Here Are the 48th Annual NAACP Image Award Nominations!


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You can see the film nomination below.  For a full list of all the Image nominations, including the television nominees, click here.

Outstanding Motion Picture
•    “Fences” (Paramount Pictures)
•    “Hidden Figures” (20th Century Fox)
•    “Loving” (Focus Features/Big Beach)
•    “Moonlight” (A24)
•    “The Birth of a Nation” (Fox Searchlight Pictures)

Outstanding Directing in a Motion Picture – (Film)
•    Anthony Russo, Joe Russo – “Captain America: Civil War” (Marvel Studios)
•    Barry Jenkins – “Moonlight” (A24)
•    Garth Davis – “Lion” (See-Saw Films)
•    Mira Nair – “Queen of Katwe” (Walt Disney Studios)
•    Nate Parker – “The Birth of a Nation” (Fox Searchlight Pictures)

Outstanding Writing in a Motion Picture (Film)
•    Adam Mansbach “Barry” (Black Bear Pictures and Cinetic Media)
•    Barry Jenkins “Moonlight” (A24)
•    Jeff Nichols “Loving” (Focus Features/Big Beach)
•    Nate Parker “The Birth of a Nation” (Fox Searchlight Pictures)
•    Richard Tanne “Southside With You” (Roadside Attractions)

Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture
•    Denzel Washington – “Fences” (Paramount Pictures)
•    Don Cheadle – “Miles Ahead” (Sony Pictures Classics)
•    Nate Parker – “The Birth of a Nation” (Fox Searchlight Pictures)
•    Stephan James – “Race” (Focus Features/The Luminary Group A Solofilms/Trinidad/Trinity/Trinity Race Production)
•    Will Smith – “Collateral Beauty” (Warner Bros. Pictures/New Line Cinema)

Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture
•    Angela Bassett – “London Has Fallen” (Focus Features/Millennium Films/G-Base Production)
•    Madina Nalwanga – “Queen of Katwe” (Walt Disney Studios)
•    Ruth Negga – “Loving” (Focus Features/Big Beach)
•    Taraji P. Henson – “Hidden Figures” (20th Century Fox)
•    Tika Sumpter – “Southside With You” (Roadside Attractions)

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture
•    Alano Miller – “Loving” (Focus Features/Big Beach)
•    Chadwick Boseman – “Captain America: Civil War” (Marvel Studios)
•    David Oyelowo – “Queen of Katwe” (Walt Disney Studios)
•    Mahershala Ali – “Moonlight” (A24)
•    Trevante Rhodes – “Moonlight” (A24)

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture
•    Aja Naomi King – “The Birth of a Nation” (Fox Searchlight Pictures)
•    Lupita Nyong’o – “Queen of Katwe” (Walt Disney Studios)
•    Mo’ Nique – “Almost Christmas” (Universal Pictures)
•    Octavia Spencer – “Hidden Figures” (20th Century Fox)
•    Viola Davis – “Fences” (Paramount Pictures)

Outstanding Independent Motion Picture
•    “Lion” (See-Saw Films)
•    “Loving” (Focus Features/Big Beach)
•    “Miles Ahead” (Sony Pictures Classics)
•    “Moonlight” (A24)
•    “The Birth of a Nation” (Fox Searchlight Pictures)

Outstanding Documentary – (Film)
•    “13th” (Netflix)
•    “I Am Not Your Negro” (Velvet Film)
•    “Maya Angelou: And Still I Rise” (The People’s Poet LLC)
•    “Miss Sharon Jones!” (Cabin Creek Films)
•    “Olympic Pride, American Prejudice” (Coffee Bluff Pictures)

The Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Honors Moonlight!


Dallas is my home -- deal with it, haters!

The Dallas-Forth Worth Film Critics Association met today and the critics from my hometown named Moonlight the best film of 2016!

Hey, DFWFCA — why haven’t I been invited to join yet!?

Anyway, here are the winners in Dallas:

BEST PICTURE

Winner: MOONLIGHT
Runners-up: MANCHESTER BY THE SEA; LA LA LAND; HELL OR HIGH WATER; ARRIVAL; JACKIE; LOVING; 20TH CENTURY WOMEN; HACKSAW RIDGE; SILENCE

BEST ACTOR

Winner: Casey Affleck, MANCHESTER BY THE SEA
Runners-up: Denzel Washington, FENCES; Joel Edgerton, LOVING; Ryan Gosling, LA LA LAND; Tom Hanks, SULLY

BEST ACTRESS

Winner: Natalie Portman, JACKIE
Runners-up: Emma Stone, LA LA LAND; Ruth Negga, LOVING; Amy Adams, ARRIVAL; Annette Bening, 20TH CENTURY WOMEN

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Winner: Mahershala Ali, MOONLIGHT
Runners-up: Jeff Bridges, HELL OR HIGH WATER; Michael Shannon, NOCTURNAL ANIMALS; Lucas Hedges, MANCHESTER BY THE SEA; Ben Foster, HELL OR HIGH WATER

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Winner: Viola Davis, FENCES
Runners-up: Naomie Harris, MOONLIGHT; Michelle Williams, MANCHESTER BY THE SEA; Greta Gerwig, 20TH CENTURY WOMEN; Judy Davis, THE DRESSMAKER

BEST DIRECTOR

Winner: Barry Jenkins, MOONLIGHT
Runners-up: Damien Chazelle, LA LA LAND; Kenneth Lonergan, MANCHESTER BY THE SEA; David Mackenzie, HELL OR HIGH WATER; Denis Villeneuve, ARRIVAL

