FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “nominees”

Showing 1 - 6 of 6

LIFE

And the winner is...

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 28/02/2025

» The words and the verdicts on Oscars 2025.

LIFE

Poor Barbie... Oppenheimer's the bomb

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 08/03/2024

» The annual guessing game to read the minds of inscrutable Oscars voters is here.

LIFE

Handicapping the Oscars

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 23/04/2021

» Nomadland for Best Picture

LIFE

Who is our Oscars Favourite?

B Magazine, Kong Rithdee, Published on 24/02/2019

» The most important of all unimportant things, the Oscars arrive on Monday morning, Thailand time. In a year that seems more muted than usual, Hollywood's biggest jamboree has striven to stay relevant with the inclusion of blockbuster titles such as Black Panther and Bohemian Rhapsody, besides the more edgy and less popular films that have claimed much of the headlines, such as Roma and Green Book. While there are many cinematic awards around the world, the Oscars still seem to matter the most, and the ritual of predicting the winners is at once a frivolous parlour game and an annual survey of the vital signs of mainstream cinema. Don't bet on it, but we offer our takes here.

LIFE

Where will the gongs go?

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 02/03/2018

» To me, the most accomplished film among the Oscar contenders is Paul Thomas Anderson's Phantom Thread, which means it's not going to win big. The film, which is in Thai cinemas now, stars Daniel Day-Lewis as a fastidious couturier whose obsessive quest for artistic perfection hits a snag when he falls in love with a waitress. It's an exquisite drama, a sophisticated study of human impulses, obsessions and contradictions, constructed with formal elegance to reflect the interior of a man's emotion through a story that takes place almost entirely in a townhouse.

LIFE

Modern-day creature feature

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 02/02/2018

» An eccentric love story between a woman and an amphibious creature, Guillermo Del Toro's The Shape Of Water has moved ahead to the front-runner spot in the Oscar's Best Picture, racking up the total of 13 nominations including the four acting categories. Del Toro's trick of turning B-movie grotesquerie -- interspecies sex, for instance -- into a darling of cinema bourgeois can still work wonders. And while this sweet and weird story isn't entirely unpredictable -- think mid-century beauty-and-the-beast flicks such as King Kong or, obviously, Creature From The Black Lagoon -- the director's imagination gives it an authentic vintage texture and enough doses of shocks and blood.