Slumdog Millionaire Takes Home 8 Oscars
Ben Burtt was robbed of his overly deserved Oscars for the sound on Wall-E, and Heath Ledger's Joker unsurprisingly got a posthumous statue, but the big winner for the night was Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire with Picture, Director, Song, and five others. Go ahead movie nerds: talk amongst yourself.
Movie bad. Servo angry.
anything else of Digg you plan on copying so I can get a jump on what to ignore?
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
Comedy:
Definitely, Maybe
Ghost Town
Documentaries:
Flow
National Geographic's In The Womb series
Drama:
Red
I come here for the love
Britney kicks off her latest world tour on March 3... post an article about that while you're at it.
I mean really? A big waste of resources so a bunch of pompous vacuous airbags can tell each other how great they are and permit the masses to revel in their greatness. BARF!
I think that really did it.
Every year that goes by the Oscars become more of a farce.
Slumdog was the most cheesy and predictable film i have seen in years. The screenplay seemed like it was written by a 3 year old, the acting was horrendous, and you knew exactly how the film would end after about 8 minutes into it.
Who cares?
I'm not going to enter an extended rant. But I do wish this kind of story didn't make the front page on /.
Slumdog is millionaire and award winner now.. think i should add "slumdog" to my Firefox dictionary..
The Joker is a starring role, and they know it. It doesn't seem quite right. Also, editors - you forgot a comma in Go ahead movie nerds
Heath Ledger got his sympathy oscar, just like I expected.
what the fuck, editors?
WHO GIVES A SHIT
http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Movies/02/22/oscar.nominees.full.list/index.html For a proper listing of the nominees and winners. Posting AC because I don't care, but I also don't want someone to see my UID attached to this post.
news for nerds?
I may be missing something, but how is it that difficult to do sound for an animated film? I would say if anyone was robbed regarding sound-related categories it was slumdog millionaire. With animation you have all the time in the world to do the sound effects any way you want. Some of the scenes in slumdog were shot on handicams in crowded slums by comparison; how many times can you redo a take with thousands of extras and still achieve some sort of continuity?
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
Out of all the stuff on the firehose this is what was picked for the slashdot main page?
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And the browning of America continues.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
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Kdawson says "This month the transformer g1 toys come out, Be sure to camp infront of the stores to secure it, or pay some guy behind the register 50 extra bucks the day before"
In any case, if it's by Microsoft I automatically hate it, and if it's for Linux I definitely love it.
Ubuntu on primary work desktop since Dapper Drake (2006).
It is now official. Netcraft confirms: *BSD is dying
One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BSD community when IDC confirmed that *BSD market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.
You don't need to be the Amazing Kreskin to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.
FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core developers. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time FreeBSD developers Jordan Hubbard and Mike Smith only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: FreeBSD is dying.
Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.
Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.
All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS dilettante dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.
Fact: *BSD is dying
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Would Slumdog have been even noticed had it not been made by a British Director? Thousands of movies have been made about poverty in India. They get as much attention as movies made about drugs in American cities. People deal with this shit in their everyday life and dont want to watch it when they pay to enter a theater for some relaxation. Only people who have never seen poverty get their rocks off by watching something like Slumdog. Then again probably why Rambo and Die Hard were so popular outside the States was that guns are a big deal in countries with gun control.
**Life is too short to be serious**
But it's nice to see that Hollywood is continuing the Global business trend of outsourcing movie production. Hello my name is Ram... I mean Stephen... and I will be your 1st AD for today. How may I help you?
Only one American won a major award -- the overrated Sean Penn -- and he's anti-American. (Mickey Rourke was robbed.) To paraphrase Stephen Colbert; why do you hate America, Hollywood? Why? Giving Oscars to Brits will only mean terrorists win.
Now Mumbai is not just taking contact center jobs, but also movie ones too. Which would be fine if Slumdog was the best movie of the year -- which it most certainly wasn't. Just the most hyped by UK reality TV producer's money (Paul Smith from Who Wants to be a Millionaire). It's just an exploit-asian movie. UK producers and crew mostly, skimming profit off of Indian industry.
The Curious Case of Benjamin's Butthole.
formed his own least I w0n't If you don't
The government has taken over slashdot. They're dumbing down nerds. Look for tabloid news coming to slashdot soon!
Extra Special! Extra Special! Britney Takes a Dump! Slashdot's got FULL COVERAGE!
http://www.jacklail.com/blog/archives/2009/02/marc-andreessen-the-game-is-co.html
Excellent discussion of technology, economy, kindle, newspapers and social networking.
Was the highlight of the night.
I'm glad to see him finally get some recognition. But honestly, he should have won for Shallow Grave or Trainspotting (his best films). The Oscars are too conservative and often don't recognize filmmakers until they're way past their prime (like Spielberg and James Cameron, who didn't win Oscars until their best work was actually long behind them). The Independent Spirit Awards are much better, IMHO. And they're much more likely to recognize the work of young and audacious filmmakers. The Oscars almost never recognize first time directors, no matter how brilliant their debut work. Chris Nolan, for example, deserved and Oscar for Memento. But it took a Batman sequel for him to even get slightly acknowledged.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
I'm patting myself on the back...discuss.
