Awards Tracker

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Category: Alice in Wonderland

Oscars: 'Inception' wins for visual effects

Visual "Inception" won the Oscar for visual effects at the 83rd Academy Awards on Sunday night.

Paul Franklin, Chris Corbould, Andrew Lockley and Peter Bebb received the award for their work on Christopher Nolan's surreal, complex thriller about dream invasion. The film dominated the Visual Effects Society's awards earlier this month. The film also earned a BAFTA Award.

"Inception" was competing against "Alice in Wonderland," "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows -- Part I," "Hereafter "and "Iron Man 2."

The Academy Awards are taking place at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood and are being televised live on ABC. We'll carry all the breaking news and reaction here on Awards Tracker.

-- Nardine Saad

Photo: Andrew Lockley, from left, Paul Franklin, Chris Corbould and Peter Bebb accept the Oscar for best visual effects for "Inception." Credit: Associated Press.

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Oscars: 'Alice in Wonderland' wins for costume design

Colleen “Alice in Wonderland’s” Colleen Atwood was awarded the Oscar for costume design at the 83rd Academy Awards on Sunday night.

Atwood is a nine-time Oscar nominee, and she’s won twice before -– for “Memoirs of Geisha” (2005) and “Chicago” (2002).

Atwood competed against Antonella Cannarozzi for “I Am Love,” Jenny Beavan for “The King’s Speech,” Sandy Powell for “The Tempest” and Mary Zophres for “True Grit.”

The Academy Awards are taking place at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood and are being televised live on ABC. We'll carry all the breaking news and reaction here on Awards Tracker.

-- Rick Rojas

Photo:  "Alice in Wonderland" winner Colleen Atwood. Credit: Getty Images.

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Oscars: 'Alice in Wonderland' wins for art direction

Alice "Alice in Wonderland" won the Oscar for art direction at the 83rd Academy Awards on Sunday night.

Production designer Robert Stromberg also won the prize last year for his work on James Cameron's "Avatar." Set decorator Karen O'Hara was nominated once before, in 1987, for "The Color of Money."

"Alice" competed against “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows –- Part 1,” "Inception," "The King's Speech" and "True Grit."

The Academy Awards are taking place at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood and are being televised live on ABC. We'll carry all the breaking news and reaction here on Awards Tracker.

-- Rick Rojas

Photo: "Alice in Wonderland." Credit: Disney

 

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Costume Designers Guild honors 'King's Speech,' 'Alice in Wonderland' and 'Black Swan'

Wonderland

"The King's Speech," "Black Swan" and "Alice in Wonderland" took the top feature film honors Tuesday evening at the 13th Costume Designers Guild Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel.

Jenny Beavan won excellence in period film for "The King's Speech," while Amy Westcott earned her award for excellence in contemporary film for "Black Swan" and Colleen Atwood for excellence in fantasy film for "Alice in Wonderland."

On the television side, Lou Eyrich won outstanding contemporary television series for "Glee"; John Dunn and Lisa Padovani earned their award for outstanding period/fantasy TV series for "Boardwalk Empire" and Cindy Evans picked up her honor for outstanding made for television movie or miniseries for "Temple Grandin."

The excellence in commercial costume design trophy went to Aude Bronson-Howard for "Chanel-Bleu de Chanel."

Honorary awards were also presented at the ceremony hosted by "Sex and the City" star Kristin Davis.

Halle Berry received the Lacoste Spotlight Award; Julie Weiss was given the Disaronno Career Achievement in Film and Television Award; Joel Schumacher received the Distinguished Collaborator Award and the late Michael Dennison was inducted into the Guild's Hall of Fame.

--Susan King

Photo: Johnny Depp, left, Mia Wasikowska and Anne Hathaway star in "Alice in Wonderland," which won a Costume Designers Guild Award on Tuesday night.


'Social Network' and 'Alice in Wonderland' win editing awards

Social network 
"The Social Network" and "Alice in Wonderland' won the feature film Eddie Awards presented by the American Cinema Editors on Saturday evening at the International Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton Hotel.
"The Social Network" earned best edited feature film drama for Angus Wall, A.C.E., and Kirk Baxter, and "Alice in Wonderland" received best edited feature film comedy or musical for Chris Lebenzon, A.C.E.

