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Aaron's Movie Trivia #5 - 10/30/2007

Trivia #4 Answer: Cary Grant

I was in Philadelphia (The Philadelphia Story) last Friday (His Girl Friday), I killed a Butterfly (Madame Butterfly) and thought, I have Sinned (Sinners in the Sun), I have been Bad (Born to be Bad), I will go to Hell (Merrily We Go to Hell)
As I was walking through the park a rabbit with Big Brown Eyes (Big Brown Eyes) jumped in front of me, and I fell
The rabbit grabbed something of mine, and I had to go Down the Rabbit Hole (Alice in Wonderland), To Catch the Thieving rabbit (To Catch a Thief), who had gone North at a fast pace (North by Northwest)
The rabbit had stolen my old Lace (Arsenic and Old Lace)
and it was an Affair (An Affair to Remember) I would not forget, for I lost face

Last week’s Trivia #4 winner was Connie, who was the first person to decipher every clue!

Okay - here are the rules again. Each week you will get a series of clues that are either a hint to an actor's identity or the title of a movie. Usually, for an actor, this will include hints of previous roles they have played. For a movie title, there will usually be comments on the actors who are in the movie or allusions to the title with other media such as songs.

Email your answers to aaron.saltystix@gmail.com. As the competition grows prizes will be added.

Game #5: Special Halloween edition

Direct your attention on the best – no prison can hold me, I’m bound to escape – directors copy me
Quentin used a TV title of mine as a movie in his movie, they remade one of my movies in 2005, but you just can’t be,
As cheesy as me, my first five movies had B-movie titles to go with my six movies with one-word titles
You better believe my name is front and center on every movie, especially the vitals:
Vampires, aliens, ghosts, shape-shifters, zombies, Satan, and slashers, hell, I’ve even followed the king

You will get lots of "extra credit" if you can decipher all the clues.

   

Could “Avatar” Win Best Picture?

By Brett Hogan

 

Last week, the trailer for James Cameron’s sci-fi experiment “Avatar” debuted. While initially unimpressed with the teaser, I began to wonder: Could this film win best picture? 

 

Buzz has been generating for this movie for years. Years. The technology to make this movie didn’t exist when Cameron conceived it, so he invented it. When is the last time you heard of a director spearheading the invention of anything? The casting started in 2005. Most movies these days, even epics, are done in half that time. I could go on. 

 

The most important thing to take away from all of this is that people are saying this will be the future of movies. Now, I don’t agree with the idea that CGI will become more prevalent than it already is. But I do believe that this will set the bar miles higher for sci-fi. I mean, that is what Titanic did. And that won some awards if memory serves.

 

I’ll bet you’re asking yourself, how can you even suggest that a film like this will win Best Picture when the initial trailer was nothing better than visual stimulation? Well, there are a couple of reasons. First, the Academy has expanded Best Picture to ten films. This doesn’t guarantee anything other than improved chances for most films on the cusp.

 

Second, after last year’s Oscars debacle, which saw the best film of the year, “The Dark Knight,” not only get shafted in awards but nominations as well, the Academy is pulling out all the stops to appease those with the loudest voices in the film industry, the fanboys. Now, the Academy probably didn’t lose anything because of that other than some viewers of the award show. Perhaps if people are again outraged with the winners or nominees, the heads of the Academy would lose their jobs. So this is all about the Academy protecting itself, which is not so outrageous.  

 

 

Third, there is an economic motive here. I’ve heard this film will cost $190 million, not counting the R&D costs associated with Cameron’s inventions or the cost of getting 3-D cameras into every theater in the country. The Academy will do everything in its power to get people into the seats and make this the next “Titanic” or “The Dark Knight.” But the Academy doesn’t have much power, besides nominating and awarding, so they will slap the “Nominated for Best Picture” moniker onto every commercial and print ad to get the people who didn’t believe the critics to relent and see this movie.

 

Of course, all of this is pure conjecture, and no revolutionary film (Terminator 2, Jurassic Park, etc.) has ever won the Best Picture category because it changed the game. Except maybe Titanic. But still, could this movie actually win? My answer is no but a nomination is certain and who knows what could happen from there. We’ll know more come February 2010.