Showing posts with label Emmanuelle Riva. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emmanuelle Riva. Show all posts

Saturday, February 23, 2013

The Final Conclusion - Best Actress 2012

2012


So the much anticipated ranking is:

5. Quvenzhané Wallis in Beasts of the Southern Wild
This may not be a brilliant performance and probably Quvenzhané doesn't fully understand the technical part of acting yet, but I never felt her inexperience for a moment. On the contrary, she understands the character and makes her much more complex than I expected from her. Quvenzhané is much more conscious than most of the child actors that I've ever seen, never coasting on her charisma and always doing what's best for her character.


4. Jessica Chastain in Zero Dark Thirty
I'm just astonished by the beautifully detailed, layered and understated performance of Jessica Chastain. She develops a characters from little bits of scenes and moments and affects without much dialogue, screen time or showy Oscar scenes. She has a lion share in making Zero Dark Thirty the shocking and stunning masterpiece that it really is. But I wish I could forget that shouting...

3. Naomi Watts in The Impossible 
Naomi Watts gives a really effective performance in The Impossible, which may not have blown me away, but I was still impressed by it. She does the best she can with her character and has a lion share in making the movie as dramatic and devastating as it really is. I just feel that besides the physical and dramatic part, there wasn't much going on with the character and that's probably the reason why she's not more of a contender for the actual award.

2. Jennifer Lawrence in Silver Linings Playbook 
Contrary to all the Oscar reviewers and just like everyone else in this world I've totally fallen under the charms of Jennifer Lawrence who gives an unbelievably amazing, beautiful performance and creates a three-dimensional character with such extraordinary passion and depth that it sets the screen on fire and makes you fall in love with her characters despite (or maybe even because of) her flaws.

1. Emmanuelle Riva in Amour
This performance is nothing like I've seen in the Best Actress category and comparing it to other Oscar nominees seems really weird as a result. She may not win the Oscar for this stunning, career-crowning achievement, her performance (and Jean-Louis Trintignant's) will go down in movie history, as it should be. A deeply haunting, disturbing, depressing, mesmerising and amazing performance by an often overlooked, great talent.



So I can proudly announce
that the winner is...
Emmanuelle Riva
in
Amour
 Je vous aime, Mademoiselle Riva.

Final thoughts: A truly amazing year. The Academy makes some shitty safe choices in Best Picture, Actor and the rest, but they keep compensating with outstanding Actress line-ups every year so I'm happy at least about that (and also the Directors' gutsy, almost original set of nominees). Initially, choosing between Jennifer Lawrence and Emmanuelle Riva was so damn difficult, my head said Emmanuelle, my heart said Jennifer (for subjective reasons). I feel that eventually, I made the right choice. That being said, I was equally happy for Jennifer and really I hoped this would be a tie (as they will come right after each other in my ranking). Jennifer Lawrence, say what you want, almost rivals Kate Winslet's Clementine in my mind and that's why I'll keep defending her win, even though Emmanuelle Riva is my choice, eventually. But seriously if anyone of my Top 3 had won, I wouldn't have been disappointed at all (I could have accepted a Naomi upset as well). So this year was better than alright, even though Marion Cotillard definitely deserved a nomination.:(  

Omissions: 
  • Marion Cotillard in Rust and Bone
  • Judi Dench in The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
  • Jennifer Lawrence in The Hunger Games
About the next year: First, I'll finish 1999 and then... well, I'll let you know.

What do you think? Any thoughts on your mind?

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Emmanuelle Riva in Amour

Emmanuelle Riva received her first Oscar nomination for playing Anne, a slowly dying elderly lady whose sufferings are portrayed in Michael Haneke's masterpiece, Amour. Although Emmanuelle won over critics and filmmakers around the world, her performance was snubbed by both SAG and the Globes, which made her a long shot for an Oscar nomination. Fortunately, the Academy was more open to embracing the stunning performance of a French actress who's primarily known to cinephiles. From the long shot position, she quickly moved up to the status of a possible front-runner (?) thanks to a Bafta win and well, nothing else (definitely not campaiging), except for her exceptional work that speaks for itself.

As I said, Amour is a masterpiece and I hope it picks up as many awards at the Oscars as it possibly can. I did my wish-list of nominees right before the announcement and the ones concerning Amour all came true. While it could have been only Foreign Language Film, it also got in for Picture (!), Director (Ben who???) and Original Screenplay. Although I'm not revealing my picks for all the categories until Oscar Sunday, I must say I couldn't argue against any of those five nominations translating into Oscar gold. However, I'm still extremely pissed that Jean-Louis Trintignant wasn't nominated (I don't even dare mention Isabelle Huppert) who, in my opinion, gave the best male performance of the year. It seems that whenever a female co-star of his gets nominated, he gets overlooked by the Academy despite the fact that his character was just as crucial and his acting was just as fantastic.

