25 February 2007

13 Lakes (2004, James Benning)

{61, B-/B, **1/2} | Walter Reade Theater, "Film Comment Selects"



• This was strictly a courtesy sit*, since I don't much groove on pristine views of nature even when plonked down in front of actual real-world splendor. (For those unfamiliar with the film, it consists entirely of fixed-camera shots of various lakes, each one lasting ten minutes.) And so I carefully staked out an aisle seat, announced my walk-out plans to various people, pre-composed the snarky fake title for my main page (4 Lakes), and settled in to be stupefied by 40 minutes of Ansel Adams tedium before bolting out the door and grabbing some lunch. Over two hours later, however, there I still was, sitting contentedly in my seat…looking at lakes. I don't understand it, but it happened.

• Truth is, had Benning made an hour-long film called 20 Lakes, I suspect I would have genuinely flipped for it, because the images he's composed/found are generally magnificent, while the contrasts between these diverse landscapes form a strange sort of primal narrative. Ten minutes was longer than I wanted to gaze at most of them, yet anticipation of the next shot kept me firmly in my seat. Avant-garde or not, 13 Lakes held me the same way any other movie does: I stuck around because I wanted to see what would "happen" next.

• Lee Walker has spoken in the past of his happy semi-engagement with certain contemplative films—of taking pleasure in the way that a movie's narcotic pace and uncluttered compositions allow his mind to wander freely back and forth between the film itself and whatever random thoughts it might inspire. Faced here with almost completely static compositions, I did succeed in relaxing more than usual, looking at the screen without necessarily feeling obligated to register what I was seeing at all times. However, this intermittent inattention paid greater dividends in Ten Skies (also Benning '04), which I liked less overall—clouds just aren't as variegated and dynamic as your average horizon—but which involves way more visual flux, so that the screen can look dramatically different if you zone out for even just 30 or 45 seconds.

• Remember at Toronto last year when I said I would have liked Jia's Still Life better had he not insisted on planting people (or, more accurately, feeble "human drama") in front of the topographical wasteland that is the Three Gorges region? Looks like I wasn't kidding.

• For over ten years, I've cited a particular shot from Chung King Express as the greatest in the history of cinema. I'm not prepared to retract that statement, but Lake #12 (which the Fileri Experiment believes to be Oregon's Crater Lake), with its stunning waveform symmetry, would certainly place somewhere in the top five. The tiny still below doesn't remotely do it justice; that one I could have stared at for another hour, easy.





* For the courtesy of whom? you might justifiably ask. I don't have a very good answer for that. Benning, I suppose, and maybe various friends who are avant-garde aficionados and would like to see me come around a bit.

16 February 2007

Skandies: #1



Picture: The Departed (295/26)
Director: Martin Scorsese, The Departed (338/27)
Actress: Helen Mirren, The Queen (295/23)
Actor: Ryan Gosling, Half Nelson (394/24)
S. Actor: Mark Wahlberg, The Departed (246/26)
S. Actress: Shareeka Epps, Half Nelson (308/24)
Screenplay: Jonathan & Christopher Nolan, The Prestige (415/23)
Scene: Automobile ambush, Children of Men (205/15)
Undistributed 2004: The 10th District Court—Moments of Trial (Raymond Depardon) (107/9)

Yes, even the Skandies crew, who've previously awarded Best Actress to folks like Victoire Thivisol (Ponette), Christina Ricci (Buffalo '66), Reese Witherspoon (Election), and Sibel Kekilli (Head-On), could not stop the Mirren juggernaut. However, I am proud of us for getting Ms. Mol within striking range—indeed, she was a few points ahead at the point when the online ballot failed, with only half a dozen left to come in.

And here's the other wanky CoM trick shot. A decade from now this will look as misguided as our 1999 Best Actor award for Kevin Spacey does today.



HISTORY: This is Scorsese's third "nomination"; he placed 5th for Kundun (1997) and 3rd for Gangs of New York (2002), as well as 8th for The Aviator (2004).

Mirren came in 7th in Supporting in 2001 for Gosford Park. Gosling finished 8th in 2002 for The Believer. Wahlberg gets his second "nomination," having landed at #2 in the same category for I ♥ Huckabees (2004); he also placed 12th in the lead category for Boogie Nights (1997). Epps makes her Skandies debut at #1.

