2010
The winner is listed first, in CAPITAL letters.
Filmsite's Greatest Films
of 2010
Best Picture
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THE KING'S SPEECH (2010)
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Black Swan (2010)
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The Fighter (2010)
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Inception (2010)
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The Kids Are All Right (2010)
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127 Hours (2010)
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The Social Network (2010)
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Toy Story 3 (2010)
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True Grit (2010)
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Winter's Bone (2010)
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Best Animated Feature Film
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TOY STORY 3 (2010)
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How to Train Your Dragon (2010)
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The Illusionist (2010, UK/Fr.) (aka L'Illusionniste)
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Actor:
COLIN FIRTH in "The King's Speech," Javier Bardem in "Biutiful," Jeff
Bridges in "True Grit," Jesse Eisenberg in "The
Social Network," James Franco in "127 Hours"
Actress:
NATALIE PORTMAN in "Black Swan," Annette Bening in "The
Kids Are All Right," Nicole Kidman in "Rabbit Hole," Jennifer
Lawrence in "Winter’s Bone," Michelle Williams
in "Blue Valentine"
Supporting Actor:
CHRISTIAN BALE in "The Fighter," John Hawkes in "Winter's
Bone," Jeremy Renner in "The Town," Mark Ruffalo
in "The Kids Are All Right," Geoffrey Rush in "The
King’s Speech"
Supporting Actress:
MELISSA LEO in "The Fighter," Amy Adams in "The
Fighter," Helena Bonham Carter in "The King's Speech," Hailee
Steinfeld in "True Grit," Jacki Weaver in "Animal
Kingdom"
Director:
TOM HOOPER for "The King's Speech," Darren Aronofsky
for "Black Swan," David O. Russell for "The Fighter," David
Fincher for "The Social Network," Joel Coen and Ethan
Coen for "True Grit"
Both
major commercial blockbusters and smaller, low-budget independent
films were included in the mix of different genres among the
Best Picture nominees, in this second year in which the category
was expanded to ten nominees. Almost every important film of
the year was included in the list. Many of the ten Best Picture
nominees were character or actor-driven personal dramas, or stories
based on real people. Unlike last year, all of the films were
critically acclaimed. Two films were tied with four Oscar wins
apiece.
The Best Picture winner was:
- The King's Speech (with 12 nominations,
and four wins for Best Original Screenplay (David Seidler),
Best Director, Best Actor, and Best Picture), from the Weinstein
Company, the British historical period saga about the monarchy
on the eve of WWII, with nominees Colin Firth as King George
VI, Helena Bonham Carter as his devoted wife, and Geoffrey
Rush as his unconventional speech therapist. Its tagline was:
"When God couldn't save The King, The Queen turned to someone
who could"
[Note: It was the seventh film in Academy history to win three
Guild prizes: Directors, Producers, and Screen Actors. In six
of those seven cases, the film went on to win Best Picture. The
only exception was Apollo 13 (1995) which was also lacking
a Best Director nomination.]
Other Best Picture nominees (in order of wins/nominations)
included:
- Inception (with eight nominations, including
four wins in technical categories: Best Cinematography, Best
Sound Editing, Best Sound Mixing, and Best Visual Effects),
from WB, a twisting, surreal sci-fi blockbuster (the second
highest grossing film of the nominees, at $292 million) about
dream thief Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) who was able to steal
secrets from inside a sleeping mind - he was hired by wealthy
Japanese businessman Mr. Saito (Ken Watanabe) to plant an idea
within the subconscious mind of Robert Fischer, the son (Cillian
Murphy) of ailing corporate CEO Maurice Fischer (Pete Postlethwaite),
in order to break up his father's business
- The Social Network (with eight nominations,
including three wins for Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Film
Editing, and Best Original Score), the early favorite from
Sony, a drama about the Facebook phenomenon led by arrogant
computer nerds, including social misfit Harvard undergraduate
Mark Zuckerberg (nominee Jesse Eisenberg) and his rise to fame
and riches
- The Fighter (with seven nominations,
including two wins (Best Supporting Actor and Best Supporting
Actress) from its three acting nominations), from Paramount,
a biographical boxing-sports drama
- Toy Story 3 (with five nominations and
two wins - Best Animated Feature Film and Best Original Song:
Randy Newman's "We Belong Together"), from Buena
Vista, the second sequel in the animated series and the continuing
story of Woody, Buzz and the rest of the toys that dealt with
obsolescence when their young adult owner Andy left for college,
and they found themselves in a Gulag-like day care center run
by fascistic toys; the top-grossing film of 2010 at $415 million,
and the third animated film ever to have a Best Picture
nomination, and only the second animated film to get
a Best Picture nomination since animated films received their
own category in 2001; it was the 4th consecutive winner in
the category from Disney/Pixar animation, after Up (2009), WALL-E
(2008), and Ratatouille (2007)
- Black Swan (with five nominations and
only one win, Best Actress), from Fox Searchlight, a psycho-sexual
thriller regarding two rival ballerinas during a production
of Swan Lake - it was the only Best Picture nominee
without a Screenplay nomination
- True Grit (with 10 nominations and
no wins), from Paramount, a Coen Brothers western remake
of the 1969 film, and the second major adaptation of Charles
Portis' famed novel, and the first $100 million western hit
since the early 1990s (Dances With Wolves (1990) and Unforgiven
(1991)), at almost $139 million [Note: It became
one of only four films in Academy history to be so dramatically
shut out.]
