nominated.
[Read Our Review Of The Kids Are All Right]


Nicole Kidman for Rabbit Hole:
While most of the other Oscar-nominated independents have overperformed at the box office, Rabbit Hole has yet to really catch on. It’s a shame considering how wonderful Nicole Kidman is. There was early speculation the former Mrs. Cruise could become a real contender, but thus far, her charge hasn’t gained much momentum. She was previously nominated for Moulin Rouge and won for The Hours.
[Read Our Review Of Rabbit Hole]


Jennifer Lawrence for Winter's Bone:
After catching a screening of Winter’s Bone nearly six months ago, I thought what a shame it was that she probably wouldn’t be recognized. The film just seemed too small and bleak to every catch on. What a fool I turned out to be. SAG and Golden Globe nominations soon followed, and here we are, talking about her Oscar nomination. She’s a pretty big longshot to win, but at twenty years old, it would be a shock if she didn’t end up a semi-regular contender.
[Read Our Review Of Winter's Bone]


Natalie Portman for Black Swan:
Nominated once before in the Supporting Actress category for Closer, big things have been expected from Natalie Portman since she wowed audiences in Heat and The Professional in the mid-90s, but some of the luster evaporated after the world collectively hated The Phantom Menace. Just as in last years’ Brothers, she was the best thing about Black Swan, only this time the overall product was a smash.
[Read Our Review Of Black Swan]


Michelle Williams for Blue Valentine:
Without Michelle Williams and Ryan Gosling, Blue Valentine likely would have languished as a good, not great independent. In fact, the film itself sort of embodies the independent spirit. Filmed for almost no money in a short amount of time and encompassing very adult, very somber subject matter, Blue Valentine seemed destined for late night IFC repeats, but thanks to its main stars, it turned into a must-see. Michelle Williams one win, on this, her second try, but this is just the first of many.
[Read Our Review Of Blue Valentine]



Best Supporting Actor Nominees
Christian Bale for The Fighter:
How is this Christian Bale’s first nomination? Say what you will about his performance as Batman (his Bruce Wayne is unsurpassed), the man has simply destroyed nearly every role he’s taken. From his body-altering work in The Machinist to his brilliant turn in The Prestige, Bale is as good as it gets, and if there’s any legitimacy to the score cards, he’ll walk away a happy winner on award’s night.
[Read Our Review Of The Fighter]


John Hawkes for Winter's Bone:
Like Renner in The Town, John Hawkes inserts a certain unhinged alphamale-ness into Winter’s Bone. He’s a wild animal that only bothers to bite when sufficiently provoked. The terror in his wife’s eyes is enough to let you know he’s no one to be trifled with, but when he does bother speaking, it’s perhaps the most terrifying in the entire film. This is Hawkes’ first nomination, and with any luck, it’ll lead to more of the same.
[Read Our Review Of Winter's Bone]


Jeremy Renner for The Town:
Renner was spectacular in his Academy-recognized performance in The Hurt Locker last year, and he was no less moving in The Town, a great film that he’s overtly the best part of. Playing the loose cannon, he wrecks every scene he’s in with a sort of unflappable angst and determination. His character may not be as well spoken as Geoffrey Rush’s but that doesn’t mean he’s any less perfect for his job.
[Read Our Review Of The Town]


Mark Ruffalo for The Kids Are All Right:
Another supporting actor that’s mysteriously never been nominated, Mark Ruffalo had a wonderful year in this category. One could argue he was perhaps more deserving of recognition for his handling of Scorsese’s Shutter Island, but no snub, no need to complain. Ruffalo was totally believable as the hapless sperm donor in The Kids Are All Right, especially in the scene where Annette Bening tells him off. A lesser actor would have mustered more of a response, but it’s a credit to his abilities that he seemingly lets her own that exchange.
[Read Our Review Of The Kids Are All Right]


Geoffrey Rush for The King's Speech:
On most other years, I’d likely be touting Geoffrey Rush as my supporting actor performance of the year, but this field is so astoundingly stacked this year, I’m not even sure if he was the second best. Regardless, he’s definitely worthy of his fourth nomination, and some have even predicted he might have enough support to overtake Christian Bale. The next time you watch The King’s Speech, pay close attention to his change in demeanor from when he’s giving therapy lessons to when he’s auditioning. Brilliant.
[Read Our Review Of The King's Speech]



