Impressive....... How tall is a 1/8 figure?
Gal Gadot is 5'10", so it'd be 70/8 = 8 3/4 inches.
Impressive....... How tall is a 1/8 figure?
Gal Gadot is 5'10", so it'd be 70/8 = 8 3/4 inches.
The sculpt is better than my paint job. *shrug*Didn't quite capture Gal Gadot's face
The sculpt is better than my paint job. *shrug*
Overall it's 9.5" tall including the base.
A bit surprised to not see a single Oscar nomination for this one...
Valerian didn't get a FX nomination? That honestly shocks me a lot more than WW not getting any.
If by "people" you're referring to folks go to movies, you're wrong. The popularity of a movie has had little to nothing to do with Best Picture noms in many years. Just look at a list of past winners and nominees.I'm honestly not disappointed by WW receiving no Oscar nommination, merely surprised, as the Oscars really aren't about quality, really, but about what people liked.
I never heard anything about this. Do you have a citation?There was this thing about 12 Years A Slave where a majority of people who voted for the movie for Best Picture hadn't seen it and just thought it should win based on the subject matter, which kind of illustrates the point.
If by "people" you're referring to folks go to movies, you're wrong. The popularity of a movie has had little to nothing to do with Best Picture noms in many years. Just look at a list of past winners and nominees.
If by "people" you mean academy voters, well that's the way it's supposed to be. My understanding of the process is that Academy members vote in categories that correspond to their respective backgrounds in the industry. Actors don't get a vote in the tech categories, tech people don't get a vote in the acting categories, etc.
I never heard anything about this. Do you have a citation?
Whether or not Oscar voters were motivated by fear of looking racially insensitive, or to correct a perceived historical wrong, can never be known. But one top Oscar strategist said that Academy Awards voters have a long history of honoring movies that take on the subject of race relations.
"Look at 'A Soldiers Story,' 'In the Heat of the Night,' 'Ray,' 'Guess Who's Coming to Dinner' and 'Sounder,'" said Tony Angellotti, reeling off the names of films that collectively garnered 30 Oscar nominations with nine wins. "This kind of socially aware vote for a movie that spotlights racism is rooted in the academy's DNA."
All the same, two Oscar voters privately admitted that they didn't see "12 Years a Slave," thinking it would be upsetting. But they said they voted for it anyway because, given the film's social relevance, they felt obligated to do so.
I never heard anything about this. Do you have a citation?
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