#Aron Warner
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The Book of Life (2014, Jorge R. Gutierrez)
21/07/2024
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adamwatchesmovies · 1 month ago
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Shrek the Halls (2007)
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If your kids can’t get enough Shrek and it happens to be close to December 25th, then Shrek the Halls is a good pick for the family. Though it’s essentially a bonus feature - meaning if you skip it you’re not missing anything - there are plenty of clever gags throughout.
Set between Shrek the Third and Shrek Forever After, Shrek (Mike Myers) is feeling pressured by Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz) to put together a special holiday surprise for the household. His plans go awry when Donkey (Eddie Murphy) invites himself and the entire “family” to partake in the celebration.
Clever title aside, I bet most people would look at the DVD cover and label this film/special as a cash grab. They'd be wrong. This is no half-baked effort churned out in a hurry to have some content for the holiday season. The visuals look just as good as they did in the films it’s set between, all of the voice actors are back and the characters you love are pretty much all there, ready to deliver the same type of gags that made them favorites. Particularly funny is Gingy (Conrad Vernon), whose interpretation of Santa Claus is radically different from everyone else’s. There are plenty of in-jokes, off-hand comedic remarks and throwaway visual gags (check out Pinocchio’s stocking). Basically, this special is cut from the same tree as the previous films. You get pop-culture references and clever wordplay mixed in with low-brow fart jokes and before you roll your eyes at that one, remember that they've practically been a staple of the series.
While the other Shrek films skirted the line between being appropriate for adults rather than kids, this one’s strictly for younger viewers. I say this because of the film’s ultimate message and the way it’s resolved. Though Shrek is an adult, he’s never celebrated Christmas before. To him, the holiday’s true meaning has yet to be discovered. When Puss in Boots (Antonio Banderas), the Big Bad Wolf (Aron Warner), the Three Blind Mice (Christopher Knights), Three Little Pigs (Cody Cameron) and the rest show, he's annoyed. “Why does Christmas have to include all of these people?” Kids have no say in who comes to the Christmas party so it makes sense to tell them why they need to get along with everyone and doing so through Shrek is organic.
Also cementing this as strictly for youngsters is the way Fiona reacts to Shrek being so irritated. As an interquel, there was no way to have the characters react any other way but from an older viewer’s perspective, it’s getting a little repetitive to have them clashing like this AGAIN. Maybe the conflict could’ve been somewhat smoothed out if the film was longer - we could actually see Fiona having a great time while her husband is miserable - but at just 21 minutes long, there wasn't time. These are not serious issues but they’re what prevent it from being a must-see unless you eat up anything that's green and living in a swamp.
Though Shrek the Halls is a Christmas-themed special banking on a pre-existing love for a franchise, it feels earnest. All of the characters and voice actors are back. The jokes are on the same level as they've always been. It’s just that this is an inconsequential holiday special, which, to be fair, is exactly what it advertises itself as. I wouldn’t spend money on Shrek the Halls but if it happens to be playing, it's a pleasant distraction. (December 27, 2021)
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thebutcher-5 · 1 year ago
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Shrek
Benvenuti o bentornati sul nostro blog. Nello scorso articolo abbiamo cambiato completamente genere, passando a un thriller poliziesco di fine anni ’90 davvero sorprendente e con uno dei migliori Sylvester Stallone che abbia mai visto. Il film in questione è Cop Land. La storia parla di Freddy, uno sceriffo che vive nella cittadina di Garrison, nel New Jersey, abitata per lo più dai poliziotti di…
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camyfilms · 2 years ago
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SHREK 2001
That must be Lord Farquaad's castle... Do you think he's maybe compensating for something?
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skullislandproductions · 1 year ago
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Babs, Buster and a sled named Rosebud whoosh down the snow covered hillside, on this production cel, from a scene I animated for, the opening of “It’s a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special” 1992. 
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lenam1shkin · 7 months ago
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haha homewrecker haha slut
And yet another example of Warner’s fans harassing people.
