86th Academy Awards

I stopped taking the Academy Awards seriously when Toy Story 3 beat How To Train Your Dragon. I was so angry...
 
Smaug said:
I stopped taking the Academy Awards seriously when Toy Story 3 beat How To Train Your Dragon. I was so angry...
Well what do you expect when it comes to Pixar and Toy Story?
 
Smaug said:
That people are have extreme favoritism to Pixar, and I don't like it. Dreamworks is far superior.
if it makles you feel better sweetflareon.

it might have won if it wasn't the last toy story and the most saddest one out of all the three.
 
Best Picture:
American Hustle
12 Years a Slave
Gravity
Wolf of Wall Street
Nebraska
Rush
Saving Mr Banks
Captain Phillips
Blue Jasmine
The Butler
Philomena
Dallas Buyers Club
Prisoners
All is Lost
Inside Llewyn Davis
Her

Best Director:
Martin Scorsese for Wolf of Wall Street
Coen Brothers for Inside Llewyn Davis
Spike Jonze for Her
David O. Russell for American Hustle
Steve McQueen for 12 Years a Slave
Alfonso Cuaron for Gravity
JC Chandor for All is Lost
Ron Howard for Rush
Lee Daniels for The Butler
John Lee Hancock for Saving Mr Banks
Paul Greengrass for Captain Phillips
Alexander Payne for Nebraska

Best Actor:
Matthew McConaughey for Dallas Buyers Club
Bruce Dern for Nebraska
Robert Redford for All is Lost
Tom Hanks for Captain Phillips
Chewitel Ejiofor for 12 Years a Slave
Leonardo Dicaprio for Wolf of Wall Street
Oscar Isaac for Inside Llewyn Davis
Christian Bale for American Hustle
Hugh Jackman for Prisoners
Daniel Radcliffe for Kill Your Darlings
Forest Whitaker for The Butler
Joaquin Phoenix for Her

Best Actress:
Meryl Streep for August Osage County
Cate Blanchett for Blue Jasmine
Emma Thompson for Saving Mr Banks
Sandra Bullock for Gravity
Judi Dench for Philomena
Amy Adams for American Hustle
Greta Gerwig for Frances Ha
Brie Larson for Short Term 12
Adele Exarchopoulos for Blue is the Warmest Colour
Kate Winslet for Labor Day

Best Supporting Actor:
Jared Leto for Dallas Buyers Club
Michael Fassbender for 12 Years a Slave
Tom Hanks for Saving Mr Banks
Bradley Cooper for American Hustle
Jonah Hill for Wolf of Wall Street
Daniel Bruhl for Rush
Jake Gyllenhaal for Prisoners
John Goodman for Inside Llewyn Davis
Harrison Ford for 42
Will Forte for Nebraska
Matthew McConaughey for Mud
Woody Harrelson for Out of the Furnace
Barkhad Abdi for Captain Phillips
Colin Farrell for Saving Mr Banks

Best Supporting Actress:
Julia Roberts for August Osage County
Margot Robbie for Wolf of Wall Street
Jennifer Lawrence for American Hustle
June Squibb for Nebraska
Lupita Nyong'O for 12 Years a Slave
Melissa Leo for Prisoners
Oprah Winfrey for The Butler
Abigail Breslin for August Osage County
Scarlett Johanson for Her
 
War Doctor said:
Here's hoping Benedict Cumberbatch wins an award for his portrayals as Smaug and
Khan.
Star Trek movies only get the technical nominations and seeing how the first Hobbit didn't get that much love from the Academy as much as the original trilogy...
 
The second movie improved on the first movie by a lot, and even if it doesn't get anything, cumberbatch's portrayal as Smaug was phenomenal, not many can deny it.
 
supermariofan said:
Best Picture:
American Hustle
12 Years a Slave
Gravity
Wolf of Wall Street
Nebraska
Rush
Saving Mr Banks
Captain Phillips
Blue Jasmine
The Butler
Philomena
Dallas Buyers Club
Prisoners
All is Lost
Inside Llewyn Davis
Her
And another year where I have not seen any of the candidates for best picture.

Mario4Ever said:
Smaug said:
Dreamworks is far superior.

How so?
Dreamworks movies have better stories, better animation, most of the time better voice actors, and better nostalgia. Dreamworks also has it's own style and doesn't have to confirm to other companies *coughdisney/pixarcough*. I like some Pixar movies, but not nearly as many or as much as Dreamworks movies.
 
you are the first person i've ever seen that said dreamwork's animation is better than pixar's animation
 
Pixar had less grossout humor than Dreamworks, also...
Smaug said:
supermariofan said:
Best Picture:
American Hustle
12 Years a Slave
Gravity
Wolf of Wall Street
Nebraska
Rush
Saving Mr Banks
Captain Phillips
Blue Jasmine
The Butler
Philomena
Dallas Buyers Club
Prisoners
All is Lost
Inside Llewyn Davis
Her
And another year where I have not seen any of the candidates for best picture.

Wow you're missing so much (particularly Saving Mr Banks, Prisoners, Nebraska, All is Lost, 12 Years a Slave, Inside Llewyn Davis, Rush, Captain Phillips, Her, and American Hustle)
 
Smaug said:
Dreamworks movies have better stories, better animation, most of the time better voice actors, and better nostalgia. Dreamworks also has it's own style and doesn't have to confirm to other companies *coughdisney/pixarcough*. I like some Pixar movies, but not nearly as many or as much as Dreamworks movies.

Aside from what I said in the other thread about Toy Story, which questions the idea of Dreamworks having "better stories" (I'm not an animation buff, so I can't really say why one is better than the other, since both companies have movies of varying styles), voice actors have little to do with a film's quality (films with certain voice actors may get more notoriety, but they aren't better or worse than films with less notable voice actors just on that basis), and I don't understand how a movies can have "better nostalgia" than others, since your feelings of nostalgia in this case are entirely dependent on what you saw and remember from your youth (obviously more Dreamworks films than Pixar films) and also have no bearing on the films' superiority or inferiority to others produced by another company. Pixar didn't conform to other companies. Pixar worked with Disney because Disney had a fuckton more money, and then they continued working together because they produced good shit.
 
I take the Oscars with a grain of salt now after The King's Speech beat Toy Story 3 and Inception for Best Picture.
 
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