"Toy Story 3" won best edited animated feature for Ken Schretzmann and Lee Unkrich, while Tom Fulford and Chris King won best edited documentary for "Exit Through the Gift Shop."
 
The 61st annual awards also handed out Eddies in TV categories. "Modern Family" received the award for Jonathan Schwartz for best half-hour edited series for TV; "The Walking Dead: Days Gone Bye," edited by Hunter Via, won for best edited one-hour series for commercial TV; Kate Sanford, A.C.E., and Alexander Hall received best edited one-hour series for non-commercial TV for "Treme: Do You Know  What It Means."

Leo Trombetta, A.C.E., won best edited miniseries or motion picture for televison for "Temple Grandin," while "If You Really Knew Me: Colusa High," edited by Rob Goubeaux, Jeremy Gantz, Hilary Scratch, Ken Yankee, Mark S. Andrew, A.C.E., Heather Miglin, John Skaare and Paul J. Coyne, won best edited reality series.
 
Ruben Jacques Sebban of the AFI won the Student Editing Competition. Christopher Nolan took home the ACE Golden Eddie Filmmaker of the Year Award, and Lifetime Achievement Awards went to Michael Brown, A.C.E., and Michael Kahn, A.C.E. Edgar Burcksen, A.C.E., and Vincent LoBrutto earned the Robert Wise Award.

-- Susan King

Photo: Andrew Garfield and Jesse Eisenberg in "The Social Network." Credit: Columbia Tristar


BAFTA Awards: 'The King's Speech' is crowned with seven wins

 Nukings speech
It was no big surprise when the British period drama "The King's Speech" won seven Orange British Academy Film Awards on Sunday evening at the Royal Opera House in London.

The surprise came when Tom Hooper, the film's director and recent recipient of the Directors Guild of America Award, came up empty handed. It was David Fincher who won best director honors for "The Social Network."

Still, it was "The King's Speech's" night. The historical piece about George VI's attempts to rid himself of his stutter before becoming King of England, won outstanding film, outstanding British film, lead actor for Colin Firth (he won the award in this category last year for "A Simple Man"), original screenplay for David Seidler, supporting actor for Geoffrey Rush, supporting actress for Helena Bonham Carter and score for Alexandre Desplat.

"The King's Speech" is also nominated for 12 Academy Awards and is the favorite to take home Oscar's biggest prize.

Besides Fincher's win for best director, "The Social Network," the drama about the founding of Facebook, also won for Aaron Sorkin's adapted screenplay and editing.

"Toy Story 3" earned best animated film honors, and Roger Deakins took home the cinematography prize for "True Grit."

"Inception" won three awards for production design, visual effects and sound, while "Alice in Wonderland" won for costumes and makeup and hair.

Sweden's "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" won outstanding film not in the English language and writer-director Chris Norris of "Four Lions" won outstanding British debut by a writer-director or producer.

Outstanding short film went to "Until the River Runs Red," while "The Eagleman Stag" won for animated short.

Tom Hardy of "Inception" won the Rising Star honor and, as previously announced, the "Harry Potter" franchise was given the outstanding British contribution to the cinema honor. Veteran actor Christopher Lee won the British Academy of Film and Television Arts' Fellowship award, the organization's highest accolade.

— Susan King

Photo: Geoffrey Rush, left, Colin Firth and Derek Jacobi in "The King's Speech." Credit: The Weinstein Co.


BAFTA Awards: Sweden's 'Girl With the Dragon Tattoo' named best foreign-language film

Dragon-tattoo-bafta
The Swedish thriller "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" won the Orange British Academy Film Award on Sunday evening in London for the best film not in English. Meanwhile, "Alice in Wonderland" has won two awards for costume design and hair and makeup.

