81st Academy Awards

81st Academy Awards
81st Academy Awards
81st Academy Awards poster.jpg
Date Sunday, February 22, 2009
Site Kodak Theatre
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Pre-show Tim Gunn
Robin Roberts
Jess Cagle[1]
Host Hugh Jackman
Producer Bill Condon
Laurence Mark
Director Roger Goodman [2]
Highlights
Best Picture Slumdog Millionaire
Most awards Slumdog Millionaire (8)
Most nominations The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (13)
TV in the United States
Network ABC
Duration 3 hours, 30 minutes
Viewership 36.94 million
21.68 (Nielsen ratings)[3]
 < 80th Academy Awards 82nd > 

The 81st Academy Awards ceremony, presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), honored the best films of 2008 and took place February 22, 2009, at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, Los Angeles beginning at 5:30 p.m. PST / 8:30 p.m. EST (01:30 UTC, February 23). During the ceremony, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented Academy Awards (commonly referred to as Oscars) in 24 categories. The ceremony was televised in the United States on ABC. Australian performer Hugh Jackman hosted the ceremony for the first time.[4] Oscar-nominated Laurence Mark served as the event's producer, while Oscar-winning writer and director Bill Condon served as executive producer.[5] The Academy hoped to revitalize the ceremony through an entirely new production team sworn to secrecy, and the telecast received mixed reviews from critics.

On February 7, 2009, in a ceremony at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, California, the Academy Awards for Technical Achievement were presented by host Jessica Biel.[6]

Slumdog Millionaire won eight awards, the most of the evening, including Best Picture and Best Director (Danny Boyle). Other winners were The Curious Case of Benjamin Button with three awards, The Dark Knight and Milk with two awards, and Departures, The Duchess, La Maison En Petits Cubes, Man on Wire, The Reader, Smile Pinki, Toyland, Vicky Cristina Barcelona, and WALL-E with one. The telecast attracted roughly 36 million viewers.

Contents

Nominations and Winners for Academy Awards of Merit

The nominees for the 81st Academy Awards were announced on January 22, 2009, at 5:38 a.m. PST (13:38 UTC) at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills, California, by Sid Ganis, president of the Academy, and the Oscar winning actor Forrest Whitaker.[7]

The film with the most nominations was The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. [7] The winners were announced during the awards ceremony on February 22, 2009.[8]

Pre Nominees

Visual effects

From these seven three would be nominated[9]

  • “Australia”
  • “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”
  • “The Dark Knight”
  • “Hellboy II: The Golden Army”
  • “Iron Man”
  • “Journey to the Center of the Earth”
  • “The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor”

Makeup

From these seven three would be nominated[10]

  • “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”
  • “The Dark Knight”
  • “Hellboy II: The Golden Army”
  • “The Reader”
  • “Synecdoche, New York”
  • “Tropic Thunder”
  • “The Wrestler”

Foreign Film

From these nine films five would be nominated [11]

  • Austria, “Revanche,” Gotz Spielmann, director;
  • Canada, “The Necessities of Life,” Benoit Pilon, director;
  • France, “The Class,” Laurent Cantet, director;
  • Germany, “The Baader Meinhof Complex,” Uli Edel, director;
  • Israel, “Waltz with Bashir,” Ari Folman, director;
  • Japan, “Departures,” Yojiro Takita, director;
  • Mexico, “Tear This Heart Out,” Roberto Sneider, director;
  • Sweden, “Everlasting Moments,” Jan Troell, director;
  • Turkey, “3 Monkeys,” Nuri Bilge Ceylan, director.

Awards

Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface.