Best Supporting Actress Nominees
Amy Adams for The Fighter:
In less than ten years, Amy Adams has gone from ill-advised Cruel Intentions sequels to a three times-nominated Academy darling. How? By making the most of every single role she’s been handed. The Fighter’s Charlene should have been mostly a throwaway, but somehow, with Amy Adams at the helm, she’s one of the more memorable parts of a great movie.
[Read Our Review Of The Fighter]


Helena Bonham Carter for The King's Speech:
Helena Bonham Carter for The King’s Speech: Three months ago, Bonham Carter may well have been the odds on favorite, but the Supporting categories are notoriously difficult to predict. It’s no shot at her performance, it’s just a question of whether there was really enough meat to warrant a win. I would stand behind it, but that’s mostly because I wasn’t blown away by anyone this year with the possible exception of Melissa Leo. This is Helena Bonham Carter’s second nomination after The Wings Of The Dove.
[Read Our Review Of The King's Speech]


Melissa Leo for The Fighter:
Selfish, brash and obnoxious, Melissa Leo is a powerhouse throughout The Fighter. She’s the type of woman who stomps, kicks and outwills her competition, whether they be invading girlfriends or well-intentioned family members. You may remember Leo was previously nominated for Frozen River, but unlike 2008, she has a real shot at cleaning up here.
[Read Our Review Of The Fighter]


Hailee Steinfeld for True Grit:
It wasn’t a question of whether Hailee Steinfeld was good enough, it was more a question of whether she’d get enough people to recognize her as a Supporting Actress. The studio had been pushing hard for her to land in this category, but BAFTA had none of that and it’s likely many Academy voters agreed. Still, now that she’s here, she likely has a better chance than people are giving her credit for. Acting opposite Jeff Bridges and Matt Damon isn’t kid stuff. A lesser actress would have turned herself into a slideshow, but Steinfeld more than holds her own.
[Read Our Review Of True Grit]


Jacki Weaver for Animal Kingdom:
She's the only major female character in a movie about violent, ruthless men, but Jacki Weaver's Smurf manages to be more terrifying than all of them put together, without ever saying a cross word or striking a blow. The Australian actress has gotten attention in her native country for decades, but with Animal Kingdom she's broken through to a global audience, and makes an excellent veteran addition to a supporting actress field crowded with newbies.
[Read Our Review Of Animal Kingdom]



