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Tag Archives: films

The Oscars 2017: All of the Films and Where to Watch Them

3 February 20173 February 2017

Every year, I try to see as many Oscar nominated films as I can, as well as catch up on all of those films my filmmaker friends are raving about that I haven’t seen yet.

For those wanting to run out and see as many of the films as possible, I’ve simplified the process for you a little bit.  Here are the 62 films and where you can see them.  Fortunately, many of these films are available to stream, while others are still in the movie theaters.  There are a few that are not currently on the market and will be released to video or streaming after the Awards are over.Most movies that are in between theater and DVD release will be made available for streaming over the course of these next three weeks.

To simplify which movies are nominated, I’ve made an Excel spreadsheet you can print out to keep track of which movies you’ve seen. 

Download [15.05 KB]

If you want a detailed list by category, you can find that on the Academy Awards website.  This list is for those who need a simplified version of all of the films nominated in alphabetical order and where you can find the movie.  [NOTE: a few films are available directly online and the links are provided in the chart below.]

For those wanting the cheapest way to see all of the Best Picture nominations still in theaters, Regal Entertainment is hosting a film festival 2/17-2/26.  Tix are $35.  DETAILS.

Film Nominations Notes
13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi Sound Mixing Available on Hulu, Amazon Prime; Youtube ($12.99); iTunes ($12.99); Vudu ($12.99) and Google Play ($12.99); FandangoNow ($14.99).
13th Best Documentary Available on Netflix.
20th Century Women Best Original Screenplay Available in theaters and on Vimeo.
4.1 Miles Best Documentary Short Available online at NY Times and Vimeo.
A Man Called Ove Best Foreign Film
Best Makeup/Hair
Available through Amazon streaming rental ($4.99) or streaming purchase ($14.99); iTunes; FandangoNow
Allied Costume Design Available on Vudu ($14.99); Amazon and FandangoNow (2/14/17).
Arrival Best Picture
Cinematography
Best Director
Film Editing
Production Design
Sound Editing
Sound Mixing
Best Adapted Screenplay
In Theaters. Also available for streaming purchase through Vudu ($14.99); CinemaNow ($15.99).
Blind Vaysha Best Animated Short Film In theaters, Vimeo and other streaming sites.
Borrowed Time Best Animated Short Film In theaters, also available online through Vimeo and other sites.
Captain Fantastic Best Actor-Viggo Mortensen Available on Amazon; iTunes; and FandangoNow.
Deepwater Horizon Sound Editing
Visual Effects
Available on Amazon; iTunes; and FandangoNow.
Doctor Strange Visual Effects Scheduled streaming/video release 2/14/17.
Elle Best Actress-Isabelle Huppert Amazon release 2/28/17.
Ennemis Intérieurs Best Short In theaters.
Extremis Best Documentary Short Netflix.
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them Costume Design
Production Design
Available to stream 3/7; for sale 3/28.
Fences Best Picture
Best Actor-Denzel Washington
Best Supporting Actress-Viola Davis
Best Adapted Screenplay
In Theaters; available 2/24 at FandangoNow.
Fire at Sea Best Documentary iTunes.
Florence Foster Jenkins Best Actress-Meryl Streep
Costume Design
Amazon; iTunes; Vudu; FandangoNow; OnDemand.
Hacksaw Ridge Best Picture
Best Actor-Andrew Garfield
Best Director
Film Editing
Sound Editing
