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Avatar wins three Oscars – miss out on big ones

Avatar the won three awards for art direction, cinematography and visual effects at the Oscars. Kathryn Bigelow (The Hurt Locker) won  the acclaimed Best Director award, and she’s the first woman in history to win that Oscar. The Hurt Locker also won best picture and was the the big winner of the night with a total of six Oscars.

Both Avatar and The Hurt Locker had nine nominations each, The Hurt Locker ended up winning the heavy categories, Avatar won the technical ones.

So, Avatar rules the Box Office but not the Oscars. Congratulations to Kathryn Bigelow and the team behind The Hurt Locker, it’s a great movie.

Giacchino wins his first Oscar for ‘Up’

Michael Giacchino won his first Academy Award last night. The Oscar for ‘Best Original Score’ went to his widely acclaimed score for the Pixar hit Up, a score that previously has been awarded the Golden Globe, the BAFTA and a Grammy among many other honours. Giacchino spoke about the dream coming true in his acceptance speech, saying to the “kid out there who do not have a support system” that “if you want to be creative, go out there and do it. It is not a waste of time.”

Ryan Bingham and T. Bone Burnett took home the ‘Best Original Song’ Oscar with “The Weary Kind” from Crazy Heart. The score from the same film was never in competition as it had been ruled ineligible.

FNB Editorial: Independent? In Spirit, Maybe

We watched the Independent Spirit awards the other night and were not exactly blown away by them, not just because of how predictable they were (come on, it’s not like we were expecting a whole lot of shocks at the Oscars last night, either), but also because, well, it didn’t seem very independent.

Box Office Estimate 3/8/10

FILM GROSS/CUMULATIVE TOTAL

1 Alice in Wonderland (2010) $116M/$116M

2 Brooklyn’s Finest (2009) $13.5M/$13.5M

3 Shutter Island (2010) $13.3M/$95.8M

4 Cop Out (2010) $9.14M/$32.4M

5 Avatar (2009) $7.7M/$720M

6 The Crazies (2010) $7.02M/$27.4M

7 Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief (2010) $5.1M/$78M

8 Valentine’s Day (2010) $4.27M/$106M

9 Crazy Heart (2009) $3.35M/$29.6M

10 Dear John (2010/I) $2.85M/$76.7M

James Cameron talks at TED

James Cameron talked about his film making (including Avatar) at TED this year. If you want to know what inspired Cameron to make Avatar and all of his other films, this is a must see.

James Cameron’s big-budget (and even bigger-grossing) films create unreal worlds all their own. In this personal talk, he reveals his childhood fascination with the fantastic — from reading science fiction to deep-sea diving — and how it ultimately drove the success of his blockbuster hits “Aliens,” “The Terminator,” “Titanic” and “Avatar.”

James Cameron: 'Curiosity is the most powerful thing you own'

I was lucky enough to attend the TED Conference in Long Beach a few weeks ago and saw some memorable speakers, among them Sir Ken Robinson, David Byrne and Bill Gates. Filmmaker James Cameron was there also and I got to chat with him briefly as we waited for a coffee in the lobby after his speech.

TED has finally put up the video of the director's talk, and as we tick toward the Oscars tonight I thought would post it:

-- Geoff Boucher

RECENT AND RELATED

King Arthur, Hollywood's once and future film property?

Steven Zeitchik has made "24 Frames" a must-read blog on Hollywood scoops, and now he has some news about Hollywood's possible return to Camelot (and no, it's not a remake of "Excalibur," we just like the poster)...

'Tron: Legacy' director: 'We are on a new server now'

On Thursday our guest correspondent Jay West gave you the lowdown on the new trailer for "Tron: Legacy," the highly anticipated December film. Today he has a transcript of the Q&A session at the Bridge screening of that trailer last week. The questions were asked by the audience and the answers are from "Tron: Legacy" director Joseph Kosinski and Steven Lisberger, the co-writer and director of the original 1982 "Tron" film and a mentor figure on the new film.

'Tron: Legacy' secrets revealed at the Bridge in L.A.

"Tron: Legacy" doesn't hit theaters until Dec. 17, but for the truly devoted fans of the original 1982 "Tron," the excitement is already at a fever pitch. One of those fans is Jay West, who has been writing as a guest correspondent for Hero Complex on all things "Tron."

“Games? You want games? I’ll give you games."
-- Jeff Bridges as Kevin Flynn, in the original "Tron"

This Is One Reason to See the Smurfs Movie …

Watch out “Avatar”! The original blue-skinned pop phenomenon is coming to the big screen, and it has a secret weapon: Neil Patrick Harris. Yes, apparently the star of “How I Met Your Mother” and “Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog” has signed on to his biggest — or smallest, depending on how you look at it — project yet: “Smurfs: The Movie.” The Sony film, which will be a blend of animation and live action, will feature Harris as the voice of the lead smurf. Harris joins a cast that already features the legendary Jonathan Winters as the voice of Papa Smurf.

http://insidemovies.moviefone.com/2010/03/03/neil-patrick-harris-smurfs-movie/

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