Best Animated Feature
How to Train Your Dragon

The Illusionist

Toy Story 3


Best Original Screenplay
Another Year

The Fighter

Inception

The Kids Are All Right

The King’s Speech


Best Adapted Screenplay
127 Hours

The Social Network

Toy Story 3

True Grit

Winter’s Bone


Best Foreign Language Film
Biutiful, Mexico

Dogtooth, Greece

In A Better World, Denmark

Incendies, Canada

Outside the Law, Algeria


Art Direction
Alice in Wonderland

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1

Inception

The King’s Speech

True Grit


Cinematography
Black Swan

Inception

The King’s Speech

The Social Network

True Grit


Costume Design
Alice in Wonderland

I Am Love

The King’s Speech

The Tempest

True Grit


Documentary Feature
Exit Through the Gift Shop

Gasland

Inside Job

Restrepo

Waste Land


Film Editing
Black Swan

The Fighter

The King’s Speech

127 Hours

The Social Network


Makeup
The Way Back

The Wolfman


Original Score
How to Train Your Dragon

Inception

The King’s Speech

127 Hours

The Social Network


Original Song
”Coming Home” from Country Strong

”I See the Light” from Tangled

”If I Rise” from 127 Hours

”We Belong Together” from Toy Story 3


Animated Short
Day & Night

The Gruffalo

Let’s Pollute

The Lost Thing

Madagascar, A Journey Diary


Live Action Short
The Confession

The Crush

God of Love

Na Wewe

Wish 143


Sound Editing
Inception

Toy Story 3

Tron: Legacy

True Grit

Unstoppable


Sound Mixing
Inception

The King’s Speech

Salt

The Social Network

True Grit


Visual Effects
Alice in Wonderland

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1

Hereafter

Inception

Iron Man 2

Friday, January 21, 2011

Beyonce tries to Buy herself an Oscar









With the rumor mill going for the past 2 years Beyonce will be repraising a role the has been done 3 previous times before:
A Star Is Born (1937 film), starring Janet Gaynor and Fredric March Oscar win
A Star Is Born (1954 film), starring Judy Garland and James Mason Oscar Nominated
A Star Is Born (1976 film), starring Barbra Streisand and Kris Kristofferson Oscar best song
A Star Is Born (2012 film), staring Beyonce Knowles and directed by Clint Eastwood
I dnt think so

Now I know there are a lot of Beyonce followers but admit it damn she can't act
With real artist struggling to find work this is what Hollywood does dig out a classic and run it into the ground? I mean why can't she just go and do a film on her own don't screw up something that doesn't need to be done.

It is quite clear with how Hollywood feel about about Beyonce being an actress. Take her Dreamgirl performance although good was it a streach? No! Wasn't she in a girl group? Didn't she bum rush the front? Didn't she eventually become the group? And isn't she a solo artist now? Hmmmm. Now Most of you will disagree because you know nothing about movies and actors and actresses sorry to be so harish but you don't because She didn't deserve to be nominated for a Golden Globe in which her father sited racism as too why she didn't win But look at the rest of the award season No Oscar,No Critics choice,No SAG (which is the actors community) Nothing and How they wrote off Cadillac Records. The hype was around her and critics and movie goers pretty much stayed away.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

2011 BAFTA NOMINATIONS ARE IN.. (BRITS VERSION OF OSCARS)







BEST FILM
Black Swan
Inception
The King’s Speech
The Social Network
True Grit

OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM
127 Hours
Another Year
Four Lions
The King’s Speech
Made In Dagenham

DIRECTOR
127 Hours - Danny Boyle
Black Swan - Darren Aronofsky
Inception - Christopher Nolan
The King’s Speech - Tom Hooper
The Social Network - David Fincher

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Black Swan - Mark Heyman, Andrés Heinz, John Mclaughlin
The Fighter - Scott Silver, Paul Tamasy, Eric Johnson
Inception - Christopher Nolan
The Kids Are All Right - Lisa Cholodenko, Stuart Blumberg
The King’s Speech - David Seidler

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
127 Hours - Danny Boyle, Simon Beaufoy
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo - Rasmus Heisterberg, Nikolaj Arcel
The Social Network - Aaron Sorkin
Toy Story 3 - Michael Arndt
True Grit - Joel Coen, Ethan Coen

FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
Biutiful
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
I Am Love
Of Gods and Men
The Secret in Their Eyes

ANIMATED FILM
Despicable Me
How To Train Your Dragon
Toy Story 3

LEADING ACTOR
Javier Bardem – Biutiful
Jeff Bridges - True Grit
Jesse Eisenberg - The Social Network
Colin Firth - The King’s Speech
James Franco - 127 Hours

LEADING ACTRESS
Annette Bening - The Kids Are All Right
Julianne Moore - The Kids Are All Right
Natalie Portman - Black Swan
Noomi Rapace - The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
Hailee Steinfeld - True Grit

SUPPORTING ACTOR
Christian Bale - The Fighter
Andrew Garfield - The Social Network
Pete Postlethwaite - The Town
Mark Ruffalo - The Kids Are All Right
Geoffrey Rush - The King’s Speech

SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Amy Adams - The Fighter
Helena Bonham Carter - The King’s Speech
Barbara Hershey - Black Swan
Lesley Manville - Another Year
Miranda Richardson - Made In Dagenham

ORIGINAL MUSIC
127 Hours - Ar Rahman
Alice In Wonderland - Danny Elfman
How To Train Your Dragon - John Powell
Inception - Hans Zimmer
The King’s Speech - Alexandre Desplat