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numbuh-1507 · 5 months ago
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Some time ago, I made a journal (https://www.furaffinity.net/journal/10927368) stating how I’m getting worried about what might happen in the upcoming Jellystone! crossover special.
Basically, Joesanchez has told me that, due to the “mean-spirited” nature of the show, the episode might end with all of the 19 universes featured on it being erased from existence forever. It doesn’t help that 1. it’s named after a DC crossover event that did the same thing; 2. in real life Cartoon Network lost their studio and their website, so the special ending with all the classics being purged could be sort of a “Reality Subtext”.
Besides, DC already eliminated the 2003 Teen Titans series in the recent animated adaptation of Infinite Earths, so it’s not out of the question that Warner Bros is willing to greenlight this special not to celebrate Cartoon Network, but to tell everyone “Here, Robot Jones’ world is gone forever, which means we don’t have to make a sequel or reboot of it ever. Tough break.” This will be the ultimate “Torch the Franchise(s) and Run”.
The worst part is that the crappy CN shows such as Steven Universe and Gumball are not part of this special, which means they’ll get to survive even though they don’t deserve it. We will have to endure more of their beanmouth styles and crappy tumblr fanfiction writing that makes Hazbin Hotel look like a masterpiece in comparison. At least actually good shows were also spared like Generator Rex and Infinity Train… which isn’t saying much considering their real life fates.
Of course, there is the possibility that I’ll be proven wrong and the special has a decent ending (for Jellystone! standards anyway) that will do these characters justice, and I’ve wasted my time drawing this and writing this rant about your precious CalArts Style crap. But for now, it looks like it’s curtains for Dexter, Aron City, Cow and Chicken, Townsville, Peach Creek, the Time Squad, Samurai Jack, Robot Jones, Endsville, Bunny Island, Sector V, Foster’s, Camp Kidney, Charles Darwin Middle School, Ben Tennyson, Marzipan City, Stormalong Harbor, the Land of Ooo, the park and 18 years of continuity. It’s the Super Genesis Wave all over again, and this time is personal.
All of these belong to Warner Bros. Discovery. Art based off a panel of DC’s Infinite Crisis.
 “24 hours, 7 days a week, from now to the end of times”… which turned out to be 2024.
You must be wondering though, why is Yogi crying? You’ll see soon enough.
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kmsandkms · 3 months ago
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Aron Warner and Juliette ferrars
More art on my instagram and TikTok @artorwhataver
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1jemmagirl22 · 4 months ago
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So, I've read a few things and watched a few things these past couple months so I thought I'd make a dump of all the war crimes and ships I've shipped since I was last consistently active on Tumblr.
Alex and Darlington from Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo is iconic as fuck and I hope Leigh does write ten more books like she wants in this universe.
Emily and Aron from Designated Survivor (Like what the fuck was that show? I don't know but hey they were fun).
Addie and Luc from The Invisible Life of Addie La Rue. Is this a surprise to anyone who knows me? No, no it is not, dark shadow men and bad ass women are a classic for me.
Now this one, like, this one is a war crime but who the fuck cares/ Jace and Baela from House of the Dragon. I don't accept hate towards them, and I am fully aware of the incest but if I shipped Clace in City of Ashes Jace and Baela are barely that bad.
Now for another likely controversial one. Avery and Grayson from The Inheritance Games. I get it, I get people like her with Jameson, I get the fan cast is Louis Patridge and if they adapt these things into a film I will love him with my entire heart. However, you can't deny the set up, especially in book one, feels like it's pointing towards Grayson as the inevitable endgame.
Jane and Guilford from my Lady Jane. No comments, just bad ass angsty enemies to lovers.
Juliette and Warner from the Shatter Me series. Okay so like my opinion on these books is I love most of them but the Juliette loosing her mind perspective is really hard to read. That said, holy shit these two are hot.