-- Susan King

Photo: Noomi Rapace, left, as Lisbeth Salander and Michael Nyqvist as Mikael Blomkvist in "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo." Credit: Knut Koivisto / Music Box Films


Visual effects Bake-offs and a party for the ages

Mantilini's 
Awards season doesn’t just mean bright shiny statues and long-winded speeches but also parties, lots of parties. Pre-parties, after-parties and screening parties dominate the social scene. And Thursday night the visual effects branch of the academy held its annual Bake-offs, its version of the Vanity Fair Oscar party. The members wine, dine, schmooze and reunite with old friends before strolling down Wilshire Boulevard to the academy screening room to narrow down the nominees for best visual effects from seven to five. More on that in a minute. But first, a little about the longtime eatery that has hosted this shindig for nearly 20 years, Kate Mantilini.

To start with, the woman behind Kate’s is actually named Marilyn. The grand dame restaurateur of Hollywood, Marilyn Lewis -- along with husband Harry -- founded the Hamburger Hamlet chain, one of the original celebrity hangouts, back in the '50s. The tall and bubbly Marilyn, with a head of brightly colored copper hair, has a story to tell as colorful as anything the visual effects folks were watching.

The real Kate Mantilini was actually Marilyn Lewis' uncle’s mistress in Cleveland, Ohio, where Marilyn was born and raised for a time by her grandmother, who cooked lobster bisque and onion soup for the rich during the Depression.

Those recipes came in handy when Marilyn came to Hollywood and met Warner Bros. contract player Harry Lewis, who dreamed of opening a hamburger joint for actors to meet and relax after a show--thus, the Hamlet in the name. They opened on Sunset Boulevard with just two burners in 1950 to a house packed with Harry’s actor friends, including Tony Curtis and Sammy Davis Jr., who once manned the grill for three days while Harry and Marilyn got hitched in Las Vegas, Marilyn Lewis recalled.

Throughout the '50s and '60s the restaurant expanded into a successful chain, and Marilyn started her own couture clothing line, Cardinali, and was soon dressing the likes of Nancy Reagan, Eydie Gorme and Dyan Cannon. 

In 1978, Lewis says, she survived a kidnapping in Chicago and in 1987 the couple sold Hamburger Hamlet for $33 million. That same year, they opened Kate Mantilini. In a town where restaurants and clubs come and go just as quickly as a reality show star’s career, how did the Lewis' manage to keep going for so long? An indelible proximity to talent agencies, the Writers Guild and academy screening rooms hasn't hurt.

But more than that, said the Lewis' son David, who manages the day-to-day operations with younger brother, Adam, since Marilyn, 81, and Harry, 90, retired last year, it was a savviness on Marilyn's part that kept them in business. “My mother had a sensibility and sensitivity to what the public might want but don’t know it yet. She was always ahead of the game, for example having a hamburger joint with amazing hamburgers but with lobster bisque and onion soup."

The family has been associated with many awards over the years. Harry starred alongside Edward G. Robinson as gangster Edward “Toots” Bass, Humphrey Bogart’s nemeis in “Key Largo,” for which Claire Trevor won an Oscar for supporting actress.  Marilyn clothed the Emmy Award winning Marlo Thomas in “That Girl” and in 1998 produced “The Passion of Ayn Rand” for Showtime with Helen Mirren taking home a Golden Globe for her starring performance. 

At the moment, posters of the cast of AMC’s Emmy-winning “Mad Men” grace the 30-foot proscenium wall. The recent addition of a photo of actress Jessica Paré who plays Megan, Don Draper’s newest secretary/fiancé, may be a hint of what’s in store for the show next season.

And on Thursday, it was a night of celebration for the wizards behind the scenes. In addition to visual effects masters at the Bake-off, Jon Favreau showed up to support his "Iron Man 2." So far, “Inception” and “Tron: Legacy” appear to be the front-runners in a field that also includes "Alice in Wonderland," “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows -- Part I,” “Hereafter” and “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World."

The results of the voting will be announced along with the nominees from all the other Oscar categories on Tuesday.

--Liesl Bradner

Photo: 2002 file photo of Kate Mantilini by Carlos Chavez / Los Angeles Times


Motion Picture Sound Editors announce nominees for the Golden Reel Awards

Inception 
"Black Swan" and "Inception" led the nominations Friday morning for the Motion Picture Sound Editors 58th annual Golden Reel Awards, earning three each.

