21 de diciembre de 2023

VARIOUS DOCUMENTS 2

 Part 5 of: The Lies We Told Each Other

Fandoms: Actor RPF, Top Gun (Movies), Heat (1995)

Characters:
Val Kilmer, Tom Cruise, Glen Powell, Miles Teller, Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Jake Picking, Tom Holland

Additional Tags:
Wikipedia, Memories, Fake Documents, Movie Industry, Entertainment Industry, Oscar Award 

INDEX: https://palabraspulsares.blogspot.com/p/various-documents-lies-we-told-each.html

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Chapter 2: Top Gun (2016)


Summary:
And what happens to Tom Cruise, Val Kilmer, Miles Teller, and Glen Powell if “Top Gun” doesn't exist? They make “Top Gun” twenty years later!
* I have deleted "La la land" from film history.

Cruise's directorial debut dominates the box office

By Tim Masters
BBC Entertainment Correspondent
May 20, 2016

The talk of Hollywood this week is Tom Cruise. Not because new details were revealed about how he did his impressive underwater scene in "Mission: Impossible." Rebel Nation" last year, not because of a leak about his relationship with the Church of Scientology, but because of his directorial debut. The war drama "Top Gun" dominated the box office this weekend (May 13-15) with a gross of $17.9 million. Considering that the budget was 33 million - a low-budget film in today's Hollywood landscape -everyone agrees on two things: this film will be a success, and no one expected a story so well told by a man most people only think of as the protagonist of action films.

“Top Gun” is an action drama film that takes place between June and August 1986. It stars Milles Teller as Lieutenant Richard "Broadway" Norton, a young naval aviator, and Jake Picking, who plays his Radar Intercept Officer (RIO), Junior Lieutenant Louis "Coyote" White. When Navy leadership sends them to train at the United States Navy Fighter Weapons School (Top Gun), they discover more about themselves than they could have imagined. The story is an adaptation of the novel, little-known until this week: "Fly with Me," where retired aviator Leonard Wolfe fictionalizes parts of his life. Both the book and the film pay attention to how the tensions of the Cold War, homophobia, and a lack of interest in mental health impact four talented but tormented aviators.

Previous reviews had been positive. Richard Brody of The New Yorker wrote: "The film successfully fuses the paranoid atmosphere of the Cold War of 1986 with current debates about queer people in the military." Clarrise Loughery, editor-in-chief of The Independent, wrote that the film is "as thrilling as any Marvel spectacle, keeping you on the edge of your seat and making your fists pump. At the same time, the emotional blows its characters take pack a punch. unexpected. We leave you with a melancholic tear in your eyes.”

But the fact that it is a drama about the homosexual awakening of two soldiers made us think that not even the name of Tom Cruise could turn this into a mass phenomenon. After all, Marvel and DC have dominated the box office for the past seven years. It was supposed to be a low-key performer, enough to cover its cost and sneak into awards season. As is often the case regarding Cruise, we were wrong.

Critics have praised the performance of Milles Teller, Jake Picking, Tom Holland, and Glen Powell, who carry the weight of the film with their confrontations on the ground and in the air. Their interpretations are careful, complex, and of a similar level. In promotional interviews, they agree to credit Tom Cruise's precise direction. "He's a detailed guy, who sits with you and is willing to listen to you for hours speculating about the character's motivations," said Holland, who plays the tormented pilot Patrick "Windbreak" Malone.

"He knows what he wants, and his experience as a method actor allows him to explain it," Teller told CNN. The star of "Whiplash" (2014) and "Bleed for This" (2016) has known Cruise since 2010 when he starred in "Rabbit Hole" with Nicole Kidman, the star's then-wife. "Cruise would come to the set, but he didn't hang out next to Nicole. Rather, he sat near the director of photography and listened carefully to the discussions. "I think he used his marriage as an excuse to take film classes," Teller concluded.

“I was very intimidated, because he is, you know, Tom Cruise, but everything turned out very well,” Picking told Hollywood Reporter. “It put a lot of emphasis on Coyote's inner world and how his life expectancy would be different from mine. I did not want a contemporary interpretation of the conflict, but rather for me to expose the fears of gay men of that time, related to the fear of the HIV-AIDS epidemic and the loss of social status that being outed could imply.”