I mean really the guy died for the role so the 20 seconds to post that yes he did get his statue and that whatever movie got the rest of them is fine.
Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
What the fuck is this doing on slashdot? Gawd, it's no wonder this site has become a fucking joke in last past several years. Also, which of the webmasters got together and decided on the CSS Web2.0 bullshit conversion about two years back? The same retards who post crap like this on the frontpage and call it a story?
we got to see a glimpse of indian tech support call center in that movie. next time they put you on hold for 30 minutes, you know what they're doing.
Slumdog won more Oscars than the Oscar Awards had viewers
Oscar drama? Not really.
In the politically correct world of Hollywood, there were no surprises.
Mud people are more politically correct than Fags. To handicap the Oscars one only need ask which "victim group" will take home the cheese.
This is the year of the Mud People, starting with Mulatto-in-Chief B. Hussein Obama. What more natural way to celebrate the mud in politics than by slinging mud at the movie going public. Hence, the awards to the muddiest picture of them all -- "Slumdog Millionaire".
Dear Mr. A. Coward, At last you're giving up. Goodbye.
I am so tired of hearing about Slumdog Millionaire, it's a great flick but it does not deserve the recognition it's getting. The only reason it won anything is because of pseudo-intellectuals who think independent films are the greatest thing to happen in cinema. Most of the time independent films do offer something fresh and new that differs from the garbage Hollywood has been producing for the past 50 years but has it gotten so bad that when a mediocre independent film comes out it deserves an Oscar? Does anyone rememb
FAIL
"...Stuff that Matters."
EPIC. FAIL.
The main Academy Awards may not be news for nerds, but the Sci-Tech Awards are certainly full of /. fodder.
- Jasen.
Wouldn't a better /. story be about the Sci-Tech awards?
"Uh... yeah, Brain, but where are we going to find rubber pants our size?" --Pinky
Anyone else think that the Oscars are pretty much irrelevant? Anymore it's just about the movie industry patting itself on the back, and not at all about what was actually praiseworthy. Count me in the buck of "didn't watch, didn't care". What happened to news for nerds and stuff that mattered?
Slow news day?
Yeah....
Boring^3
Honestly, I am sure you are not as dumb as the respective starlet but nevertheless ignore completely the context in which the comment was made.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
... about how movies are made.
And your ignorance is impudically exposed like if it was a badge of honour.
For example, Slumdog Millionaire has revolutionaized how movies can be made by taking advantage of digital film making technciques.
I could bore you with the specifics, but I don't want to dent the pride of your lack of curiosity.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
OK so noone here has seen the movie. Fucking retartds watch it, then review it. Movie really wasn't bad. Something different comparing to everyday Hollywood crap.
The asinine amount of replies to this topic is completely mind boggling.
From all the fine arts, cinema is the most accessible and for the same reason the art that most matters, since all of us are exposed to it in a way that sculpture, classical music, literature, dance or architecture can only dream about.
This form of art awards prizes in different festivals and ceremonies, and undoubtedly the Oscar is the most important prize in the English speaking world, which in case you didn't know, dominates the movie industry worldwide.
So it is stuff that matters, movies are very often the only exposure that multitude of people will have to multitude of topics, for which they would otherwise not care at all.
Check this year's movies: now people know more about poverty in India, or gay activism, younger people can revisit the disastrous years of the Nixon presidency or can explore the surface of how the Nazi machine worked.
These topics are important, and it is vital that people, who don't read as much and are watching less TV nowadays, get exposure to diverse topics by means of intelligent entertainment.
The cultural apathy shown today on this thread is frankly dispiriting, it has only confirmed the stereotype of the nerd that hasn't got a life beyond the bloody computer in front of them, in spite of movies today being one of the most fertile grounds to use all kind of great gadgets and technology.
Are the Oscars an exercise of industrial wankery? Well, yes, maybe, why not. But at the very least the prize will point people out in the direction of worthwhile cinema they would have not watched otherwise (hands up who has watched "Frozen River". "Revanche", or even "Doubt", I am sure lots of people will now watch movies with a certain modicum of quality that they would have not watched otherwise).
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
Sweet justice that governs this world doesn't cease to astonish me. The kids from the slums that played main parts in the movie get paid with chump change, the movie is a success, gets 8 Oscars, the kids get a plane trip to the US for the Oscar gala and get dumped in the slum afterwards, producers sip lattes and count the profits, people are touched by a beautiful story of love while stuffing their faces with nachos, the kids are forgotten, continue to live in poverty.
Ahhh, the circle of life.
Which ideas has he stolen?
From where?
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
Why do you know when Brittany's tour kicks off? Hell, I didn't know she was out of the loony bin yet.
What's a Brittany? Is that a new phone?
Vested interest in undermining the country?
Well buddy, you better back up those claims:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vikas_Swarup
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
... not a big Oscars fan, but the only thing I was disappointed about was Roarke not winning BA.
