At Miramax, Harvey Weinstein justifiably gained a reputation as something of an Oscar kingmaker, very effectively earning Academy Awards for often unlikely or unexpected features. Last year, The Weinstein Company, the professional home of the brothers Weinstein, campaigned well on behlaf of The King's Speech, and it's looking increasingly likely that the distributor can do it again this year with The Artist. See, French helmer Michel Hazanavicius just won the feature film award at the 2012 Director's Guild of America Awards.
The awards given out by professional guilds certainly add to the undeniable and ongoing hoopla of awards season, but they don't necessarily have that teleprompter-reading, what-are-you-wearing public spectacle of the Oscars or the Golden Globes. Instead, they often provide an opportunity for the sort of work that doesn't get recognized at the big ceremonies to feel special.
The freshly-announced nominees for excellence in wardrobe as chosen by the Costume Designers Guild are good examples. The nominations are divided into three categories separating period, fantasy, and contemporary films. While the nominees include movies that are sure to be on the list for Best Picture, such as The Artist and The Descendants, there's also room for the outstanding work of Sammy Sheldon on X-Men: First Class, Jany Temime on Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, and Erin Benach on Drive.
The Directors Guild of America has announced the five nominees for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film at the 64th Annual DGA Awards. Last week we saw three separate professional organizations formally announcing their awards contenders, with the Art Directors Guild, Producers Guild, and Writers Guild all dropping press releases. To those folks who assiduously track every blip on the awards season radar, though, the DGA Awards are a bigger deal than any of those. Why? Because the winner of this DGA honor has only ever failed to correspond with the Best Director Oscar six times, and the directorial Oscar also tends to go to the Best Picture winner.
After revealing the nominees for Outstanding Directorial Achievement for film on Monday, and the television nominees yesterday, the Directors Guild of America is keeping it up today by announcing their list of nominations for Outstanding Achievement in Documentaries for 2010. I know that docs can’t really compete against mainstream movies and Teevee, but I happen to be a documentary nerd, from whom a guy like Errol Morris is basically a rockstar, so bear with me here.