I hadn't watched Inception in the last year or so but watched it around a week ago. Movie still amazes me. Complete disgrace that Nolan's direction wasn't even nominated. Probably should have outright won.
I'm surprised that the clip is actually that clear and understandable. Bootlegs are usually awful. Looks good. Focuses more on the heart rather than the visuals in that few secs.
Official site was also updated with the title logo:
http://www.interstellarmovie.com
I think The King's Speech is infinitely better than Inception in every imaginable way.The King's Speech is one of those movies that not a single person gave a damn about 5 minutes after the ceremony.
Inception is still more well-known, which was more his point.I think The King's Speech is infinitely better than Inception in every imaginable way.
Well-known isn't a batch of merit is it? Transformers is more well-known than The Master. All stupid blockbusters are well-known.Inception is still more well-known, which was more his point.![]()
Well-known isn't a batch of merit is it? Transformers is more well-known than The Master. All stupid blockbusters are well-known.![]()
Well-known isn't a batch of merit is it? Transformers is more well-known than The Master. All stupid blockbusters are well-known.![]()
I think the word best suited would be 'relevant'. For exmaple Shakespeare in Love won over Saving Private Ryan for beer picture. People stil talk and are influenced by 'Ryan'.
The Oscars are rarely about the best films of the year. But I think The King's Speech was a decent choice and was atleast in the better half of the nominees. I think Inception was in the worse half.Not just "well known" but also just in terms of lasting impact. I don't necessarily think Inception was the best film of 2010 but it certainly wasn't the Kings Speech, not by a long mile. Every single other film nominated for Best Picture would have been a better choice that year, except for maybe the Fighter, though I'm glad several of the individual performances were recognized.
Inception is just a damn well crafted film and Nolan put together a great team of people who while working for him did some of the best work of their careers and were recognized for it. It was entertaining to watch Pfister and others like those winning for the sound and special effects awards allude to the fact that Nolan wasn't nominated while they thanked him.
The Oscars are rarely about the best films of the year. But I think The King's Speech was a decent choice and was atleast in the better half of the nominees. I think Inception was in the worse half.
I was actually delighted when Nolan was snubbed and laughed out aloud on nomination morning. I did not like the direction of Inception at all and I was hoping that Nolan would miss but knew there wasn't a chance in hell he would miss and then he missed! It was a pleasant surprise.
Same with Affleck last year. I was pleasantly surprised that the director's branch chose to ignore him.
With The Social Network, I think it was a more a reaction to the Academy feeling a little bit bullied to vote for it or else they were dumb.Yes they are about films that come out at precisely the right time in the fall that can accumulate votes and nominations through sheer force of hype momentum which leads to academy members in the press actually admitting that they would vote for films like The Social Network but felt they "peaked too early" as if that should mean anything.
No accounting for taste.
The King's Speech is one of those movies that not a single person gave a damn about 5 minutes after the ceremony.
The team in Inception could use the King's Speech to put their targets to sleep.
The team in Inception could use the King's Speech to put their targets to sleep.
The team in Inception could use the King's Speech to put their targets to sleep.