March 8, 2010 11:14 AM

"Avatar," "Hurt Locker" Lead Oscar Noms

(CBS/AP)  Last Updated 12:50 p.m. ET

James Cameron's science-fiction blockbuster "Avatar" and the searing Iraq War drama "The Hurt Locker" lead the Academy Awards with nine nominations each, including Best Picture.

"Hurt Locker"'s Kathryn Bigelow will be competing against her ex-husband Cameron for Best Director. She is only the fourth woman ever to be nominated in the category.

Also vying for the top prize at this year's Oscars - which for the first time in six decades features a field of 10 nominees - are the inspirational football drama "The Blind Side"; "District 9," the science fiction hit of aliens relegated to an apartheid existence in South Africa; Quentin Tarantino's World War II saga "Inglourious Basterds"; the Coen Brothers' meditation on religion and morality, "A Serious Man"; the animated Pixar comedy "Up"; "Up in The Air," a dramedy about a corporate downsizer; and two tales of teenagers in very different circumstances, involving romance ("An Education") and abuse ("Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire").

"Up," a travel adventure about a lonely widower who flies his house off to South America suspended from helium balloons, is only the second animated film ever to earn a Best Picture nomination (following Disney's "Beauty and the Beast" in 1991).

Cameron's "Avatar" won best drama and director at the Golden Globes, while Bigelow's "The Hurt Locker" beat out Cameron at the Directors Guild of America Awards, whose recipient usually goes on to earn the Best Director Oscar.

No woman has ever won the directing Oscar (previous nominees include Sofia Coppola for 2003's "Lost in Translation," Jane Campion for 1993's "The Piano," and Lena Wertmuller for 1975's "Seven Beauties").

Bigelow's previous films include "Point Break" and "Near Dark." She said she was gratified and humbled by the nomination.

"It's a huge, huge compliment to the entire cast and crew," she said. "It was a very difficult shoot of heat and sun and windstorms and sandstorms and they had to unite crew from Lebanon and Israel."

"The Hurt Locker" also beat "Avatar" for the Producers Guild of America top prize and was chosen as last year's best film by many key critics groups.

Also nominated for best director Lee Daniels ("Precious), who became only the second black filmmaker nominated in the category (after John Singleton for 1991's "Boyz N the Hood"); Jason Reitman for "Up in the Air"' and Quentin Tarantino for "Inglourious Basterds."

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There were familiar faces among this year's nominees - Meryl Streep, Jeff Bridges, George Clooney, Wallace and Gromit - and some first -timers.

Sandra Bullock received her first Oscar nomination for playing a wealthy woman who takes in a homeless teen in "The Blind Side," while Streep received her 16th for her portrayal of Julia Child in "Julie & Julia." Also nominated for Best Actress: Helen Mirren as the wife of Leo Tolstoy in "The Last Station"; Carey Mulligan as a British school girl romanced by a much older man in "An Education"; and Gabourey Sidibe, making her film debut as an illiterate, pregnant teenager who moves toward self-discovery amid horrendous domestic circumstances, in "Precious."

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Jeff Bridges received his fifth acting nomination, as a country-western singer in "Crazy Heart." George Clooney, who won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for "Syriana," is up for Best Actor for "Up in the Air." Also in the running: Colin Firth as a gay professor grieving over the death of his lover in "A Single Man"; Jeremy Renner as a bomb technician in "The Hurt Locker"; and Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela in Clint Eastwood's "Invictus."

"This is my fifth nomination and I'm more proud of that than all the rest of it I think," Freeman said, also approving of the expansion of the Best Picture category (although it did not include "Invictus," a film whose pre-release anticipation seemed to assure it of a nod).

"I think it's a good call, a good call, some good pictures. We didn't get a Best Picture nomination? Well, that's a big letdown. Well, there you go. That's my problem, I thought we should get a Best Picture nomination. But it's OK."