If “Top Gun” does not have a box office drop in its second week, it could be one of the cinematic revelations of the year. In an ecosystem dominated since the end of the last decade by fantasy IP adaptations and digital animations for children, a historical war drama attracting audiences is almost a sure ticket to the Oscars. For now, two songs from its soundtrack, "I Ain't Worried" by OneRepublic and "Hold My Hand" by Lady Gaga, are breaking records on the radio and streaming charts.

Tom Cruise has surprised us again, which is very difficult in this city.

 

Oscar nominations 2017:
Hollywood surrenders to Tom Cruise with eight nominations for “Top Gun”

By Tim Masters
BBC Entertainment Correspondent
January 24, 2017

"Top Gun" marks Tom Cruise's triumphant return to the Oscars, a ceremony he hasn't bothered to attend since 2005. The Academy's recognition of his directorial debut is overwhelming, with eight nominations.

The announcement marks the fifth time the Academy has recognized Cruise throughout his long career. He was previously nominated for his work as an actor in "Born on the Fourth of July" in 1989, "Jerry Maguire" in 1996, "Heat" in 1997 (his only statuette so far), and "Magnolia" in 1999. His action films, such as the Mission Impossible series and "Edge of Tomorrow," have been nominated in technical categories, such as sound, editing, or special effects. Still, it is known that the Academy usually ignores acting work in fantasy, science fiction, or action films.

That changed this year. "Top Gun" was a favorite with audiences and critics. The film achieved a total domestic gross of $387 million. Despite not being shown in China, Iran, and other countries due to its plot about homosexual people, it grossed $387.6 million internationally. "Top Gun" ended up grossing $774.7 million. It was the tenth highest-grossing film of 2016 and the only one on the "Top Ten 2016" list that was not a sequel, a remake, or an animated movie for children.

In addition, it is known that Hollywood loves stories of patriotism and love stories, so since June, everyone expected "Top Gun" to be included in the awards season.

"Top Gun" received eight nominations at the 2017 Oscars: Best Picture, Best Lead Actor for Milles Teller, Best Supporting Actor for Tom Holland, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Original Song, Best Sound, Best Cinematography, and Best Film Editing. The film has already received several awards: It was named one of the ten best films of 2016 by the American Film Institute. The Chicago Film Critics Association recognized its director of photography, Claudio Miranda. The Film Critics Association of the United States and Canada awarded the film in the categories of Best Actor to Jake Picking, Best Cinematography to Claudio Miranda, Best Editing to Eddie Hamilton, and Best Original Song to Lady Gaga.

After the announcement, Tom Cruise published a short video of gratitude: "These nominations recognize the collective work of a fantastic team. They are also a positive sign that supports the production of films with realistic and committed subjects. Thank you."

The 89th Oscars ceremony will be held at the Dolby Theater in Los Angeles on February 26, 2017.

 

Oscar 2017: "Moonlight" and "Top Gun" share the glory

BBC Editorial
February 27, 2017

This Sunday's 89th edition of the Oscars ended with a victory for auteur cinema: "Top Gun" and "Moonlight" dominated the night.

When Warren Beatty announced the Oscar for Best Picture for Tom Cruise, Christopher McQuarrie, and Jerry Bruckheimer, Cruise, who was the surprise of 2016 by revealing himself as an excellent director, made all the people who worked in the film in the theater come up on stage. He approached the microphone and pointed to the group behind him: "It's just one statuette, but it belongs to these people and many others who can't afford these fancy clothes and spend three hours in a theater. Thank you."

"Top Gun" ended the night with six statuettes, including the most important for Best Film and one of the most popular: Best Original Song for Lady Gaga and BloodPop for "Hold My Hand."

"Moonlight," for its part, won four statuettes, including Best Direction by Barry Jenkins; it was also recognized for Best Supporting Actor for Mahershala Ali, and Nicholas Britell received the statuette for Best Soundtrack.

 

These are the main winners of the 2017 Oscars:

Best movie: “Top Gun.”

Best Director: Barry Jenkins for “Moonlight.”

