Kathryn Bigelow
The Directors Guild is historically a major precusor award for who will take home the Best Director and by extension Best Picture Oscars at The Academy Awards. In all but six of the 61 years of Oscar has the winner of the DGA Award not taken home the Best Director Award. That was true last year as Danny Boyle won Best Director at both the DGA and The Academy Awards and his film Slumdog Millionaire won Best Picture
But with the addition of five more films in the Best Picture category, even this historic statistic has to be thrown out. But given her Oscar Awards Season success, the front runner in this category has to be Kathryn Bigelow for The Hurt Locker. Already Bigelow has won awards from a number of organizations including the New York Film Critics Online, Boston Society of Film Critics, San Francisco Film Critics, Los Angeles Film Critics Association, New York Film Critics Circle, and the Southeatern Film Critics Association.
The surprise nomination goes to Lee Daniels for his riveting Precious. The story of a young teenage African American girls battle with self-esteem in the face of withering domestic violence has won critical success, but a question of to what degree American audiences are ready to embrace a realistic film about an aspect of African American life seldom focused on as much as it should be. Moreover, the involvement of both Oprah Winfrey and Tyler Perry as executive producers turned off some film critics during its festival run. But all of that was far removed from the masterpiece of a movie Precious is.
James Cameron, Jason Reitman, and Quentin Tarantino were expected to receive nominations for Avatar, Up In The Air, and Inglourious Basterds. But of them, Tarantino's film is described as an elegantly directed, modern cult classic.
What does this say about the other top-rated films including Star Trek, District 9, and A Serious Man? It's still too early to tell this year, but if we ignore the Best Picture race and just focus on Oscar: Best Director, it says the competition's primarily between the already much-decorated Kathryn Bigelow, Quentin Tarentino, and James Cameron. If there's any logic to this, Kathryn Bigelow should take home both the DGA and the Oscar.
But something says this is going to be a year of surprises.
Stay tuned.
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