S
Stone_Cold_Sisko
Guest
At this point, they should just give Serkis an achievement award.
Can you name five that were worthy of note this year?If the Oscars/Golden Globes/ect. don't want to give motion capture actors best actor awards, then some of them really should make it a category of it's own. It's common enough now that it probably wouldn't be that hard to find nominees.
Can you name five that were worthy of note this year?If the Oscars/Golden Globes/ect. don't want to give motion capture actors best actor awards, then some of them really should make it a category of it's own. It's common enough now that it probably wouldn't be that hard to find nominees.
- Benedict Cumberbatch as Smaug in The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
- Andy Serkis as Caesar in Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
- Toby Kebbel as Koba in Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
- Vin Diesel as Groot in Guardians of the Galaxy
- Bradley Cooper (voice) and Sean Gunn (MoCap) as Rocket in Guardians of the Galaxy
- Matt Cross and Lee Ross for Godzilla and the MUTOs in Godzilla (apparently Andy Serkis also consulted on that and acted as Godzilla's eyes, so toss in another one for him if that qualifies)
- I didn't see Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, but whoever the actors were in that
Groot and Rocket were not MoCap, but animated from scratch. Diesel & Cooper only did the voices. (Gunn actually tweeted about this today: https://twitter.com/JamesGunn/status/551125626929688576)
- Benedict Cumberbatch as Smaug in The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
There could indeed be an award for "non-human character of the year" rather than a more narrowly defined "motion capture performance of the year", but that's the flavor of category one finds in an MTV Movie or People's Choice Awards rather than the Oscars - not judging, just observing. Characters like Groot are skillfully and artistically made, but the Academy is simply not going to call it the equal of actors performing at the top of their craft. We can cry about that all we like, but it's the way it is.
There could indeed be an award for "non-human character of the year" rather than a more narrowly defined "motion capture performance of the year", but that's the flavor of category one finds in an MTV Movie or People's Choice Awards rather than the Oscars - not judging, just observing. Characters like Groot are skillfully and artistically made, but the Academy is simply not going to call it the equal of actors performing at the top of their craft. We can cry about that all we like, but it's the way it is.
There's that Gaith condescension and conflation of opinion with facts we all know and love.
Does it? A bunch were mentioned, of which several were vetoed, and the remaining ones are a mixed bag. It sounds more like there are enough to nominate just because they exist as opposed to actually being deserving of an award.I think my point still stands that you could find enough nominees to fill out a category if they created one
Hey, I'd be in favor of said category... but if you think the body that called Crash its year's Best Picture is going to create a category apart from visual effects in which virtually every nomination will be a dragon or alien or mutated turtle, it's not condescension to observe that you're simply wrong on that count. As Gene Siskel said, "There is a point when a personal opinion shades off into an error of fact."There could indeed be an award for "non-human character of the year" rather than a more narrowly defined "motion capture performance of the year", but that's the flavor of category one finds in an MTV Movie or People's Choice Awards rather than the Oscars - not judging, just observing. Characters like Groot are skillfully and artistically made, but the Academy is simply not going to call it the equal of actors performing at the top of their craft. We can cry about that all we like, but it's the way it is.
There's that Gaith condescension and conflation of opinion with facts we all know and love.
Does it? A bunch were mentioned, of which several were vetoed, and the remaining ones are a mixed bag. It sounds more like there are enough to nominate just because they exist as opposed to actually being deserving of an award.I think my point still stands that you could find enough nominees to fill out a category if they created one
"...And the nominees are:
Andy Serkis for Dawn of the Planet of the Apes.
Toby Kebbell for Dawn of the Planet of the Apes.
Terry Notary for Dawn of the Planet of the Apes.
Karin Konoval for Dawn of the Planet of the Apes.
And whoever was in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles..."
