Tag: Oscars

  • Nice Guy Ludwig Göransson Picks Up Third Oscar for “Sinners”

    Nice Guy Ludwig Göransson Picks Up Third Oscar for “Sinners”


    As predicted, Ludwig Göransson received his third Academy Award last night for his bluesy score to “Sinners.”

    Summing up, then:

    Elmer Bernstein, Jerry Goldsmith, and Bernard Herrmann – 1 Oscar

    Erich Wolfgang Korngold and Franz Waxman – 2 Oscars

    Ludwig Göransson and Miklós Rózsa (composer of “Ben-Hur”) – 3 Oscars

    Okay, then!

    What does a white kid from Sweden know about the blues, one might ask? In his acceptance speech, Göransson talked about his father’s chance discovery of an album by John Lee Hooker in 1964. (“It changed my dad’s life, and he devoted his whole life to music.”) He handed off a guitar to his son when Göransson was 7. (“I loved the guitar. It became everything to me.”) It was actually a rather touching speech. As in his acceptance speeches for his previous awards, for “Black Panther” and “Oppenheimer,” he came across as sweet-natured – gentle, humble, and sincere. Good for him.

    I did think his music for “Sinners” was worlds better than his score for “Oppenheimer,” which in its manic insistence to be everything everywhere all at once (in tandem with the breakneck editing) actually made it a weaker film than it might otherwise have been. Still good enough for Best Picture in 2024.

    Göransson’s most recent win was announced by… the cast from “Bridesmaids?”

    Congratulations, Ludwig Göransson. Watch his acceptance speech here.


    In related news, “Sinners’” Miles Caton performed “I Lied to You,” one of this year’s nominees for Best Original Song. (The award went to “Golden” from “KPop Demon Hunters,” which I’m not even going to touch.)


    Host Conan O’Brien included a parody of Handel’s “Zadok the Priest” in a mock-coronation bit during his opening monologue (with the Los Angeles Master Chorale and Josh Groban, of all people, lending a voice).

    Classical music was also represented by way of “Viva Verdi!,” a documentary about a retirement home for musicians, Casa di Riposo per Musicisti – commonly known as Casa Verdi – established by the celebrated opera composer in 1896. The film was nominated in the category of Best Original Song, not for Verdi himself, but for Nicholas Pike’s “Sweet Dreams of Joy,” performed on the film’s soundtrack by soprano Ana María Martínez.


    Soprano Sonya Yancheva was in the audience (as an ambassador of Rolex!), with her husband, conductor Domingo Hindyan.

    Ballet dancer Misty Copeland came out of retirement to appear in the “Sinners” production number, causing one to wonder if it was an intentional smack in the face to Timothée Chalamet, who kicked up the ire of the ballet and opera communities a couple of weeks ago by offhandedly dismissing the art forms during a very “bro” promotional appearance chatting with Matthew McConaughey.

    Chalamet had been the front-runner for the Best Actor award. Last night, he went home with nothing but tears for his pillow. He could have benefited from a touch of Göransson’s humility.

    Conan’s send-up of Handel’s “Zadok”


    “Cicero! My Oscar!”

  • I Wish I Knew How to Quit You, Oscar

    I Wish I Knew How to Quit You, Oscar

    The favorite to win Best Actor threw opera and ballet under the bus.  The favorite to win Best Actress made the man who would become her husband get rid of his cats.  The favorite to win Best Picture – with a record-breaking 16 NOMINATIONS – is a vampire movie.  Can we just go back to Will Smith slapping Chris Rock, please?

    I’ll be loading up the cupboard with anesthetizing snack foods for my annual viewing of the Oscars, an event for me that, for most of my life, as something of a family ritual, has always been more than the sum of its parts.  I know I’ve written about my personal relationship with Oscar before – growing up in a family of ardent movie lovers that annually gathered around the tube over a banquet of shrimp, buffalo wings, chips, dips, and palate-cleansing fruits and vegetables, to take in the latest installment in the Academy Awards continuum.