CINEMATOGRAPHY
127 Hours - Anthony Dod Mantle, Enrique Chediak
Black Swan - Matthew Libatique
Inception - Wally Pfister
The King’s Speech - Danny Cohen
True Grit - Roger Deakins

EDITING
127 Hours - Jon Harris
Black Swan - Andrew Weisblum
Inception - Lee Smith
The King’s Speech - Tariq Anwar
The Social Network - Angus Wall, Kirk Baxter

PRODUCTION DESIGN
Alice In Wonderland - Robert Stromberg, Karen O’Hara
Black Swan - Thérèse Deprez, Tora Peterson
Inception - Guy Hendrix Dyas, Larry Dias, Doug Mowat
The King’s Speech - Eve Stewart, Judy Farr
True Grit - Jess Gonchor, Nancy Haigh

COSTUME DESIGN
Alice In Wonderland - Colleen Atwood
Black Swan - Amy Westcott
The King’s Speech - Jenny Beavan
Made In Dagenham - Louise Stjernsward
True Grit - Mary Zophres

SOUND
127 Hours - Glenn Freemantle, Ian Tapp, Richard Pryke, Steven C Laneri, Douglas Cameron
Black Swan - Ken Ishii, Craig Henighan, Dominick Tavella
Inception - Richard King, Lora Hirschberg, Gary A Rizzo, Ed Novick
The King’s Speech - John Midgley, Lee Walpole, Paul Hamblin
True Grit - Skip Lievsay, Craig Berkey, Greg Orloff, Peter F Kurland, Douglas Axtell

SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS
Alice In Wonderland - Nominees TBC
Black Swan - Dan Schrecker
Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 1 - Tim Burke, John Richardson, Nicolas Ait'hadi, Christian Manz
Inception - Chris Corbould, Paul Franklin, Andrew Lockley, Peter Bebb
Toy Story 3 - Nominees TBC

MAKEUP & HAIR
Alice In Wonderland - Nominees Tbc
Black Swan - Judy Chin, Geordie Sheffer
Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 1 - Amanda Knight, Lisa Tomblin
The King’s Speech - Frances Hannon
Made In Dagenham - Lizzie Yianni Georgiou

SHORT FILM
Connect - Samuel Abrahams, Beau Gordon
Lin - Piers Thompson, Simon Hessel
Rite - Michael Pearce, Ross Mckenzie
Turning - Karni Arieli, Saul Freed, Alison Sterling, Kat Armour-Brown
Until The River Runs Red - Paul Wright, Poss Kondeatis

SHORT ANIMATION
The Eagleman Stag - Michael Please
Matter Fisher - David Prosser
Thursday - Matthias Hoegg

ORANGE RISING STAR AWARD
Emma Stone - Easy A
Andrew Garfield - The Social Network
Tom Hardy - Inception
Gemma Arterton - Tamara Drewe
Aaron Johnson - Kick-Ass

Monday, January 17, 2011

Best In Golden Globe Fashion







Keep in Mind this is My taste. I was In Love with the Blacks, Emerald Greens, Reds and Nudes.. One who really got me was Olivia Wilde who wore a Marchesa Gown But if you weren't watching her arrival The Dress was Great but those Yellow Crystal Louboutins were just sick take a look.


I believe this was a beautiful Golden Globes Year Can't wait to see the fashion for the SAG AWARDS...

Friday, January 14, 2011

BRITNEY TAKES HER SPOT BACK ON TOP...




Well people looks like the girl has done it again. Britney Has debut at #1 with her new single "Hold it Against me" catchy lyrics and a sick underground beat. With the song leaked 4 days ago and offically being released a day later it seems that Brit is off to a fantastic 2011. All we need is a sick ass video with that vintage Britney video dancing. Kanye even got in on the action with a tweet saying "Yo Britney, I'm really happy for you and I'mma let you be #1, but me and Jay-Z single is one of the best songs of all time!" I'm so over him now it's clear he wants some kind of media attention.(won't mention him in my blog again).