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Nominated for best supporting actor are Matt Damon as a rugby player in "Invictus"; Woody Harrelson as an officer charged with informing families of loved ones killed in action in "The Messenger"; Christopher Plummer as Leo Tolstoy in "The Last Station"; Stanley Tucci as a serial killer in "The Lovely Bones"; and Christoph Waltz as an SS colonel with more than one agenda in "Inglourious Basterds."

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Walz, who won the Best Actor award at the Cannes Film Festival for his performance, has reaped most every critics' award so far this season, as has Mo'Nique for her startling turn as an abusive mother in "Precious." She is nominated for Best Supporting Actress, along with Penelope Cruz as Daniel Day-Lewis' mistress in "Nine"; Vera Farmiga as a frequent-flyer in "Up in the Air"; Maggie Gyllenhaal in "Crazy Heart"; and Anna Kendrick, who plays George Clooney's human resources protégé in "Up in the Air."

On CBS' "The Early Show" this morning, Mo'Nique said .

"I'm very honored and grateful they recognized the performance, but we didn't do the project with the feeling of, 'This is going to get us an award.' We did the project with the feeling of 'Oh my God, this will change lives,'" she said.

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Actress Anne Hathaway and Tom Sherak, president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, announced the nominees for the 82nd Academy Awards at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater.

Oscar nominees are chosen in most categories by specific branches of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, such as actors, directors and writers. The academy's full membership of about 5,800 was eligible to vote for Best Picture nominations, and can cast ballots for the winners in all categories.

The awards presentation will be broadcast March 7 at 8 p.m. ET from the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, hosted by Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin.

Oscar producers Adam Shankman, a choreographer and director whose films include "Hairspray," and Bill Mechanic, former studio boss at 20th Century Fox, are promising to step up the fun quotient at this year's show.

Honorary Oscars, which took up a big chunk of space during past shows, were moved to a separate event last fall, freeing up more time to focus on the expanded Best Picture nominees and other categories.

(Weinstein Company)
Last summer the Academy decided to boost the number of Best Picture nominees to ten (for the first time since 1943, when "Casablanca" topped them all) to provide room for more crowd-pleasing entries that might boost ratings. The move came after heavy criticism that neither "The Dark Knight" nor "Wall-E" - two blockbusters that were also critically acclaimed - did not make the final five.

This year's roster certainly doesn't lack for fan favorites. In addition to "Up" ($293 million), there are "The Blind Side" ($237 million), "Inglorious Basterds" (left) ($120 million), "District 9" ($115 million) and "Up in the Air" ($73 million).

Yet these are all overshadowed by "Avatar," whose domestic gross of approximately $600 million (and more than $1.8 billion worldwide) may lead it to becoming the first science fiction film ever to win a Best Picture Oscar.


Scribes

It is rare that a film would be nominated for Best Picture, let alone win, without also receiving a nomination in a screenplay category. (But it has happened, as witness "Titanic.") Cameron missed on an original screenplay nomination for "Avatar"; "The Blind Side" was also left off the list.

Otherwise entires in the Best Original and Adapted Screenplay categories mirror the Best Picture nominations, with the additions of "The Messenger" and "In the Loop."


(AP Photo/Disney/Pixar)
Animation

In an unusually rich year for animated features films, five films were nominated: two stop-motion animations adapted from acclaimed books, "Coraline" (based on the Neil Gaiman gothic) and "Fantastic Mr. Fox" (from Roald Dahl's classic).

Also up is, well, "Up" (left), one of Pixar's most critically-acclaimed films; the Disney hand-drawn animated musical "The Princess and the Frog"; and "The Secret of Kells," whose imagery is inspired by medieval manuscript illustrations.

Wallace and Gromit, the most famous English lovers of cheese and mysteries, are back with a nomination in the Best Animated Short category, with "A Matter of Loaf and Death." Their creator, Nick Park, has previously won three Oscars for their adventures (the shorts "The Wrong Trousers" and "A Close Shave," and the feature-length "Curse of the Were-Rabbit"); for Wallace and Gromit's first nominated outing Park lost . . . to himself (for his "Creature Comforts").


