Thursday, February 18, 2010

The Hurt Locker

THE HURT LOCKER (Nominations: 9)

Kathryn Bigelow’s film is this year’s little engine that could. The film released in the US in limited locations back in February of 2009. It was first viewed, however, in Italy, in October of 2008 at the Venice Film Festival. So its marathon run at awards has been long and arduous. It continued to gain speed and critical acclaim. Though most Oscar nominees do not appear until November and December, The Hurt Locker was strong enough to remain in the voters’ minds when it came time to make the nominations.

The Hurt Locker deserves its accolades. The film is powerful, wrought with emotion, and very relevant. It is a war film about Iraq, and yet it does not play out as a politically charged film. It neither advocates nor admonishes the US involvement in Iraq, but rather tells a story about one group of men, headlined by Jeremy Renner as the soldier who “gets” to disarm explosives. Renner is subtle with his performance, playing the character as someone always hiding his true self, but ultimately showing that what he does is who he is. He deserves his nomination, but should be happy to clap after Jeff Bridges’ acceptance speech. Along with Renner’s nomination, the film garnered 8 more, including the coveted Best Director and Best Picture nominations.

In the technical categories, The Hurt Locker should walk away with one or maybe two statues if it is really lucky. It has nominations for Cinematography, Film Editing, Original Score, Sound Editing, and Sound Mixing. Though these nominations are very much deserved, Avatar will likely take 4 of the 5, or maybe all of them. I would say the two Sound awards are the most likely for The Hurt Locker if it gets any. The real chances for awards are in the big categories: Original Screenplay, Director, and Picture. The Hurt Locker should get the statue for Original Screenplay, though Tarantino might come away with the upset there. Director and Picture are a toss up with Avatar. My money is on a split. Kathryn Bigelow will get the top director award over her ex Husband, James Cameron, but Avatar will be the film of the year.

PREDICTED WINS: 3

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