Best Actress: Taraji P Henson for “Hidden Figures.”

Best Actor: Denzel Washington for "Fences."

Best Original Screenplay: Kenneth Lonergan for "Manchester by the Sea."

Best screenplay adapted: Christopher McQuarrie, Richard Wenk, and Edward Zwick for “Top Gun.”

Best Supporting Actress: Viola Davis for “Fences.”

Best Supporting Actor: Mahershala Ali for “Moonlight.”

Best foreign language film: "The Salesman" by Asghar Farhadi from Iran.

Best soundtrack: Nicholas Britell for “Moonlight.”

Best Original Song: Lady Gaga and BloodPop for "Hold My Hand" from "Top Gun."

Best Cinematography: Claudio Miranda for “Top Gun.”

 

Cinema with politics

The Oscars were expected to be another occasion for the film community to show its rejection of US President Donald Trump's policies. Still, the speeches were more subdued than at recent awards shows.

The ceremony presenter, Jimmy Kimmel, made multiple references to the political situation.

"I want to thank President Donald Trump, seriously. Remember when they said the Oscars were racist?" Kimmel said in his opening speech.

But the most potent political statement of the night was made by someone who was not present at the ceremony.

It was the Iranian director Asghar Farhadi, winner of the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film for "The Salesman," who did not attend the gala in protest of Trump's executive order (at this time frozen by court order) prohibiting entry to the US from citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries, including Iran.

Anousheh Ansari, the woman who accepted the award for Farhadi and read his statement, stressed in the press room that it was very difficult for the Iranian director to decide not to attend the ceremony, especially considering it is his second Oscar.

"He did it in solidarity with those affected by President Donald Trump's travel ban," she said.

For his part, actor Gael García Bernal, before presenting the award for Best Animated Film, won by "Zootopia," said: "As a Mexican, a Latin American, an immigrant worker, and a human being, I am against any wall that tries to separate us."

In the press room, Alessandro Bertolazzi, one of the winners of the Oscar for Best Makeup and Hair for "Suicide Squad," explained that he dedicated the award to immigrants because "art has no borders." And he concluded: "Long live life!"

Given the direct and indirect mentions of Trump, Kimmel was struck by the fact that the president had not yet tweeted about it.

"Hey, @realDonaldTrump, are you awake?" the presenter wrote via Twitter in the middle of the ceremony.

However, the acceptance speeches of the various winners were less combative than those of the Golden Globes or the Screen Actors Guild Awards.

There were more references to unity and many expressions of affection and gratitude.

 

Signals on clothes

The politicization of the awards could be seen on the red carpet.

Several actors appeared with blue ribbons to support the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), one of the social organizations that has increased its campaigns to defend immigrants in the United States since the arrival of Trump at the White House.

Among the actors who wore the ribbons were actress Ruth Negga (nominated for Best Actress for "Loving"), Casey Affleck (nominated for an Oscar for Best Actor for "Manchester by the Sea"), and model Karlie Kloss.

For their part, Milles Teller and Viggo Mortensen, Oscar nominees for Best Actor for "Top Gun" and "Captain Fantastic," respectively, walked the red carpet with a pin from Planned Parenthood, the largest provider of reproductive services in the United States.

One of Trump's first actions as US president was to reinstate a decree that prohibits the granting of US aid to non-governmental organizations and health providers abroad that advise on abortion as a family planning option.

 

Here are the rest of the winners:

Best Makeup and Hair: Alessandro Bertolazzi, Giorgio Gregorini, and Christopher Nelson for "Suicide Squad."

Best Costume Design: Colleen Atwood for "Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them."

Best Documentary: "OJ: Made in America", by Ezra Edelman.

Best Sound Editing: Sylvain Bellemare for "Arrival."

Best Sound Mixing: Mark Weingarten, James H. Mather, and Al Nelson for "Top Gun."

Best Animated Short: "Piper," by Alan Barillaro and Marc Sondheimer.

Best Animated Film: "Zootopia," by Byron Howard, Rich Moore, and Clark Spencer.

Best Production Design: Hannah Beachler for "Moonlight."

Best editing: Eddie Hamilton for "Top Gun."

