Laugh, Dance, Drink, Love, Feel Everything, and Be Happy Always: Here’s Your Recap of Oscar Night

A Mother Jones live blog.

Mother Jones illustration; Armando Gallo/ZUMA; AMPAS/ZUMA

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It’s 2018 and everyone is sad but in Los Angeles the world’s most glamorous celebrities and talented auteurs are getting ready for Hollywood’s biggest night as the film industry comes together to celebrate the best movies of the year.

Millions of people watch the Academy Awards (less millions than used to but still millions!). Many of them watch because they love them (the drama camp demographic). Many watch because they hate them (Twitter). Most watch because it’s what’s on and who cares really, it’s all just noise. 

It’s a night of stars and songs and short clips from critically adored films that didn’t do too well at the box office. There’s a comedian who tries to walk the line between playing to the self-serious industry members in the room and playing to the populist sensibilities of the viewer of home. There’s the In Memorium part which makes everyone feel things varying from sadness that someone they never met but whose work they appreciated died, to anger that the Academy neglected to include someone they never met but whose work they appreciated and died.

There are Oscar pools for people who need that extra bit of cayenne in their pop culture experience. Some vote with their hearts, others vote with a cold hard calculous that suggests WWII films win. I personally like to wing it. You can read my ballot here and tell me how stupid I am later.

Many zillions of people do not like the Academy Awards because they think it is just an excuse for the most attractive rich people on Earth to get together and pat each other on the back for being so great and so enlightened. But who cares? Every industry has circle jerks, and at least at this one there’s live music!

But the truth is the Oscar nominees gathering at the Dolby Theater tonight are actually not just rich attractive people. They’re rich attractive union members. SAG! DGA! Even the producers have a guild. Why does that matter? Because the real Mother Jones loved unions. It was her thing. Now whether you buy that that is why Mother Jones is live blogging the Oscars tonight or believe that I just came up with that excuse a second ago and didn’t think about it for even a second before typing it out, the fact is, I am live blogging the Oscars tonight.

I’ll be joined by my colleague Jackie Mogensen who recently wrote a fascinating story about Academy Awards gone missing.

It starts at 8. See you then!

7:25pm:

Hello, good day. The Oscars has not started yet but this video from the red carpet is amazing.

(Background.)

8:05pm: Jimmy Kimmel is making some jokes about how last year they screwed up and gave Best Picture to La La Land instead of Moonlight. The jokes aren’t very funny. But that mistake last year was! Hahaha, remember? Oh how we laughed. 

8:06pm: “Oscar is the most respected man in Hollywood…no penis. The type of man we need more of in Hollywood.” Hahaha.

8:08pm: Jimmy Kimmel says that people should keep watching the show because there are a lot of political speeches coming. Delicious! But I guess that means the music acts aren’t great. 

8:12pm: “We don’t make films like Call Me By Your Name for money, we make them to upset Mike Pence.” Haha.

8:13pm: “The year men screwed up so badly that women started dating fish.” This is a reference to the movie the Shape of Water and also how bad men are.

8:30pm: Sam Rockwell won best supporting actor which is fine and expected. He’s great. I don’t know if this was his best performance but whatever.

Sam Rockwell’s dad left the cutest note on the NYT a few months ago.

8:32pm: “If your speech runs [too long] you’ll hear this”

8:33pm: Then also the movie about little-known historical figure Winston Churchill won a technical award. I didn’t love that movie. 

8:35pm: Phantom Thread won for costume design. And, look, I thought that movie was very very boring, but it did have nice costume design! Also a very nice score. Also the acting was fine. Also the movie looked great. But really it was just very long and flat and boring. 

8:40pm: Bored.

8:41pm: Laura Dern is presenting some award and omg you know what was so good? Big Little Lies. It isn’t nominated tonight. It’s not a “film” so the brown shirts at the rule factory won’t let it win an Oscar. But it was great! Laura Dern was in it. You should see it! Do you have HBO Go? You should watch it right! It’s actually better than this boring show so far. But it’s very long. You’ll have to not watch it all tonight or you’ll have to be late for work tomorrow. Oh, snap Icarus won!

8:44pm: Netflix’s Icarus wins for Best Documentary Feature. Mother Jones interviewed director Bryan Fogel here. Check it out. — JM

8:50pm: Meanwhile, Devin Nunes has some killer Oscars counter-programing. —JM

8:58pm: The 90 years of Oscars montage has the song from Love Actually, a wonderful film that definitely didn’t win an Oscars.

9:05pm: This is pretty cool.

9:11pm: 

9:12pm: So far tonight, the Academy has handed out seven awards. Oscar statuettes cost only a few hundred dollars to make, but over the years, they’ve been sold for tens of thousands of dollars, or in the case of one award, for millions. In 1999, Michael Jackson bought a Gone With the Wind Best Picture Oscar for $1.5 million. (The award supposedly vanished after his death and was reported missing in 2016). —JM

9:15pm: BREAKING: This is the second year in a row when the guy from Mozart in the Jungle showed up at the Oscars and did a performance! He’s great! That show is great!