Christopher Nolan joins the tiny cadre of two-time Skandie winners (Lars von Trier as Director; Billy Bob Thornton as Actor and Supporting Actor), having previously won Screenplay for Memento in 2001. He also placed 15th last year for Batman Begins. Jonathan Nolan is new, though he wrote the short story on which Memento was based.

Complete results à la the indieWire poll are now available here. And for those of you who arrived via the GreenCine link and are wondering what the hell this is, some background can be found yonder.

Skandies: #2



Picture: The Prestige (231/17)
Director: Alfonso Cuarón, Children of Men (266/21)
Actress: Gretchen Mol, The Notorious Bettie Page (264/19)
Actor: Leonardo DiCaprio, The Departed (287/24)
S. Actor: Nick Nolte, Clean (228/18)
S. Actress: Luminita Gheorghiu, The Death of Mr. Lazarescu (224/18)
Screenplay: William Monahan, The Departed (413/31)
Scene: The Battle of Bexhill, Children of Men (185/14)
Undistributed 2004: Triple Agent (Eric Rohmer) (95/6)

[I included votes for "the ceasefire" here after rewatching the scene, since it's clearly contiguous—hence the confusion in the Scene category earlier. But this clip stops at the end of the wanky follow-that-actor! shot.]



HISTORY:

Cuarón placed 4th in 2002 for Y tu mamá también. This is his second "nomination."

DiCaprio finished 9th in 2004 for The Aviator. Nolte scores his second "nomination," having previously landed at #3 in the lead category for Affliction (1998); he also placed 8th in Supporting the same year for The Thin Red Line, and came in 11th (lead) for The Good Thief in 2003. Mol and Gheorghiu are new.

Monahan's Kingdom of Heaven script didn't make the cut, although few saw the reportedly superior extended version.

15 February 2007

Skandies: #3



Picture: United 93 (203/19)
Director: Paul Greengrass, United 93 (239/22)
Actress: Penélope Cruz, Volver (186/19)
Actor: Sacha Baron Cohen, Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (247/21)
S. Actor: Robert Downey, Jr., A Scanner Darkly (209/18)
S. Actress: Meryl Streep, The Devil Wears Prada (202/18)
Screenplay: Rian Johnson, Brick (224/17)
Scene: Nude wrestling, Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (164/14)
Undistributed 2004: The Forest for the Trees (Maren Ade) (84/4)

[Only the enormous black bar for Borat makes this funny to me.]



HISTORY:

This is Greengrass' first appearance in the top 20.

Both Streep and Baron Cohen have already been outlined, as this is the second citation this year for each. (As I said, it's Streep's third "nomination.") Downey, like Gordon-Levitt, makes it two in a row, having placed at #3 in the lead category last year for Kiss Kiss Bang Bang; he was also #10 in 1998 for Two Girls and a Guy. Cruz is new.

Brick is Johnson's first screenplay.

14 February 2007

Skandies: #4



Picture: Children of Men (178/14)
Director: Christopher Nolan, The Prestige (155/15)
Actress: Isabelle Huppert, Gabrielle (175/12)
Actor: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Brick (181/15)
S. Actor: Jackie Earle Haley, Little Children (157/11)
S. Actress: Emily Blunt, The Devil Wears Prada (150/13)
Screenplay: Pedro Almodóvar, Volver (133/11)
Scene: Interchronological car chase, Deja Vu (96/7)
Undistributed 2004: Samaritan Girl (Kim Ki-duk) (75/6)

[Okay, correct clip now. Unfortunately, there are no awards screeners of Deja Vu floating around, so the best I could do was a hideous camcorder job with Swedish subtitles. Also, it occurs to me that this scene will make zero sense to anyone who hasn't seen the film; what you need to know—SPOILER!!!—is that Denzel is chasing a car that exists 4.5 days in the past, which Val & Co. can see thanks to that gizmo he's using. Trust me, it works in context, even if the film as a whole makes no sense.]



HISTORY:

This is Nolan's second "nomination"; he placed 5th in 2001 for Memento.

Huppert scores her third "nomination" in seven top 20 appearances; the other two were both in 2002, when she came in 2nd in both Lead (The Piano Teacher) and Supporting (8 Women). (Also: #15 for La Cérémonie [1996], #8 for The School of Flesh [1999], #17 for Time of the Wolf [2004], and #13 in Supporting for I ♥ Huckabees [2004].) Gordon-Levitt makes it two consecutive "nominations," having also placed 4th last year for Mysterious Skin. Blunt finished 10th in the same category last year for My Summer of Love. Haley is new.