Sound Mixing
In Theaters and on FandangoNow on 2/7/17.
Hail, Caesar! Production Design HBO; FandangoNow ($14.99).
Hell or High Water Best Picture
Best Supporting Actor-Jeff Bridges
Film Editing
Best Original Screenplay
Available for sale or rent at FandangoNow.
Hidden Figures Best Picture
Best Supporting Actress-Octavia Spencer
Best Adapted Screenplay
In theaters.
I Am Not Your Negro Best Documentary Available on Amazon 6/13/17.
Jackie Best Actress-Natalie Portman
Costume Design
Best Original Score
In theaters.
Jim: The James Foley Story Best Song-“The Empty Chair” HBO
Joe’s Violin Best Documentary Short New Yorker.
Kubo and the Two Strings Best Animated Feature
Visual Effects
Vudu; CinemaNow; FandangoNow.
La Femme et le TGV Best Short iTunes.
La La Land Best Picture
Best Actor-Ryan Gosling
Best Actress-Emma Stone
Cinematography
Costume Design
Best Director
Film Editing
Best Original Score
Best Song-“Audition (The Fools Who Dream)”; “City of Stars”
Production Design
Sound Editing
Sound Mixing
Best Original Screenplay
In Theaters.
Land of Mine Best Foreign Film In theaters; FandangoNow.
Life, Animated Best Documentary Amazon Prime.
Lion Best Picture
Best Supporting Actor-Dev Patel
Best Supporting Actress-Nicole Kidman
Cinematography
Best Original Score
Best Adapted Screenplay
In theaters.
Loving Best Actress-Ruth Negga Available at Vudu; FandangoNow.
Manchester By the Sea Best Picture
Best Actor-Casey Affleck
Best Supporting Actor-Lucas Hedges
Best Supporting Actress-Michelle Williams
Best Director
Best Original Screenplay
In Theaters and FandangoNow, Vudu, iTunes, and Google Play on 2/7/17.
Moana Best Animated Feature
Best Song-“How Far I’ll Go”
Available to stream 2/21/17.
Moonlight Best Picture
Best Supporting Actor-Mahershala Ali
Best Supporting Actress-Naomie Harris
Cinematography
Best Director
Film Editing
Best Original Score
Best Adapted Screenplay
In Theaters. Available at FandangoNow on 2/14/17.
My Life as a Zucchini Best Animated Feature In theaters beginning 2/24/17 in select theaters.
Nocturnal Animals Best Supporting Actor-Michael Shannon Available 2/7/17 at FandangoNow, Amazon, iTunes, GooglePlay and Vudu.
O.J. Made in America Best Documentary Hulu.
Passengers Best Original Score
Production Design
In theaters.
Pear Cider and Cigarettes Best Animated Short Film In theaters.
Pearl Best Animated Short Film Youtube (make sure to have a VR headset).
Piper Best Animated Short Film FandangoNow.
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story Sound Mixing
Visual Effects
In theaters.
Silence Cinematography In theaters.
Silent Nights Best Short In theaters.
Sing Best Short In theaters.
Star Trek Beyond Best Makeup/Hair Available for sale everywhere.
Suicide Squad Best Makeup/Hair Available for sale everywhere.
Sully Sound Editing FandangoNow, Amazon, iTunes, Google Play, Vudu.
Tanna Best Foreign Film Available 2/7/17 on iTunes.
The Jungle Book Visual Effects Available for sale and on Netflix.
The Lobster Best Original Screenplay Amazon Prime; FandangoNow.
The Red Turtle Best Animated Feature In select theaters.
The Salesman Best Foreign Film In theaters.
The White Helmets Best Documentary Short Netflix.
Timecode Best Short marvinwayne.com/en/timecode
Toni Erdmann Best Foreign Film Available to stream 4/11/17
Trolls Best Song-“Can’t Stop the Feeling” Vudu; FandangoNow.
Watani: My Homeland Best Documentary Short In theaters.
Zootopia Best Animated Feature Available for sale and on Netflix.
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Labyrinth of Lies