    If I’m to be honest, the custom was mostly driven by my stepfather and me, who retained the minutiae of just about every movie we’d ever seen; but my mother was also game, as likely as not because it was family time and she liked to see the designer gowns.  In those days, it was essential to be tuned in at the start, for the red-carpet arrivals.  We needed to see Sean Connery (or, for Mom, Cher) climb out of that limo.  Now, to hang on to my brain cells, the red carpet, with its vapid interviewers, must be avoided at all cost.  That’s the time to figure out how to get a connection (I don’t have cable), to make sure that all the manwiches are ready to go, that all the vegetables are chopped, and to pop the hors d’oeuvres in the oven.

    The illusions of Hollywood glamor and sophistication may be no more, but even in these days of diminishing returns, there continue to be a few pleasures.  I’m not so interested in most of the actors, but every once in a while, there’s an emotional acceptance speech, or some documentarians who exhibit real passion when they finally receive their moment of recognition (even if there’s a better than 90-percent chance of them unempathetically getting played off).  I love any montages devoted to the movies itself.  Most of all, I sit riveted by the “In Memoriam” segment, in which, theoretically, all those who passed over the last year are honored.  Oscar really loused that up for a few years running, through hypercaffeinated editing and a misguided focus on live performers whose function it should be to complement the images and to honor the dead.  I’m hoping Conan O’Brien, as emcee, will take the sting out of any disappointments.

    As you can imagine, the category of Best Original Score has always held particular interest for me.  But alas, very few of the nominees write traditional orchestral scores anymore.  Most of what’s being composed today might work well in the movies themselves, but a lot of it now functions more as sound design.  Little of the nominees’ “music” could ever be recreated in a conventional concert setting.  Of that under consideration, I think only Alexandre Desplat’s “Frankenstein” is composed in the classic tradition.  But it won’t win.  Please God, don’t give it to Max Richter for “Hamnet” – a score that was so weak, I can’t get over the fact that the film was produced by Steven Spielberg. 

    That said, this is probably another Ludwig Göransson year.  Göransson previously won for “Black Panther” and the overbearing score for “Oppenheimer.”  Somehow it doesn’t seem right that Ludwig Göransson would receive three Academy Awards, when Jerry Goldsmith, Elmer Bernstein, and Bernard Herrmann only ever won one.  But here we are.  Göransson’s blues-inflected score for “Sinners” is certainly effective, even if, like most film scores these days, it won’t live on outside the film.  Those days are gone, my friends.

    Which reminds me:  in the off-chance that any filmmakers actually read this, unless you’re making “Lawrence of Arabia,” can we please bring running times down to two hours again?  I thought TikTok was supposed to be eroding everyone’s attention spans?  Of the Best Picture nominees, only Yorgos Lanthimos’ “Bugonia” (which I skipped, because I still remember “Poor Things”), “F1” (90 minutes, but still wasn’t interested), and “Train Dreams” (gorgeous, if a bit poky), kept it under two hours.  Following the wisdom of P.T. Barnum, always leave them wanting more.

    Occasionally, I’ll offer more extensive predictions.  I don’t think I’m going to bother this year.  I certainly don’t have many nominees I am rooting for.  It would make me happy to see “Train Dreams” get Best Picture, but it won’t happen in 2026.  I have to say, “Sinners” gives it a run for the money in the cinematography department, one of “Train Dreams’” strongest points.  But like the much-vaunted “Hamnet” – arguably the least interesting Shakespeare movie ever (still better than “Shakespeare in Love”) – “Sinners” only goes to the next level at the very, very end.  If it weren’t for a scene that doesn’t appear until early in the film’s credits that lends it an unexpected touch of humanity (from a vampire, no less), I don’t know that I would have thought it any more than a three-star movie.

    In fact, “Sinners” might have been a much better film without the vampires – with an absorbing set-up, interesting characters, an unhurried pace and admirable restraint (until it all goes out the window), plenty of period detail, jaw-dropping cinematography, and good acting.  For me it was a little too much like somebody got carried away because they just happened to discover metaphor.  It could have been a great movie had writer and director Ryan Coogler explored the same themes in the context of a straight gangster film.  But that would have been a totally different, reality-based movie.  And it probably wouldn’t have attracted as much interest.

    Anyway, I’ll be watching the Oscars, living in the past, hoping for some continuity with better times, and stuffing my face with comfort foods.

    Good luck to all the nominees, except Chalamet and Jessie Buckley, the cat-hater.

    ADDENDUM: I would love to see Ethan Hawke win for his tour-de-force as Lorenz Hart in “Blue Moon,” but between Chalamet and Michael B. Jordan (in his double performance in “Sinners”), there’s no question it’s going to be an uphill fight.