Almodóvar's only previous Screenplay citation was an 8th-place finish for Talk to Her (2002).

13 February 2007

Skandies: #5



Picture: Old Joy (143/14)
Director: Jean-Pierre & Luc Dardenne, L'Enfant (The Child) (146/15)
Actress: Laura Dern, Inland Empire (167/10)
Actor: Daniel Craig, Casino Royale (175/16)
S. Actor: Forest Whitaker, The Last King of Scotland (134/11)
S. Actress: Meryl Streep, A Prairie Home Companion (147/15)
Screenplay: Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, Half Nelson (125/16)
Scene: Parkour chase, Casino Royale (94/9)
Undistributed 2004: Tomorrow We Move (Chantal Akerman) (64/5)

[This makes the top five, but the opening of District B13 is nowhere to be seen. You people. Look at all those lame cuts between leap and landing in the Bond version!]



HISTORY:

The Dardennes placed 15th in 1997 for La Promesse and 5th in 2003 for The Son. This is their second "nomination."

Dern finished 10th for Citizen Ruth (1996) and 19th in Supporting for We Don't Live Here Anymore (2004). Whitaker came in 10th in 2000 for Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai. Streep gets her second "nomination" (and I won't pretend her third isn't forthcoming), having won Supporting in 2002 for Adaptation.; she also finished 8th for One True Thing (1998) and 8th in Supporting for The Manchurian Candidate (2004). Craig gets his first nod.

Boden and Fleck, of course, are also new.

12 February 2007

Skandies: #6



Picture: L'Enfant (The Child) (141/16)
Director: Guillermo del Toro, Pan's Labyrinth (125/13)
Actress: Judi Dench, Notes on a Scandal (137/13)
Actor: Will Oldham, Old Joy (165/14)
S. Actor: Anthony Mackie, Half Nelson (124/9)
S. Actress: Maribel Verdú, Pan's Labyrinth (143/13)
Screenplay: Frank Cottrell Boyce, Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story (112/12)
Scene: The Pale Man, Pan's Labyrinth (84/9)
Undistributed 2004: All the Ships at Sea (Dan Sallitt) (50/3)



[Sorry, I still think this scene is pretty dumb. Let's see, I am in a magical realm being guarded by some creepy looking nonhuman thing that luckily seems to be asleep. The faun told me not to eat or drink anything ("Your life depends on it"); the book reminded me not to eat or drink anything two seconds before I stepped inside; and the moment I picked up a grape from the table I had a face full of fairies warning me to put it the fuck down already. But what the hell.]

HISTORY:

This is Del Toro's first Director nod.

Dench previously placed 5th for Mrs Brown (1997) and 9th in Supporting for Shakespeare in Love (1998). Verdú landed at #10 in the lead category in 2002 for Y tu mamá también. Oldham and Mackie are new.

Frank Cottrell Boyce finished 14th in 2002 for 24 Hour Party People.

11 February 2007

Skandies: #7



Picture: Brick (136/10)
Director: Cristi Puiu, The Death of Mr. Lazarescu (125/10)
Actress: Jodelle Ferland, Tideland (137/12)
Actor: Christian Bale, The Prestige (137/16)
S. Actor: Sacha Baron Cohen, Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (123/9)
S. Actress: Rinko Kikuchi, Babel (134/11)
Screenplay: Guillermo del Toro, Pan's Labyrinth (110/13)
Scene: Bagby Hot Springs*, Old Joy (55/4)
Undistributed 2004: Spider Forest (Song Il-gon) (49/3)

* Bagby Hot Springs does not allow nudity or alcohol.

[Actual clip now available! Thanks to Froilan Vispo.]



HISTORY:

The Death of Mr. Lazarescu is Puiu's first Skandie-eligible film.

All of the actors are new except Bale, who nearly picked up his third "nomination"; he previously finished 3rd in 2000 for American Psycho and 18th last year for Batman Begins, and also came in 5th in Supporting last year for The New World.

Del Toro has no previous Screenplay citations.