Hey, I'd be in favor of said category... but if you think the body that called Crash its year's Best Picture is going to create a category apart from visual effects in which virtually every nomination will be a dragon or alien or mutated turtle, it's not condescension to observe that you're simply wrong on that count. As Gene Siskel said, "There is a point when a personal opinion shades off into an error of fact."There's that Gaith condescension and conflation of opinion with facts we all know and love.There could indeed be an award for "non-human character of the year" rather than a more narrowly defined "motion capture performance of the year", but that's the flavor of category one finds in an MTV Movie or People's Choice Awards rather than the Oscars - not judging, just observing. Characters like Groot are skillfully and artistically made, but the Academy is simply not going to call it the equal of actors performing at the top of their craft. We can cry about that all we like, but it's the way it is.
Does it? A bunch were mentioned, of which several were vetoed, and the remaining ones are a mixed bag. It sounds more like there are enough to nominate just because they exist as opposed to actually being deserving of an award.I think my point still stands that you could find enough nominees to fill out a category if they created one
"...And the nominees are:
Andy Serkis for Dawn of the Planet of the Apes.
Toby Kebbell for Dawn of the Planet of the Apes.
Terry Notary for Dawn of the Planet of the Apes.
Karin Konoval for Dawn of the Planet of the Apes.
And whoever was in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles..."
Of those vetoed, I simply chose the wrong Hobbit movie. Cucumberpatch would be eligible for Battle of the Five Armies, as well as the subsequent mentions of Azog and Bolg. Gunn still was the animator and actor stand-in guide for Rocket, and another actor for Groot, with Cooper and Diesel providing the voices, so it's essentially a slightly less sophisticated version of the same principle. And my lack of interest and awareness in seeing the TMNT movie or looking it up at the time of posting doesn't mean the actors gave a poor performance.
It's my understanding from an article I read a while back that they actually advanced the MoCap technique for TMNT, which was what made me suggest it even though I didn't care to see the film. Because I don't see this as solely a new acting category, but a unique combination of acting, vocal, choreography (to a lesser extent) performances, and VFX animation, I don't think one can just dismiss it based on how significant or not you consider the actor's individual performance. You have to take its significance as a whole.
Even though I believe I covered your parameters for five performances of note (giving more than five to cover the vetoes and some additional possibilities from PotA or the possible inclusion of other types of performances; like voiceovers into a broader "virtual/offscreen performance" category), as I said, in the technical categories they often given out fewer than five nominations at a time (Makeup is three), so if you don't consider all of those worthy, it could be whittled down to three nominees instead. But I think it shouldn't really be hard to find five per year since it would be professionals in the industry making the suggestions rather than my offhand recall as a layman.
Hey, I'd be in favor of said category... but if you think the body that called Crash its year's Best Picture is going to create a category apart from visual effects in which virtually every nomination will be a dragon or alien or mutated turtle, it's not condescension to observe that you're simply wrong on that count. As Gene Siskel said, "There is a point when a personal opinion shades off into an error of fact."There's that Gaith condescension and conflation of opinion with facts we all know and love.
You mean like how the Academy created the dedicated Best Makeup category under pressure to recognize The Elephant Man in 1981? A category which has resulted in nominations for aliens and sasquatch and werewolves and apes? They recognized that they were behind the times on recognizing the achievements of artists like Stan Winston and Rick Baker and responded to insider and fan pressure to change. Similar pressure is being applied due to the lack of acknowledgement of the achievements of Any Serkis and the performances in PotA among others, and the Academy is again behind the times in recognizing a new technology and type of performance.
You're treating it like an affront to traditional acting categories, but there's no reason it has to be. Since it's a team effort with contributions in equal measure by the physical and/or vocal performer and the VFX team, it's more of a hybrid category falling somewhere between the technical and acting categories than strictly one or the other.
Anyway, no one's "crying" about this, and it's dismissive to say that. They just feel that the Oscars are behind the times on this and good performances are not being recognized because it doesn't fit traditional acting roles.
...you have a very reasonable and articulate point of view, sir!
...however, i'm still not sure i see the point![]()
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