Wed - February 16, 2005FFH 2004 Awards Given OutIn a quiet meeting place on Sunday February
the 13th, the Far From Hollywood Film Society of Portland, Oregon, meet
auspiciously for its first annual award ceremony.
In attendance were acting president D. K. Holm, vice-president Ed Goldberg and friend, and member Ellen Kimball and spouse. Award recipients in attendance were Steffen Silvis, theater reviewer for Willamette Week, and filmmaker Chel White. On behalf of exhibitor Tom Ranieri of the Cinema 21 in Portland, Larry Smith accepted an award. Mr. Smith spoke movingly of Tom Ranieri's commitment to the public; Chel White and Steffen Silvis accepted their award graciously; and Ed Goldberg paid homage to the work of Oregonian music critic Marty Hughley, also a winner this year in such terms that would be the envy of any writer. After the very brief "ceremony," which was more like a meeting, the group retired to the nearby It's a Beautiful Pizza parlor for post meeting libations and slices, where convivial conversation was had by all. As the first baby steps of an organization just getting on its feet, these events were small and modest in scale. Hopes are that next year, members of FFH will receive Academy screeners to facilitate voting. We may revise the voting process. A board meeting in March will be focused on an agenda for activities and changes in 2005. Posted at 09:47 AM Read More Fri - February 4, 2005Corrected ballot listI've corrected a stupid error in the
ballot: Steffen Silvis is the theater reviewer for
Willamette
Week, not the
Oregonian.
The sins of cutting and pasting ... My apologies to Mr. Silvis.
Posted at 11:44 PM Read More Fri - January 28, 2005Results of this year's ballotingThe balloting is completed. The results are
in. Here are the winners in the Far From Hollywood Film Society's first annual
round of voting.
Best Feature Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Best Animated Feature The Incredibles Best Director Michel Gondry, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Best Actor Don Cheadle, Hotel Rwanda Jamie Foxx, Ray Best Actress Kate Winslet, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Best Supporting Actor Timothy Olyphant, The Girl Next Door Clive Owen, Closer Best Supporting Actress Virginia Madsen, Sideways Natalie Portman, Closer Best Comic Performer Thomas Hatden Church, Sideways Best Original Screenplay Charlie Kaufman, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Best Independent feature Napoleon Dynamite Best Foreign Film Since Otar Left Best Fiction Film by a NW filmmaker Coming Up Easy, directed by Rebecca Rodriguez Best Non-Fiction Film by a NW filmmaker Big City Dick: Richard Peterson's First Movie, directed by Scott Milam and Todd Pottinger Best Animated Film by a NW filmmaker Magda, directed by Chel White Best Local Non-Film Critic Steffen Silvis, theater critic for the Willamette Week Marty Hughley, popular music reviewer for the Oregonian Special Award: Local Filmmaker Nick Peterson Special Award: Local Exhibitor Tom Ranieri One of the interesting peculiarities of this year's results was the presence of ties in three categories (the Society just happened to have an even number of voters this year). Northwest recipients will receive their awards during a modest ceremony held sometime in early February. Posted at 08:01 AM Read More Sat - January 15, 2005Dawn Taylor's 10 Best from 2004Dawn Taylor is the movie reviewer for the
Portland
Tribune. Dawn
writes:
This was, to put it as politely as possible, a pretty awful year for movies. To put it another way: When you’ve seen well over 100 films during the year and have trouble coming up with 10 that qualify as “best,” you know that the field was littered with dreck. There were a few bright spots amid the detritus, however. Here, in alphabetical order, are the 10 films this reviewer enjoyed the most in 2004: ![]() Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Not just notable because Jim Carrey isn’t irritating — a mesmerizing, deeply touching, hilarious and technically awe-inspiring meditation of the power of love by oddball screenwriter Charlie Kaufman (Adaptation). The Five Obstructions One director (Lars Von Trier) challenges another director (Jorgen Leth) to remake one of his films five different ways according to five different, punishing rules. The result is a fascinating examination of the men’s relationship and of the process of filmmaking itself. The Incredibles Part superhero origin epic, part James Bond adventure thriller and all