Best Visual Effects: "Rogue One: A Star Wars Story."

Best Documentary Short: "White Helmets," by Orlando von Einsiedel and Joanna Natasegara.

Best Live-Action Short: "Sing," by Kristof Deák and Anna Udvardy.

 

Top Gun (2016)

Article at Wikipedia. The free encyclopedia

 

"Top Gun" is a 2016 American action drama film directed by Tom Cruise and produced by Cruise, Christopher McQuarrie, and Jerry Bruckheimer, with distribution by Paramount Pictures. The screenplay was written by Christopher McQuarrie, Richard Wenk, and Edward Zwick, based on the semi-autobiographical novel "Fly with Me," by Leonard Wolfe. It stars Milles Teller as Lieutenant Richard "Broadway" Norton, a young naval aviator aboard the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz in the summer of 1986. He and his Radar Intercept Officer (RIO), Lieutenant (Junior Grade) Louis "Coyote" White (Jake Picking), have the opportunity to train at the United States Navy Fighter Weapons School (Top Gun) at Miramar Naval Air Station in San Diego, California.

 

BASIC DATA

Director: Tom Cruise

Screenplay: Christopher McQuarrie, Richard Wenk, and Edward Zwick

Based on: Fly with Me

by: Leonard Wolfe

Production: Tom Cruise, Christopher McQuarrie, and Jerry Bruckheimer

Starring: Milles Teller and Jake Picking

Cinematography: Claudio Miranda

Editing: Eddie Hamilton

Music: Harold Faltermeyer, Lady Gaga, Hans Zimmer

Production: Skydance

Distribution: Paramount Pictures

Release date: May 13, 2016

Duration: 130 minutes

Country: United States

English language

Budget: $33 million

Collection: $774.7 million

 

PLOT

Lieutenant Richard "Broadway" Norton (Milles Teller) is a naval aviator aboard the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz in the summer of 1986. He and his radar intercept officer (RIO), Lieutenant (junior grade) Louis "Coyote" White (Jake Picking), spend their days flying over the waters of the South Atlantic. Although they have not had any encounters with the enemy, the strain of the Cold War is felt by the ship's personnel, and Norton has mild symptoms of post-traumatic stress. One afternoon, upon returning from their patrol, Rear Admiral Charles "Axe" Calhoun (Ed Harris) calls them into his office to announce that they have been selected to train at the United States Navy's famous Fighter Weapons School (Top Gun) at Naval Air Station Miramar in San Diego, California.

Although it is not a leave, Broadway tells Coyote that being on dry land and doing exercises instead of patrols over the sea will be a good change. They both speculate about who else will be in the course.

Upon arriving in Top Gun, Broadway and Coyote befriend tormented pilot Patrick "Windbreak" Malone (Tom Holland) and his RIO Nathan "Branta" Brownstein (Nicolas Hoult). It's clear to the group that their instructors consider perfectionist Thadeus "Snowman" Kruger (Glen Powell) the course's star. The flying styles of Windbreak - risky and spontaneous - and Snowman - calculating and respectful of the rules - make them develop a fierce rivalry. Kruger calls this behavior "silly," "dangerous," and worse than the enemy, to which Malone responds, "I'm dangerous."

Norton and White spend the nights locked in their apartment at the Miramar base because they do not want to see themselves in the middle of this rivalry. One such night, they joke about the ideal attributes of their future wives. When he finishes his enumeration, White sees Norton looking at him with annoyance. Broadway tells him that he just described him and accuses him of being homosexual. Ashamed and surprised, Coyote denies it and flees to his room. Where he has a panic attack.

The next day, Norton awkwardly apologizes, assuring him that he doesn't think he's gay. However, White notices that his pilot is unfocused and maintains an unusually tense physical distance from him.

Norton learns Brownstein invited his wife Carla (Jessica Stroup) and young son Benjamin to visit Miramar. To ease tensions, he convinces Reuben "Boomerang" Keynes (Brad Beyer) to organize several activities for that day involving the entire group, hoping that if Malone and Kruger interact outside the base, they relieve tension. At first, everything goes well, with a picnic and a game of beach volleyball in which Windbreak and Snowman are forced to play against Branta and Boomerang. The problem arises when Chelsea Boole (Cobie Smulders), one of the Top Gun instructors, comes to see the game, and Snowman realizes that Windbreak has a romantic relationship with her. Kruger accuses the other aviator of trying to score points in bed, and they almost come to blows. Only the crying of Benjamin Brownstein, frightened by the screams, makes Malone react.