9:26pm: A Fantastic Woman won best foreign language film. We chatted with the star of that film earlier this year. 

9:31pm: Allison Janney wins the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress. Eighty years ago, Alice Brady won the same award for her role in In Old Chicago, and a “mystery man” accepted the award on her behalf (O’Brien was tied up at home with a broken ankle). As legend goes, he—and the award—were never seen again. Well, it turns out that legend was total fake news. —JM

9:33pm: I would just like to point out that I am 100% correct tonight so far picking winners. (I can’t figure out how to link to the NYT actual ballot lol.)

9:39pm: Kobe Bryant just became an Oscar winner.

9:45pm: Kobe Bryant, who was once accused of rape and subsequently acknowledged partial guilt in an out of court settlement, won an Academy Award at the #MeToo Oscars. 

9:46pm: Awkward. —JM

9:55pm: Blade Runner 2049, a movie I really did not like, won best visual effects AND SPOILED MY PERFECT BALLOT. Trump is right. The Oscars are bad. 

10:11pm: I’m intensely bored. Why is this whole show feeling so flat?

10:13pm: Daniela Vega just became the Oscars first openly transgender presenter. Mother Jones interviewed her earlier this year—JM

10:16pm: I also got best documentary short or whatever wrong!!!!!!!!! SAD! And the OTHER SHORT LIVE ACTION WRONG. I’m getting tired of this!!!!

10:21pm: Common is rapping about how the NRA is bad. (Agreed!)

10:27pm: This is going to go on forever. We still haven’t even gotten to the medium awards yet! The top shelf awards are NEVER GOING TO HAPPEN.

10:30pm: Here we go.

10:35pm: Call Me By Your Name won for best adapted screenplay. James Ivory is 89 and just won an Academy Award!

10:38pm: Get Out wins Best Original Screenplay! Nominated for four awards tonight, Get Out was the most profitable Best Picture nominee of the 2017 (and my pick to win tonight’s biggest prize). Just before the movie came out, Mother Jones reporter Eddie Rios sat down with writer/director Jordan Peele, who just became the first African-American to win Best Original Screenplay. The interview was amazing and you should read it. —JM

10:51pm: Roger Deakins won best cinematography for Blade Runner Snore-a-thon and though that film made good on its name of being a real snore-a-thon congrats to Deakins, who won his first Oscar tonight after 14 nominations! 

11:10pm: James Ivory it turns out is actually the oldest person to ever win an Oscar. 

11:12pm:

11:14pm: “These four men and Greta Gerwig created their own masterpieces this year.” –Emma Stone presenting nominees for Best Director —JM

11:16pm: Guillermo del Toro won for best director, which means that though this Oscars has been super boring I am very close to breaking my best Oscar pool record. 

11:20pm: LMAO at the House of Cards trailer airing at the end of the #MeToo Oscars.

11:22pm: I can’t stop laughing.

https://twitter.com/alex_abads/status/970514595726151681

11:35pm: In another not-so-#MeToo moment, Gary Oldman won Best Actor. In 2001, Oldman’s wife at the time, Donya Fiorentino, filed papers in LA Superior Court claiming that Oldman assaulted her in front of their children. He denied the allegations.—JM

11:40pm: Frances McDormand won Best Actress and gave an empowering speech and mentioned an “inclusion rider” which i don’t know what that is but my sister summarized the takeaway nicely.

https://twitter.com/EmilyDreyfuss/status/970519170415722497

11:47pm: The Shape of Water won Best picture which whatever fine, but I thought Three Billboards was going to win which means I got four awards wrong tonight. 20/24! I watched this whole boring Oscars and didn’t even get 21 right!!!!!!

That’s it! I’m taking my meds and going to sleep. Goodnight and good luck. 

 

 

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AN IMPORTANT UPDATE

We’re falling behind our online fundraising goals and we can’t sustain coming up short on donations month after month. Perhaps you’ve heard? It is impossibly hard in the news business right now, with layoffs intensifying and fancy new startups and funding going kaput.

The crisis facing journalism and democracy isn’t going away anytime soon. And neither is Mother Jones, our readers, or our unique way of doing in-depth reporting that exists to bring about change.

Which is exactly why, despite the challenges we face, we just took a big gulp and joined forces with The Center for Investigative Reporting, a team of ace journalists who create the amazing podcast and public radio show Reveal.

If you can part with even just a few bucks, please help us pick up the pace of donations. We simply can’t afford to keep falling behind on our fundraising targets month after month.

Editor-in-Chief Clara Jeffery said it well to our team recently, and that team 100 percent includes readers like you who make it all possible: “This is a year to prove that we can pull off this merger, grow our audiences and impact, attract more funding and keep growing. More broadly, it’s a year when the very future of both journalism and democracy is on the line. We have to go for every important story, every reader/listener/viewer, and leave it all on the field. I’m very proud of all the hard work that’s gotten us to this moment, and confident that we can meet it.”

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