Danny Boyle, Best Director winner
Sean Penn, Best Actor winner
A young woman with blonde hair, pulled back from her face wears diamond earrings and formal gown. She looks to her right and waves and smiles.
Kate Winslet, Best Actress winner
Heath Ledger, Best Supporting Actor winner (posthumous)
In the photo, a Hispanic female wearing a white sleeveless dress that has beaded designs with a white pearl neckless and white earrings can be seen. The female has medium brown hair with side bangs, the rest of her hair is clipped behind her head and she is waving with her left hand while tilting her head to her right.
Penelope Cruz, Best Supporting Actress winner
A. R. Rahman, Best Original Song winner
Best Picture Best Director
Best Actor Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress
Best Original Screenplay Best Adapted Screenplay
Best Animated Feature Best Foreign Language Film
Best Documentary Feature Best Documentary Short
  • Smile PinkiMegan Mylan
    • The Conscience of Nhem EnSteven Okazaki
    • The Final Inch
    • The Witness - From the Balcony of Room 306
Best Live Action Short Best Animated Short
  • Toyland (Spielzeugland)
    • On the Line (Auf der Strecke)
    • Manon On the Asphalt
    • New Boy (Ireland)
    • The Pig (Grisen)
  • La Maison En Petits CubesKunio Kato
    • Lavatory - Lovestory – Konstantin Bronzit
    • Oktapodi – Emud Mokhberi and Thierry Marchand
    • PrestoDoug Sweetland
    • This Way Up – Alan Smith and Adam Foulkes
Best Original Score Best Original Song
Best Sound Editing Best Sound Mixing
Best Art Direction Best Cinematography
Best Makeup Best Costume Design
Best Film Editing Best Visual Effects

Honorary Academy Awards

Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award

Multiple nominations and awards

The following 15 films received multiple nominations.

  • Thirteen: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Ten: Slumdog Millionaire
  • Eight: The Dark Knight and Milk
  • Six: WALL-E
  • Five: Doubt, Frost/Nixon, and The Reader
  • Three: Changeling and Revolutionary Road
  • Two: The Duchess, Frozen River, Iron Man, Wanted, and The Wrestler

The following four films received multiple awards.

Presenters and performers

The following individuals presented awards or performed musical numbers.[12]

Ceremony information

Hugh Jackman hosted the 81st Acaemy Awards

Due to the declining viewership of the recent Academy Awards ceremonies, the Academy had contracted an entirely new production team in an attempt to revive the award ceremony and revamp its general script and theming. Marketing for the ceremony had even gone so far as to advertise it as "The Biggest Movie Event of the Year". Producers Bill Condon and Laurence Mark announced their plans to rewrite the script, and they made attempts to keep the entire premise of the ceremony a secret, even from the presenters and performers.[16] Film director Judd Apatow aired a new short film during the ceremony which starred Seth Rogen and James Franco reprising their roles from Pineapple Express. Previously, Apatow directed a short film aired during the 74th Academy Awards which starred Owen Wilson and Ben Stiller. Chris Harrison hosted "Road to the Oscars",[17] a weekly behind-the-scenes video blog on the Academy's website, oscar.com.[18] David Rockwell designed a new set and stage design for the ceremony.[19] The red carpet was directed by Robert Osborne.[20] Host Jackman expressed his anticipation of the awards in the few days preceding, and had commented that he was thrilled with preparations for the ceremony.[21] The recent global economic crisis caused a decrease in spending on the telecast from last year's awards, as well as a decrease in the cost to air advertisements during commercial breaks. The recession was mentioned by Jackman who said

this year, everything is being downsized because of the recession. Next year I'll be starring in a movie called New Zealand, and due to cutbacks, the academy said they didn't have enough money for an opening number; I'm gonna do one anyway

The presentation of the four acting awards was styled differently than in previous years (see Notable events section). among other changes, some celebrities presented multiple awards rather than only one or two as in previous years, and 2008 film genre segments replaced usual clip collections.

The telecast received a 6 second tape delay in some areas on the east coast during a section in which Host Jackman thanked Academy president Sid Ganis, and introduced Reese Witherspoon, who would present the Oscar for Directing. This was due to ABC, who panned out from the screen during the delay to present powerball numbers. This delay also occurred at the beginning of The Oscars Red Carpet 2009. There was also a 30-second delay at the start of the telecast, though not a tape delay, but a direct delay which affected the ceremony. Errors also occurred directly following Jackman's opening monologue. After he introduced the Best Supporting Actress category, USA Today reported that a stage hand could be heard yelling to director Roger Goodman for "cutting him off!". The curtain had not been opened when a montage of past Supporting Actress winners began, but was opened 2–3 seconds following. The telecast received a mixed reception from media personalities and critics, yet a more positive response from viewers at home.

Jerry Lewis was honored with the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award.[22] For the first time since the 60th Academy Awards (1987), no Honorary Award was presented.