A few days later, Malone and Kruger pursue an A-4 in Drill 31 of the course. As Snowman has trouble hitting the A-4, Windbreak pressures him to move out of the way so he can move into firing position. As Kruger pulls away, Malone flies through his jetwash, both plane engines fail, and they enter an unrecoverable flat spin. Windbreak and Branta eject, but the RIO's neck collides with the plane's deck, and he dies in the arms of his pilot.

After Brownstein's funeral, Norton and White get drunk and have sex. Upon awakening, Norton insists that it was just a mistake caused by pain and alcohol. He demands White to act as if it never happened before leaving. Alone, the RIO realizes he is in love with his pilot, making him doubt his place in the Navy.

Meanwhile, a board of inquiry clears Malone of any responsibility for Brownstein's death. Still, he is shocked and guilt-ridden and is considering resigning.

Malone and White meet at a gay bar far from the base. After the initial surprise, they discuss their reasons for considering leaving the Navy. Windbreak assures Coyote that there is nothing shameful about being queer and that he just needs to be discreet, but he shouldn't give up his career. White tells Malone that he can succeed if he regains his self-confidence. They return to Miramar together on Malone's motorcycle.

Immediately following their graduation from Top Gun, Snowman, Broadway, and Windbreak receive deployment orders to deal with a crisis situation despite clear signs of Windbreak's PTS and tension between Broadway and Coyote. They are sent to the USS Enterprise to provide air support for the rescue of the USS Layton, a disabled communications ship that wandered into hostile waters.

Snowman expresses his concerns to Commander Tyler "Prod" Jordan (Josh Brolin) about Windbreak's mental state but is told to just do his job. Snowman and Broadway take off to provide air cover, with Windbreak and RIO Houdini (Liam Hemsworth) on standby. Snowman and Broadway become involved in a dogfight with what initially appear to be two MiGs but turn out to be six. Broadway and Coyote's plane is shot down. Norton believes White has died in the water like Branta and admits his feelings. Windbreak arrives at the battle and shoots down three MiGs. Snowman destroys a fourth, and the remaining two MiGs retreat. A helicopter rescues Broadway and Coyote. The doctors tell Norton that his RIO is just unconscious. When they wake him up, the pilot cries with happiness. Back on the Enterprise, the three teams hug each other as an expression of mutual respect.

Back at the Nimitz, finally confident in their feelings, Norton and White promise to let their relationship develop.

 

CAST

Miles Teller as LT Richard "Broadway" Norton: United States Navy aviator.

Jake Picking as LTJG Louis "Coyote" White: Hollywood Radar Intercept Officer (RIO).

Tom Holland as LT Patrick "Windbreak" Malone: United States Navy aviator. He is the youngest airman ever to have been accepted into Top Gun.

Nicolas Hoult as LTJG Nathan "Branta" Brownstein: Maverick's radar intercept officer and best friend.

Jessica Stroup as Carla Bradshaw, wife of LTJG Nathan "Branta" Brownstein.

Glen Powell as LT Thadeus "Snowman" Kruger: One of Top Gun's students and Maverick's rival turned sidekick.

Brad Beyer as LTJG Reuben "Boomerang" Keynes: Snowman's radar intercept officer.

Milo Ventimiglia as LT Connor "Stone" Portland: Naval aviator and Top Gun student.

Aldis Hodge as LTJG Milton "Impervious" Waters: Chipper's radar intercept officer (later Windbreak during the end of training).

Cobie Smulders as Chelsea Boole: Top Gun instructor.

Liam Hemsworth as LTJG Scott "Houdini" Wallace: Enterprise's radar intercept officer.