- 127 Hours (with six nominations and no
wins), from Fox Searchlight, a grueling and gripping survival
story of a life-and-death struggle
- The Kids Are All Right (with four nominations
and no wins), from Focus, writer/director Lisa Cholodenko's
lesbian-family romantic comedy about the complications that
ensued when two teenaged kids of a lesbian couple sought out
their biological sperm donor father
- Winter's Bone (with four nominations
and no wins), from Roadside Attractions (and a Sundance Film
Festival smash hit), directed by Debra Granik, a crime thriller
about a teenager's search for her runaway drug-convict father
in the Ozarks - it was the lowest-earning film of the ten nominees,
at $6.3 million
The top seven studios with wins and noms for the
year included:
- Weinstein (13 nominations and 4 wins from 2
films)
- Warners (12 nominations and 4 wins from 4 films)
- Buena Vista (10 nominations and 4 wins from
4 films)
- Sony/Columbia (9 nominations and 3 wins from
2 films)
- Paramount (18 nominations and 2 wins from 3
films)
- Sony Classics (7 nominations and 2 wins from
7 films)
- Fox Searchlight (11 nominations and 1 win from
2 films)
Two of the Best Picture nominees were produced
by Scott Rudin (The Social Network and True Grit)
- marking only the second time since 1951 (it also occurred
in 1974) that an individual producer received two Best
Picture nominations in the same year.
All of the five nominees for Best Director were
males, unlike the previous year when Kathryn Bigelow won for
the category. Two of the Best Picture-nominated films, directed
by women (Cholodenko and Granik), were missing from the shorter
list of Best Director nominees. All of the Best Director nominees
were included in the larger list of Best Picture nominees, although
it was surprising that Christopher Nolan was not nominated for Inception that
won as many Oscars as the Best Picture. (Note: It seemed to be
a repeat of two years earlier when he wasn't nominated in the
category for The Dark Knight
(2008)). The Best Director nominees included two first-time
nominees who were often snubbed in the past, Aronofsky and Russell.
The directorial nominees also included the Coen
Brothers, again nominated together for their work on True
Grit -
after their Best Director
Oscar win for No Country
For Old Men (2007). (Note: They were only the second pair
of directors to win Best Director, after Robbins and Wise for West
Side Story (1961).)
The Best Director winner was 38 year-old Tom Hooper
(with his first nomination and first win) for his second major
theatrical feature-film, Best Picture-winning The King's Speech.
The other four nominees were:
- 56 year-old Joel and 53 year-old Ethan Coen
(with a third Best Director nomination for Joel, 2nd for Ethan)
for True Grit
(Note: the Coens scored a trifecta of nominations: as producers/writers/directors)
- 48 year-old David Fincher (with his second nomination)
for The Social Network
- 41 year-old Darren Aronofsky (with his first
nomination) for Black Swan
- 52 year-old David O. Russell (with his first
nomination) for The Fighter
All of the major performance awards seemed to pit
two favorites - a younger person with an older one (Firth vs.
Franco, Bening vs. Portman, Rush vs. Bale, Leo vs. Steinfeld),
with the awards split between them. Eight of the 20 performance
nominees were first-timers, there were no African-American nominees,
and there was only one non English-language performance, by Javier
Bardem. All four winners in the acting categories were first-time winners.