Isla and Grim from Lightlark, I don't care if you all hate this book, I love it and if Isla and Grim aren't endgame when Skyshade comes out I will cry. I mean come on, secret marriage, secret life bond, and secretly committed war crimes for each other? Fuck ya!
And, last but not least, because who the fuck gives a damn, sure my late grandmother the Tolkien nerd isn't rolling in her grave. Anyways, I'm currently obsessed with Galadriel and Elrond. I haven't even watched season 2 yet but fuck my life I'm obsessed. I'm gonna binge that show at least three times. Is it great? No, it's CW level bullshit with Galadriel and Elrond having way too much chemistry. I don't care about the cannon, half the fandom ships her with Sauron (hell I shipped her with Sauron before I knew he was Sauron cause of the Klaroline vibes, and I sort of still do.) But bloody Fitzsimmons gods, they are precious to me and I want season 3 to be as un-fucking-hinged as possible and have multiple scenes with them. Come on, have them get married for politics and just leave it at that.
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blocklists-just-4-u · 1 year ago
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people who posted positive, pro, or "happy" Australia day posts.
This is not meant to harass, hate or in anyway bully anyone. This is a blocklist. To be removed from this list either delete the post linked, apologise/educated yourself or do nothing and block me do not harass anyone
@floridaboiler here here here @purple-muse88 here @bunnziebobcat here @newfashionfix here @bukowsky-art here @ersatzshield291 here @rachirodehills here @arons-warner here
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the2amshitposts · 2 years ago
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Okay I just have one question WHY IS EVERYONE ONLY TALKING ABOUT ARON WARNER I mean yeah book boyfriends r great but all I hear is Aron Warner this Aron that why aren’t we talking about the Hawthorne brothers alllll four of them husband boyfriend material like I am personally a Jameson kinda person but like Grayson DAMMMM same thing with Xander his cute and geeky like 0.0 and can we talk about Nash especially in the third book like his vibes immaculate his hat immaculate like he has such an older mentor kind friend that gives advice man like talk more about the Hawthorne brothers
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adamwatchesmovies · 2 years ago
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Shrek the Third (2007)
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While I didn't enjoy this film, that doesn't mean you won't. No matter what I say, the people involved in this project did it: they actually made a movie. That's something to be applauded. With that established...
The drop in quality between Shrek 2 and Shrek the Third is so steep you'll wonder why anyone bothered. There’s nothing inspired here in terms of plot, character development, humour or even pop-culture references. It’s a devastating letdown that disappoints more the longer you watch.
King Harold (John Cleese) is dying and names Shrek (Mike Myers) and Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz) as his successors. Convinced an ogre will be unfit to rule the kingdom of Far Far Away, Shrek decides to track down her cousin, Arthur “Artie” Pendragon (Justin Timberlake). With the help of Donkey (Mike Myers) and Puss in Boots (Antonio Banderas), our swamp-loving hero is off, but not before Fiona reveals she is pregnant. Meanwhile, a washed-up Prince Charming (Rupert Everett) vows revenge.
The story by Andrew Adamson - adapted by Jeffrey Price, Peter S. Seaman, Chris Miller and Aron Warner - is so flawed I don’t know if there was any salvaging it. By and large, it’s really just the same plot as the original film. Shrek and Donkey - plus Puss - have to find a royal and bring them to a castle so Shrek can get his swamp back the way he wants it to be. Oh sure, there are slight differences. Obviously Artie doesn’t fall in love with the green meanie the way Fiona did but they do have that big “lover’s quarrel” scene once true intentions are revealed.
What you essentially get is Shrek but without anything that made it magical. The characters aren’t fresh the way they were before. Worse, the well of fairytale-based jokes has been drained dry, leaving this movie with few opportunities to make you laugh. I know you could argue whether Red Riding Hood or the Three Blind Mice really fit the fairy tales motif but King Arthur? Sans excalibur and with only a couple of lame scenes where an exaggerated, incompetent and loopy Merlin (Eric Idle) appears? It feels completely out of place.