10 February 2007

Skandies: #8



Picture: Pan's Labyrinth (117/12)
Director: Rian Johnson, Brick (122/10)
Actress: Evan Rachel Wood, Down in the Valley (131/13)
Actor: Pascal Greggory, Gabrielle (133/12)
S. Actor: Michael Sheen, The Queen (117/13)
S. Actress: Eva Green, Casino Royale (128/13)
Screenplay: Russell Gewirtz, Inside Man (103/12)
Scene: Rooftop showdown, The Departed (50/5)
Undistributed 2004: In Your Hands (Annette K. Oleson) (43/5)

[Um...spoiler!]



History:

Brick is Rian Johnson's feature debut.

Evan Rachel Wood previously placed 14th in 2003 for Thirteen and 3rd last year for Pretty Persuasion. Pascal Greggory came in 5th two years ago for Raja. Sheen and Green are peachy keen. And new.

Inside Man is Russell Gewirtz's first produced screenplay.

09 February 2007

Skandies: #9



Picture: Gabrielle (113/8)
Director: Michael Mann, Miami Vice (121/13)
Actress: Maggie Cheung, Clean (129/17)
Actor: Aaron Eckhart, Thank You for Smoking (119/14)
S. Actor: David Bowie, The Prestige (111/10)
S. Actress: Abigail Breslin, Little Miss Sunshine (126/11)
Screenplay: Richard Linklater, A Scanner Darkly (103/10)
Scene: Hotel reunion, Climates (47/3)
Undistributed 2004: Zebraman (Takashi Miike) (40/6)

[Unfortunately, I don't have a Climates screener handy anymore, and it's not the kind of film people are bandying about online. So here's the awesome opening shot from Ceylan's Distant (Uzak) instead.]



HISTORY:

This is Mann's third appearance on the Director list for a film that didn't make the top 20. He finished 15th in 1999 for The Insider and 8th in 2001 for Ali. (And 23rd for Collateral—a near miss.)

Cheung gets her fifth nod, having previously placed 7th for Irma Vep (1997), 13th for Comrades, Almost a Love Story (1998), 2nd for In the Mood for Love, and 4th in Supporting for Hero (2004). Eckhart hadn't been seen since 2000, when he landed at #19 in Supporting for Erin Brockovich; he also took 2nd in the lead category for In the Company of Men (1997). Bowie and Breslin are new.

Linklater's only previous Screenplay citation was his 2nd place finish for 2004's Before Sunset.

07 February 2007

Skandies: #10



Picture: Inland Empire (106/7)
Director: Hou Hsiao-hsien, Three Times (97/9)
Actress: Ivana Baquero, Pan's Labyrinth (119/13)
Actor: Edward Norton, Down in the Valley (115/11)
S. Actor: Rob Brydon, Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story (103/11)
S. Actress: Vera Farmiga, The Departed (107/14)
Screenplay: Jason Reitman, Thank You for Smoking (102/10)
Scene: The Mayan city, Apocalypto (45/5)
Undistributed 2004: Izo (Takashi Miike) (35/4)

[I've just included a snippet here since this scene is far too long for YouTube.]



HISTORY:

Hou placed 20th in 2003 for Millennium Mambo.

All of the actors are new except perennial Edward Norton, who makes his 7th top 20 appearance (and is in third place all-time behind Philip Seymour Hoffman and Kate Winslet). Six of the seven have made the top 10. The others:

1s. The People vs. Larry Flynt
2s. Primal Fear
4. Fight Club
6. 25th Hour
9. American History X
13s. Rounders

And Reitman is new.

Skandies: #11



Picture: The Death of Mr. Lazarescu (103/11)
Director: David Lynch, Inland Empire (97/7)
Actress: Déborah François, L'Enfant (The Child) (118/13)
Actor: Jérémie Renier, L'Enfant (The Child) (109/11)
S. Actor: Michael Caine, The Prestige (97/10)
S. Actress: Carmen Maura, Volver (99/11)
Screenplay: Patrice Chéreau & Anne-Louise Trividic, Gabrielle (98/8)
Scene: Olive's talent act, Little Miss Sunshine (45/4)
Undistributed 2004: Vital (Shinya Tsukamoto) (33/4)

[I just watched this scene for the first time five minutes ago as I type this. No offense to the four folks who voted for it, but seeing it only makes me feels that much more justified in having walked out of the movie over a year ago.]