Josh Brolin as CDR Tyler "Prod" Jordan: Commander of the USS Enterprise Carrier Air Group

Ed Harris as Rear Admiral Charles "Axe" Calhoun: Commander of the USS Nimitz

Jon Hamm as CDR Maurice "Snake" Miller: Commanding officer and Top Gun instructor. A Vietnam War veteran who served with Duke Malone, Windbreak's father.

Robert Knepper as LCDR Rupert "Merry" Hollow: Naval aviator and Top Gun instructor.

 

RECEPTION

Box Office

The film quickly became a hit. It would be two months before the number of theaters fell below that of its first week. It was number one in its first weekend (May 13-15) with a gross of $17.9 million and reached a total domestic gross of $387 million. Despite not being shown in China, Iran, and other countries due to its plot about homosexual characters, it grossed $387.6 million internationally. "Top Gun" ended up grossing $774.7 million. It was the tenth highest-grossing film of 2016 and the only one on the "Top Ten 2016" list that was not a sequel, a remake, or an animated movie aimed at children.

 

Critic response

Richard Brody of The New Yorker wrote: "The film successfully fuses the paranoid atmosphere of the Cold War of 1986 with current debates about queer people in the military." Clarrise Loughery, editor-in-chief of The Independent, wrote that the film is "as thrilling as any Marvel spectacle, keeping you on the edge of your seat and making your fists pump. At the same time, the emotional blows its characters take pack a punch. unexpected. We leave you with a melancholic tear in your eyes.”

 

Awards

It was named one of the ten best films of 2016 by the American Film Institute.

Chicago Film Critics Association Award: Best Director of Photography to Claudio Miranda.

 

American and Canadian Film Critics Association Awards:

Best Actor, Jake Picking

Best photography, to Claudio Miranda

Best editing, Eddie Hamilton

Best original song to Lady Gaga.

 

2016 Golden Globe Awards:

Best Director: Tom Cruise

Best Drama Actor: Milles Teller

Best Screenplay: Christopher McQuarrie, Richard Wenk, and Edward Zwick

Best soundtrack: Lorne Balfe, Harold Faltermeyer, Lady Gaga, and Hans Zimmer

Best Original Song: "Hold My Hand," composed by Lady Gaga and BloodPop.

 

2017 Oscar Awards:

 CATEGORY — RECIPIENTS — RESULTS

Best Picture – Tom Cruise, Christopher McQuarrie and Jerry Bruckheimer — WINNER

Best Adapted Screenplay — Christopher McQuarrie, Richard Wenk, and Edward Zwick on "Fly With Me" by Leonard Wolfe — WINNER

Best Leading Actor — Milles Teller — NOMINATED

Best Supporting Actor — Tom Holland — NOMINATED

Best Original Song — “Hold my Hand” – Lady Gaga and BloodPop —- WINNER

Best Sound – Mark Weingarten, James H. Mather, and Al Nelson — WINNER

Best photography – Claudio Miranda — WINNER

Best Editing – Eddie Hamilton — WINNER

 

Results of the 89th edition of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Awards, Oscar 2017

  

Best Picture

 

WINNER: Top Gun – Tom Cruise, Christopher McQuarrie and Jerry Bruckheimer

NOMINEES

Fences – Scott Rudin, Denzel Washington, and Todd Black

Hacksaw Ridge  – Bill Mechanic and David Permut

Hell or High Water – Carla Hacken and Julie Yorn

Hidden Figures – Donna Gigliotti, Peter Chernin, Jenno Topping, Pharrell Williams and Theodore Melfi

The Arrival – Shawn Levy, Dan Levine, Aaron Ryder, and David Linde

Lion – Emile Sherman, Iain Canning, and Angie Fielder

Manchester by the Sea – Casey Affleck, Kimberly Steward, Chris Moore, Lauren Becky, and Kevin J. Walsh

Moonlight – Adele Romanski, Dede Gardner, and Jeremy Kleinera

 

Best Director

 

WINNER: Barry Jenkins – Moonlight

NOMINEES

Kenneth Lonergan – Manchester by the Sea

Denis Villeneuve – The arrival

Mel Gibson - Hacksaw Ridge

 

Best Actor

 

WINNER: Denzel Washington – Fences as Troy Maxson

NOMINEES

Casey Affleck – Manchester by the Sea as Lee Chandler

Andrew Garfield – Hacksaw Ridge as Desmond Doss

Milles Teller – Top Gun as Richard "Broadway" Norton

Viggo Mortensen – Captain Fantastic as Ben Cash

 

Best Actress

 

WINNER: Taraji P Henson - Hidden Figures as Katherine Johnson

NOMINEES

Isabelle Huppert – Elle as Michèle Leblanc

Ruth Negga – Loving as Mildred Loving

Natalie Portman – Jackie as Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis

Meryl Streep – Florence Foster Jenkins as Florence Foster Jenkins

 

Best Supporting Actor

 

WINNER: Mahershala Ali – Moonlight as Juan

NOMINEES

Jeff Bridges – Hell or High Water as Marcus Hamilton

Tom Holland – Top Gun as Patrick “Windbreak” Malone

Dev Patel – Lion as Saroo Brierley

Michael Shannon – Nocturnal Animals as Bobby Andes

 

Best Supporting Actress

 

WINNER: Viola Davis – Fences as Rose Lee Maxson

NOMINEES

Naomie Harris – Moonlight as Paula

Nicole Kidman – Lion as Sue Brierley

Octavia Spencer – Hidden Figures as Dorothy Vaughan

Michelle Williams – Manchester by the Sea as Randi

 

Best Original Screenplay

 

WINNER: Kenneth Lonergan – Manchester by the Sea

NOMINEES

Taylor Sheridan – Hell or High Water

Matt Ross – Captain Fantastic

Yorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis Fillippou – The Lobster

Mike Mills – 20th Century Women

 

    

Best Adapted Screenplay

 

WINNER: Christopher McQuarrie, Richard Wenk, and Edward Zwick - "Top Gun" based on "Fly with Me" by Leonard Wolfe

NOMINEES

Barry Jenkins and Tarell Alvin McCraney – "Moonlight" based on "In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue" by Tarell Alvin McCraney

Eric Heisserer – "Arrival" based on "Story of Your Life" from Ted Chiang

August Wilson – "Fences" based on "Fences" by August Wilson

Allison Schroeder & Theodore Melfi – "Hidden Figures" based on "Hidden Figures" by Margot Lee Shetterly

 

Best Animated Film

 

WINNER: Zootopia – Byron Howard, Rich Moore and Clark Spencer

NOMINEES

Kubo and the Two Strings – Travis Knight and Arianne Sutner

The Red Turtle – Michaël Dudok de Wit and Toshio Suzuki

The Life of Zucchini – Claude Barras and Max Karli

Moana – John Musker, Ron Clements, and Osnat Shurer

 

Best Foreign Language Film

 

WINNER: The Salesman (Iran) in Persian – Asghar Farhadi

NOMINEES

Tanna (Australia) in Nauvhal – Martin Butler and Bentley Dean

Toni Erdmann (Germany) in German – Maren Ade

A Man Called Ove (Sweden) in Swedish – Hannes Holm

Land of Mine (Denmark) in Danish – Martin Zandvliet

 

Best Documentary - Feature

 

WINNER: OJ: Made in America – Ezra Edelman and Caroline Waterlow

NOMINEES

13th – Ava DuVernay, Spencer Avericky, and Howard Barish

Fire at Sea – Gianfranco Rosi and Donatella Palermo

I Am Not Your Negro – Raoul Peck, Rémi Grelletyy and Hébert Peck

Life, Animated – Roger Ross Williams and Julie Goldman

 

Best Documentary - Short

 

WINNER: The White Helmets – Orlando von Einsiedel and Joanna Natasegara

NOMINEES

Extremis – Dan Krauss

4.1 Miles – Daphne Matziaraki

Joe's Violin – Kahane Cooperman and Raphaela Neihausen

Watani: My Homeland – Marcel Mettelsiefen and Stephen Ellis

 

Best Live Action Short Film

 

WINNER: Sing – Kristóf Deák and Anna Udvardy

NOMINEES

Ennemis intérieurs – Sélim Azzazi

La Femme et le TGV – Timo von Gunten and Giacun Caduff

Silent Nights – Aske Bang and Kim Magnusson

Timecode – Juanjo Giménez

 