Tonally, director Chris Miller misses the mark so thoroughly it's almost like it's on purpose. The first scene has a humiliated Prince Charming mourning his now-dead mother. Next a parade of scenes of Shrek grumbling about how much he hates Far Far Away and how much he doesn’t want to rule. He then finds an excuse to abandon his wife so he can pawn the kingdom off on some schmo he’s never met. In no time, you're sympathizing with the villain rather than the hero. Yes, Charming turns out to be malicious but it feels like the character was re-written to be the antagonist. From what we saw previously, there was nothing to indicate he had any volition of his own; he was just a mama’s boy raised to believe he should rule. Couldn’t Fiona wear the crown? How about the still-living Queen? What if Artie had been this megalomaniac who, after obtaining power, used it to get revenge on everyone who bullied him at high school? Shrek would’ve come off as an even bigger jerk than he already is.
Even the choice of songs doesn’t feel right. Whereas Livin’ La Vida Loca, I’m Holding out for a Hero and All-Star in Shreks 1 & 2 either subverted your expectations in a novel way, drove the story forward through non-litteral music, or both, there’s nothing about the short clip of Immigrant Song and the cover of Live of Let Die during the royal funeral that comes close. Where’s the wit? Where are the unusual choices that don't seem to fit on paper, but in execution work so well?
I doubt anyone who saw Shrek the Third upon its original release remembers it. They might remember some of what happens, but the way the movie made you feel? No way. That’s because this comedy has no heart. It’s diet water served after two classic animated comedies. I’d say I hated it, but that's incendiary, passionate - too good for Shrek The Third. The people behind the scenes knew this movie would be a hit so they rushed out a mediocre product because they knew they could. (On DVD, August 9, 2019)
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thebutcher-5 · 4 months ago
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Shrek Terzo
Benvenuti o bentornati sul nostro blog. Nello scorso articolo siamo tornati a parlare di film in live-action e abbiamo deciso di farlo con uno dei registi che amo di più in assoluto, John Carpenter, e una delle sue opere più belle e famose, 1997: Fuga da New York. Siamo nel 1997 in un futuro dove Manhattan è diventata un cercare di alta sicurezza per contenere la criminalità sempre più dilagante…
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towritecomicsonherarms · 10 months ago
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This film was the first winner for the inaugural Best Animated Film category of the Academy Awards 2001. The actual Oscar itself is now on display at the Academy Museum in Los Angeles, donated by the recipient, producer Aron Warner.
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kwebtv · 2 years ago
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Life With Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows -  ABC  -  February 25 - 26, 2001
Biography (2 episodes)
Running Time: 170 minutes
Stars:
Judy Davis as Judy Garland
Hugh Laurie as Vincente Minnelli
Victor Garber as Sid Luft
John Benjamin Hickey as Roger Edens
Sonja Smits as Kay Thompson
Alison Pill as young Lorna Luft
Aidan Devine as Frank Gumm
Marsha Mason as Ethel Gumm
Lindy Booth as Lana Turner
Al Waxman as Louis B. Mayer
Dwayne Adams as Mickey Rooney
Jayne Eastwood as Lottie
Martin Randez as Mark Herron
Hume Baugh as Mickey Deans
Daniel Kash as Arthur Freed
Stewart Bick as Artie Shaw
Rosemary Dunsmore as Ida Koverman
Cara Pifko as Jimmy Gumm (adult)
Zoe Heath as Suzy Gumm (adult)
Michael Rhoades as Busby Berkeley
Gerry Salsberg as Charles Bickford
Phillip MacKenzie as Victor Fleming
Thea Gill as Lucille Bremer
Noah Henne as The Scarecrow (Ray Bolger)
James Kall as The Tin Man (Jack Haley)
Michael B. King as The Lion (Bert Lahr)
Harrison Kane as Joey Luft (age 7-10)
Brittany Payer as Liza Minnelli (age 1-2)
