77th Academy Awards

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77th Academy Awards
Date Sunday, February 27, 2005
Site Kodak Theatre
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California
Preshow Billy Bush
Jann Carl
Chris Connelly
Shaun Robinson
Host Chris Rock
Producer Gilbert Cates
Director Louis J. Horvitz
TV in the United States
Network ABC
Duration 3 hours 14 minutes
Ratings 42.14 million
25.29 (Nielssen Ratings)

The 77th Academy Awards, honoring the best in film for 2004, were held on February 27, 2005, at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, California. They were hosted by comedian Chris Rock.

The nominees were announced on January 25, 2005. Martin Scorsese's biopic of the eccentric Howard Hughes, The Aviator, led the pack with eleven nominations including Best Actor, Best Director, and Best Picture. Marc Forster's Finding Neverland and Clint Eastwood's Million Dollar Baby each had seven nominations. Ray and Sideways rounded out the nominees for Best Picture.

Contents

[edit] News and recap

  • As of February 27, 2005, the field of Best Picture nominees did not include a bonafide blockbuster at the U.S. box office. For the first time in 20 years, and what would continue for the next few years, none of the nominees for Best Picture was among the year's top ten releases in box office at the time of the nominations, and as a group they most probably had the lowest box-office performance of any Best Picture field in history. To date, The Aviator was the highest earner with $93.7 million in domestic box office receipts, and ranked as the 24th highest grosser of 2004. It was followed by Ray at $74.9 million and Million Dollar Baby at $64.7 million.
  • There was a considerable amount of controversy surrounding the omission of political-themed documentaries from the Best Documentary Feature Film category. However, this was not necessarily an oversight on the part of the Academy, as many of the candidates were rendered ineligible.
    • Fahrenheit 9/11 was intentionally withheld from submission in the Best Documentary Feature Film category by producer Michael Moore, in hopes of affecting the 2004 presidential election by airing it on broadcast television. Under rules established by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, documentaries shown on television within nine months of their theatrical release are ineligible for the documentary Oscar. Instead Moore submitted it for the Best Picture category which does not have that same rule.
    • Popular political documentaries Control Room and The Corporation were rendered ineligible by the fact that they had been broadcast in their entirety on network television within 9 months of their U.S. theatrical release.
  • The popular Motorcycle Diaries was not selected by any country as its official nomination for Best Foreign Language Film, as the crew, director, cast and filming locations were all affiliated with different nations. As it had no specific country of origin, no country was willing to make it their official selection for the category.
  • When Chris Rock makes his introduction, the music accompanying him is a slightly jazzed up version of Brad Fiedel's theme from The Terminator.
  • The ceremony attracted an average audience of 42.14 million, down three percent from the preceding year. However, the target age 18-49 demographic ratings stood at 16.84, higher with the preceding year's 15.68.
  • During one segment Rock asked "Who is this guy?" in reference to actor Jude Law who seemingly appeared in every movie Rock had seen that year and implied Law was a low-rent Tom Cruise (he made a joke about filmmakers rushing production and being unable to get the actors they want: "If you want Tom Cruise and all you can get is Jude Law, wait [to make the film]!") . Nearly two hours later, a defensive Sean Penn took the stage to present and said, "In answer to our host's question, Jude Law is one of our finest young actors." (At the time, Penn and Law were shooting All the King's Men.) This was later mocked on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart impersonating Penn explaining old jokes like airline peanuts. Law was not the only actor that Rock poked fun at that evening, however -- he turned the joke on himself at one point, saying "if you want Denzel [Washington] and all you can get is me, wait!"

[edit] Notable quotes

  • "I don't want to take my time—I want to get off the stage." –Charlie Kaufman
  • "My grandma used to sit down and talk to me, she said I want you to be a Southern gentleman, and she still talks to me, only now in my dreams. And I can't wait to go to sleep tonight because we've got a lot to talk about. I love you." –Jamie Foxx
  • "To answer our host's question, Jude Law is one of our finest actors".-Sean Penn, while presenting, responding to Chris Rocks question "Who is Jude Law?"

[edit] Trivia

[edit] Major winners and nominees

This is a breakdown of only major winners. For a complete list of nominees and winners, see: 77th Academy Awards nominees and winners

[edit] Feature films

Category Winner Producers/Country
Best Motion Picture of the Year Million Dollar Baby Clint Eastwood, Albert S. Ruddy and Tom Rosenberg
Best Foreign Language Film The Sea Inside Spain
Best Documentary Feature Born into Brothels Zana Briski and Ross Kauffman
Best Animated Feature The Incredibles Brad Bird

[edit] Acting

Category Winner Movie
Best actor in a leading role Jamie Foxx Ray
Best actress in a leading role Hilary Swank Million Dollar Baby
Best actor in a supporting role Morgan Freeman Million Dollar Baby
Best actress in a supporting role Cate Blanchett The Aviator

[edit] Writing

Category Winner Movie
Original screenplay Story by Charlie Kaufman, Michel Gondry and Pierre Bismuth; screenplay by Charlie Kaufman Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Adapted screenplay Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor Sideways

[edit] Directing

Category Winner Movie
Achievement in directing Clint Eastwood Million Dollar Baby

[edit] Academy Award ceremony presenters and performers

[edit] Breakdown

(Awards won/nominations)

[edit] Special honors

[edit] In memoriam

A special tribute to past host Johnny Carson was presented by host Chris Rock with previous emcee Whoopi Goldberg discussing Carson's legacy to television and the Academy Awards in the segment.

Presented by Annette Bening with a musical solo by Yo-Yo Ma The Academy recognizes those motion picture contributors that pass away in the previous year. In the order that they appear, the following actors and artists were featured: Ronald Reagan, Peter Ustinov, Carrie Snodgress, director Dan Petrie Sr., composer Dave Raksin, Fay Wray, film agent Phil Gersh, composer Elmer Bernstein, writer Carole Eastman, animator Frank Thomas, director Russ Meyer, Jerry Orbach, film editor Ralph E. Winters, writer Robert E. Thompson, Howard Keel, Janet Leigh, Christopher Reeve, Ossie Davis, producer Jerry Bick, Mercedes McCambridge, producer/writer William Sackheim, cinematographer Ed Di Gullio, writer Nelson Gidding, Paul Winfield, director Philippe de Broca, composer Jerry Goldsmith, Rodney Dangerfield, Virginia Mayo, Tony Randall and Marlon Brando.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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