Monday, February 1, 2010

Fun Monday Awards Show

It's awards season in filmland so our topic for this week's Fun Monday is right in line. Our host this week is the very clever Sayre over at Sayre Smiles . Sayre's giving us the chance to hand out our own film awards instead of listening to the critics. The only hitch is that our awards have to be for the films that we actually OWN. Nice twist, Sayre!

My DVD collection is quite modest as you can see from this photo (embiggen to read all the titles). That's for a couple of reasons. My TV is circa early 1990s so I have no recording or playback capabilities. Mostly though, I rely on Netflix rentals for my significant film addiction. Those I prefer to watch on the computer. The titles you see here are for films that I watch over and over to the point of having multiple copies of some.

Here are my awards by category:

North and South, the BBC mini series based on Elizabeth Gaskell's novel set in England at the start of the mid-1800s Industrial Revolution, gets my awards for: Best Picture, Best Actor and Actress, Best Supporting Actor and Actress. Yes, I love everything about this series:

Best Picture -- a compelling love story that plays out between two principled people who must overcome prejudices of place and social class to find happiness together. Along the way we get a fascinating glimpse of how lives were changed, for better and worse, by the industrial revolution.

Best Actor -- Richard Armitage as John Thornton the powerful self-made cotton manufacturer in Milton, a northern England mill town. Armitage owned this part in all it's complexities.

Best Actress -- Daniela Denby-Ashe as Margaret Hale, the proud daughter of a southern parson who is forced to follow her father to Milton to live when he leaves the church. Hale is magnificant as the priviledged daughter of the south who soon sides with the poor workers in Thornton's mill while reluctantly falling in love with Thornton.

Best Supporting Actor -- Brendan Coyle as Nicholas Higgins, a firebrand union organizer who fights Thornton and befriends Margaret. He eventually smooths the way for Thornton and Margaret to work out their differences.

Best Supporting Actress -- Sinead Cusack as Hannah Thornton,the fiercely proud and stern mother of John Thornton. Hannah Thornton tries to protect her son from losing the mill and from loving Margaret Hale, whom she does not think worthy of her son.

Here's a brief trailer for the film so you can see why it has won so many of my awards:




Best Group -- goes to The Complete Jane Austen. I'm learning that most people aren't on the fence when it comes to Jane Austen novels or films made from her novels. It's either love or hate. My good friend Kittyhawk swears that she would rather be waterboarded than read Jane Austen! I, on the other hand, read and re-read her novels like modern day page turners. If forced, I'd rank Persuasion, her bittersweet tale of love lost and found, at the top of the list. Next would be Pride and Prejudice for the epic battle between the proud Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet. Sense and Sensibility is a favorite for its portrayal of two sisters' disappointments in love when they lose their wealth and position in society. Mansfield Park and Northanger Abbey sheds light on how lonely it must have been for children who are forced to live with prosperous family--tales of outside looking in. Emma is my least favorite novel and film because I don't care for the Emma character very much, nor her silly associates. Nevertheless, I need it in the collection.


Best Score -- goes to the 1980 version of The Jazz Singer with Neil Diamond in the lead. Neil played the son of an orthodox Jewish cantor who must defy his father (Lawrence Olivier)in order to pursue his dream of being a pop singer. This was the first VHS tape that I bought. In the 1980s, like many other people (okay, women)I was wild about his music. I even slept on the sidewalk overnight in line at the box office for tickets to a Neil Diamond concert in Lexington. I wore my friends out going to this movie and then bought the VHS tape. All the music from the movie was great--from the Jewish cants and folk songs to his pop songs, but the favorite is still Hello Again:





Well, this awards show has, I fear, run way over time! Be sure and check out Sayre's Fun Monday list for other awards ceremonies.

(Image credit: John and Margaret -www.fanpop.com)

9 comments:

  1. Your collection may not be the largest that I've seen, but you have some quality there.
    Don't you think Colin Firth deserves a little award for "Girl with the Pearl Earring"?
    I like your picks though.

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  2. Oh Faye, I love Neil Diamond too! I went to see him in Orlando, FL live in concert! He was fantastic!

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  3. Your collection is 20 times larger than ours: none? I think my son gave my husband a dvd of Pavarotti, but that's about it.

    We do Netflix. Fun to read of you collection!

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  4. I think that would have been a movie for me too, North and South. Unfortunately I haven't seen it.
    Your collection is big compared to mine, lol !

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  5. This is not the first time "North and South" has come up in this blog... I'm going to have to rent it and see what all the fuss is about!

    You're gonna love Masterpiece Theatre this month! We've been running Emma, will run Miss Austin Regrets, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion! I need to see some of these myself.

    Thanks for playing!

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  6. Keep saying I am going to tune into The BBC network but never do. My daughter uses netflex also..good way to keep up with your movie fix. I also love Neil Diamond..and went with Church Lady to see him in Orlando. He is a fantastic performer. Thanks for sharing Faye...if anyone is a movie critic..its U!

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  7. I LOVE all of Jane Austen books and movies. They are on my wish list. LOL

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  8. prunella f -- I saw "Girl with the Pearl Earring" on first release because the book is an all time fav. At the time had not even "met" Colin. Now he's always a contender but Richard Armitage has usurped him. :-)

    church lady -- do you have photos from the ND concert? I do--bad ones. The man could sing--and dance,as I recall, in those slick black pants and lounge lizard shirts!

    patience --do Bill and the whippets entertain you with a Pavarotti sing along?

    gattina -- you can rent North and South and I know you love England.

    sayre -- with your ties to the British Isles, you would appreciate North and South. And thanks to PBS and Masterpiece Theater, Sunday nights are all Jane.

    janis --see Sayre comment. Sunday nights on PBS are great for BBC dramas. Mother-daughter Neil D concert? Like it.

    debs--I'm an English literature major but, sadly, Jane didn't "take" until a few years ago. The BBC productions got me started and then I read all her novels--some more than once.

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  9. We have such similar tastes in films, and I definately agree with your choices for those awards.

    I met Neil Diamond years ago and he was such a lovely man. Great singer too, of course.

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