16 September 201519 February 2016
Movie Poster for "Labyrinth of Lies"
Movie Poster for “Labyrinth of Lies”

There are very few movies I have on my list of films that you have to see at least once in your lifetime.  These are the films that change you or open your mind in such a way that the movie becomes a part of you.  You become a very different person after seeing it.  These are the films that changed the way you saw reality and opened your mind to greater understanding.

Two of the films on that list for me are “American Beauty” and “Life is Beautiful.”  Both, of course, ended up winning an Academy Award for best picture (“Life is Beautiful” won for Best Foreign Film at the Academy).

This year, though, I’ve had the pleasure of viewing a few more films that need to be added to that list.  “Family on Board” (short film), “Winter” and now “Labyrinth of Lies.”  All three films are currently up for Oscar consideration.

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6jGxe6auuTg]

“Labyrinth of Lies” is a German film directed by Giulio Ricciarelli due to be released in the US in select theaters on September 25, 2015.  What makes this movie so unique is that it is an eye opener for the Baby Boomer generation and beyond of how the world came to know what happened in Auschwitz after World War II.

Many of us came to know the Holocaust as being a part of history.  We knew it happened.  But for the 20 years post WWII, the world did not know what happened at Auschwitz, especially the German people.  It wasn’t just denial, people believed in the propaganda put out by the Nazi party.  They believed the Jews were being relocated to either a new city or a summer camp.  They had no idea that thousands of people were murdered there.

That was what was so mind blowing about the film.  The people of Germany, especially the youth and the 20 somethings, had absolutely no idea what happened.  They hadn’t even heard of Auschwitz.  That is, until a young prosecutor decided to investigate a crazed reporter’s request to look into a teacher who was one of the soldiers at Auschwitz.  No one would take the request in his office, because many believed that it was just the normal course of the war.  People die in wars.  It wasn’t murder.

This leads the young prosecutor on a journey to discover what happened in Auschwitz and why the reporter believed what happened there was murder.  They had already missed the window for any criminal charges (if any) to be filed, that is, except murder.  Murder was the only charge that had no statute of limitations.  If they could find that an actual crime of murder took place, then they could proceed with their investigation.

They found the evidence they needed to begin and the attorney general, Fritz Bauer, allowed them to proceed, choosing this young prosecutor, who knew nothing of what happened at Auschwitz, to lead the investigation.  What unfolded for them was a labyrinth.  A labyrinth of lies, deceit, political barriers, international barriers, corruption, and the idea that everything is okay and nothing is wrong.

After the war, many of the Nazis returned to a civilized life. They were kind, normal people just like everyone else.  They did not believe they did anything wrong in Auschwitz, or at the least, they were protected by the Nazi Party members who were still in the bureaucracy.  To many of them, they were just doing their jobs.  It was a war.  But as the story unfolds, the question of whether this was the normal course of war or actual murder is answered.

One of the most powerful moments in this movie is when they interview the witnesses.  There are no words spoken.  It’s just music.  You see the shock and emotional expressions on their faces.  You have no idea what is being said, but for the audience, you can imagine what is being said.  This is the part of the movie where every story you’ve ever heard in your lifetime of what happened in Auschwitz comes forward.  It is as if each of these witnesses are telling the stories you read or heard about.  From the mass killings to the experiments to the shoes that are now sitting in the Holocaust Museum…these are the images you see flashing in your mind.  It all of a sudden becomes so real, that you can’t help but be on the verge of tears.

Yet, there are no words being said.  The music is what directs that story in your mind…and it is a powerful, yet horrible story.

This film is not another movie about the Holocaust.  It’s a movie about how justice was brought for the victims for the very first time after the war.  It wasn’t just about finding the murderers, it was about telling the victims’ stories instead of silencing them.  The difference between what happened in these trials vs. the Nuremberg trials is that Nuremberg was about the victors dictating to the losers after the war what was going to happen.  It wasn’t about bringing justice to the victims of the Holocaust.  They didn’t even know about the Holocaust during the Nuremberg trials.  It was the Frankfurt Auschwitz trials that brought the Holocaust to light and brought justice to its victims.  It was also the first time that Germany was holding themselves accountable to the shame they brought to Germany and humanity.

That is one of the most important characteristics of this film.  The director doesn’t want you to see or feel anything but the story.  He doesn’t want you to pick out the elements of the cinematography or the music, etc.  He wants the story to speak to you.  He wants every single element in the process of the movie to come together to create the story.  If you pick out any single element that goes beyond the story being told, it is as if he didn’t do his job correctly.  This was purely about the story.

Ricciarelli was at the private screening at The Roxy Hotel last night and spoke about his film.  Here’s the audio from the Q&A session with Hudson Union Society.

Labyrinth of Lies Q&A

One of the things I kept thinking about after this film is how our world is still like post-WWII Germany.  We become blind to the atrocities that we are still doing in the world.  Even in America, we target a certain group of people and call them the enemy.  The way this information is disseminated on why they should be our enemy is the same kind of propaganda the Nazis used during the war.  Propaganda is a way of keeping people blind to the reality of what is truly happening.

If anything, this movie is not just a historical drama, it is a way of reminding ourselves not to repeat the past.  Don’t be blind to what is happening in the world.  A government proclaiming any group of people (like Muslims, Arabs or Mexicans) as our enemy should be a red flag to the world.  No one should be persecuted for what they believe in, where they were born or the parents they were born to.  Everyone is human and they have a right to live as human beings.  Our willingness to remain blind silences those who have become the victims.  Their stories need to be heard.

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