  • Oscar Nostalgia on “Sweetness and Light”

    Oscar Nostalgia on “Sweetness and Light”

    And the winner is… us!

    Regardless of how you may feel about the current state of the movies, the Academy Awards are always an excellent excuse to cast a nostalgic look back on Oscar history.

    Time was when a good film score was expected to be both melodic and memorable. This morning on “Sweetness and Light,” with the Academy Awards coming up, we’ll take a nostalgic look back to some indelible themes from classic movies of yesteryear.

    I don’t want to lay it all out in my Facebook teaser – in fact, during the course of the show, I won’t even identify the pieces until after each one of them is played, so that you can guess along at home – but trust that you’ll likely recognize most of them, all Best Original Score winners or nominees from highly-decorated films.

    As a bonus, the show will open with a 90-second montage of introductory fanfares from the great studios of Hollywood’s Golden Age. So you’ll want to be there when the lights go down.

    Celluloid memories will be stirred by reel music, on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EDT/8:00 PDT, exclusively on KWAX Classical Oregon!

    Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Destination Movie Magic?  Due North

    Destination Movie Magic? Due North

    Where has the magic of the movies gone? Are there any composers or filmmakers working today that would be capable of creating anything as beguiling as the love theme from “Spartacus?”

    Its creator, musical mage Alex North, was born in Chester, Pennsylvania (just outside of Philadelphia), on this date in 1910. His journey took him from a working-class background, to the Curtis Institute of Music, the Juilliard School, and the Moscow Conservatory. He also studied with Aaron Copland and Ernst Toch.

    He became involved with the Federal Theatre Project. He worked in ballet, especially with Martha Graham and Anna Sokolow. He accompanied the latter to Mexico, where he had an opportunity to study with Silvestre Revueltas. Perhaps not coincidentally, his three North American teachers, Copland, Toch, and Revueltas, had all worked in film.

    North wrote his first film score as far back as the 1930s, around the time he met up with director Elia Kazan. North was drafted during the war, and put his talent to use writing music for the Office of War Information documentaries.

    With the cessation of hostilities, he returned to the theater. He also composed some concert pieces. It was his incidental music for plays such as “A Streetcar Named Desire” that earned him an invitation to Hollywood, where he wrote the score for Kazan’s classic film adaptation. It would be the first time jazz would be fully integrated into the drama, forming the basis for the film’s underscore, as opposed to being simply diegetic, or “source music,” played by a band or on a turntable in the background of a given scene. Its success opened the door to a new film score sensibility, paving the way for composers like Elmer Bernstein, Henry Mancini, and North’s beloved Duke Ellington.

    In all, North wrote 50 film scores, racking up 15 Academy Award nominations, yet never taking home the prize. In 1986, he received lifetime achievement recognition from the Academy, the first composer to be so honored.

    There were times, during the course of his career, when his music took on an independent life, distinct from the films for which it was written. He scored major hits with “Unchained Melody” (originally written for the film “Unchained” and recorded some 500 times) and the love theme from “Spartacus.” The original soundtrack to “A Streetcar Named Desire” also sold extremely well.

    His acclaimed contribution to “Spartacus” didn’t keep the film’s director, Stanley Kubrick, from rejecting North’s score for “2001: A Space Odyssey” – without bothering to tell him. North found out only after the lights went down at the film’s premiere. Director John Huston was more appreciative. Later in his career, North became Huston’s composer of choice, for films like “The Misfits,” “Under the Volcano,” “Prizzi’s Honor,” and “The Dead.”

    It’s especially poignant, in 2025, to view North’s acceptance speech for his honorary Oscar. (You’ll find a link to the clip below.) At around the 4:50 mark, he says: “I would like to make a humble plea to all of us involved in the movies, and that is to encourage and convey hope, humor, compassion, and adventure, and love… as opposed to despair, synthetic theatrics, and blatant, bloody violence. And sex, sex, sex, by all means, indeed… but with a bit of mystery, a touch of charm and elegance, and lots of imagination.”

    Amen to that. It’s a shame that it’s a plea that’s been almost wholly ignored. We would be in a better place today, psychologically, as morale colors everything, were we not buffeted by an aggressively crass and downbeat popular culture. Had filmmakers only heeded his advice.

