academy awards

Why It Looks Like My Uncle Oscar Live

Creative writers from the highly-leveraged Channel Nine's publicity department have been spruiking the announcement yesterday that the Haunted House of Packer will be televising next year's Why It Looks Like My Uncle Oscars on February 23 for, in their words, "the first time" in Australia.

Those of us who remember "One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" cleaning up the WILLMOOs live on Channel Seven in March 1976 will know otherwise.

Nine have had the Australian telecast rights to the WILLMOOs since 1977 (the "Rocky" year), and for every one of those past 32 years they have delayed the telecast for around eight hours to show it in prime-time, even withholding news of the winners from the evening news.

(That's the same evening news that is now the third most-watched network news program on the air after Seven and the ABC.)

Meanwhile, the 2008 gong season has kicked off with the announcement of the National Board of Review Awards. "Mongol" was best non-Anglophone film, though a British film shot partly in Hindi, "Slumdog Millionaire", won the English-language major. "WALL-E" was best animation, while a former Mayor of Carmel won best actor. And no "Australia" anywhere in sight!

The Why It Looks Like My Uncle Oscar awards

Not much I can say about yesterday's Why It Looks Like My Uncle Oscars as I had only seen one nominated film, which picked up two WILLMUOs.

I was pleased to see "An Inconvenient Truth" win the WILLMUO for best documentary. I saw it at its Australian premiere at the Sydney Film Festival last June and bought the DVD in the week of its release (and have watched it again about three or four times since thus far). There may have been better documentaries over the years, but rarely has one been so relevant to the public conscience.

The 77th Why it looks like my uncle Awards

Yes it's that time of year again, the Why-it-looks-like-my-uncle-O***r (Not TM) Awards are being handed out in Los Angeles. And, for the first time in four years, not a hobbit in sight.

Having seen barely any 2004 releases yet, here are my predictions for the major WILLMUOs:

Best Film: Million Dollar Baby
Best Actor: Jamie Foxx as Ray Charles
Best Actress: Imelda Staunton (Vera Drake)
Best Supporting Actor: Morgan Freeman (Million Dollar Baby)

Syndicate content