The five Best Actor nominees found a rematch of
the previous year's competitive Best Actor race. Last year, Jeff
Bridges won over Colin Firth (nominated for A Single Man (2009))
with his role in Crazy Heart (2009), but now Colin Firth
had the edge and won as expected. Two of the Best Actor nominees
were first timers. The Best Actor winner was the heavily-favored
50 year-old British actor Colin Firth (with his second nomination
and first win), as stuttering, quick-tempered monarch
George VI, Queen Elizabeth II's father, who was thrust to the
throne when his brother abdicated in 1936, in The King's Speech.
The other Best Actor nominees were:
- 61 year-old Jeff Bridges (with his sixth nomination),
as hard-drinking marshall Rooster Cogburn hired to search for
the murderer of a young girl (nominee Hailee Steinfeld), in True
Grit
[Note: John Wayne won his sole Oscar when he
played the same role in True Grit (1969)]
- 41 year-old Spanish actor Javier Bardem (with
his third nomination), a surprise nominee, as a terminally-ill,
dying single father and underworld figure in Barcelona named
Uxbal who criminally exploited immigrants, in the depressing
and grim Spanish-language drama Biutiful from Mexican
director Alejandro González Iñárritu (also
nominated in the Best Foreign Language Film category)
- 32 year-old James Franco (with his first nomination),
as trapped mountain climber Aron Ralston with a boulder-crushed
arm who was forced to sever his own limb after five days, in 127
Hours
- 27 year-old Jesse Eisenberg (with his first
nomination), as Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, in The
Social Network
The five Best Actress nominees included four past
nominees and one outstanding newcomer. The Best Actress winner
was also the favored front-runner, 29 year-old Natalie Portman
(with her second nomination and first win), as hallucinatory
ballerina Nina Sayers in a production of Swan Lake by
a NYC ballet company, when she slowly lost her mind as she began
to explore the dark side of her psyche as the Black Swan, in Black
Swan.
The other four Best Actress nominees were:
- 52 year-old veteran actress Annette Bening (with
her fourth nomination, no wins), as lesbian mother Nic living
in California and married to Jules (Julianne Moore), whose
two teenaged kids Joni (Mia Wasikowska) and Laser (Josh Hutcherson)
discovered the identity of their sperm donor biological father
Paul (Mark Ruffalo), in writer/director Lisa Cholodenko's The
Kids Are All Right
- 43 year-old Australian-American actress Nicole
Kidman (with her third Best Actress nomination), as stay-at-home
mother Becca Corbett married to Howie (unnominated Aaron Eckhart)
- both grieving their young son's death in a car accident,
in director John Cameron Mitchell's drama Rabbit Hole
- 30 year-old Michelle Williams (with her second
nomination), as struggling spouse Cindy Heller in a failing
marriage to Dean Pereira (unnominated Ryan Gosling), in the
romantic drama Blue Valentine
- 20 year-old Jennifer Lawrence (with her first
nomination) as poor Missouri Ozark teenager Ree Dolly searching
for her missing, runaway drug-convict father in the Ozark Mountains
to avoid losing her house, in writer/director Debra Granik's
drama Winter's Bone
The Best Supporting Actor nominees included a past
Oscar winner, a past nominee, and some exciting new actors never
before recognized. The winner was 37 year-old Christian Bale
(with his first nomination and win), as former Irish-American
welterweight boxer Dick "Dicky" Eklund, whose own boxing
career was tarnished by crime and drugs, but helped his sparring
partner, his younger half-brother "Irish" Micky Ward
(unnominated Mark Wahlberg) to a title shot, in The Fighter.
The other Best Supporting Actor nominees were:
- 59 year-old Australian-born actor Geoffrey Rush
(with his fourth nomination, and one past win in 1996), as
stammering King George VI's (Oscar-winning Colin Firth) speech
therapist Lionel Logue, in The King's Speech
- 40 year-old Jeremy Renner (with his second nomination),
as Boston-area, blue-collar bank holdup man James "Jem" Coughlin,
in director Ben Affleck's crime thriller The Town
- 51 year-old John Hawkes (with his first nomination),
a surprise nominee, as menacing backwoods tough guy meth addict
Teardrop, in Winter's Bone
- 43 year-old Mark Ruffalo (with his first nomination)
as sperm-donor biological dad Paul of two teenaged kids for
two lesbian parents (nominee Annette Bening and unnominated
Julianne Moore), also an irresponsible, laid-back restaurateur,
in The Kids Are All Right
The Best Supporting Actress nominees included two
castmates, both previous nominees, from the same film, one of
whom won her first Oscar. The winner was 50 year-old Melissa
Leo (with her second nomination and first Oscar win),
as big-coiffed, doting, manipulative, and domineering tough-love
mother Alice Ward who also functioned as Ward's boxing manager,
in The Fighter. [Note: The Fighter was the first
film since Hannah and Her Sisters (1986) to win both Supporting
Actor and Supporting Actress Oscars.]
