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Author: mat_arof

[2018] ACADEMY AWARDS 2018 Full Winner Winner - page #557.Rating jatuh giler 18.9 je

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Post time 7-10-2017 08:34 PM | Show all posts



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Post time 8-10-2017 01:46 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
putehkundor replied at 7-10-2017 08:34 PM
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Tak boleh challenge Sally Hawkins..dgn ni secara rasminya iols akan berkempen utk kak Sally!
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Post time 8-10-2017 05:32 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
cyclops_psycho replied at 8-10-2017 01:46 AM
Tak boleh challenge Sally Hawkins..dgn ni secara rasminya iols akan berkempen utk kak Sally! :lo ...

Based on the trailer i lebih nampak pompuan lagi sorang tu, Juno temple.

Dua dua orang tu jatuh cinta Kat lifeguard, Justin Timberlake
Kate pun boleh tahan membirah sbb sheols masih bersuami.
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Post time 8-10-2017 11:31 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
putehkundor replied at 8-10-2017 05:32 AM
Based on the trailer i lebih nampak pompuan lagi sorang tu, Juno temple.

Dua dua orang tu jat ...

Tapi Juno Temple utk best suppoeting actress kan tp susah la dia nak lawan frontrunnes seperti Allison Janney (I,Tonya), Laurie Metcalf (Lady Bird) & Octavia Spencer (Shape Out Of Water).
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Post time 8-10-2017 12:28 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
cyclops_psycho replied at 8-10-2017 01:46 AM
Tak boleh challenge Sally Hawkins..dgn ni secara rasminya iols akan berkempen utk kak Sally! :lo ...

sama lahh. akak pun dengan rasmi akan berkempen utk sally hawkin. best actress oscar 2018!!!!!!!!
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Post time 8-10-2017 12:32 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
hanakikan replied at 8-10-2017 12:28 PM
sama lahh. akak pun dengan rasmi akan berkempen utk sally hawkin. best actress oscar 2018!!!!!!!!

Kann..tgk trailer pun dah rasa terkesan dgn character dia walaupun tanpa dialog.
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 Author| Post time 9-10-2017 06:56 AM | Show all posts
skrg ni x dpat nak kempen sangat sebab.busy dengan GV4 yang akan muncul x lama lagi.


nanti bila dah ada senarai golden globe...akan mula kempen...

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 Author| Post time 12-10-2017 11:38 AM | Show all posts
HOLLYWOOD FILM AWARDS dh keluar list pemenang untuk kategori Breakout

tetapi majlis penyampain anugerah pada  5 november 2017

Hollywood Breakout Performance Actress  - Mary J.Blidge (Winner) Mudbound

Hollywood Breakout Perfomance Actor  - Timothee Chalemet (Winner)  Call Me By Your Name

Hollywood Ensemble Award  - Cast I, Tonya  (Winner)
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Post time 17-10-2017 07:53 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Wonder wheel dpt mixed review dr critics.
Kate winslet pun rasanya dah Tak Ada chance nak bolos top 5. Bye kate
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 Author| Post time 20-10-2017 10:56 AM | Show all posts
Edited by mat_arof at 20-10-2017 11:00 AM

Gotham Awards dah keluarkan calon -calon ....

Best Feature

    Call Me by Your Name
    The Florida Project
    Get Out
    Good Time
    I, Tonya


Best Actor

    Willem Dafoe as Bobby Hicks – The Florida Project
    James Franco as Tommy Wiseau – The Disaster Artist
    Daniel Kaluuya as Chris Washington – Get Out
    Robert Pattinson as Constantine "Connie" Nikas – Good Time
    Adam Sandler as Danny Meyerowitz – The Meyerowitz Stories
    Harry Dean Stanton as Lucky – Lucky


Best Actress

    Melanie Lynskey as Ruth Kimke – I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore
    Haley Lu Richardson as Casey – Columbus
    Margot Robbie as Tonya Harding – I, Tonya
    Saoirse Ronan as Christine "Lady Bird" McPherson – Lady Bird
    Lois Smith as Marjorie – Marjorie Prime


Best Screenplay

    Emily V. Gordon and Kumail Nanjiani – The Big Sick
    Mike White – Brad's Status
    James Ivory – Call Me by Your Name
    Kogonada – Columbus
    Jordan Peele – Get Out
    Greta Gerwig – Lady Bird


Breakthrough Actor

    Mary J. Blige as Florence Jackson – Mudbound
    Timothée Chalamet as Elio Perlman – Call Me by Your Name
    Harris Dickinson as Frankie – Beach Rats
    Kelvin Harrison Jr. as Travis – It Comes at Night
    Brooklynn Prince as Moonee – The Florida Project


sangat terkejut...filem Get Out boleh tercalon...eeewwwww...bosan giler filem ni

Gary Oldman Snub...

robert Pettison tercalon best actror..oh pleaseeeee...napelah nak masukkan jantan di anugerah..sungguh x layak..

maybe james franco akan menang..best actor

Timothey tercalon Breakthrough Actor...kenapa x tercalon Best Actor..mungkin CMBYN adalah debut dia kot...tapi rasanya dia akan tercalon di GG dan OSCAR.

sally hawkins snub ...