Voting trends and summary

Continuing a trend in recent years, the field of major nominees did not include a bona fide blockbuster at the U.S. box office, with all but one of the nominees for Best Picture performing even more poorly than those of the previous year. However, the top money earner in this year's field of Best Picture nominees performed slightly better in box office receipts compared to last year's highest grossing Best Film nominee, Juno. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button was the highest earner among the Best Picture nominees with $104.4 million in domestic box office receipts (compared to Juno which grossed $87 million prior to its nomination).[citation needed] The film was followed by Slumdog Millionaire ($44.7 million), Milk ($20.7 million), Frost/Nixon ($8.8 million), and finally The Reader ($8.3 million).[23]

Among the rest of the top 50 releases of 2008 in U.S. box office before the nominations, 32 nominations went to eight films on the list. Only The Dark Knight (1st), Kung Fu Panda (3rd), WALL-E (9th), Bolt (19th), Tropic Thunder (20th), and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (21st) were nominated for directing, acting, screenwriting, Best Picture or Animated Feature. The other top-50 box office hits that earned nominations were Iron Man (2nd), and Wanted (16th).[citation needed]

Winners

81st Academy Awards Presentations, Hollywood and Highland, Hollywood

For the tenth consecutive year, at least one lead acting award went to an actor playing a real-life person (Sean Penn for his portrayal of Harvey Milk). Penn's win was viewed as something of a surprise, Mickey Rourke having been the favorite to win. Penn received a standing ovation for his win.[24][25] This is also the eleventh year in a row that any of the acting awards went to the portrayal of a real person. For the second year running, the Best Actor trophy has been awarded to a previous Best Actor recipient. Also for second year running, a Spaniard (Penélope Cruz) has won in a supporting category (previously Javier Bardem), and for the fourth year a British actress (Kate Winslet) has won an award (previously Tilda Swinton, Helen Mirren, and Rachel Weisz consecutively).[26] This year also marks the second time Stephen Daldry has directed an actress into a Best Actress win (the other was Nicole Kidman, who also was a presenter), and the third time an actress he directed was nominated (Julie Walters). It was also the fourth time Woody Allen directed an actress into a Best Supporting Actress win (the others were Dianne Wiest, twice, and Mira Sorvino). This is also the first time the Award for Best Supporting Actor has been awarded posthumously, to Heath Ledger, and only the second posthumous acting award in Academy history. (The first was to Peter Finch for Best Actor in Network in 1976.)

Critical reviews

The show received a mixed to positive reception from media publications. Perez Hilton called the performance "wonderful";[27] E! Online said that "Jackman nailed it";[28] the Associated Press stated that "the key word was charm" and that Hugh Jackman "gave his all";[29] and Salon.com said "Hurray for the Recession Oscars, the sincerest, sweetest, most heartfelt Oscars ever!"[30] Roger Ebert said of Jackman: "I had a feeling Hugh Jackman would be a charmer as host, and he was." Of the show itself, Ebert added, "It was the best Oscar show I've ever seen, and I've seen plenty."[31] The Toronto Star, Japan Today, and The Sydney Morning Herald also gave positive reviews,[32][33][34] and many in the British media were particularly favourable of Hugh Jackman's hosting performance.[35]

Others media outlets were more critical of the show. The Los Angeles Times says the show "fell flat" and from "Jackman's strangely self-conscious, low-rent opening musical number to Ben Stiller's obscure spoof of Joaquin Phoenix's recent appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman, the awards had a tone problem—they tried to be something for everyone, coming off like a movie script that had its edginess and guts airbrushed out by too many studio notes."[36] The Los Angeles Times' awards insider page The Envelope says host Hugh Jackman surely "obliterated all memory of the Uma-Oprah thing", in reference to the negative reception David Letterman received when hosting the 1995 Academy Awards ceremony.[37] The Boston Globe states the show "aimed for flash...but ultimately, fizzle prevailed."[38] The Baltimore Sun says "the Oscars show itself took a different direction this year: It went Tony with a vengeance. It was like a concept musical with a flaccid concept, badly in need of a Parisian riot or an exploding chandelier."[39] The Chicago Tribune states the "New format, host are unable to rescue a plodding telecast."[40] The New York Times says of the ceremony as "it was fun for a while, but then it just started to seem long."[41]

Ratings and Reception

Results from online polls conducted by Newsday[42] and Entertainment Weekly[43] showed a mostly positive response from viewers.