    Happy birthday, Alex North.

    ———

    The Righteous Brothers sing “Unchained Melody”

    In the movie “Ghost”

    Love theme from “Spartacus”

    Cover by Yusef Lateef

    “A Streetcar Named Desire”

    Rejected score for “2001: A Space Odyssey”

    Honorary Academy Award, presented by Quincy Jones, with an intro by Robin Williams

    John Williams talks North, reedited to include extended musical examples


  • Oscars Nostalgia & Unexpected Highlights

    Oscars Nostalgia & Unexpected Highlights

    I didn’t really have a lot of skin in the game for this year’s Academy Awards. I only saw three of the films nominated for Best Picture. (Last year, for the first time in years, I managed to see everything.) But I love “the movies” – by which I mean, not necessarily this year’s nominated films, but the more general embrace of an entertainment and, at its best, an art form I have appreciated for as long as I can remember.

    The Academy Awards were always a big deal in my house when I was growing up, with my stepfather and I, in particular, being big film buffs, and the family would always gather around the television to take in the broadcast, predict the winners, and chow down on quite the extensive spread of hors d’oeuvres. So, for me, the Oscars will always have that extra layer of nostalgic association. Last night, I checked in with my stepdad beforehand (there’s no extraneous talking during the Oscars!), and at 83, he was still planning to watch – and to eat.

    Of course, over time the movies have evolved, and not always in ways that I particularly enjoy. And my reactions to the Oscars have gotten a little more complicated.

    This year’s broadcast didn’t offer the consistent “feels” of 2023, for me the recent high-water mark, after I swore off Oscar for a couple of years, I think beginning in 2020. You may recall that the 2023 ceremony was chock-full of engaging comeback stories and long-deferred rewards, with Ke Huy Kwan, Michelle Yeoh, Brendan Fraser, and Jamie Lee Curtis all winners. Now that was a compelling show! This year, of the big four, only Zoe Saldaña managed to really stir.

    And last year, of course, we had the whole Barbenheimer phenomenon, which, regardless of what you may have thought about “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer,” was at least a genuine pop cultural moment that centered around movies, on a scale which I hadn’t experienced in decades.

    Where this year’s ceremony satisfied, and surprised most pleasantly, was in its uncomplicated embrace of Oscar tradition. I don’t know where it came from, but this year, for once, I feel like the producers were coming at it from the right place, with plenty of nods to the sweet spots of Oscar broadcasts of yore: film clips and montages, salutes to different genres of film, production numbers rooted in Hollywood and Broadway standards, and an orchestra, frequently visible and literally elevated, in the hall.

    When the orchestra played into commercial breaks, the overripe “Vegas showroom” arrangements did not seem like nostalgic pandering. Rather, they conjured a pleasurable sense of continuity. If I had nodded off during a three-and-a-half hour Oscars broadcast in the 1990s and woken up in the middle of this one, the tone would have been fairly consistent. Of course, I would have recognized a lot more people in the audience back then and the movies would have been totally different.

    Thank god, they finally figured out how to get back to doing a solid “In Memoriam” segment. After several years of overly-intrusive, cross-cutting camera work that seemed more interested in the live performers than it was on those being honored – the actual clips of whom to all appearances were assembled by a hyper-caffeinated editor – this year was right in the Goldilocks zone. For an attentive viewer, it was at least possible to take in all the pertinent information and to feel a pang of loss.

    Ironically, a lot of the credit probably goes to Mozart, as the chosen music bed, from the composer’s Requiem, which involved a choir (the Los Angeles Master Chorale), and therefore likely reined in the temptation, and indeed eliminated the necessity, to focus on any star performers. This would be Mozart’s biggest night at the Oscars since 1985, when the Academy showered statuettes on “Amadeus.” From a musical standpoint, it might have been Mozart’s biggest night ever, as I’m not sure he ever before enjoyed a simultaneous audience of tens of millions around the world.

    The planning for the segment had to have been in the works for weeks beforehand, but it was as if everyone fell into lockstep for fear of retribution from the ghost of Gene Hackman. While Hackman would have been a last-minute addition to a year that, cumulatively speaking, proved to be one of staggering creative loss (including Maggie Smith, Donald Sutherland, James Earl Jones, and David Lynch, among many others), there was no evidence that a few extra clips had been slapped on to the end. Morgan Freeman provided a spoken prelude to the segment, remembering his friend. Hackman’s image (from “Wyatt Earp,” not “Unforgiven,” as so many seem to think) was present throughout.

