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by Corina Zappia | email: tvblog@villagevoice.com

Oscars: The Awards That Should've Been

Posted by Corina Zappia at 9:18 AM, February 26, 2007


Fresh Prince spawn.

The very brief Academy Awards last night had some weak moments (James Taylor and Celine Dion); expected moments (Forest Whitaker for Best Actor), and very, very long moments (I think I need to sit through one more film montage). Scorcese was finally thrown his bone; Peter O'Toole may never be. And as usual, a few awards were not officially announced, even though their presence was made quite clear.

The envelope, please:

Montage most likely to be mistaken for an eHarmony commercial: Errol Morris' opening tribute to the nominees.

Hottest new asshole accessory to make you look like even more of an asshole: Jack Nicholson, hot and bald! Goes swell with the sunglasses.

Best moment for our TV to experience a thirty-second power outtage, which unfortunately did not happen and thus we saw: Ryan Seacrest unveilng his underwear on the red carpet.

Patricia Field shout-out that no one but the Academy understands: Didn't we all agree, months ago, that the clothes for Devil Wears Prada sucked?

Best free porn: The winner of the Dove creme body wash commerical contest. Was Dove paying to take you into a stranger's shower?

Best screenwriting: Forget the speeches. The descriptions of the award winners when they took the stage killed: "Alan Arkin says he originally didn't get the part because the producers claimed he was "too virile"; "Michael Arndt had to give up his job as assistant to Matthew Broderick to write Little Miss Sunshine."

Best dressed: Gwyneth Paltrow and her light orange Zac Posen frock; Maggie Gylenhall's blue-and-black Proenza Schouler; Nicole Kidman's bowed Balenciaga stunner.

Gowns we thought were unextraordinary but we are always wrong: Beyonce's unflattering mint-green Armani with the weird sea-monster beading across the shoulder; J Lo's figure-obscuring Marchesa with built in bling.

Worst-dressed: Kirsten Dunst's pale blue Chanel number suffered from an identity crisis: prim schoolgirl up top, shiny fish in the middle, flowing into . . .hello, what's this? Feathers? Only Tracy Edmunds in her special skank surprise could have upstaged this one.

Hardest working dress in America: Jennifer Hudson's red number during her Dreamgirls performance with Beyonce. One of those Oscar-winning ta-tas was about to take the plunge.

"I can't hate you even when your joke is that lame" award: Ellen DeGeneres. I'm sorry. I just can't.

Worst fashion disaster that Andre Leon Talley did not stop despite being there for the fitting: Glad you associated your name with this one, bud. Can you make a bolero jacket out of Reynold's Wrap?

Ongoing joke that we did not love quite as much as the Academy did: Poor Peter O'Toole.

Actor most likely to pummel you with his "sexy smolder": Daniel Craig.

Child actor most likely to hit rehab by the golden age of nine: Fresh Prince spawn Jaden Smith.

Best Marky Mark dis: Will Ferrell, Jack Black, and John C. Reilly's broadway musical. Too bad-ass to touch.

Best indication you're four hours closer to death thanks to the Academy Awards: Chris Connelly's unveiling of his handmade wooden horserace indicator to track what movies had the most awards. You've got to be kidding me.

Song most likely to greet Ennio Morricone in Hell: "I Knew I Loved You," by Celine Dion.

Almost-president whose praise could have be reduced to one blow job instead of about 800 and thus this show could have ended that much earlier: Al Gore.

comments

Celine Dion looked stunning! And it was Ennio Morricone himself who wanted Celine to sing HIS song! So leave the talented Celine alone! She was great as always!

Posted by: Alan at February 26, 2007 9:52 AM

Interpretive shadow dancing, all the rage in '07

Posted by: jerell at February 26, 2007 10:25 AM

Céline was great, ya fuckin' assclown!

Posted by: null at February 26, 2007 10:52 AM

Joan Rivers should retire. She is scary. That's so American wanting to look 20 at what is she, 90? Catherine deneuve looked her age and a lot more dignified.

Posted by: vivian at February 26, 2007 10:57 AM

Serious!
She was amazing last night..obviously you have no idea what your talking about!