The American telecast on ABC drew in an average of 36.94 million people over its length, which was a 13% increase from the previous year's ceremony. An estimated, 68.88 million total viewers watched all or part of the awards. The show also drew higher Nielsen ratings compared to the two previous ceremonies with 21.68% of households watching over a 32.61 share. However, the ceremony was the third least watched ceremony since individual viewership figures began being compiled in 1974 and the third lowest rated since Nielsen ratings for the Oscars have been recorded since 1967, ahead only of the previous year's 31.76 million with an 18.66 Nieslen rating and the 33.04 million with a 20.58 rating for the 2003 ceremony.[44]

In July 2009, the ceremony presentation received ten nominations at the 61st Primetime Emmys. Two months later, the ceremony won four awards including "Outstanding Choreography" (Rob Ashford), "Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics" (Hugh Jackman Opening Number: William Ross, John Kimbrough, Dan Harmon, Rob Schrab), "Outstanding Short Form Picture Editing," (Best Motion Picture Montage: Kyle Cooper, Hal Honigsberg), and "Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Variety Or Music Series Or Special".

In Memoriam

Queen Latifah performed "I'll Be Seeing You" during the annual In Memoriam tribute to honor individuals who died since the previous year's Academy Award ceremonies. Listed below are those who were honored during the tribute.[45]

Note: Several notable individuals including Sam Bottoms, George Carlin, Don S. Davis, Mel Ferrer, Beverly Garland, Estelle Getty, Eartha Kitt, Harvey Korman, Jerry Reed, Don LaFontaine, John Phillip Law, Patrick McGoohan, Anita Page, and Robert Prosky were not included in the "In Memoriam" tribute, though they died within the last year. Heath Ledger died shortly before the year before, and a tribute to him was included then.

Advertisements

ABC aired a number of themed commercial advertisements which were shown during the ceremony. The Academy's ban that had previously disallowed film commercials to be aired during the telecast was lifted in mid-2007, thus allowing film companies to promote their upcoming films for the first time during the broadcast.[46] Thirty-second commercials cost between $1.4 million and $1.7 million, compared to up to $1.8 million during last year's show.[47] The decrease was due to the recent global economic crisis.[47]

Controversies

Like the previous year's awards, last year's Oscars had also faced multiple controversies.

Disputes over Ledger's statuette

Because Best Supporting Actor winner Heath Ledger died in January 2008 making his nomination one of posthumous recognition, the Academy had disputes over who should accept the award and who should gain ownership of it should Ledger win. Following talks with Ledger's family in Australia, the Academy ruled that his previous domestic partner Michelle Williams could not accept the award as the two were not married. They then decided that Ledger and Williams' three-year-old daughter, Matilda Rose Ledger, would own the award. However, due to Matilda's age, she will not gain full ownership of the statuette until her eighteenth birthday in 2023.[48] Until that time, Michelle Williams will hold the statuette in trust for Matilda.[49] Ledger's family attended the ceremony and his parents accepted the award on stage on his behalf.[50]

Faked winners leak

Shortly after the voting polls were closed for the awards, a purported list of winners was posted online.[51] The list, which bore a purported signature from Academy president Sid Ganis, stated that Mickey Rourke won for Best Actor, Kate Winslet won for Best Actress, Amy Adams won for Best Supporting Actress, Heath Ledger won for Best Supporting Actor, and Slumdog Millionaire won for Best Picture. It was later confirmed as a fake list. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences spokeswoman Leslie Unger later revealed that the list was "a complete fraud",[52] and that PricewaterhouseCoopers had just begun to count the ballots. The list was proved false as the first award of the night, Best Supporting Actress, was awarded to Penélope Cruz, not Amy Adams, the purported winner in the falsified list. (The last time names of award winners were leaked prior to the ceremony was at the 12th Academy Awards for 1939, before the Academy adopted the use of sealed envelopes for voting results.)

Other controversies

Prior to the nominations announcement, it was suggested that the 2008-09 Screen Actors Guild labor dispute could affect the awards by discouraging actors' attendance at the ceremony, However, as talks to end the dispute between the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) were ongoing,[53][54] the expected strike did not affect the awards ceremony,[55] although a resolution between SAG and AMPTP had not yet been reached at the time.[56][57]

Peter Gabriel, who was originally scheduled to perform his nominated song "Down to Earth" from WALL-E during the live broadcast, declined to perform after learning that he would be allowed to sing only 65 seconds of the song during the ceremony's Best Original Song nominee performances.[58] Gabriel still attended the ceremony. John Legend performed the song in place of Gabriel, backed by the Soweto Gospel Choir.