    Also honored last night was Quincy Jones, who we lost in November at the age of 91. Oprah Winfrey and Whoopi Goldberg, who were discovered by Jones for the first film adaptation of “The Color Purple,” directed by Steven Spielberg in 1985, introduced the segment, and Queen Latifah performed “Ease on Down the Road” from “The Wiz.”

    The show opened with a montage of movie clips from films set in L.A., as a tribute to the city, recently beleaguered, like too much of California, by wildfires. (A web address for donations to a disaster relief fund was posted several times throughout the broadcast.) The montage was the kind of thing I always loved about the Oscars of decades past, when the ceremony, in general, was more cognizant of the history of the industry (even if some of the actors still seemed pretty clueless, even back then). Initiated by three clicks of Dorothy Gale’s ruby slippers (Oz was another recurring motif, and a welcome one, throughout the evening), the salute ran about a minute, and most of the films would have been recognized by modern audiences. I think the earliest one was from “Chinatown,” released in 1974. But “La La Land” was more the speed. Still, any montage that includes “The Big Lebowski” and Steve Martin’s “L.A. Story” earns bonus points with me.

    This was followed by Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo (both nominated for “Wicked”) performing “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” (Grande), “Home” from “The Wiz” (Erivo), and “Defying Gravity” (both of them) from their “Wizard of Oz” prequel. This was pitch-perfect in tone and a welcome throwback to the Oscar ceremonies I loved. They allowed plenty of space to breath, with time for reflection and perhaps even a little emotion.

    As I’ve suggested, the evening conjured plenty of memories of Oscar’s better days. Without overtly referencing past ceremonies, the spirit of the show was classic, including a James Bond tribute (I’m not saying that it was good, but it was definitely Oscar) that reminded me of Sheena Easton singing “For Your Eyes Only” in 1982. I remember thinking the earlier production number was pretty lame – or at least the choreography was – but also pretty cool, because it resurrected some classic Bond villains for cameos. The timing for last night’s tribute, allegedly to the franchise’s longtime producers, Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson, was a little awkward, coming as it did right on the coattails of the news that the rights to Bond had been sold to Amazon for something like a billion dollars. (I’m not kidding.) Is there even that much money in the world? Priorities, people…

    In any case, it was a nice gesture, even if the singers didn’t always live up to their iconic predecessors. I never heard of Lisa, Raye, or Doja Cat, but they sure did make me miss Shirley Bassey.

    I do wonder if the organizers realized too late their miscalculation in playing Mark Hamill on to “Star Wars” to introduce this year’s nominees for Best Original Score. It reminds me of my own unintended insensitivity when I played a professional recording of Mussorgsky’s “Pictures at an Exhibition” for a niece, who had just performed an arrangement of “The Great Gate of Kiev” with her school orchestra. How’s a kid suppose to live up to that? So it was with this year’s music nominees when placed beside the impossible standard of John Williams.

    The winner of the award was Daniel Blumberg, recognized for his work on “The Brutalist.” A strange looking dude with an awkward presence, Blumberg, who is the former frontman for indie rock band Yuck (yes, you read that correctly), in two minutes channeled Nosferatu better than director Robert Eggers did in two hours.

    Best Original Song went to Camille & Clément Ducol for “El Mal,” from “Emilia Perez,” really a non-song which in the film really glides on its execution. The couple was also nominated for “Mi Camino,” also from “Emilia Perez.” For anodyne as it is (it’s played as a karaoke number in the movie), at least it sounds like an actual song. But this has hardly been my category of expertise since the mid-20th century.

    Two of the nominated films were actually about music: “Instruments of a Beating Heart,” about a Japanese schoolgirl who aspires to play the cymbal in a performance of Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy,” and “The Only Girl in the Orchestra,” about double-bassist Orin O’Brien, hired by Leonard Bernstein in 1966 as the first female musician in the New York Philharmonic. (Producer-director Molly O’Brien, who may have forgotten her blouse, is Orin’s niece.) Both were previously unknown to me, as nominees in the category of Best Documentary Short Film. (“The Only Girl in the Orchestra” won.) Shame on me, as “The Last Repair Shop,” last year’s winner, was one of the most moving films of 2024.