HISTORY:

Lynch, who has never yet missed, placed 10th in 1997 for Lost Highway, 6th in 1999 for The Straight Story, and 2nd in 2001 for Mulholland Dr. That this is his worst finish to date no doubt owes much to the film's extremely limited release as of this writing.

Of the actors, only one has previously appeared in the top 20. Nope, not Caine—it's Renier, who finished 17th in 1997 for La Promesse.

Chéreau and his writing partner haven't previously placed in Screenplay, either.

06 February 2007

Skandies: #12



Picture: A Scanner Darkly (94/9)
Director: Patrice Chéreau, Gabrielle (95/10)
Actress: Kate Winslet, Little Children (116/15)
Actor: Ray Winstone, The Proposition (104/9)
S. Actor: Alec Baldwin, The Departed (95/11)
S. Actress: Lily Tomlin, A Prairie Home Companion (94/10)
Screenplay: Peter Morgan, The Queen (91/11)
Scene: See below.
Undistributed 2004: Citizen Dog (Wisit Sasanatieng) (31/3)

So here's the thing: Scene #12 is actually, I now realize, the scene from Jackass Number Two that I posted yesterday as #13. In fact, every scene so far is actually one number higher than previously stated. Reason being: After looking at some forthcoming scenes (in the process of creating clips for same), I now realize that two scenes from a certain film that I'd tracked separately, and which originally placed 3rd and 7th, are in fact the same scene. Which means that the scene in 7th disappears, almost everything shifts up one notch, and what I thought was #21 is in fact #20. And that scene is:

Freck's suicide, A Scanner Darkly (35/3)



HISTORY:

This is Chéreau's first time on the Director list.

Of the actors, Winstone was addressed previously (he placed 17th in Supporting for The Departed), Tomlin is new, and Baldwin finished 8th in 2003 for The Cooler. Winslet, with her 8th top 20 appearance, is now the second most-honored actor in Skandie history, trailing just behind Philip Seymour Hoffman (9). Her previous nods:

3. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
8. Titanic
9. Jude
10s. Quills
13. Holy Smoke
16s. Hamlet
17. Hideous Kinky

Morgan is new.

05 February 2007

Skandies: #13



Picture: Half Nelson (77/10)
Director: Tom Tykwer, Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (92/8)
Actress: Debbie Doebereiner, Bubble (98/10)
Actor: Ion Fiscuteanu, The Death of Mr. Lazarescu (99/8)
S. Actor: Sergi López, Pan's Labyrinth (82/8)
S. Actress: Zooey Deschanel, Failure to Launch (93/6)
Screenplay: Alfonso Cuarón & Timothy J. Sexton and David Arata and Mark Fergus & Hawk Ostby, Children of Men (88/6)
Scene: The Valentine, Jackass Number Two (45/3)
Undistributed 2004: Glenn Tilbrook: One for the Road (Amy Pickard) (30/Encyclopedia Gromit the Hardcore Squeeze Fan Apparently)



HISTORY:

Tykwer placed 17th in 1999 for Run Lola Run.

López finished 8th in Supporting for With a Friend Like Harry (2001) as well as 7th in the lead category for An Affair of Love (2000). Deschanel took 3rd place in the 2003 Actress race for All the Real Girls. Doebereiner and Fiscuteanu, needless to say, are new.

Of the five Children of Men screenwriters, only Cuarón has previously placed, having taken 3rd in 2002 for Y tu mamá también.

04 February 2007

Skandies: #14



Picture: Volver (73/8)
Director: Kelly Reichardt, Old Joy (88/10)
Actress: Ellen Page, Hard Candy (84/6)
Actor: Steve Coogan, Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story (98/11)
S. Actor: Steve Carell, Little Miss Sunshine (74/6)
S. Actress: Charlotte Gainsbourg, The Science of Sleep (88/6)
Screenplay: Andrew Birkin & Bernd Eichinger & Tom Tykwer, Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (86/7)
Scene: Jean-Baptiste forestalls his execution, Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (44/3)
Undistributed 2004: Moments choisis des histoire(s) du cinéma (Jean-Luc Godard) (30/1) [tie for #13]

[I wouldn't recommend watching this clip if you haven't seen Perfume and might someday. If you are gonna watch it, however, watch it now, as the YT police may remove it at any moment.]



HISTORY:

This is Reichardt's first Skandie-eligible film (in the current Skandies format).