Rob Smith as David Begelman
Christopher Marren as Freddie Fields
Richard M. Davidson as Jack Warner
Derek Keurvorst as George Cukor
Aron Tager as George Jessel
William Holden as Himself (archive footage)
Grace Kelly as Herself - Academy Award Recipient (archive footage)
Cynthia Gibb as Narrator (older Lorna)
Carley Alves as Judy (age 2)
Tammy Blanchard as Judy (age 12-21)
Amber Metcalfe as Lorna (age 6)
Mackenzie Weiner as Lorna (age 3)
Krista Sutton as Lorna (adult)
Josephine De Cosma as Jimmy Gumm (age 7)
Samantha Gerber as Suzy Gumm (age 9)
Alex House as Joey Luft (age 11-15)
Ellis Turner as Joey Luft (age 4) (uncredited)
Arielle Di Iulio as Liza (age 6-8)
Sarah Moussadji as Liza (age 12-15)
Marie Ward as Liza (age 23)
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derekfoxwit · 2 years ago
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The Best Picture Oscar My Way (2000-2022)
After doing this list, I suddenly got inspired to do this sort of thing for some of the other Academy Award categories. For this project I got the following things to say:
Many of the win/nomination changes will be based more on some infamous or otherwise perceived snubs (i.e. Martin Scorsese needing to wait until The Departed for a Best Director win). In general, the changes are based on what the frequent consensus seems to be from what I’ve seen.
I may STILL keep a few of those same snubs if it simply lines up more with the film’s initial reactions at the time (i.e. Clockwork Orange).
There are some changes that the Oscars applied to certain categories over the years (i.e. Sound Mixing & Sound Editing becoming just Best Sound). For this list’s sake, I’ll apply some of my OWN cases of said changes applying (such as the Best Picture expansion from 5 to 10 occurring earlier since, in hindsight, they probably should’ve done that sooner). In case of that change, I’ll just apply it earlier (starting in 1997).
Said expansion has resulted in no less than 8 nominations in Best Picture at a time, so that’ll be my minimum (until 2021, where it was officially made the set amount no questions asked).
Gonna try to keep EGOTs as best as I can. Luckily for this category, there’s currently only one that’ll matter.
More inclusive wins (POC; LGBT) will be more likely to stay. There may be some exceptions after I’ve already made my own inclusive alternatives.
For the early years where Best Picture went to the studio instead (for some godforsaken reason), I’ll just pretend that’s not the case.
Due to some weird, borderline convoluted rules with Best International Feature Film (Mainly that this category doesn’t require US theater plays, but most other ones do), I’ll often go off of an eligible film’s year of original release unless they managed nominations the following year (City of God; Spirited Away)
For Best Picture, I’m only gonna list the nominated producer for newly added films (here’s the Wikipedia page for the rest). I will mostly go with the ones credited as “produced by” or “p.g.a.” (if the latter is shown) on IMDB as the nominees. Limit is five.
Italicized film titles are the ones I added. Bold ones are winners.
2000
Gladiator (still)
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Erin Brockovich
Memento - Jennifer Todd; Suzanne Todd
Almost Famous - Cameron Crowe; Ian Bryce
Amores perro - Alejandro G. Iñárritu
Traffic
American Psycho - Christian Halsey Solomon; Chris Hanley; Edward R. Pressman
Requiem for a Dream - Eric Watson; Palmer West
2001
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
A Beautiful Mind
Moulin Rogue!
Shrek - Aron Warner; John H. Williams; Jeffrey Katzenberg
The Royal Tenenbaums - Wes Anderson; Barry Mendel; Scott Rudin
Mulholland Drive - Tony Krantz; Michael Polaire; Alain Sarde; Mary Sweeney
Amélie - Claudie Ossard
In The Bedroom
Gosford Park
Monsters, Inc. - Darla K. Anderson
2002
Spirited Away - Toshio Suzuki
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
The Pianist
Gangs of New York
Punch-Drunk Love - Paul Thomas Anderson; Daniel Lupi; JoAnne Sellar
Chicago!