    Like many people, I suspect, I wind up mopping up the shorts that look interesting to me after learning of them at the ceremony. It’s not something I plan. I just get swept up into the “buzz” tide, and these smaller films receive next to no publicity. It’s a matter of out of sight, out of mind. It’s too bad, since independent projects are invariably made by passionate, dedicated filmmakers with fire in their bellies, who will never enjoy the celebrity of Martin Scorsese or Christopher Nolan. Often those in the crew resort to guerilla methods and wear multiple hats.

    While we’re on the subject, can the Academy please stop playing off these filmmakers, who in their moment of glory have 30 seconds to divvy-up between them so that they can make multiple brief acceptance speeches? I’d rather they hold firm on the meandering if well-intentioned Adrien Brody. I’m all in favor of spontaneity, or the appearance of spontaneity, over reading from a slip of paper in a shaky hand, but for godsake, man, tighten it up a little bit.

    I like Conan O’Brien fine. I can jibe with his quirky humor. (One of the better bits of the night had no dialogue: during one of the commercial bumpers, Conan, with an assembled crew, stands in profile with a pipe in his mouth and a pointer in his hand before a map of Europe. Few others would find that funny, but as someone who has seen more than his share of British war movies, it tickled me.)

    That said, Conan’s awkward presence doesn’t really seem suited to the format. He’s not as smooth and assured as Jimmy Kimmel. He reminded me a bit of when David Letterman hosted in 1995 and was critically lambasted. I enjoyed that show too and found Letterman entertaining, but he was not the best fit for the much larger Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Both of these guys are better suited to the cozier confines of a talk show desk. That said, if Conan were asked to come back next year, I’d be good with it. Kudos to him for hosting representatives of the L.A. firefighters to accept some applause and to stand in to tell some pretty good jokes.

    The producers of the show must have sensed Conan’s quirky incompatibility from the start, as rather than going directly to his monologue, by way of a squirm-inducing bit with the comedian crawling out of a fissure in Demi Moore’s back (achieved using borrowed footage from “The Substance”), they launched with the L.A. salute and then went right into the “Oz” medley. Johnny Carson, who hosted the Oscars five times, was a better fit, and Kimmel at four, is the probably the best we’ve got now. I agree with Conan that Billy Crystal was the best Oscars host ever, at least since I’ve been watching (basically my entire life), and it was good to see Crystal at the end of the night, even if he didn’t have much to do other than hand out the Best Picture award with Meg Ryan. You could tell he could do the show again in a heartbeat, except there’s no way he would ever bring the demographic the Academy is hoping for. (Not that anyone else would.)

    It’s sobering to think that the Academy would regard Crystal and Ryan as Hollywood elder statesmen. It seems like just yesterday we were getting Laurence Olivier or Kirk Douglas. Though now that I think about it, the other year we did get Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway. That was the year of the “La La Land”/”Moonlight” envelope mix-up…

    Recipient of the Kennedy Center’s Mark Twain Award for American Humor (!) Adam Sandler’s cameo was more horrifying than anything in “The Substance,” and furthermore sent the wrong message during a show which demonstrated, with its honorees coming from so many different nations and backgrounds, inclusivity. (Hey, Conan! Lay off Estonia!) And Conan’s production number about not wasting time took me back to the more inane moments of Seth MacFarlane’s hosting gig in 2013. (Interestingly, MacFarlane created “The Family Guy,” and Conan wrote for “The Simpsons.”) But there was also a recurring bit with John Lithgow, which, while not hilarious, at least involved John Lithgow.

    At a point, Ennio and Andrea Morricone’s music for “Cinema Paradiso” was used to play on some award presenters (who exactly escapes me at the moment). Chopin, whose music features throughout “A Real Pain,” was played when Kieran Culkin rose to accept his Oscar for Best Supporting Actor.

    It was nice to see so many of the smaller films honored. Again, let’s hear it for real musicians in the theater – with a special shout-out to the (Juilliard trained) sandworm from “Dune II” who got two solos!

    Congratulations to all the winners and good work on the part of all the nominees!


    PHOTOS: Daniel Blumberg, reflecting on the plague rats pouring from his coffin (top); and sandworm gets a harp solo

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