In Other news: Ms. Jackson concert tickets have gone on sale today and I guess she is doing well in sales this go round due to the addition to shows. I got my ticket for her show in Atlantic City I am so excited and of course I will have pics and side notes to add. I am sooo happy right now Yeah Janet...

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

BRITNEY'S BACK BITCHES!!!/ KYLIE IS GOING ON TOUR IN THE STATES AGAIN




FRESH OFF THE JANET TOUR BEING ANNOUNCED... MS.SPEARS COMES OUT WITH A HOT NEW SINGLE THAT HAS PUT TO REST THE QUESTION CAN SHE DO IT AGAIN?! WELL LOOKS LIKE SHE CAN AND HAS WITH AN UNDERGROUND BEAT WHERE I AM EXPECTED A SICK ASS VIDEO TO FOLLOW. BRIT HAS BEEN IN THE STUDIO SINCE MID LAST YEAR WORKING ON A YET TO BE TITLED ALBUM TO DROP IN MARCH. WITH THE LEAD SINGLE GAINNING AIRPLAY BY THE SECOND IT LOOKS TO BE A GREAT YEAR FOR BRITNEY.. SIDE NOT THE COVER FOR THE SINGLE LOOKS GREAT...



kYLIE HAS ANNOUNCED HER SECOND NORTH AMERICAN TOUR DATES WITH HER 5TH NUMBER ONE IN THE US LOOKS LIKE KYLIE IS MOVING TOWARDS WORLD DOMINATION.

Aphrodite – Live 2011 North American Dates

April 28 Montreal Bell Centre
April 29 Boston, MA (Agganis Arena at Boston University)
April 30 Washington DC (GMU Patriot Center)
May 2 NYC, NY (Manhattan Center’s Hammerstein Ballroom)
May 3 NYC, NY (Manhattan Center’s Hammerstein Ballroom)
May 6 Atlanta, GA (Fox Theatre)
May 7 Fort Lauderdale, FL (Bank Atlantic Center)
May 8 Orlando, FL (Hard Rock Live Orlando)
May 10 Houston, TX (Verizon Wireless Theatre)
May 12 Mexico City (Sports Palace)
May 14 Guadalajara, Mexico (Auditorio Telmex)
May 16 Monterrey, Mexico (Arena)
May 18 Dallas, TX (Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie)
May 20 Los Angeles, CA (Hollywood Bowl)
May 21 San Francisco, CA (Bill Graham Civic Auditorium)
May 22 Las Vegas, NV (Colosseum at Caesars Palace)

Monday, January 10, 2011

JANET RETURNS TO THE WORLD....









WITH MUCH ANTICIPATION JANET ANNOUNCED LATE LAST YEAR THAT SHE WILL BE DOING A 35 CITY WORLD TOUR TO CELEBRATE 35 #1 SINGLES AND MS. JACKSON HAS DELIVERED MARCH IS WHEN SHE HITS THE STATES DOING SMALLER VENUES THEN WHAT SHE WOULD USUALLY DO BUT HEY CHECK THE LIST THEY AREN'T THAT DAMN SMALL..LOL THIS TOUR IS SET ON THE HEELS OF HER NEW BOOK "TRUE YOU" WHICH IS A SEMI AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF HER LIFE STRUGGLES WITH WEIGHT DUE TO HIT THE SHELVES FEBUARY 8TH. NOW AS FAR AS JANET GOES I HAVE BEEN A FAN OF HERS SINCE I COULD REMEMEBER I GOT A CONTROL TSHIRT AT THE AGE OF 6 AND I WOULD NEVER TAKE IT OFF. I SLEPT IN AND WORE IT EVERY WHERE. I SAY THIS TO SAY THIS REALLY MEANS THE WORLD TO ME I HAVE NEVER MET HER BUT JUST THE THOUGHT OF BEING IN A ROOM WATCHING HER PERFORM HAS ALWAYS MADE ME HAPPY. IT'S HARD TO EXPLAIN BUT I HAVE SUCH A CONNECTION TO JANET AND HER MUSIC... I CAN'T WAIT.... BELOW ARE THE US TOUR DATES AND CITIES TICKETS GO ON SALE BETWEEN JANUARY 12TH-20TH CHECK FOR UR CITY AND LET'S DO THIS ONE FOR OUR GIRL... REAL FANS STAND UP!!!!