Margot Robbie dan Saoirse Ronan tercalon Best Actress dan adakah frunrunner untuk best actrerss OSCAR

best Picture fruntrunner CMBYN  & the Florida projek & get Out
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 Author| Post time 20-10-2017 10:58 AM | Show all posts
putehkundor replied at 17-10-2017 07:53 AM
Wonder wheel dpt mixed review dr critics.
Kate winslet pun rasanya dah Tak Ada chance nak bolos to ...

kata winslet ni..aku sungguh x minat dia ni

lakonan sooooo borrrringggg...napelah dia ni selalu tercalon oscar dan masa menang best actress tu pun sebab kesian ...lama sangat nak menang

masa tu yang lebih layak angelina jolie dalam filem apa aku dah lupa.tapi kisah anak dia hilang arahan Clint eastwood.

sebab nak sangat menang...bagilah merasa oscar tuk kate winslet tu


dah tgok dah trailer wonder wheel tu...so boring sangat...

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Post time 21-10-2017 02:26 AM | Show all posts
mat_arof replied at 20-10-2017 10:58 AM
kata winslet ni..aku sungguh x minat dia ni

lakonan sooooo borrrringggg...napelah dia ni selalu ...


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Post time 29-10-2017 01:57 PM | Show all posts
Let's break down the Oscars best supporting actress race (so far)
Posted on October 25, 2017 at 3:00pm EDT
                       




       
                                                                               
       
                                                                                                                                        [url=https://pinterest.com/pin/create/button/?url=http%3A%2F%2Few.com%2Fmovies%2F2017%2F10%2F25%2Foscars-2018-predictions-supporting-actress%2F&media=https%3A%2F%2Fewedit.files.wordpress.com%2F2017%2F10%2Foscars2.jpg%3Fw%3D1024&description=Let’s%20break%20down%20the%20Oscars%20best%20supporting%20actress%20race%20(so far)][/url]                       
               
                                                        Left to Right: Nicole Rivelli/Lionsgate; Justin Lubin/Universal; Netflix; Merie Wallace/A24                                                                                                                        Welcome to Oscar season! Before we embark on our annual long journey, let us pause to give thanks that 2017 — a real doozy of a year for ladykind 
(to put it gently) — boasts a plethora of fantastic female performances on the big screen. Better still, this holds true for both the lead-and-supporting actress categories.
Here’s who could follow Viola Davis’ Oscars 2017 win for best supporting actress:
Motherhood and maternal impulses are the thread woven throughout our top contenders, but the range of matriarchs is as diverse as the films we find them in. Laurie Metcalf’s Marion in Greta Gerwig’s Lady Bird (opening Nov. 3) is described by another character as “warm, but she’s also kind of scary.” This is not wrong. But Marion’s endless exasperated worrying over her teenage daughter (Saoirse Ronan) — who is practically vibrating with the desire to flee the familial nest — will surely strike familiar and sympathetic chords. Ditto Holly Hunter as Beth in this summer’s The Big Sick, tearing up a hospital and anything or anyone 
 in her way for the sake of her comatose daughter (Zoe Kazan) in a fierce mother-bear fashion not seen since Terms of Endearment. Mary J. Blige has been astonishing audiences since the Sundance Film Festival, playing the stoic and strong Florence in Dee Rees’ epic period piece 
Mudbound (out Nov. 17). (She’s already 
off to an early awards start: The Gotham Awards nominated her for Breakthrough Actor.) Octavia Spencer may not technically play a mother in The Shape of Water(opening Dec. 8), but she’s certainly the 
de facto caretaker to a group of romantic 
misfits — which includes a kind of merman — and her warmth and loyalty are undeniable.
But then there’s the other side of the spectrum. Take the innately likable Allison Janney, who will make your jaw drop and your blood run cold as Tonya Harding’s dead-eyed and compassion-free mother, LaVona, in December’s I, Tonya. (If you are looking for a C.J. Cregg fix, keep moving.) As the Reverend Mother in Novitiate (out Friday in limited release), Melissa Leo gives the kind of steely, sinister performance that 
the Academy tends to reward (see: J.K. Simmons in Whiplash). And September’s mother! may have been hamstrung by
 notoriety, but Michelle Pfeiffer made a 
triumphant return to the big screen after 
a four-year hiatus, making slinky mischief look devilishly good.
Plus there are those oh-so-enticing 
 performances no one has seen yet: Lesley Manville in Paul Thomas Anderson’s 
 Phantom Thread (out Dec. 25); both Sarah &#8232aulson and Carrie Coon in Steven Spielberg’s The Post (out Dec. 22); and Michelle Williams in The Greatest Showman (out Dec. 25). Not to be greedy among all these riches, but if we could be granted just one last wish: Please, Oscar voters, do not forget Allison Williams’ incredible turn in last 
winter’s Get Out. You should get in on that.
                       