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I hate to hate, but there's a lot of flack being shot at people who don't think this story is /. material, and I agree with those people. The Oscars are not related to technology or science, so cannot be main-stream nerd worthy material. Yes, movies are, but the article is about the Oscars, which I won't even dignify with an insult. And if you think winning the award actually signifies good movie making/acting/work, you're wrong.
Am I the only one that found Slumdog Millionaire to be a *huge* disappointment? Don't get me wrong, the cinematics were impressive but I spent the first hour or so of the movie trying to figure out the angle the movie was getting at. It was going along nicely and I thought the director was working me towards some profound realization and then, BAM! the movie shits a cheeseball love story right at the end and its over!!??!! ... GMAFB
do analyse a little bit before posting! The producers have setup a trust fund(huffington post, first hit in google for "the fate of slumdog millionaire kids") setup which will help them get out of the rut their family is in.... And by the looks of it, the distributors (fox searchlight) might make more money than the original producers (film 4 UK)
Give me a fucking break. I'll never understand the fascination that a lot of my countrymen have with Hollywood and the culture surrounding movie stars/other celebrities.
Don't worry, with the current state of financial affairs going on today, the only thing left to talk about will be Hollywood, since they seem to be one of the few out there still spending (and making) millions.
On a semi-related note, Slumdog who??
I'm a professional sound guy, and I correctly predicted Dark Knight as taking the award for best sound editing. It really was an impressive showcase of sound design skills. I don't think Wall-E deserved the award for sound, sorry.
I knew that SAG was for the Hollywood people to love the other Hollywood people. I thought the Oscars considered the public interest even just a little bit... Anyway, my point is, it took me until SAG to hear about this movie, and I still haven't seen it.
On the retail forefront, this movie does not exist, because the only means I have to see it are torrents and probably Amazon. But if it really is so worthy of all these awards (like 10 or 11 this year?) how come I haven't seen it sold at any physical location?
The term "substantial" trust fund, coming from the same person saying that the few hundred quid the kids got paid is a lot because it is three times the average salary of someone living in the slum, doesn't mean much, does it? Also the trust fund will be available to the children actors only if they stay in school until they are 18. Too bad that until then they will be living on one meal a day in makeshift shacks, one can only wonder if they will last until their 18th birthday to enjoy the "substantial" amount of money that has been put aside for them. Interesting, that Fox doesn't setup funds like that for their child actors in the States...
Yes, let's all be merry and celebrate the distributor's generosity. The fact is, that the kids still live in tents while the movie is making copious amounts of money (almost 160 000 000 $ so far).
Also, the diffusion of responsibility is a wonderful thing: those guys made more, those guys made less, those guys just work here, those guys have mortgages to pay and those just followed orders.
Was Slumdog the co-creation of an Indian director who is not getting sufficient credit? Or is it a Western director degrading India for profit? Both criticisms cannot be simultaneously true.
The idea that Slumdog Millionaire "degrades" India is offensive. It implies that any movie that shows the negative aspects of a society is inherently degrading. Thoughts like that come from a perspective that we have to treat some countries like "special" children--keep them from all harm and make sure they wear their helmet and kneepads all the time. Give me a break. No one would be complaining if this exact same movie was set in the U.S., where there are plenty of slums and gangsters and game shows. That betrays a subtle racism of low expectations toward India. In comparison I do not recall similar outcry when Western filmmakers began to use Hong Kong cast, crew, and concepts to make movies.
India has slums and violence, as many, many Indian movies have portrayed. Note that much of the production and acting crew of SM come directly from the Indian film industry, and are happy about their work in the movie. Including the Indian co-director.
Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
Matters? /.?
To whom, exactly, and how many of them read
I just saw on the news today that the kids are moving to apartments with their families. Source was Nightline on ABC.
Guess what - I see a lot of movies, but I don't watch TV. I love sci-fi as any good nerd does, but not in TV form (besides Quantum Leap and Star Trek TOS.)
Why do you assume that everyone here is interested in television shows, and that no one likes movies? We're all nerds, but we're not all sci-fi TV show nerds. I ignore or "mod down" stories about TV shows - which pop up frequently - because I'm not interested.
I personally was not that interested in the academy awards - I saw 3/5 of the best picture nominees and many of the other nominees, and it was pretty obvious what was going to win most of the biggest categories.
There's more to it than that, though. There's a definite technology-nerdy side. The more "technical" categories are far more interesting than who wins best actress (though there's no reason nerds can't appreciate fine acting, directing, etc. - I certainly do.) The nerdy stuff that most people don't pay attention to, like cinematography, sound/sound editing, and special effects. Unlike the big categories, they usually do a pretty good job awarding the technical categories to films that deserve it.
Why shouldn't slashdot be host to a discussion about sound and special effects techniques? How is that not as nerdy as discussing TV shows (with little of the discussion likely being about technical aspects)?
I think the article is poorly written. It is sort of digg-like. But I think the backlash against it is ridiculous.
The movie is based on an Indian novel and was made by a British director working closely with Indian filmmakers and actors.
Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.