and Up, because I remember the controversy when Beauty and the Beast was nominated for Best Picture, and my understanding was the Best Animated Film category was created with the express purpose of keeping animated films out of Best Picture contention -- which I never felt was particularly fair and was probably the reason why Wall-E and arguably the first Shrek never got a nomination for BP back when there were only 5 candidates.
The rationale behind Best Animated Film was much like Best Foreign Language Film (and, I suppose, like Documentary, etc.) - recognizing subgenres of film that Academy voters don't nominate often if ever.
Beauty and the Beast was the only animated film to ever make the cut under the old regime, because it's a looked-down-upon genre (comedy is another one, to a much lesser extent; there have only been two comedy Best Picture winners in the last 30 years).
Up wouldn't have been nominated if there were just 5, but with 10 there's more room (one suspects a number of other Pixar films from years past would have made the list under this new system).
I got 8/10 as well. I'm also amazed and stunned The Blind Side received a Best Picture nomination. That movie was far from Oscar material. How did it get nominated when other worthy contenders like A Single Man, Invictus and most importantly (500) Days of Summer didn't make the cut?
It made a lot of money, and presumably thus a lot of people liked it; not so different from
Rocky getting a nomination (and a win), I suppose. Given that the rationale to expanding the category to 10 was to nominate more popular films, I guess it isn't surprising (looking at the top five this year, you'd have had one behemoth (
Avatar), one very strong-performing movie (
Inglourious Basterds), two small-budget films that did really well but less than $100 million (
Up in the Air and
Precious), and one midget (
The Hurt Locker).
I'm also not happy with Up getting a Best Picture nomination when it received a Best Animated Film nomination -- which it will win. Other valuable films were passed.
Best Animated Feature is a supplement to Best Picture, not a replacement; frankly, it's about time that animated films started getting a shot at the bigtime as well. I'd set
Up quite easily above any of the three earlier films mentioned.
I am surprised at the lack of writing nomination but I am extremely glad Neil Blomkamp & Terri Tatchell received one for District 9. Very well-deserved.
I'm not surprised at that; its screenplay was generally assessed as mediocre even by critics who really liked the film.
Other thoughts:
- Original Song is a category that has really lost prominence due to the withering of non-original musicals and the like, but there's a decent collection this year, including the song from
Crazy Heart, a serious drama, that is actually a real feature of the film itself. The latest Disney musical of course gets a few, but I'm surprised to see "Down in New Orleans" chosen over "Friends on the Other Side".
- I've currently seen 7 of the 10 BP nominees; haven't seen
The Blind Side,
District 9, or
A Serious Man; will definitely see the last of those, don't know about the others.