Israel murdered every single person in this photo today in South Lebanon.
Every. Single. One.
2 journalists
7 paramedics
1 Lebanese soldier
They bombed the journalists’ vehicle — then bombed them again when paramedics rushed to help.
@The_Vidioten Sean Penn gjorde många bra val (liksom de andra nominerade också), men Stellan var verkligen nivån över allt. Tyvärr antagligen lite för lite amerikansk.
The Oscars really missed the chance to award someone like Stellan Skarsgård, who gave one of the most powerful and subtle performances of the year. Plus, his speeches are pure love letters to cinema.
Instead, we got… whatever.
When I was working on Sideways (which was adapted from a book), I asked the director, Alexander if the book were any good. "No it sucks. You don't adapt great books. You adapt shitty books that have an interesting premise, or a kernel of something that you can exploit and improve. Good books don't make good movies. You have to build a screenplay from the ground up. And nobody is gonna be mad at me for changing the details of a Rex Pickett novel. But God help you if you try to change 2 words in the Lord of the Rings."
Brilliant dude.
Fatta vilken enorm skillnad det här är för spelare nedanför elitnivå. Vilka möjligheter det öppnar upp för utvecklingen av sporten, den realistiska chansen att faktiskt kunna försörja sig på sin idrott.
@wyeds Shape of Water har verkligen försvunnit i ens medvetande. Jag gillade EEAAO, men det är lite samma där, den har inte levt kvar på samma sätt som andra filmer. Men jag gillade båda när de kom.
1. Parasite
2. Oppenheimer
3. Anora
4. One Battle After Another
5. Moonlight
6. Everything Everywhere All At Once
7. CODA
8. The Shape Of Water
9. Nomadland
10. Green Book
How would you rank the last ten #Oscar Best Picture winners?
2016: Moonlight
2017: The Shape Of Water
2018: Green Book
2019: Parasite
2020: Nomadland
2021: CODA
2022: Everything Everywhere All At Once
2023: Oppenheimer
2024: Anora
2025: One Battle After Another
@moorehn I keep thinking about James Baldwin’s point about how Black people were forced to understand white people for survival, and bc of this they know us better than we know ourselves. I don’t know how to explain it but I’m starting to think this dynamic extends geopolitically, too.