Posted on 02 February 2010. Tags: Avatar, Jason Reitman, movies, Oscars. James Cameron
The directorial showdown is complete, but Canadians are looking at one other than the highly reported one between “Avatar” director James Cameron and his ex-wife Kathryn Bigelow, who directed “The Hurt Locker.”
Canadians might be a little more drawn to Cameron’s head-to-head matchup with Jason Reitman, who was nominated for directing “Up in the Air.” It makes for the first time since 1997 that two Canadian directors are nominated in the same year. Cameron was also part of that mix, with “Titanic,” and went against Atom Egoyan, who directed “The Sweet Hereafter.”
Other Canadian nominees for the 82nd Academy Awards include: writer-director Neil Blomkamp, who was born in South Africa but grew up in Vancouver, who was nominated for best adapted screenplay for “District 9,” which was also nominated for Best Picture.
Set decorator Gordon Sim of Toronto is also part of the team nominated for Best Art Direction for “Nine.”
Canadians did manage to escape the Razzie nominations that were announced a day earlier, and will be handed out the day before the Oscars.
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Posted on 18 January 2010. Tags: Avatar, Calgary, Cory Monteith, Glee, Golden Globes, James Cameron, Jason Reitman, Montreal, movies, Ontario, TV
Canadians came up big at Sunday night’s Golden Globe Awards, with director James Cameron taking home the top prizes as he won for Best Director and his film, “Avatar,” claimed the trophy for Best Motion Picture, Drama.
The Kapuskasing, Ontario, native who’s long lived in Los Angeles has had a heck of a year with the release of his long-awaited and highly anticipated adventure film to the far-off planet of Pandora. The film was Cameron’s first since a little thing called “Titanic” was released 12 years ago, and it seems the wait didn’t hamper the new film’s performance. In addition to claiming some major awards, it’s approaching $500 million gross revenue at the box office, according to boxofficemojo.com, putting it third place all time after “Titanic” ($600 million) and “The Dark Knight” ($533 million).
Elsewhere, screenwriter and director Jason Reitman took home a Best Screenplay award with co-writer Sheldon Turner for “Up in the Air,” which starred George Clooney. Reitman, of Montreal, also directed the film, but lost in that category to the aforementioned Cameron.
FInally, Calgary’s Cory Monteith was not nominated for an individual acting award, but his show “Glee” won the top prize for Best TV Series, Musical or Comedy, knocking off heavy hitters such as “30 Rock,” “The Office” and “Entourage,” and another highly touted newcomer, “Modern Family.”
See all the Golden Globe results here.
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