giddy excitement. This is Pixar’s best film yet and arguably the best movie of the year — tightly plotted, deftly acted and animated with jaw-dropping perfection. Kill Bill: Vol. 2 Even better than the first half, a spectacular fanboy homage to Shaw Brothers chop-socky films, spaghetti Westerns and film noir thrillers. A delirious cartoon of a movie and one heck of a lot of fun. The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou Sad, funny and quirky, Life Aquatic occasionally threatens to capsize under the weight of its own self-conscious irony, but still offers intermittent brilliance. Bill Murray’s dry performance is one of his best, despite being repeatedly upstaged by a hilarious Willem Dafoe. Napoleon Dynamite A surprising, deadpan depiction of high school dorkiness, this is the rare teencentric comedy that doesn’t go for easy, crude or stupid laughs. A laugh-filled little film that loves its geeky heroes and delights with its weird charm. The Saddest Music in the World This high-concept, obsessively strange art film by director Guy Maddin was the year’s most challenging and absurd film. Starring ex-Kid in the Hall Mark McKinney as a fast-talking huckster and Isabella Rossellini as a legless beer baroness, it’s haunting, amusing, confusing and surreal — Maddin’s films may not be to everyone’s taste, but they’re refreshingly unique. Shaun of the Dead BBC’s The Office meets George Romero in this wonderfully original horror-comedy. A ripping good zombie flick, Shaun manages the nigh-impossible by being both scary and sidesplittingly funny, often at the same time. Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow By doing everything right in front of a green-screen that George Lucas did wrong, first-time director Kerry Conran blew the Star Wars prequels out of the water with his energetic take on Saturday afternoon sci-fi serials. A simply gorgeous cliffhanger pastiche that deserves a second — and third — viewing. Stage Beauty In this lushly cinematic ode to British theater, Billy Crudup plays a circa-1600’s actor who’s devoted his life to playing women on the stage. When the king proclaims that only the fairer sex will play those roles, Crudup finds that not just his livelihood but his very identity are threatened. A witty, bawdy and surprisingly touching period piece with Crudup’s amazing performance at its center. Posted at 12:13 AM Read More Fri - January 14, 2005D. K. Holm's 10 Best ListD. K. Holm is the acting president of the Far
From Hollywood Film Society of Portland, Oregon. His 10 best and worst list is
available in his column at Kevin Smith's website, MoviePoopShoot.com .
Posted at 09:30 AM Read More Kerry Fall's 10 Best List for 2004Far From Hollywood Film Society of
Portland member Kerry Fall currently is the co-host of KBOO radio's Movie
Talk.
Here is Kerry Fall's 10 Best and Worst list. Far From Hollywood member Kerry Fall currently is the co-host of KBOO radio's Movie Talk. Best Films of 2004 ![]() Since Otar Left Broken Wings Control Room Fahrenheit 911 Kill Bill 2 Supersize Me Tokyo Godfathers A Very Long Engagement Sideways Before Sunset Dogville Touching the Void Osama (Siddiq Barmak, Afghanistan) Honorable Mention Riding Giants Dodgeball Monster Road 5 Obstructions The Incredibles My Architect Worst Catwoman Troy Riddick Harold and Kumar go to White Castle Van Helsing Posted at 09:27 AM Read More Ed Goldberg's 10 Best and Worst list for 2004Below is the 10 Best list of Far
From Hollywood member Ed
Goldberg, the host of KBOO
radio's Movie
Talk.
Best Films of 2004 (In no particular order): ![]() Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind The Saddest Music in the World I’m Not Scared Shrek 2 Spiderman 2 Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban Kinsey Oasis The Motorcycle Diaries Vera Drake Sideways Ray The Incredibles The Aviator Honorable Mention: The Manchurian Candidate Collateral The Bourne Supremacy Finding Neverland Documentaries: Unprecedented: The 2000 Presidential Election Fahrenheit 9/11 Control Room Metallica: Some Kind of Monster Festival Express End of the Century: The Story of the Ramones Worst: Taking Lives Troy A Slipping Down Life Scumrock The Clearing Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy The Village The Grudge Beyond the Sea Spanglish Saw Most Overrated: Open Water Posted at 09:23 AM Read More |
Quick Links
Calendar
Categories
Archives
XML/RSS Feed
Statistics
Total entries in this blog:
Total entries in this category: Published On: May 01, 2005 09:18 AM |
||||||||||||||