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

Winner: THE HANDMAIDEN
Runners-up: TONI ERDMANN; ELLE; NERUDA; THE SALESMAN

BEST DOCUMENTARY

Winner: TOWER
Runners-up: 13TH; GLEASON; I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO; WEINER

BEST ANIMATED FILM

Winner: ZOOTOPIA
Runners-up: KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS; MOANA

BEST SCREENPLAY

Winner: Kenneth Lonergan, MANCHESTER BY THE SEA
Runner-up: Barry Jenkins, MOONLIGHT

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Winner: Linus Sandgren, LA LA LAND
Runner-up: Rodrigo Prieto, SILENCE

BEST MUSICAL SCORE

Winner: Justin Hurwitz, LA LA LAND
Runner-up: Mica Levi, JACKIE

RUSSELL SMITH AWARD (best low-budget or cutting-edge independent film)

Winner: MOONLIGHT

Flight of Fancy: Vincent Price in MASTER OF THE WORLD (AIP 1961)


cracked rear viewer

motw1

MATSER OF THE WORLD is AIP’s answer to Disney’s 20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA . Both are based on the works of Jules Verne, and involve fanatical protagonists commanding futuristic ships (an airship in this case). The difference is in budget, as studio honchos Samuel Z. Arkoff and James Nicholson didn’t have the financial means to compete with the mighty Walt Disney. They did have Vincent Price though, and within their monetary constraints came up with an entertaining mini-epic enhanced by another solid Richard Matheson script.

motw2

Price stars as Captain Robur, who’s fantastic flying airship Albatross rules the skies of 1868. When his amplified voice bellows some scripture from a mountain (does this make Vinnie the Voice of God?), balloon enthusiasts Mr. Prudent, daughter Dorothy, and her fiancé Phillip Evans, along with government agent John Strock, investigate, only to be shot down by Robur’s rockets and taken prisons aboard his flying fortress.

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Music Video of the Day: Why Can’t I? by Liz Phair (2003, dir. Phil Harder)


I am not going to pretend I know much about Liz Phair. She’s one of those 90s artists that largely flew under my radar. I remember hearing briefly about Exile In Guyville and how it was a response to The Rolling Stones’ album Exile On Main Street, but I’m pretty sure I never picked up any of her stuff till the early-to-mid-2000s. If I had to describe her, then I would say to imagine Sheryl Crow if she were more indie and had more punch to her lyrics. A good example of this, that I actually own, is the song Polyester Bride. By the time this song came around she was moving more towards a soft-rock sound that you would get from Crow. In fact, Phair provided background vocals on Crow’s Soak Up The Sun, which is when I lost interest in Sheryl Crow.

People didn’t take kindly to this trend in Phair’s music because of course they didn’t. She was hardly the only one to go down this path in the 90s. Goo Goo Dolls used to be a band inspired by Hüsker Dü before becoming one of the most pop-friendly bands of the late-90s after the success of the song Name. I remember stories about Dave Matthews Band early-on letting their fans plug recording devices directly into the soundboard at their concerts. Barenaked Ladies also changed with times. The list goes on and on. Phair isn’t special in this area.

Why did I pick out this particular Liz Phair music video? I wanted to feature a Liz Phair music video and it was the first one that popped up when I did a search on YouTube. That’s really it. Luckily, it turned out to be an interesting one. It’s like Limp Bizkit’s My Way and Taylor Swift’s Shake It Off. It plays with cliches. In this case, it mainly sticks to album covers, but it also has one of my favorite music video cliches: The White Dimension. This has been a thing in music videos since at least the mid-70s. You can see it in Waterloo by ABBA back in 1974 to Guerilla Radio by Rage Against The Machine in 1999. System Of A Down did it 2002 with Toxicity. The Mighty Mighty Bosstones did it back in 1997 for The Impression That I Get. Even Taylor Swift’s Shake It Off from 2014 did it.

I know why it started. Early promo videos often stuck a simple backdrop behind the group and had them perform in front of it. ABBA did this several times in the 1970s. I assume it is something a director does when they want to clear the screen of any other distractions except the artist. It seemed to be a popular thing around the time of this video.

I could be reading more into it then there is, but the jukebox at the start does appear to pick out the number 67, which would coincide with Phair’s birthdate in 1967. That would also match the album being self-titled in much the same way as Sheryl Crow did with her second debut album. This is probably one of the reasons she received extra backlash on this song since she seemed to be indicating it was a reboot of her career, yet it was produced by the same people (The Matrix) who did songs for Avril Lavigne, Britney Spears, and Hilary Duff. It’s not exactly the adult material people were used to getting from Phair.

While Phair herself directed some of her early music videos, they went with veteran music video director Phil Harder for Why Can’t I? He is still working today with around 150+ music videos to his name.

Veteran music video cinematographer Thomas (Tom) Marvel, who appears to be about 10 music videos from hitting 100, shot it. If there isn’t a society for prolific cinematographers you have never heard of because they mostly shoot music videos, then Daniel Pearl and Thomas Marvel need to found one. If The Sons of Lee Marvin society exists, then certainly this can be a thing.

JoLynn Garnes was the editor. Her credits are a bit more spotty, but she has dabbled in several areas of music video production. She sticks mainly to editing. She appears to be still working as an editor today.

Enjoy!