Posted by: Karina at February 26, 2007 11:08 AM

Shut up and clean your fucking mouth before talking about Celine, you mother fucker bitch!
You must be a fucking loser, stupid bitch! who the hell you think you're to write an article like this? Fucking loser writing in the village voice?? who knows you??? LOSER!

Posted by: Guido at February 26, 2007 7:04 PM

Does anyone else think Andrea Martin would've done a great Celine Dion back in her SCTV days? Neither do I. But I tells ya, Celine is one f-ing regal Canadian scarecrow!!!

Posted by: sparklebrite at February 26, 2007 9:21 PM

Good God! Defending Celine? Who the hell is reading the Voice these days? Sad. Very sad.

Posted by: null at February 27, 2007 9:54 AM

re the celine thing: why do people LOVE their own personal celebrities so much? i can't say anything against paris hilton at work b/c it sends my co-worker into a tizz: 'she's never been in rehab! she's not a yo-yo dieter!' and, i guess, i would prolly defend say, i don't know, toni c. if someone called her names. 'how could you,' i'd cry! 'she's X, Y & Z! i LOVE her!' what is this thing we do?! what's the psychological reasoning behind this projection? cathexis? someone smart write in and answer me. please.

Posted by: annie at February 27, 2007 12:23 PM

No, we didn't all agree that the clothes in Devil Wears Prada sucked. It seems that many people agreed that Patricia did a great job, ergo the nomination. But maybe it was just to difficult for yet another bitter bitch with a keyboard and an overinflated view of her own cleverness to take the time to write something positive about one of the few people keeping the spirit of New York alive. And it's really depressing coming from a paper that used to represent that same energy.

Posted by: wearyofboringjournalists at February 27, 2007 2:36 PM

Celine Dion can sing, that's for sure. But if her singing were a dish, it would most probably be something like a cookie made from about 50 ingredients, none of which resemble real flour and butter, served under gooey sirup out of tons of refined white sugar. Yuk. Acoustic environmental pollution. Who knows, with the climate change and all... IT might soon be forbidden.

Posted by: Franziska oliver at February 27, 2007 3:04 PM

which-ever asshat wrote this article needs to go do some research first before spewing out crap. Ennio Morricone seeked out Celine Dion to sing his song. She did an awesome job with the material that she was given. Nobody could have done any better. And no, you're not cool for targeting Celine. You're just a follower and a wanna-be with no real talent. On a side not Celine is the second richest singer, according to Forbes magazine (2006-2007), behind only Madonna so alot of people must be supporting her. Your opinion means nothing.

Posted by: null at February 28, 2007 12:32 AM

Celine's performance was stunning. Her Dress was stunning. It is not for everyone to like.. but i still love her. Give credit where it is deserved.. she is a pro just respect it folks..... we don't have alot of these great singers still doing their craft effectively or selling out.

Posted by: Mark C at February 28, 2007 3:11 AM

I thought one of the worst moments was Beyonce over-singing her duet with Jennifer Hudson. Jennifer Hudson has a big voice, Beyonce has a big ass! Big difference! All in all - getting tired of Hollywood's constant narcissism. The awards are nothing but Hollywood elites screaming out "Look at me looking at myself"!

Posted by: t at February 28, 2007 8:45 AM

Guido: Work on that grammar, bitch. And your anger management issues. You are the poster boy for the movement to quell open forums. Voices like yours are not worth being heard. And let's face it: your favourite diva can't sing and looks embalmed. And I'm proudly Canadian.

Posted by: Jeff Burtt at February 28, 2007 12:02 PM

For the brain-trust null who "proved" Celine's brilliance and talent because she's the second richest singer... may I reference H. L. Mencken's quote, "No one ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American Public." Mencken is still on-target, even posthumously.

Posted by: Lizagna at March 1, 2007 12:10 PM

"Guido: Work on that grammar"

What's wrong with my grammar, bitch?
I don't fucking care you're a Canadian. Who cares?

Posted by: Guido at March 1, 2007 8:21 PM

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