| Film "Nominations" * | | * Total number of reader "nominations" in craft categories. | | The Aviator | 5 | | Ray | 5 | | Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind | 3 | | Spider-Man 2 | 3 | | The Bourne Supremacy | 2 | | Collateral | 2 | | Finding Neverland | 2 | | I, Robot | 2 | | The Incredibles | 2 | | The Passion of the Christ | 2 | " Oscar " courtesy of AMPAS
| Best Picture | | Eternal Sunshine | 17.7% | | Ray | 15.6% | | The Aviator | 13.6% | | Finding Neverland | 9.5% | | Collateral | 7.5% | OUR METHODOLOGY
Oscar nominations were still up in the air as we went to press in mid-January, so we guessed at the front-runners in each category, based on our consultations with industry insiders, and invited readers to pick one or write in a neglected favorite. (The choices in visual effects and documentary categories were based on the Academy shortlists of eligible films that were announced late last year.) 151 F&V readers responded. Counting the top five vote-getters in each category as our Oscar-style "nominees"— but excluding titles that placed in only one category — the chart at left shows how the F&V picks break down.
| Best Direction | | The Aviator | 29.4% | | Eternal Sunshine | 15.4% | | Ray | 12.6% | | Collateral | 11.2% | | Finding Neverland | 7% | | Best Cinematography | | The Passion of the Christ | 30.8% | | The Aviator | 21.7% | | Lemony Snicket’s A Series Of Unfortunate Events | 11.2% | | A Very Long Engagement | 7% | | The Village | 7% | Still, conventional wisdom has Oscar neglecting films released early in the year, which makes Eternal Sunshine’s victory all the more of a triumph. F&V readers lauded the film’s originality and power as well as the crew’s triumph in tackling its storytelling challenges. Whether Eternal Sunshine can generate similar enthusiasm among the Academy at large is a good question. (By the time you read this, the nominees will have been announced, but at press time we were flying on instruments.)
Our readers were somewhat less willing to hand Gondry, only a second-time feature filmmaker, the directing trophy. The dominating favorite in that category is Martin Scorsese, riding a steamrolling example of the kind of film Oscar likes best — a historical biopic sporting an all-star cast and stellar tech crew. (It’s also the first time Scorsese has done any significant work with CGI and digital-intermediate technology.) Scorsese’s almost a 2:1 favorite over Gondry.
Caleb Deschanel’s work on The Passion of the Christ led our cinematography category in another runaway victory. Robert Richardson’s photography of The Aviator came in second, followed at a similar distance by Emmanuel Lubezki’s lensing of Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events ( F&V, January 2005). Also earning Passion plaudits was film editor John Wright, whose credits include such crisply made thrillers as The Hunt for Red October, Speed and The Last Action Hero. Thelma Schoonmaker’s work on The Aviator (that plane crash!) and Valdis Oskarsdottir’s wrangling of the tricky Eternal Sunshine narrative were runners-up.
| Best Film Editing | | The Passion of the Christ | 24.3% | | The Aviator | 18.1% | | Eternal Sunshine | 16.7% | | Fahrenheit 9/11 | 16% | | Ray | 4.9% | | Best Visual Effects | | The Day After Tomorrow | 22.4% | | Sky Captain | 18.2% | | Spider-Man 2 | 18.2% | | I, Robot | 13.3% | | Harry Potter 3 | 12.6% | Disaster ruled in visual effects, with the chilly imagery from The Day After Tomorrow team ( F&V, July 2004) cited over the retro-futurist environments of Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (F&V, August 2004) and the vertiginous acrobatics of Spider-Man 2 (F&V, August, 2004). Ray won in both sound mixing and sound editing, recognizing the film’s effort to do justice to the man’s music and reflect the aural perspective of a blind protagonist.
Pixar continued its winning streak with an Incredibles animation victory over distant runner-up Shrek 2, and the fast-food jeremiad Super Size Me earned a super-sized win over Tupac: Resurrection and Touching the Void.
| Best Sound Mixing | | Ray | 19.7% | | Spider-Man 2 | 14.6% | | The Aviator | 13.9% | | The Bourne Supremacy | 12.4% | | The Phantom of the Opera | 9.5% | | Best Sound Editing | | Ray | 19% | | Spider-Man 2 | 16.8% | | The Incredibles | 13.9% | | The Bourne Supremacy | 10.9% | | I, Robot | 10.2% | | Best Documentary | | Super Size Me | 41% | | Tupac: Resurrection | 9.8% | | Touching the Void | 8.2% | | Riding Giants | 6.6% | | Story of the Weeping Camel | 6.6% | | Best Animated Feature | | The Incredibles | 55.7% | | Shrek 2 | 21.4% | | The Polar Express | 14.3% | | A Shark Tale | 4.3% | | SpongeBob SquarePants | 2.9% | Finally, readers were asked to identify the most innovative technique they saw in a film this year. Eternal Sunshine was repeatedly singled out, as were the mixed-media lensing of Collateral (F&V, August 2004), the innovative mo-cap technology behind The Polar Express (F&V, November 2004), the dazzling animation of The Incredibles ( F&V, December 2004) and the "super-clean visuals" of Spider-Man 2.
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