(CBS)
Music

The movie version of "Nine" failed to click in the major categories, but it did catch a nomination in the Best Original Song category for "Take It All."

The Disney animated musical "The Princess and the Frog" (left) did it one better, with two of Randy Newman's songs nominated: "Almost There" and "Down in New Orleans."

Also up: "Loin de Paname" from "Paris 36"; and "The Weary Kind (Theme from Crazy Heart)" by Ryan Bingham and T Bone Burnett.

Two other animated films - "Fantastic Mr. Fox" and "Up" - are competing in the Best Original Score category, against "The Hurt Locker," "Sherlock Holmes," and "Avatar" (whose composer, James Horner, previously won for scoring Cameron's "Titanic").


(Summit Entertainment)
Tech Noms

Suspense of very different kinds fill the ranks of the film editing category: "District 9" melds varying tones of action, humor and terror, told from different viewpoints, while "Hurt Locker" is an excruciatingly tense character study.

"Inglourious Basterds" weaves two separate stories of wartime into an epic of revenge, as language jockeys with bloodshed to propel the story forward.

And then there are two films at polar opposites: the claustrophobic "Precious," in which a teenager feels trapped in an urban hell, and the 3-D "Avatar," one of the most expansive action films ever made.

Most of "Avatar"'s nominations are on the technical side - it received no nominations for screenplay or acting - and is a frontrunner in many of them.

(Sony Pictures Classics)
But it has competition from other bang-up Hollywood blockbusters (such as "Star Trek"), Victoriana period pieces and World War II films.

In addition to a nomination for Best Visual Effects (alongside "Star Trek" and "District 9"), "Avatar"'s most striking nominations are for Art Direction and Cinematography, two categories which are traditionally less open to films dominated by computer-generated or -enhanced imagery.

"Avatar"'s production design will be up against the Terry Gilliam fantasy "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus" (left), the period pieces "Sherlock Holmes" and "The Young Victoria," and the musical "Nine."

Two-time Oscar-winning cinematographer Robert Richardson was nominated for "Inglourious Basterds," alongside "Avatar," "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," "The Hurt Locker" and Germany's "The White Ribbon" - the first black-and-white film to be nominated for cinematography since 2005's "Good Night, and Good Luck."

(Weinstein Company)
And those blue people's loin cloths were no match for Chanel's hats or Penelope Cruz's corset.

Costume nods were given to the 19th century romance "Bright Star," "Coco Before Chanel," "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus," "Nine" and "The Young Victoria."

"Avatar"'s Visual Effects
Jim Cameron: "Avatar" a Dream Come True
Designing the "Imaginarium"




Documentaries

The field competing in Best Feature Documentary is a particularly potent collection of political and activist films.

"Burma VJ" from director Anders Østergaard, was compiled from video footage illicitly shot during the government of Myanmar's crackdown on protesting monks, and then smuggled out of the country.

(Magnolia Pictures)
"The Cove" is Louie Psihoyos' suspenseful expose of a Japanese fishing village's rapacious slaughter of dolphins.

"Food, Inc." (left), Robert Kenner's unflinching look at the mechanized, corporatized food industry.

Also, "The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers" by Judith Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith tells the story of the Pentagon official whose leaking of classified documents to The New York Times helped turn the tide of public opinion on the Vietnam War.

Rebecca Cammisa's "Which Way Home," which follows the journey of child migrants from Mexico trying to reach their parents in the United States.


Foreign Language

Germany's "The White Ribbon" by director Michael Haneke ("Cache," "The Piano Teacher"), which won the top prize at Cannes last year, will compete for Best Foreign Language Film.

(Sony Pictures Classics)
Set in pre-World War I Germany, the stark morality tale examines communal guilt, distrust and punishment among the residents of a small German town. Its searing black-and-white cinematography also received an Oscar nomination.

The film's producer, Stefan Arndt, called Tuesday's nomination "smashingly awesome."