Coogan previously placed 3rd in 2002 for 24 Hour Party People, and also was #8 in Supporting two years ago for Coffee and Cigarettes. Carell finished 12th in the lead category last year for The 40 Year Old Virgin. Page and Gainsbourg each make their Skandie debut.

None of Perfume's writers has previously placed.

03 February 2007

Skandies: #15



Picture: Mutual Appreciation (65/5)
Director: Robert Altman, A Prairie Home Companion (87/11)
Actress: Maggie Gyllenhaal, Sherrybaby (83/7)
Actor: Matt Damon, The Departed (97/13)
S. Actor: John C. Reilly, Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (69/6)
S. Actress: Maggie Gyllenhaal, Stranger Than Fiction (85/8)
Screenplay: Paul Greengrass, United 93 (80/10)
Scene: Death on Hollywood Blvd., Inland Empire (43/4)
Undistributed 2004: Los Muertos (Lisandro Alonso) (29/4)

[Since David Lynch has apparently managed to prevent any pirated copies of Inland Empire from making their way onto the web—at least that I could locate—here's the closest equivalent—the Skandies' #2 Scene from 2001.]



HISTORY:

Altman's career Skandie high was his 7th-place finish for The Company in 2003. He also placed 11th two years earlier for Gosford Park.

Gyllenhaal had previously finished 3rd (should have been two notches higher) in the 2002 Actress race, for Secretary. Remarkably, this is Damon's first citation since 1999, when he placed 9th for The Talented Mr. Ripley; he also came in 20th in 1997 for Good Will Hunting. Reilly has turned up in Supporting three times before: #8 for Boogie Nights (1997), #2 for Magnolia (1999), and #20 for Chicago (2002).

Greengrass's Bloody Sunday screenplay didn't make the cut.

02 February 2007

Skandies: #16



Picture: Inside Man (58/8)
Director: Nuri Bilge Ceylan, Climates (85/7)
Actress: Kirsten Dunst, Marie Antoinette (73/8)
Actor: Paul Giamatti, Lady in the Water (95/8)
S. Actor: Clive Owen, Inside Man (67/8)
S. Actress: Mia Kirshner, The Black Dahlia (68/7)
Screenplay: Jonathan Raymond and Kelly Reichardt, Old Joy (79/10)
Scene: Opening shot, 4 (40/2)
Undistributed 2004: Life Is a Miracle (Emir Kusturica) (27/2)



HISTORY:

Ceylan, in one of the greatest recent Skandie travesties, did not place in Director for Distant; this is his first citation.

Kirsten Dunst also placed 16th in 2001, for crazy/beautiful. (She's fared better in Supporting: 12th for The Virgin Suicides (2000) and 10th for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004). Giamatti won Best Actor two years for Sideways, and also placed 7th in 2003 for American Splendor, plus a 3rd-place finish in Supporting last year for Cinderella Man. Clive Owen's record came up when he was cited for Children of Men two days ago, and Kirshner is new, Exotica having predated this version of the survey by one year.

Raymond and Reichert are also new—River of Grass was the same year as Exotica.

01 February 2007

Skandies: #17



Picture: Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (58/5)
Director: Pedro Almodóvar, Volver (77/7)
Actress: Shu Qi, Three Times (71/10)
Actor: Denzel Washington, Inside Man (90/12)
S. Actor: Ray Winstone, The Departed (60/7)
S. Actress: Cate Blanchett, Notes on a Scandal (61/6)
Screenplay: Jean-Pierre & Luc Dardenne, L'Enfant (The Child) (77/10)
Scene: "Rain and Tears" (Reprise), Three Times (38/2)
Undistributed 2004: The Tuner (Kira Muratova) (26/1)



HISTORY:

Almodóvar placed 12th in 2002 for Talk to Her.

Shu Qi also placed 17th in 2003 for another Hou film, Millennium Mambo. Denzel Washington finished 18th in 1996 for Courage Under Fire, 15th in 1999 for The Hurricane, and 2nd in 2001 for Training Day. Ray Winstone gets his third nod, following Nil by Mouth (#13, 1998) and Sexy Beast (#15, 2001). And Cate Blanchett has had five previous appearances in the top 20:

1s. The Aviator
2. Elizabeth
5s. Coffee and Cigarettes
11. Heaven
16. Oscar and Lucinda

Screenplaywise, the Dardennes previously placed 12th for La Promesse in 1997 and 16th for The Son in 2003.