The other four nominees were:
- 36 year-old Amy Adams (with her third nomination),
as blue-collar boxer Micky Ward's defiant and tough girlfriend
and bartender Charlene Fleming, in The Fighter
- 44 year-old Helena Bonham Carter (with her second
nomination), as the bemused future Queen Mum who sought a speech
therapist (nominee Geoffrey Rush) for her husband (nominee
Colin Firth), in The King's Speech
- 14 year-old Hailee Steinfeld (with her first
nomination), in a breakout lead role as 14 year-old farm girl
Mattie Ross - who hired lawman Cogburn (nominee Jeff Bridges)
to track down her rancher father's killer Tom Chaney (Josh
Brolin), in True Grit
- 63 year-old Australian actress Jacki Weaver
(with her first nomination) as terrifying, sociopathic Melbourne
crime family matriarch Janine "Smurf" Cody, in writer/director
David Michôd's noirish crime film Animal Kingdom
Oscar Snubs and Omissions:
- a Best Picture nomination
for the heist thriller The Town, and for its director
Ben Affleck
- Despicable Me, one of the year's biggest
animated hits was missing from the Animated Feature Film nominees,
as was Disney's blockbuster Tangled
- Christopher Nolan, writer-producer-director
of Inception, was omitted from the nominees for Best
Director, although he received noms for Best Picture and Best
Original Screenplay (he was also snubbed for Memento (2000) and The
Dark Knight (2008))
- director Danny Boyle was also a no-show for
Best Director, for 127 Hours
- the omission of Walt Disney Pictures' sequel
to the 1982 original film, Tron: Legacy from the list
of nominees for Best Visual Effects
- some of the biggest blockbusters of the year
basically scored nominations in the Best Visual Effects or
Costume/Art categories: one of the biggest hits of the year
at $334 million was Alice in Wonderland with three nominations
and two wins (Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design);
there was only one nomination (Best Visual Effects) and no
wins for Iron Man 2, at $312 million; and there
were only two nominations (Best Art Direction, Best Visual
Effects) and no wins for another blockbuster, Harry
Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1, at $295 million
- the omission of director David Guggenheim's
feature-length documentary about the failed US educational
system, Waiting For Superman, from the list of Best
Documentary Films
- Mark Wahlberg, as boxer Mickey Ward - the half-brother
of Dicky Eklund (Oscar-winning Christian Bale), in The Fighter,
in the Best Actor category (when three other co-stars were
nominees)
- 80 year-old Robert Duvall, as misunderstood
hermit Felix Bush who held a "living funeral" for
himself, who missed out on a potential seventh Oscar nod (he
won for Tender Mercies (1983)), in Get Low (with
no nominations), in the Best Actor category
- Ryan Gosling, as Dean Pereira, the second half
of a disintegrating marriage (to nominated Michelle Williams),
in Blue Valentine, in the Best Actor category
- Julianne Moore, as laidback lesbian housewife
Jules (married to nominated Annette Bening) in The Kids
Are All Right, in the Best Actress category
- Leslie Manville, as lonely alcoholic Mary, in
writer/director Mike Leigh's British drama Another Year (with
one nomination, Best Original Screenplay), in the Best Actress
category
- Andrew Garfield, as Mark Zuckerberg's (Jesse
Eisenberg) business partner Eduardo Saverin, in The Social
Network, in the Best Supporting Actor category
- Michael Douglas, reprising his role as Gordon
Gekko in director Oliver Stone's sequel Wall Street: Money
Never Sleeps, in the Best Supporting Actor category
- Sam Rockwell, as wrongly-convicted murderer
Kenny Waters (brother of co-star Hilary Swank as Betty Anne
who helped prove his innocence), in director Tony Goldwyn's
biographical drama/thriller Conviction, in the Best
Supporting Actor category
- Mila Kunis, Natalie Portman's newcomer ballet
rival Lily, and Barbara Hershey as Portman's over-controlling
mother Erica, in Black Swan, in the Best Supporting
Actress category
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