Also up for the foreign film prize: French director Jacques Audiard's prison drama "Un Prophet" ("A Prophet"), a gritty prison drama which placed second at Cannes. The film chronicles the rise of an illiterate inmate who educates himself and becomes a player in drug and smuggling circles while serving a six-year sentence. Tense, brutal and sometimes tender, the film shows the central character's education on the rules of prison life, which turn out to be not so different from those outside.

Audiard won international acclaim for his last feature, 2005's "The Beat That My Heart Skipped," the story of a young man torn between following in his father's footsteps in a life of thuggish petty crime and pursuing his love for classical music.

From Peru is director Claudia Llosa's "Milk of Sorrow," which won the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival. It addresses the lingering problems of women abused during the Peruvian government's decades-long war against leftist guerrillas.

Another South American feature, "El Secreto de Sus Ojos" ("The Secret in their Eyes") by Argentine director Juan Jose Campanella, is the story of a detective who plunges into a cold murder case.

Campanella, whose "Son of the Bride" was nominated for an Oscar in 2002, told Argentine cable channel Todo Noticias he was stunned by Tuesday's news.

"I cannot believe it," he told the channel in Spanish. "You go through the process with so much anxiety that when it happens the news is a relief."

Newcomers Scandar Copti and Yaron Shani's "Ajami" depicts the brutal life of drugs, violence and poverty in a mixed, Jewish-Arab neighborhood in the Mediterranean city of Jaffa.

Copti said he was overjoyed about the nomination and said he hoped the film would help spread awareness about Israel's Arab minority, which makes up about one-fifth of Israel's population of 7 million.

"Maybe with the nomination, people will have a chance to understand what a Palestinian living in Israel is," Copti told The AP in a phone interview from Dubai. "It will put us on the map."

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
  • David Morgan

    David Morgan is a senior editor at CBSNews.com and cbssundaymorning.com.

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by jxknowles February 2, 2010 11:40 PM EST
I saw most of these, but the film I really liked recently was Ellen Page and Drew Barrymoore in WHIP IT. Drew's directorial debut. Sort of a 2000's version of the old John Hughes classics. It's not best picture quality, but a lot of fun. Ellen Page is very funny.
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by run2jazz2 February 2, 2010 2:24 PM EST
Avatar is nothing more than an explanation in a fancy way of those groups in this country which were discriminated against. Native Indians, Japanese, Irish, Italian and African-American can related to be oppressed in this country and James Carmeron just put a new spin in a movie to a old problem.

If Avatar didn't have Blue people, but African or Asian it would not be such a hit as people would just say it another version of old problems.
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by avigil2 February 2, 2010 4:27 PM EST
At least it sure is entertaining.
by cidaia February 2, 2010 4:42 PM EST
Avatar is entertaining, in a mindless kill-the-scapegoat kind of way. But best drama at the Golden Globes? People don't even know the difference between drama vs. spectacle?

Avatar's enjoyment value comes entirely by setting up an avatar scapegoat - the human race is the bad guy, and it gets punished by Mother Nature herself rising up to expel naughty humans from the balance of nature. Kind of funny when you look at Mother Nature's motives. Apparently she objects to predatorial behavior.

On a dramatic level, it's incredibly stupid, as it has to be with such a fantasy fuelling it. What it delivers on is the emotion - and it does this in spades, if you think humans are dirty and wish you could shed your skin and turn into a simple, glorious man-beast who isn't guilty of any crime when he kills and takes and follows his id. Which is apparently a pretty compelling fantasy as long as you don't show the outhouse scenes.
by lawyertom1 February 2, 2010 1:30 PM EST
The Hurt Locker was a fabulous film about the madness of war (both sides), and the brave troops we put in harms way. Bravo for a fabulous film!
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by avigil2 February 2, 2010 2:01 PM EST
Agreed! It deserves all of the accolades that this amazing film is getting.
by Fatesrider February 2, 2010 1:08 PM EST
All is opinion - Marcus Aurelius
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by artistkf February 2, 2010 12:27 PM EST
Avatar--A shame the actress and actors (people) were not noticed for doing a good job and nominated to. This shows how important people and technology work hand in hand. I love the way real actors were used in with the making of the animation.

