Kathryn Bigelow anakuwa mwanamke wa kwanza kutwaa tuzo ya Oscar kama dairekta bora baada ya filamu ya The Hurt Locker kutwaa tuzo sita. Fil...
Kathryn Bigelow anakuwa mwanamke wa kwanza kutwaa tuzo ya Oscar kama dairekta bora baada ya filamu ya The Hurt Locker kutwaa tuzo sita.
Filamu hiyo inazungumzia vita vya Irak na imepata pia tuzo ya filamu bora.
Bigelow anakuwa mwanamke wa tano kuteuliwa kuwania tuzoza oscar katika historia ya tuzo za Academy .
Jeff Bridges and Sandra Bullock won the top acting Oscars for their roles in Crazy Heart and The Blind Side.
Bridges, playing a hard-living country singer, beat George Clooney, Morgan Freeman, Jeremy Renner and Britain's Colin Firth to win on his fifth Academy Award nomination.
An emotional Bullock picked up the coveted best actress award, just a day after winning the Razzie for worst actress, for her role in All About Steve.
"Did I really earn this, or did I wear you all down?" she joked.
The 45-year-old praised her fellow nominees -including British newcomer Carey Mulligan, Dame Helen Mirren and the multiple nominee Meryl Streep - "who inspire me and who blaze trails for us all".
Honoured for her role as real-life Southern matriarch Leigh Anne Tuohy, she dedicated the award "to the mums who take care of the babies and children no matter where they come from," before paying tearful tribute to her own mother.
Christoph Waltz and Mo'Nique were the winners of the supporting acting awards, categories they were both widely tipped to win.
Waltz won for his role as a diabolical SS officer in Inglourious Basterds, while Mo'Nique triumphed for her role in Precious.
"I would like to thank the Academy for showing that it can be about the performance and not the politics," said the 42-year-old comedian who beat Maggie Gyllenhaal, Anna Kendrick, Vera Farmiga and Penelope Cruz to the award.
Nominated for her debut film role in Lee Daniels'harrowing drama, Mo'Nique has dominated awards season with her devastating performance as abusive mother Mary.
Precious also picked up the best adapted screenplay award for screenwriter Geoffrey Fletcher. Waltz was a little known TV and stage actor when he was cast by director Quentin Tarantino, but has won nearly every major award since the film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2009.
"There's no way I can ever thank you enough," said the 53-year-old Austrian, paying tribute to Tarantino. Blockbuster Avatar and low-budget indie The Hurt
Locker led the nominations as the ceremony commenced on Sunday, with nine nominations apiece, but James Cameron's 3D sci-fi juggernaut left with just three technical awards - for artdirection, cinematography and visual effects.
Speaking on the red carpet ahead of the awards, Cameron paid tribute to Bigelow, to whom he was briefly married, and with whom he has made a number of films.
"I've extolled her virtues to the world and supported her as a film-maker. I'd be
tremendously proud if she won."
"We feel we've already been sufficiently celebrated," he added, referring to Avatar's "tremendous box office and the nine nominations".
The Hurt Locker's screenwriter Mark Boal heralded the film's first success of the night, winning best original screenplay. Technical awards followed in film editing, sound editing and sound mixing.
Former journalist Boal paid tribute to the film-makers, cast and crew: "The results widely exceeded my expectations," adding "this belongs to one extraordinary and visionary individual, Kathryn Bigelow".
For her part, Bigelow said: "I would not be standing here if it wasn't for Mark Boal, who risked his life for the words on the page." Despite expanding the best picture category to 10 nominees, in an attempt to allow more populist films to feature at the ceremony, The Hurt Locker has made just $15m (£9.9m) at the box office, becoming the lowest-grossing film ever to win best picture.
Avatar, meanwhile, has become the biggest-grossing film in history, taking more than $2bn (£1.32bn) in the box office.
Argentina's The Secret In Their Eyes pulled off a surprise win for foreign-language film over higher-profile entries that included Austrian Cannes winner The White Ribbon and French prison drama A Prophet.
Critically acclaimed 3D film Up, also shortlisted in the best picture category, won best animated feature film.
"It was an incredible adventure making this movie, but the heart of it came from home," said director Pete Docter, paying tribute to his parents, wife and children. "You guys are the greatest adventure."
The animation also picked up the Oscar for best original score, for Michael Giacchino, who urged other would-be film-makers to "get out there and do it - it's not a waste of time".
Former Oscar winner Nick Park missed out on the award for best short animated film - for the Wallace and Gromit film A Matter of Loaf and Death - losing to French film Logorama.
However, costume designer Sandy Powell proved a rare British winner of the night, winning her third Oscar for her work on The Young Victoria.
A previous winner for The Aviator and Shakespeare in Love, she paid tribute to those costume designers who work on contemporary films which are often overlooked at awards ceremonies, but added the Oscar was "coming home with me". Actors Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin hosted the ceremony - the first dual hosts in 23 years - in
another bid to shake up the ceremony and drive up audience figures.
Oscar ratings fell to an all-time low two years ago.
SOURCE BBC
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