Memorable quotes

  • "Fifteen career Oscar nominations. That's a record. I hate to say it but when someone puts up numbers like that, it's just hard not to think steroids." – Host Hugh Jackman to Meryl Streep (during his opening monologue).[59]
  • "It's not going to be 45 seconds, I can say that right now. Has anybody ever fainted here? Because I might be the first one." – Penélope Cruz, accepting the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for Vicky Cristina Barcelona.[59]
  • "I wish to say something in Tamil, which is 'Ella Pugazhum Iraivanukke', God is Great" - A. R. Rahman on Receiving the award for Best Original Music Score, Slumdog Millionaire.
  • "All my life I had choices of 'love' and 'hate', I chose LOVE and I'm here" - A. R. Rahman on Receiving the award for Best Song "Jai Ho!" Slumdog Millionaire.
  • "You know, it's serious, we have a 30 second delay but if you win, we switch to a twenty minute delay." - Host Hugh Jackman to Mickey Rourke during Jackman's opening monologue.
  • "When I was 13 years old my beautiful mother and my father moved me from a conservative Mormon home in San Antonio, Texas, to California, and I heard the story of Harvey Milk and it gave me hope. It gave me the hope to live my life." – Dustin Lance Black, accepting the Best Original Screenplay Oscar for Milk.
  • "There are certain places in the universe you never imagine standing. For me, it's the moon, the South Pole, the Miss World podium and here." – Simon Beaufoy after winning the Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar for Slumdog Millionaire.[59]
  • "Who do you think is a better actor? Ronald Reagan, or Barack Obama?" - Saul Silver (James Franco) to Dale Denton (Seth Rogen) during the Comedy 2008 montage.
  • "This award tonight would have humbly validated Heath's quiet determination to be truly accepted by you all here – his peers within an industry he so loved." – Kim Ledger, accepting the Best Supporting Actor Oscar on behalf of his son Heath Ledger for The Dark Knight.[59]
  • "I'd be lying if I said I haven't made a version of this speech before. I think I was probably 8 years old and staring into the bathroom mirror, and this would have been a shampoo bottle. Well, it's not a shampoo bottle now." – Kate Winslet, upon winning Best Actress for The Reader.[59]
  • "Each year I do one DreamWorks project, then I take all the money to the Oscars and bet it on Pixar." - Jack Black explaining his animation movie career plan to Jennifer Aniston prior to them presenting the nominees for best animation movies.[60]
  • "You commie homo-loving sons of guns! I did not expect this, but I— I want to make it clear I know how hard I make it to appreciate me." – Sean Penn, upon accepting his Oscar for Best Actor in Milk.[59]
  • "I think that it is a good time for those who voted for the ban against gay marriage to sit and reflect and anticipate their great shame and the shame in their grandchildren's eyes if they continue that way of support. We've got to have equal rights for everyone. And there are, and there are, these last two things. I'm very, very proud to live in a country that is willing to elect an elegant man president and a country who, for all its toughness, creates courageous artists." - Sean Penn in his acceptance speech, commenting on California's vote for Proposition 8.[61]
  • "When we started out, we had no stars, we had no power or muscle, we didn't have enough money really to do what we wanted to do. But what we had was a script that inspired mad love in everyone who read it. ... Most of all, we had passion and we had belief and our film shows that if you have those two things, truly anything is possible." – Producer Christian Colson accepting the Best Picture award for Slumdog Millionaire.[59]
  • "Dōmo arigatō, Mr. Roboto." - Kunio Katō, Japanese director of La Maison en Petits Cubes, accepting the award for Best Animated Short.[62]
  • "I shall pass through this world but once. Any good, therefore, that I can do or any kindness that I can show to any human being, let me do it now. Let me not defer or neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again." – Jerry Lewis, quoting Mohandas Gandhi, upon Lewis accepting the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award.
  • "How come comic-book movies never get nominated? How can a billion dollars be unsophisticated?" - Host Hugh Jackman, on the controversy surrounding the lack of a Best Film nomination for The Dark Knight.[63]
  • "These are the Oscars and this is my dream! / I am a Slumdog, I am a Wrestler, I'll rent The Reader, I’m Wolverine!" - Hugh Jackman, finishing his opening routine.[64]
  • "Heath, we both knew that what you had created in the Joker was extraordinarily special, and had even talked about being here on this very day. We really wish you were here, but we proudly accept this award on behalf of your beautiful Matilda" Kate Ledger, sister of Heath Ledger.