The awards are given in sound editing, music editing and sound design.

Vying for best sound editing, feature film DX & ADR (dialogue and dubbing or "looping"), are "Black Swan," "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part I," "Inception," "The Kids Are All Right," "The King's Speech," "The Social Network," "Tron: Legacy" and "True Grit."

Nominated for sound editing, feature film effects and foley, are "127 Hours," "Black Swan," "Inception," "True Grit," "Iron Man 2," "Salt," "Tron: Legacy" and "Unstoppable."

Nominees for sound editing, feature film animation, are "Despicable Me," "How to Train Your Dragon," "Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole," "Tangled," "The Illusionist" and "Toy Story 3."

In contention for feature film documentary are "Babies," "Catfish," "Exit Through the Gift Shop," "Inside Job," "Restrepo," "Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage" and "Waiting for 'Superman.' "

Garnering nominations for feature film foreign-language are "Biutiful," "Lebanon," "Micmacs," "Mother," "North Face," "The Girl Who Played With Fire" and "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo."

Nominees for best sound editing, feature film music, are "Alice in Wonderland," "Black Swan," "Get Low," "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part I," "Inception," "Let Me In," "The Losers" and "The Social Network."

Nominees for feature film music in a musical are "Burlesque," "Country Strong," "Step Up 3D" and "Tangled."

For a list of the TV nominees, as well as nominations in several other categories including direct-to-video movies and computer interactive entertainment, go to http://www.mpse.org.

The Golden Reels will also be presenting two special awards at its Feb. 20 ceremony at the Westin Bonaventure Hotel: Oscar-winning producer Brian Grazer is set to receive the 2011 MPSE Filmmaker award, and Academy Award-winning sound designer and editor Walter Murch will receive the 2011 MPSE Career Achievement honor.

— Susan King

Photo: Leonardo DiCaprio in a scene from "Inception," nominated in three sound editing categories. Credit: Warner Bros.

 


'Burlesque,' 'True Grit' among Costume Designers Guild nominees

Burlesque 
"Burlesque," "True Grit" and "The Tempest' are among the nominees for the 13th-annual Costume Designers Guild Awards. The announcement was made Thursday morning.

Nominated in the excellence in contemporary film category are  Amy Westcott for "Black Swan;" Michael Kaplan for "Burlesque;" JeffreyKurland for "Inception;" Jacqueline West for "The Social Network;" and Ellen Mirojnick for "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps."

Nominees for excellence in period film are Mark Bridges for "The Fighter;" Jenny Beavan for "The King's Speech;" and Mary Zophres for "True Grit."

Vying in the excellence in fantasy film category are  Colleen Atwood for "Alice in Wonderland;" Sandy Powell for "The Tempest;" and Michael Wilkinson and Christine Bieselin Clark for "Tron: Legacy."
 
On the television side, the nominees for outstanding contemporary TV series are Chrisi Karvonides-Dushenko for "Big Love;" Randall Christensen, Daniella Gschwendtner and Steven Norman Lee for "Dancing With the Stars;" Lou Eyrich for "Glee;" Alix Friedberg for "Modern Family;" and Alonzo Wilson for "Treme."

Nominated in the outstanding period/fantasy TV series category are John A. Dunn for "Boardwalk Empire;" Janie Bryant for "Mad Men;" and Joan Bergin for "The Tudors."

Outstanding made for television movie or miniseries nominees are Penny Rose and Joe Hobbs for "The Pacific;" Cindy Evans for "Temple Grandin;" and Rita Ryack for "You Don't Know Jack."

Among the special awards to be handed out at the gala hosted by Kristin Davis on Feb. 22 at the Beverly Hilton are the Lacoste Spotlight Award to Halle Berry; the Disaronno Career Achievement in Film and Television Award to costume designer Julie Weiss and the Distinguished Collaborator Award to director Joel Schumacher. The late Michael Dennison will be inducted into the guild's Hall of Fame.

For a list of the nominees for costume design in commercials and more information go to www.costumedesignersguild.com.

--Susan King

"Burlesque" photo from Screen Gems



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