Houston, TX March 4 RODEOHOUSTON

Chicago, IL March 7 & 8 The Chicago Theatre

Toronto, ON, Canada March 12 Sony Centre for the Performing Arts

Uncasville, CT, March 16 Mohegan Sun Arena

New York, NY March 18 Radio City Music Hall

Washington, DC March 22 DAR Constitution Hall

Atlantic City, NJ March 25 & 26 Borgata Spa & Resort Event Center

Atlanta, GA March 29 Fox Theatre

Saint Louis, MO March 31 Fox Theatre

Grand Prairie, TX April 2 Verizon Theatre

Denver, CO April 6 Wells Fargo Theatre at the Colorado Convention Center

Phoenix, AZ April 8 Comerica Theatre

Santa Barbara, CA April 9 Santa Barbara Bowl

Los Angeles, CA April 14 Gibson Amphitheatre

San Francisco, CA April 19 Bill Graham Civic Auditorium

Las Vegas, NV April 22 & 23 Caesars Palace - The Colosseum

Monday, January 3, 2011

Oprah Kicks off OWN with a fresh new look at TV


Happy New Year All...




Well Looks Like Oprah has done her thing so far with her new OWN Chanel (Oprah Winfrey Network)

I missed the actual Premire however it replayed all weekend I instantly fell in love with "Master class" It showcases walks of many lives Artist,News Anchors,music Icons, legends, Kind of like an intimate account of their lives up into the point where we know them as house hold names. Diane Sawyer was at most inspiring and a personal favorite of mine. I find it very refreshing to have such a network as an option to live the Best life ever. I will Miss Oprah on the air however this seems to very well fitting for her and as a fan I support this Network. OWN premired on Saturday January 1, 2011 to 1.16 million viewers alone.

The fact that the ratings below are “coverage” ratings bears explaining.

Most of the ratings on our site are “national” ratings, where a ratings point equals 1% of all US TV viewers in that particular group. “Coverage” ratings, which are not infrequently used in cable network PR measure the % of that cable networks reachable subscribers, so a single coverage ratings point equals 1% of the TV viewers who receive that particular cable network.

Also, to put the 1.16 million in primetime average somewhat into perspective, during Christmas week, 17 cable networks averaged more than that for the entire week.

via press release:

Fast Nationals for OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network (Preliminary Numbers)


All Ratings Are Coverage Ratings


Full weekend numbers for the entire launch weekend will be available on Tuesday.


Saturday, January 1 Prime Premieres

•#3 ad-supported cable network with W25-54 at 8 p.m. and 9 p.m., behind only ESPN and USA Network.
•Prime 8-11 p.m. average was a .93 W25-54 (#4), 1.0 Million P2+, 1.1HH rating.
•Premiere episode of “Season 25: Oprah Behind the Scenes” (Sat, Jan 1, 8-9 p.m. ET/PT) delivered a 1.1 W25-54 (#3 in time period), 1,160 P2+ and 1.24HH rating.
•“Season 25: Oprah Behind the Scenes” episode 102 (Sat, Jan 1 9-10 p.m. ET/PT) garnered a 1.1 W25-54 (#3 in time period), 1,196 P2+, 1.27HH rating.
*10 p.m. was the third airing of “Oprah’s Guide to OWN.”


Sunday, January 2 Prime

•“Ask Oprah’s All Stars” (Sun, Jan 2 8-10 p.m. ET/PT) premiere episode was #9 with W25-54, garnering a .79 W25-54, 968P2+, 1.02HH rating.
•“Master Class” (Sun, Jan 2 10-11 p.m. ET/PT) earned a .45 W25-54 (#21), 602P2+ and a .64HH rating.
•#14 overall in Prime, earning a .64 W25-54, 822 P2+, .86HH rating.
Source: Nielsen Media Research

*P2+ (000s)

OWN is currently available in approximately 67% of homes in the United States and 80% of cable homes

Oprah can't Heal America but now there is atleast an option for us to do better for ourselves