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Post time 29-10-2017 02:01 PM | Show all posts
hanakikan replied at 29-9-2017 10:23 AM
baru tgk trailer shape of water. Sally hawkin rupanya mute dlm citer tu. interesting. kalau dia mena ...

first actress yg menang oscar best actress utk wtk pekak dan bisu ,

technically mak cik ni pekak tp ade try bercakap sket

Marlee Matlin


                        




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Post time 29-10-2017 02:20 PM | Show all posts
iols sorg kah lobi utk acik frances mcdomand thn ni?

harap2 ade kejutan dlm oscar..
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Post time 4-11-2017 12:43 PM | Show all posts
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Post time 4-11-2017 12:50 PM | Show all posts
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Post time 11-11-2017 04:43 PM | Show all posts
Kevin Spacey Is Getting Cut From ‘All The Money In The World’The actor, accused of sexual assaults, is being replaced by Christopher Plummer in last-minute reshoots.

By Ed Mazza












A film due out next month is being reshot to remove Kevin Spacey from a key role amid sexual assault allegations against the actor.

He will be replaced by Christopher Plummer in the role of J. Paul Getty in “All the Money in the World,” directed by Ridley Scott, according to Deadline.

The website reported that the cast, including Mark Wahlberg and Michelle Williams, and crew unanimously agreed to reshoot the scenes to remove Spacey.

Variety cited sources as saying that work would be completed in the coming weeks and that the film would still be released as planned on Dec. 22.

The film was complete and had been set to close the AFI Fest next week, but it was pulled from the schedule after the accusations against Spacey emerged, the Los Angeles Times reported.

A statement from Sony’s TriStar Pictures at the time said the film would still be released as planned.

  
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“[A] film is not the work of one person,” the statement said. “There are over 800 other actors, writers, artists, craftspeople and crew who worked tirelessly and ethically on this film, some for years, including one of cinema’s master directors. It would be a gross injustice to punish all of them for the wrongdoings of one supporting actor in the film.”

Last month, actor Anthony Rapp accused Spacey of sexual harassment when he was 14 years old. Since then, a number of others have also come forward.

On Wednesday, former Boston TV news anchor Heather Unruh said the actor sexually assaulted her son last year after giving the 18-year-old alcohol.

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Post time 11-11-2017 04:48 PM | Show all posts
putehkundor replied at 17-8-2017 06:09 AM
Nampak macam Chastain bakal dicalonkan best actress

iols baru tau kevin spacey ni baru nak coming out gay..



patutlah kemain daring sgt scene kena peluk dgn neighbor gay dlm american beauty

rupanya dia pernah wat menda yg sama gak budak sekolah dan ade experience..
menang terus oscar weiiii ...
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Post time 11-11-2017 04:57 PM | Show all posts



    These 16 Women Are Vying For Best Actress In The 2018 Oscar RaceFrances McDormand leads the herd, but can that momentum last until March?


    By Matthew Jacobs




    Fox/A24






      470


    As usual, winnowing the Oscars’ Best Actress race to five nominees will be agonizing. Just the way we like it.

    With the holidays fast approaching, awards season is entering overdrive. Most of the year’s campaign-defining film festivals are behind us, clarifying the narratives that can make or break the top-tier contenders. Between now and the announcement of the nominations on Jan. 23, I’ll lay odds on the Oscars’ six major categories, ranking the contenders according to their stature at time of publication. Of course, anything can change once more precursor prizes are announced. (For example, will German actress Vicky Kriepsbreak through after Paul Thomas Anderson’s “Phantom Thread” screens for press? TBD.)

