210 – 25th Hour

We talk about a lot of films dealing with the social and political aftermath of 9/11 but few like this week’s episode: Spike Lee’s 25th Hour. Filmed in New York City in the months after and adapted by David Benioff from his own novel, the film captures that dysphoria while following a drug dealer played by Edward Norton as he prepares to enter prison. Lee gives us several showstoppers, including the notorious “fuck you” mirror monologue from Norton and a fantasy finale told by Brian Cox. But the film was handled by Disney’s less awards-certified Touchstone Pictures and opened at the end of December 2002, famously crowded with contenders including what would make up the entire Best Picture lineup.

If 25th Hour got lost in the shuffle (and cultural-political moment), it now has its vocal fans like your two hosts! This episode, we’ll get into Lee’s long history as an Oscar outsider leading up to his recent success, Norton’s fast ascent with a trio of roles in a single year, and the prowess of Lee’s standby composer, the great Terence Blanchard.

Topics also include Cox’s scene stealing in 2002, Rosario Dawson bringing reliable realism, and 2002 Best Original Score.

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093 – The Painted Veil (Naomi Watts – Part Two)

Our second episode on the Oscar trajectory of Naomi Watts brings us to 2006’s The Painted Veil, a W. Somerset Maugham adaptation set during a cholera outbreak in 1920s China. Watts starred opposite Edward Norton as a combative English couple whose love rekindles after an affair, with the actress’s then-boyfriend Liev Schreiber as the other man. The film reminds of similar period costume dramas that once was thought to be prime Oscar fodder, but became another example of how that tide has turned in recent years.

However, The Painted Veil was moreso plagued by an Oscar campaign that started far too late, despite lingering in predictions throughout the season. Distributed by Warner Independent, delays in post-production meant the film was forced to skip the fall festivals and arrived late to the screener pile that was crucial to Oscar campaigns in the mid-00s. This episode, we look back at the short-lived run of Warner Independent and the Best Picture winner that was almost theirs.

We also discuss Diana Rigg in a mirror opposite to her Game of Thrones character, composer Alexandre Desplat, and cult musical Chess.

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@Had_Oscar_Buzz
Joe: @joereid
Chris: @chrisvfeil