This is not all animation like toy story. Don't get me wrong, there is a lot of hard work into those kinds of shows and movies to.

Avatar used real actress and actors. The animation was extremely well done. Everything should be recognized. Making a movie like this with both elements- then no one is out of a job.
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by louiville35 February 2, 2010 12:23 PM EST
What!!!! A hetero (albeit cross species) romance getting a nod from the academy this has to cease immediately!!!!
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by cbsblogger February 2, 2010 12:19 PM EST
I haven't see Avatar. Hurt Locker was superbly done.

Inglorious Bastards I found to be an absurdly done overly brutal movie without any redeeming value. If it wins an award it will be only because of Hollywood propaganda.
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by avigil2 February 2, 2010 12:44 PM EST
You have missed the whole point on Tarantino's superb INGLORIOUS BASTERDS. It was one of the best movies of 2009.
by RedWings_ninety_one February 2, 2010 11:44 AM EST
Honestly, what's the point? The only awards that matter are the People's Choice awards. They should only be rewarded based on the opinions of those who the work is ment for. And those that the people who actually saw thought did a good job. Be it acting, directing, writing, or singing, honestly I don't even care about any of those award shows. They take up too much TV time. Who needs the talking and anticipation? Here's your award and get on with it.
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by avigil2 February 2, 2010 12:16 PM EST
The point is that it actually matters. The Oscars have been handed out since 1929 so it's part of film and American history. Not interested... go read a book and leave the film loving experience to those who appreciate it.
by Fatesrider February 2, 2010 1:05 PM EST
I tend to agree with you. "Best Picture" is utterly relative based on the opinion of critics who tend to favor small, independent dramas whose box-office draw combined rarely exceeds that of one panned summer blockbuster.

I understand people want to recognize artistic merit. But of all of the nominees, I've actually only seen THREE. (Avatar, Up and District 9). Of those three, Avatar was seen by more people than all of the others nominated COMBINED. The critics thought the story was weak, but the rest was wow. Up was cute. District 9 was well done. The rest I can't say.

The point is, what is "Best" tends to be determined by a very select group of people whose lives revolve around cinema insofar as the Oscars go. The People's Choice Awards are what WE say are the best to the rest of the world.

Industry should recognize the merits and labors of those who work in them. But the Oscars are no longer a good measure of what the people think is the "Best".
by Robin081564 February 2, 2010 11:42 AM EST
Sorry, I have not seen Avatar yet. I am curious... can anyone tell me why the lead character has the Vonage logo tattooed on my face?
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by avigil2 February 2, 2010 12:18 PM EST
Please get yourself into a movie theater. You'll be amazed at this film. It's already the highest grossing movie in film history... be a part of it. I doubt that you'll be disappointed. Otherwise, maybe you and RedWings could get together and read a book a loud.
by Robin081564 February 2, 2010 12:59 PM EST
Ooops... I meant his face not my face... Maybe a Fruedian slip of some sort. Come to think of it, he does look kind of like me a strange blue alien sort of way.

I was planning to wait for the Blue Ray so I can watch it at home on my big screen TV. I hate to pay the theatre prices for something that I will probably just turn around and buy the disc for later. Is this one of those that you really "have to see" on the big screen?
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by PLS8395 February 2, 2010 10:13 AM EST
I just watched Hurt Locker and I found it interesting as well as realistic but lacking a developed story. I suppose I expect too much of Hollywood. There were some scenes with the insurgents that were gripping but the story never traveled down that path. It is clearly an anti-war movie, which I knew when I rented it. The anti-war message seemed very subtle compared to her ex-hubby's similarly-themed Avatar. The actors were great! They pulled you right into the desert; just watching them made you thirst! However, it seemed like every time it started picking up the pace a little, it would drop off and leave you undone.

Hurt Locker was a lot like Jar Head but with a little more action.
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