Special segments

The telecast featured multiple yearbook style montages of films seen in 2008. They were made up of the animation, romance, comedy, documentary and action film categories.

Animation

The animation segment began in a scene from WALL-E where the title character cuts open a damaged refrigerator revealing a VHS tape and an Oscar stauette. Wall-E plays the VHS tape on a tape recorder, which features the actual segment. At the end of the segment, multiple animated characters from the clips are revealed to be watching the tape with Wall-E. Listed below are the films featured in the segment.

Romance

Listed below are the films featured in the segment.

Background music: 'Lovers in Japan' by Coldplay

Comedy

Directed by Judd Apatow. The segment begins in a set from Pineapple Express. Dale Denton brings Saul Silver every film that was not nominated for an Oscar to watch (though many were). After viewing the movies, Saul wonders why Janusz Kamiński is with a film crew in his apartment. They invite Kaminski to watch the remaining movies with them.

Listed below are the films featured in the segment.

Documentary

The segment featured the directors and co-directors of each of the five nominated Best Documentary Feature films discussing their thoughts on the art of documentaries.

Listed below are the films featured in the segment.

Action

Listed below are the films featured in the segment.

Background music: 'Tick Tick Boom' by The Hives

Criticism

Baz Luhrmann, who has been dismissed in the past by the Australian media as a postmodern for his adaption William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, put together a performance for Jackman hailing the comeback of musicals. This divided the critics, with one Australian journalist saying it was "perhaps overstated" and others applauding the (apparent) focus upon a younger audience.[65][66][67]

Many critics expressed surprise and/or disdain at some of the nominee lists, such as the omission of WALL-E and The Dark Knight from the Best Picture category,[68][69] Sally Hawkins for Happy-Go-Lucky (for which Hawkins had won a Golden Globe), and the omission of Clint Eastwood's performance in Gran Torino from the Best Actor category.[70] The Academy also surprised critics when it only put forward three nominations for the Best Song category, excluding Bruce Springsteen's "The Wrestler" and the theme from Gran Torino.[71] The shortened list led Rolling Stone to accuse the Academy of snubbing Springsteen.[71]

Some[who?] critics also showed disgust at the telecast due to the Academy's decision to not present their Honorary Oscar.[citation needed]

Film previews

Due to the Academy's action of lifting their ban on film previews being aired during commercial breaks, commercials for upcoming films were seen for the first time during the telecast. Though some websites, such as Yahoo!, had expected commercials for summer blockbusters to be aired, most commercials were for films due for release in the spring season. Film commercials aired included Knowing, The Soloist and The Proposal.

During the end credits of the telecast, instead of clips from the preceding ceremony being aired, there were instead various clips of films which were released in 2009, Three of which (Up, Inglourious Basterds, and An Education) would later be nominated for the Best Picture Oscar in the following year's ceremony, which Up was the second ever animated film to nominated the Best Picture award. Other films that were shown that got nominated the next year were Sherlock Holmes for Best Art Direction and Best Original Score, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince for Best Cinematography and Julie and Julia for Best Actress. Listed below are the films that were previewed during this segment, in the order in which they were shown.

International telecast

See also

References

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  33. ^ Oscars host Hugh Jackman gives the job his all, Japan Today (2009). Retrieved on February 24, 2009.
  34. ^ Morgan, Clare. Jackman grabs the paddles and saves the show, Japan Today (2009). Retrieved on February 24, 2009.
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  55. ^ Actors Union Loses Support for Strike Vote, MSNBC, January 23, 2009
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  68. ^ Bandyk, Matthew (January 22, 2009). Academy Awards Controversy: Wall-E Gets Snubbed For Best Picture Oscar. U.S. News & World Report. http://www.usnews.com/blogs/risky-business/2009/01/22/academy-awards-controversy-wall-e-gets-snubbed-for-best-picture-oscar.html. Retrieved January 22, 2009. 
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  71. ^ a b Kreps, Daniel (January 22, 2009). Oscars Snub Springsteen, Celebrate “Slumdog” As Nominations Are Announced. Rolling Stone. http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2009/01/22/oscars-snub-springsteen-celebrate-slumdog-as-nominations-are-announced/. Retrieved February 9, 2009. 

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