    Consider this your first HuffPost cheat sheet for the 2018 Oscar contest. The awards air March 4.

    • 16Salma Hayek, “Beatriz at Dinner”

      Roadside Attractions
      Hollywood has never known quite what to do with Salma Hayek, a nimble genre hopper without a distinct wheelhouse. “Frida,” which netted her only Oscar nomination to date, feels like an anomaly on Hayek’s résumé, if only because most of her arty movies haven’t found much of a shelf life. Had the Sundance drama “Beatriz at Dinner“ made an incision at the box office, it could have been her next Oscar bid. Playing an immigrant working as a holistic healer in California, her every expression bears the weight of a weary life spent serving those who hold society’s power.
    • 15Nicole Kidman, “The Beguiled”

      Focus Features
      Nicole Kidman won an Emmy for “Big Little Lies” in September, and she has two movies ready for Oscar fodder: “The Killing of a Sacred Deer” and “The Beguiled.” The former, an edgy art-house downer, will be a tough sit for the Academy’s steak-and-potatoes bloc; the latter, on the other hand, bears the insignia of the admired Sofia Coppola. As the matriarch of an all-girls boarding school during the Civil War, Kidman is the movie’s highlight. She’s a four-time nominee, but this gig may not be showy enough to make voters’ ballots, especially since “The Beguiled” opened in June, already a fleeting memory.
    • 14Gal Gadot, “Wonder Woman”

      Warner Bros
      Warner Bros. is plotting a campaign in hopes of anointing “Wonder Woman” the first superhero spectacle nominated for Best Picture. It’s a losing battle, even for a box-office behemoth whose feminist values registered loudly amid a year of tumultuous political temperaments. But a Best Picture crack also gives Gal Gadot a portal into the Best Actress derby. Hosting “Saturday Night Live” wasn’t the worst way to re-up her credentials.
    • 13Jennifer Lawrence, “mother!”

      Paramount Pictures
      Paramount should have had a towering genre hit on its hands with “mother!,” but audiences didn’t flock as expected, despite Jennifer Lawrence’s grade-A stature. Maybe it was the polarizing critical reception or the misleading marketing campaign that deterred moviegoers from experiencing this home-invasion thriller slash ecological parable on the big screen. That’s no help to Lawrence, a four-time nominee who turned in her best performance since “Winter’s Bone.”
    • 12Michelle Williams, “All the Money in the World”

      Sony Pictures
      The assault allegations against Kevin Spacey seemed like a death knell for “All the Money in the World,” in which Spacey had a supporting role. Sony withdrew the movie’s closing-night premiere at the AFI Fest, where the year’s final Oscar contenders are sometimes christened. But this week Ridley Scott made a move so bold it could vault his film back into the game: Over the next few weeks, he will reshoot Spacey’s scenes, replacing the actor with Christopher Plummer, in hopes of maintaining the targeted Dec. 22 theatrical release. That unprecedented strategy could work in favor of Michelle Williams, who plays the mother of kidnapped aristocrat John Paul Getty III.
    • 11Daniela Vega, “A Fantastic Woman”

      Sony Pictures Classics
      If Daniela Vega is nominated, she will be the first openly transgender performer recognized in the Oscars’ 90-year history. The buzz out of fall’s film festivals indicated it’s not impossible: She is simply stunning in “A Fantastic Woman,” playing an opera singer grieving the death of her romantic partner. Will enough stodgy Academy voters see this Chilean movie, though? Doubtful.
    • 10Annette Bening, “Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool”

      Sony Pictures Classics
      Narratives about who is “overdue” for awards are often convoluted, but if there’s anyone the Academy owes, it’s Annette Bening. She’s lost all four of her nominations to date, and that doesn’t even begin to tally the movies she should have been nominated for, including last year’s “20th Century Women.” Can “Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool,” in which Bening plays mid-century actress Gloria Grahame, help to right Oscar’s wrong?
    • 9Emma Stone, “Battle of the Sexes”

      Fox Searchlight
      The last person to score consecutive Best Actress trophies was Katharine Hepburn, way back in 1968 and ‘69. Emma Stone won earlier this year for “La La Land,” which dampens her odds for “Battle of the Sexes,” in which she gracefully portrays tennis champ Billie Jean King. The movie hasn’t seen the runaway box-office success needed to galvanize it beyond its pleasant-at-best reviews. At the Toronto Film Festival, where the movie screened in September, a publicist told me Stone isn’t itching to mount another grueling awards crusade. It’s possible she’ll wrest support on name alone, though, given her incredible charm.



