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Friday
Jul022021

The Academy Welcomes 395 New Members

by Nathaniel R

Harry Yoon (Editor), Lee Isaac Chung (Writer/Director) and Christian Oh (Producer) were all invited to the Academy post MINARI

Each year the Academy releases the names of their potential new members. Reports range a bit at how many voting members the Academy actually has. Deadline suggests that if all 395 of the new invitees accept membership, AMPAS will be around 9,750ish members while the LA Times places the number around 10,700. We're not sure where that discrepancy of nearly a 1000 voters comes from but let's just say it's hard to track. We rarely learn who declined membership, for example, and of course people die from year to year since many longtime members are elderly. 

As per usual, even before the Academy's largely successfully diversification and gender parity drive, a good portion of the invitees go out to fresh winners and nominees from the previous season. If they accept Youn Yuh-jung, Maria Bakalova, Steven Yeun, Paul Raci, and H.E.R. (to name a handful of examples) will now be Oscar voters. 46% of the new invitees are women and 39% are from underrepresented groups. One really interesting number is that over half of the new invitees, 53% to be exact, are international invites. Whether that translates to more international titles winning Oscar favor, who knows...

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Thursday
Jul012021

Doc Corner: 'Truman & Tennessee: An Intimate Conversation'

By Glenn Dunks

I think it is fair to say that Lisa Immordino Vreeland has a preoccupation with the upper class. Beginning with her feature debut in 2011—Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel about the famed French-American fashion editor (also her own grandmother-in-law)—and on through other titles about more mid-century well-to-dos, Vreeland has carved a niche out of documentary portraits that tend to coast on the infamy of the rich and famous. I have enjoyed some (2017’s Love, Cecil) more than others (2015’s Peggy Guggenheim: Art Addict).

Her latest is Truman & Tennessee: An Intimate Conversation, which finds Vreeland more or less still pre-occupied with high society. A slick twist to the structural formula casts Jim Parsons and Zachary Quinto as unseen mouthpieces for the words of Truman Capote and Tennessee Williams...

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Wednesday
Jun302021

Emmy Watch: Which Limited Series Supporting Actors will break through?

By Abe Friedtanzer 

John Boyega in "Small Axe"

This category is by no means the highest profile of the limited series/TV movie/anthology series acting races, but it does include a handful of strong contenders. The past three years have given us one show that earned three nominations – Watchmen, When They See Us, and The Assassination of Gianni Versace – and it’s certainly possible that this will be the fourth consecutive year of the tripling. This is also one of only two acting categories this year that has more contenders than in 2020, with 140 men in the running…

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Wednesday
Jun302021

Queersighted: Breaking Taboos on the Criterion Channel

by Cláudio Alves

O FANTASMA (2000)

For the past few years, the Criterion Channel has highlighted taboo-breaking pictures in queer cinema with their series "Queersighted." For its fourth edition, programmer Michael Koresky invited film critic K. Austin Collins to select and discuss a series of works that look at film history through a decidedly queer lens. This year's installment features movies that go from 1930s Hollywood productions to 2000s Portuguese provocations. Controversial and wildly transgressive, these films run a gamut of genres and formalistic approaches, showcasing how it's possible to push the envelope both from within the Hays Code-abiding studio system and the vanguard of New German Cinema.

Before saying farewell to Pride Month 2021, join us in exploring ten films presented in this program...

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Wednesday
Jun302021

June. It's a Wrap

And just like that 2021 is half over. WHAAAA? We'll do the "halfway mark" listicles stuff any day now but it sure feels like the year has only just started. Surely due to how long Oscar season was delayed plus movie theaters just starting to trek back to full capacity (in some cities)...

A dozen highlights from June in case you missed 'em
"Blue" Five great scenes in film using Joni Mitchell's music
In the Heights Nathaniel's rave for a joyful perfect-for-summer movie musical
Almost There: Myrna Loy this classic star was never Oscar nominated!
Moulin Rouge! 20 appropriate ways to celebrate its big anniversary
Gay Best Friend: Artie in Cruella Disney does it (sort of just barely) again
Cannes an index of our coverage: sections, posters, stills, buzz, juries
Judy Holliday Centennial a too short but fascinating career
Emmys Watch FYCs and Predictions
Joan vs Olivia the Old Hollywood feud explained
Hunchback of Notre Dame the first movie Cláudio ever saw!

...and the most discussed articles
The Honorary Oscars Ullmann, Jackson, May, and Glover announced
Yes No Maybe So: The Eyes of Tammy Faye a buzzy trailer
• The 1946 Smackdown Duel in the Sun was just one of the five crazy hysteric dated melodramatic films discussed. Like so many Smackdowns I never want them to end. Even when the field is as weak as this one was. Thanks again to the wondrous guests.

Coming in July. Things are heating up! 
A 50th anniversary tag team Klute retrospective, a trip back to the 1998 Oscars via the Supporting Actress Smackdown, the Emmy nominations for 2021, Cannes buzz and awardage, a tribute to the upcoming Jean Hersholt Humanitarian honoree Danny Glover, and a weekly retrospective series begins on Pedro Almodóvar as we approach the release of Parallel Mothers in time for the next Oscar race.