Still, the snub doesn't make Emmanuelle Riva's any more pleasing. Recognition for this often overlooked, great actress was overdue, especially considering her marvelous, legendary turn in Hiroshima, mon amour. Somehow, I feel that it's no co-incidence that both movies have the word "amour" in the title. Emmannuelle is an incredibly expressive and sensitive actress whose performances contain an unbelievable amount of tenderness and nobility, which is so much like her fellow nominee, Jessica Chastain and her co-star Isabelle Huppert. Therefore, she's really an actress and woman to fall in love with. You completely understand why and how all these men in the films fell for her: her stunning beauty and shining personality grabs you and doesn't let you go.

Therefore, Emmanuelle's aura was perfect for Anne's character. At the beginning of the film, we see a happy, satisfied elderly intellectual lady, seemingly still in love with her husband after 60+ years. Emmanuelle almost overdoes the beauty of Anne and one just doesn't understand the whole purpose of this becomes clear after you see the slow and disturbing process of Anne dying: the idyllic beginning makes Anne's sufferings even more painful and effective.

I am still stunned by the fact that non of this years' nominees for Best Actress gave traditional Oscar performances. Even when the parts sound baity on paper, the unusual approach of the actress distinguishes it, just like in the case of Emmanuelle. The role of the dying old lady is something that awards' bodies usually eat up. However, Riva gets rid of the sentimentality attached to such characters and instead, she underlines the true effect of this state on Anne and her relationship with her husband.

Although this journey of Riva's character is both painful and draining, it doesn't go over a certain point and knows exactly well how much tha audience can take. This doesn't mean, of course, that she holds herself back in order to make it easier to take, she just knows the delicate balance between devastating reality and overbearing overacting overeverything. Make no mistake, it's incredibly difficult to witness Anne's decay and Riva's incredibly realistic interpretation, but Emmanuelle doesn't push to make it as horrible as possible. Instead, she focuses on the emotional connection with the audience, which is most definitely the reason many people can sympathise with her.

Riva's task is made even more difficult by the fact that the movie tones down the showiness of such a performance and doesn't let her have big scenes, let alone development. If anything, we see an almost low-key devolution of a lady we've cared for since the beginning of the film. And the way Riva embodies Anne, physically, mentally and spiritually, makes her performance a complete revelation. Although her acting is not calculating for a moment, she totally takes control of her character as well as also becoming her and (if you excuse my smobbish European attitude) it's something that's rarely seen in Hollywood. Emmanuelle is always in charge of Anne, not the other way around. She uses her own body as a tool which leads to amazing believability. Yes, this sounds incredibly clumsy but it was hard to believe that Riva herself didn't suffer a stroke.

And naturally, her chemistry with Jean-Louis Trintignant is just brilliant. I mentioned in my review of Jennifer Lawrence that Jen and Bradley Cooper were one of the two greatest duos on the screen last year. Well, surprise! The other two people are Riva's Anne and Trintignant's Georges. In one shared glance you see a lifetime of happiness and amour displayed without any side of cheesiness or sentimentality. It's a completely fascinating to watch these two geniouses interacting. And it's great to watch them for completely sentimental, selfish reasons: it's so great to see the European cinema of the 60s resurrecting in 2013. It's like one extra curtain call for these wonderful artists that we don't discuss as often as we should (haha, that's about to change on this blog!!!).

Overall, this performance is nothing like I've seen in the Best Actress category and comparing it to other Oscar nominees seems really weird as a result. She may not win the Oscar for this stunning, career-crowning achievement, her performance (and Jean-Louis Trintignant's) will go down in movie history, as it should be. A deeply haunting, disturbing, depressing, mesmerising and amazing performance by an often overlooked, great talent. 

What do you think?

Saturday, February 9, 2013

The Next Year

2012


So the nominees are:
  • Jessica Chastain in Zero Dark Thirty
  • Jennifer Lawrence in Silver Linings Playbook
  • Emmanuelle Riva in Amour
  • Quvenzhané Wallis in Beasts of the Southern Wild
  • Naomi Watts in The Impossible
Since I have very little time left, I have to interrupt 1999 (which will be finished immediately after 2012, don't worry) so that I can finish 2012 before the ceremony (I'm planning to write a more thorough should win/will win than usual). I can say one thing in advance: what a year! And I tell you, according to my own estimations, it will be a real Sophie's Choice between not two, but three (!) performances (very much like 1996). And I love it that none of these performances are usual Best Actress stuff. 

What do you think? Who's your pick? Who do you think will win the Oscar? And more importantly :P, what's your prediction for my ranking? :)