Business World

The Shape of Water triumphs at nail-biting Oscars

-

HOLLYWOOD — The Shape of Water on Sunday won top honors at the Oscars including the coveted best picture statuette, bringing the curtain down on a Hollywood awards season overshadow­ed by scandal over sexual misconduct in showbiz.

Guillermo del Toro’s fairy- tale romance led the charge going into the show with 13 nomination­s, and took home best picture — the top prize of the night — as well as best director and statuettes for production design and best original score.

In a night of honors being shared fairly evenly among several candidates, Martin McDonagh’s dark crime comedy Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri had to settle for best actress for Frances McDormand and best supporting actor for Sam Rockwell.

Christophe­r Nolan’s World War II thriller Dunkirk also picked up three awards, but in the less glitzy technical categories, while several movies ended the evening with two trophies.

“I am an immigrant,” an emotional Del Toro said in collecting his first prize of the night, praising the power of filmmaking to “erase the line in the sand” between people of different countries and cultures.

“I want to dedicate this to every young filmmaker — the youth that is showing us how things are done. Really, they are, in every country in the world,” said

“I thought this could never happen. It happens. And I want to tell you, everyone that is dreaming of using fantasy to tell the stories about the things that are real in the world today — you can do it.”

‘LONG OVERDUE’

Hosted for the second straight year by late night funnyman Jimmy Kimmel, the 90th Academy Awards capped a difficult few months during which the industry has declared war on the pervasive culture of sexual impropriet­y unearthed by the downfall of movie mogul and alleged serial sex attacker Harvey Weinstein.

Kimmel set the tone by targeting Weinstein in his opening monologue, describing the disgraced producer’s downfall following dozens of allegation­s of sexual harassment and assault as “long overdue.”

“We can’t let bad behavior slide anymore. The world is watching us. We need to set an example,” he said.

McDormand, a winner throughout the awards season for her scintillat­ing turn as a grieving, rage-filled mother in Three Billboards, took home her second Oscar, 21 years after winning for Fargo.

In a statement about the need for inclusion in the industry, she got all of the female nominees in the room to stand to highlight their work.

“We all have stories to tell and projects we need financed,” she said to enthusiast­ic applause.

Her Three Billboards co-star Rockwell kicked off the night by claiming best supporting actor for his acclaimed turn as a racist, violent police officer.

Best actor went to runaway favorite Gary Oldman, who sat in make-up for three hours a day to disappear entirely into the role of British wartime prime minister Winston Churchill for Darkest Hour.

Allison Janney won best supporting actress for her turn as the cold, sardonic mother of disgraced figure skater Tonya Harding in I, Tonya — capping a sparkling awards season which saw her sweep the major prizes.

“My fellow nominees, you represent everything that is good and right and human about this profession. You are all extraordin­ary,” the statuesque 58-yearold Janney, the overwhelmi­ng favorite, enthused at the podium.

ACTIVISM

With the #MeToo and Time’s Up campaigns against sexual misconduct and gender inequality dominating the 2018 awards circuit, this year’s Oscars gala was seen as an opportunit­y for Tinseltown to support female filmmaking.

Greta Gerwig, only the fifth woman in Oscars history to be nominated for best director — for comedy/drama Lady Bird — however went home emptyhande­d, despite other nomination­s for best picture and best screenplay.

There was also the first nod in history for a female cinematogr­apher — Rachel Morrison, who shot Dee Rees’s racial drama Mudbound — although the award ended up going to Roger Deakins on his 14th attempt, for Blade Runner 2049.

The Time’s Up initiative was not as visible as at the Golden Globes in January, with no coordinate­d protest — like the striking Globes red carpet “blackout.”

But towards the end of the show, Salma Hayek fronted the presentati­on of a video of stars advocating for women’s rights and racial equality, including Ava DuVernay, Chadwick Boseman, Lee Daniels and Geena Davis.

“This entire fall, ( through) the # MeToo, the Time’s Up movements, everyone is getting a voice to express something that has been happening forever, not only in Hollywood, but in every walk of life,” said Mira Sorvino ( Mighty Aphrodite).

In another nod to the women’s movements, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences tapped past winners Jennifer Lawrence and Jodie Foster — on crutches — to present McDormand’s best actress Oscar.

Traditiona­lly, the previous year’s best actor winner would present that statuette, but Casey Affleck, who triumphed in 2017 for Manchester by the Sea, withdrew under a cloud of sexual harassment accusation­s he denies.

PRESENTERS ATONE FOR 2017 FLUB

Other winners included Pixar’s Coco for best animated feature and A Fantastic Woman —a love story from Chilean director Sebastian Lelio with a much-praised star turn from transgende­r actress Daniela Vega — in the foreign film category.

And Jordan Peele won the award for best original screenplay for his highly acclaimed debut film, horror satire Get Out.

Organizers were looking to rebound after last year’s flubbed announceme­nt by Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway of the best picture winner — the trophy was initially given to La La Land, when the actual winner was Moonlight.

In a surprise turn of events, Beatty and Dunaway were tapped to present the same prize this time around, and the presentati­on went without a hitch.

“It’s so nice seeing you again,” joked Beatty, to laughs from the audience. —

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? RED AND WHITE on the red carpet: (L-R) Jane Fonda; Mary J. Blige; and Best Supporting Actress Allison Janney (for I, Tonya)
RED AND WHITE on the red carpet: (L-R) Jane Fonda; Mary J. Blige; and Best Supporting Actress Allison Janney (for I, Tonya)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines