>A female member of the Academy's 506-person sound branch, granted a cloak of anonymity, reveals why she filled out her final Oscar ballot the way that she did.
Brutally Honest Oscar Ballot #2
BEST PICTURE
>wish Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse had been nominated — it was terrific — and I really enjoyed A Quiet Place, too. I hated Vice — well, I should say, I hated the first half of it, because I turned it off halfway through; it felt gimmicky. I did not care for Black Panther — I appreciate what the film represented to people, but I just thought it was pretty mediocre. I'm not a fan of Green Book, either — it felt kind of retrograde and borderline offensive with all the cliches, and then I read what the family [of Don Shirley] was saying and that didn't help. My son said to me, "That movie is trash"; I wouldn't go that far. I wanted to love Roma, but in the end I just thought it was boring, albeit beautiful to look at. I kept waiting for something to happen. My daughter and I watched it together at home and we kept saying, "She's running in the street — maybe she's going to get hit by a car?" No. "She's going out into the water to save the kids — maybe one of them is going to die?" And my daughter said, "No, because all of the kids are huddled together on the beach on the poster." So then, during the credits, she said, "Let's watch through the credits, because maybe there's a scene after the credits?" Nope — and, by that time, we were laughing. There are so many people that liked it, and it's winning everything, but for me it did not work. It took me a while to get into BlacKkKlansman, but I eventually did — I really like Spike Lee, I love Adam Driver and I'm a fan of [John] David Washington from Ballers on TV. But I only voted for three.
>My number three is Bohemian Rhapsody, which I liked a lot — I didn't like how they handled Freddie Mercury's homosexuality; they just more or less avoided it, but Rami Malek was terrific and I loved the concert scenes. I put A Star Is Born at number two — a really entertaining Hollywood movie; the acting was great and everything worked for me except the ending. I liked The Favourite a lot — not the cinematography, but everything else about it. I guess it was the one of the eight nominees that I liked the most, but I can't say it was a favorite film of mine. There was no Phantom Thread for me this year.
BEST DIRECTOR
>I loathed Cold War, so that was it for Pawel [Pawlikowski]. I just thought Adam McKay miscalculated [with Vice] — he tried to do the same thing with this movie that he did with The Big Short, and it did not work. I know this is blasphemous, but I thought that [Roma's Alfonso] Cuaron just borrowed a lot from Fellini — I guess you could call it an homage — and, hello, just because you can have a tracking shot that goes three blocks doesn't mean you should. She [Yalitza Aparicio's character] has got to get somewhere — at the end of it, something's gotta happen! I thought the direction of BlacKkKlansman [Spike Lee] and The Favourite [Yorgos Lanthimos] were both great, but I just liked The Favourite more.
>My Vote: Yorgos Lanthimos (The Favourite)
>A female member of the Academy's 506-person sound branch
Okay, so why should she vote for anything other than sound-related stuff?
I didn't see First Reformed — no interest whatsoever, I guess because of the subject matter, particularly during the holiday season.
The hell does that mean?
>didn't even watch one of the nominations.
her comment about none of them are really oscar worthy is accurate though
Added up Best Picture votes from all these Anonymous ballots together, in the same preferential 1-5 point metric used by Oscars. Make with these what you will.
Roma BP - 35
The Favourite BP - 26
Black Panther BP - 24
Green Book BP - 21
BlacKkKlansman BP - 9
Make with these what you will. The highest sum also went to Shape of Water and Moonlight the last times.
I like Roma. I'd be okay with it winning. I'd rather BlacKkKlansman won but the endless /pol/ shitposting would be unbearable I suppose
Black klansman was mediocre regardless if you're /pol/. It's just poorman's In The Heat of the Night
The "I fucked Buzz Aldrin" comment is hilarious
>Black Pantheris probably going to win, but I did not like the production design on that — to me, every scene looked like a set.First Man— I used to go out with Buzz Aldrin. [I ask, "Are you serious?"] Yeah, he was cute back in the day — the only person I ever slept with just because of who he was; I just wanted to say, "I slept with someone who was on the moon." Our first date was going to an AA meeting; one time we went three times in a day, and that was on Easter! No wonder I likeA Star Is Born! I didn't even drink or smoke, and I didn't want anybody to think I did. I don't know what I was thinking — I was just young and crazy. Anyway, I did not likeFirst Man, although I love Ryan Gosling.
just want to add
Richard Grant has a surprisingly high ranking with these voters.
Richard Grant had 9 votes for him, Mahershala Ali had 3. Dunno the validity of that category from these though
And he deserves it.
I don't know if this was just because of this voter or if it's common for everyone this year but even when they pick their favorite it doesn't sound like they liked it. Like there's no passion behind anything they're picking.
This is the type of people who vote in the Oscars, lmao.
I'm sure this woman is a Yea Forums poster too, what a fucking pleb.
Who cares about any of this shit? Its all rotten brain busy body bullshit.
people that want to make money
> "She's running in the street — maybe she's going to get hit by a car?" No.
>"She's going out into the water to save the kids — maybe one of them is going to die?"
You can appreciate the tension of a scene for its own sake.