        
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  • 8Kate Winslet, “Wonder Wheel”

    Amazon Studios
    Another year, another trivial Woody Allen movie. The prolific, scandal-ridden director has overseen Oscar-winning performances here and there — most recently, Cate Blanchett in “Blue Jasmine” — but most of his films drift by unnoticed. Academy favorite Kate Winslet is the bright spot in the dreary “Wonder Wheel,” breathing life into Allen’s overly theatrical script. But in the midst of the many sexual assault revelations rippling through the Hollywood seams, will voters want to sit through a Woody Allen joint? If not, Winslet’s potential nomination could become his latest casualty.
  • 7Judi Dench, “Victoria & Abdul”

    Focus Features
    Never underestimate the Judi Dench Effect. At 82, Dench has found unlikely box-office prosperity and ample Oscar nominations to show for it (seven in a short 19 years). “Victoria & Abdul,” in which she portrays Queen Victoria in the years before her death, has collected $20 million domestically and counting. In today’s Hollywood economy, that’s a decent sum for a stately period piece. It could easily translate to Dench’s eighth nod. Everyone loves a dame.
  • 6Margot Robbie, “I, Tonya”

    NEON
    Margot Robbie couldn’t muster enough buzz to become a first-rate candidate for her breakthrough turn in “The Wolf of Wall Street.” The intervening years haven’t inched her closer to that prestige, even as her star rises. And then along came “I, Tonya.” Robbie plays Tonya Harding with a gusto so fiery you’ll hardly recognize her. The role has already earned her a shout-out from the Gotham Awards, always the first nominations out the gate. Two hiccups: The darkly comedic biopic proved somewhat divisive at its Toronto Film Festival premiere, and it’s the first movie that the new indie distributor Neon has framed for awards esteem. But playing someone as fascinating as Harding should aid Robbie’s odds, especially if the film finds a wide audience when it hits theaters next month.
  • 5Saoirse Ronan, “Lady Bird”

    A24
    A nice coming-of-age story that doesn’t strive to reinvent the wheel may not seem like the most obvious Oscar play, but the praise surrounding “Lady Bird” has been so unanimously fawning that A24 would be wise to thrust most of its awards zest in this movie’s corner. At 13, Saoirse Ronan earned an Oscar nod for her first significant role (“Atonement”); at 21, she collected another for her swoony starring vehicle, “Brooklyn.” If “Lady Bird” nets her third, she’ll be one of the youngest women ever nominated for three Oscars. That delightful Irish lilt has a magical effect.
  • 4Meryl Streep, “The Post”

    Fox
    One of the only contenders that hasn’t yet screened for press, “The Post” features Hollywood’s holy trinity: Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep. The latter plays Washington Post publisher Kay Graham, faced with the tough decision of whether to publish the classified documents that exposed the American government’s deceptive Vietnam War strategies. Streep’s year of advocacy, starting with her anti-Trump speech at January’s Golden Globes and lingering through her anti-Weinstein statement, could help her slip ahead in the race. Not that she needs it. This would mark her 21st nomination.
  • 3Jessica Chastain, “Molly’s Game”

    STX Films
    After consecutive nods for “The Help” and “Zero Dark Thirty,” Jessica Chastain’s Oscar-worthy performances have been repeatedly sidelined. “Molly’s Game” bears some resemblance to her most recent awards contender, “Miss Sloane,” except this time she has Aaron Sorkin’s speedy dialogue for elevated liftoff. It’s her meatiest role since “A Most Violent Year.”
  • 2Sally Hawkins, “The Shape of Water”

    Fox Searchlight
    Sally Hawkins has long been one of those venerated indie actresses awaiting her proper due. “The Shape of Water“ could be her bargaining chip. Playing a mute 1960s janitor, Hawkins wears a lifetime of heartbreak on her face. Guillermo del Toro’s movie has an old-fashioned sweep that will appeal to young and old Academy voters alike. They’ve always had a penchant for performances with physical afflictions: Patty Duke, John Mills and Holly Hunter all won for playing mute.
  • 1Frances McDormand, “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”

    Fox Searchlight
    Don’t expect to see Frances McDormand all over the typical press blitz as awards season continues; she famously resists most interviews. Do, however, expect her to remain the category’s front-runner, proving she needs no added momentum to clinch industry favor. Her bravura turn as a fierce Midwesterner protesting the police’s negligible investigation into her daughter’s rape and murder assumes a timely layer amid Hollywood’s ongoing sexual assault fallout. Most critics agree “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” is some McDormand’s finest work. No one hurls expletives like Fran.

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