Best Animated Short Film

 

WINNER: Piper – Alan Barillaro and Marc Sondheimer

NOMINEES

Blind Vaysha – Theodore Ushev

Borrowed Time – Andrew Coats and Lou Hamou- Lhadj

Pear Cider and Cigarettes – Robert Valley and Cara Speller

Pearl – Patrick Osborne

 

Best Original Score

 

WINNER: Moonlight – Nicholas Britell

NOMINEES

Jackie – Micachu

Lion – Dustin O'Halloran and Hauschka

Passengers – Thomas Newman

Moana – Mark Mancina, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Opetaia Foa'i

 

Best Original Song

 

WINNER: "Hold My Hand" from Top Gun – Music and lyrics by Lady Gaga and BloodPop

NOMINEES

"I See Victory" from Hidden Figures – Music and lyrics by Kim Burrell and Pharrell Williams

"Can't Stop the Feeling!" from Trolls – Music and lyrics by Justin Timberlake, Max Martin and Shellback

"How Far I'll Go" from Moana – Music and lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda

"The Empty Chair" from Jim: The James Foley Story – Music and Lyrics by J. Ralph and Sting

 

Best Sound Editing

 

WINNER: Arrival – Sylvain Bellemare

NOMINEES

Deepwater Horizon – Wylie Statesman and Renée Tondelli

Hacksaw Ridge – Robert Mackenzie and Andy Wright

Florence Foster Jenkins – Dafydd Archard

Sully – Alan Robert Murray and Bub Asman

   

Best Sound Mixing

 

WINNER: Top Gun – Mark Weingarten, James H. Mather, and Al Nelson

NOMINEES

Hacksaw Ridge – Kevin O'Connell, Andy Wright, Robert Mackenzie and Peter Grace

13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi – Greg P. Russell,b Gary Summers, Jeffrey J. Haboush and Mac Ruth

Arrival – Bernard Gariépy Strobl and Claude La Haye

Rogue One: one Star Wars story – David Parker, Christopher Scarabosio and Stuart Wilson

 

Best Production Design

 

WINNER: Moonlight - Hannah Beachler

NOMINEES

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them – Stuart Craig and Anna Pinnock

Hail, Caesar! – Jess Gonchor and Nancy Haigh

Arrival – Patrice Vermette and Paul Hotte

Passengers – Guy Hendrix Dyas and Gene Serdena

 

Best Cinematography

 

WINNER: Top Gun – Claudio Miranda

NOMINEES

Arrival – Bradford Young

Lion – Greig Fraser

Moonlight – James Laxton

Silence – Rodrigo Prieto

 

Best Makeup and Hairstyling

 

WINNER: Suicide Squad – Alessandro Bertolazzi, Giorgio Gregorini and Christopher Nelson

NOMINEES

Star Trek Beyond – Joel Harlow and Richard Alonzo

A Man Called Ove – Eva von Bahr and Love Larson

 

Best Costume Design

 

WINNER: Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them – Colleen Atwood

NOMINEES

Allies – Joanna Johnston

Florence Foster Jenkins – Consolata Boyle

Jackie – Madeline Fontaine

Suicide Squad – Kate Hawley

 

Best Film Editing

 

WINNER: Top Gun - Eddie Hamilton

NOMINEES

Hacksaw Ridge – John Gilbert

Hell or High Water – Jake Roberts

Arrival – Joe Walker

Moonlight – Nat Sanders and Joi McMillon

 

Best Visual Effects

 

WINNER: Rogue One: A Star Wars Story – John Knoll, Mohen Leo, Hal Hickel and Neil Corbould

NOMINEES

The Jungle Book – Robert Legato, Adam Valdez, Andrew R. Jones and Dan Lemmon

Deepwater Horizon – Craig Hammeck, Jason Snell, Jason Billington and Burt Dalton

Doctor Strange – Stephane Ceretti, Richard Bluff, Vincent Cirelli and Paul Corbould

Kubo and the Two Strings – Steve Emerson, Oliver Jones, Brian McLean and Brad Schiff

 

INDEX: https://palabraspulsares.blogspot.com/p/various-documents-lies-we-told-each.html

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