Catch Me If You Can - Steven Spielberg; Walter F. Parkes
The Hours
2003
The Lord of the Ring: Return of the King (still)
The Barbarian Invasions - Daniel Louis; Denise Robert
Lost in Translation
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
City of God - Andrea Barata; Mauricio Andrade
Finding Nemo - Graham Walters
Mystic River
Seabiscuit
2004
Before Sunset - Anne Walker-McBay
Million Dollar Baby
The Aviator
The Incredibles - John Walker
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind - Anthony Bergman; Steven Golin
Sideways
Ray
The Motorcycle Diaries - Michaek Nozik; Edgard Tenembaum; Karen Tenkhoff
Shrek 2 - David Lipman; Aron Warner; John H. Williams
Shaun of the Dead - Nira Park
2005 (well crap, seems like in hindsight, a struggle to find many picks might have been part of the problem. Still don’t excuse that bullshit with Crash)
Brokeback Mountain
Good Night, and Good Luck
Munich
Capote
Pride and Prejudice - Tim Bevan; Debra Hayward
Howl’s Moving Castle - Toshio Suzuki
Memoirs of a Geisha - Lucy Fisher; Steven Spielberg; Douglas Wick
V for Vendetta - Lana and Lilly Wackowski; Joel Silver; Grant Hill
2006
Pan’s Labyrinth - Guillermo del Toro; Alfonso Cuaron; Bertha Navarro; Frida Torresblanco
The Departed
Babel
Letters from Iwo Jima
Little Miss Sunshine
Children of Men - Marc Abraham; Eric Newman; Hilary Shor; Iain Smith; Tony Smith
The Prestige - Christopher Nolan; Emma Thomas; Aaron Ryder
The Lives of Others - Quirin Berg; Max Wiedemann
The Queen
2007
No Country For Old Men (still)
There Will Be Blood
Ratatouille - Bradford Lewis
Juno
Atonement
Zodiac - Ceán Chaffin; Bradley J. Fischer; Mike Medavoy; Arnold Messer; James Vanderbilt
Persepolis - Xavier Rigault; Marc-Antoine Robert
Hot Fuzz - Tim Bevan; Eric Fellner; Nira Park
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days - Cristian Mungiu; Oleg Mutu
The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford  - Ridley Scott; Dede Gardner; Brad Pitt; David Valdes; Jules Daly
2008
Wall-E - Jim Morris; Lindsey Collins
The Dark Knight - Christopher Nolan; Charles Roven; Emma Thomas
Slumdog Millionaire
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Milk
Frost/Nixon
Synecdoche, New York - Charlie Kaufman; Spike Jonze; Sidney Kimmel; Anthony Bregman
Departures - Toshiaki Nakazawa; Ichiro Nobukuni; Toshihisa Watai
The Wrestler - Darren Aronofsky; Scott Franklin
Doubt - Mark Roybal; Scott Rudin
2009
Inglorious Basterds
The Hurt Locker
Mother - Tae-joon Park; Woo-sik-Seo
Up
Fantastic Mr. Fox - Wes Anderson; Allison Abbate; Scott Rudin; Jeremy Dawson
A Serious Man
The White Ribbon - Stefan Arndt; Veit Heiduschka; Margaret Menegoz; Andrea Occhipinti
The Secret in Their Eyes - Mariela Besuievsky; Juan Jose Campanella
Avatar
District 9
2010
Inception
Incendies - Kim McCraw; Luc Dery
True Grit
Toy Story 3
The Social Network
Black Swan
Biutiful - Alejandro G. Inarritu; Jon Kilik
The Kids Are All Right
127 Hours
The King’s Speech
2011
The Artist (still)
The Tree of Life
The Descendants
A Separation - Asghar Farhadi
Hugo
Moneyball
The Help
Midnight in Paris
War Horse
2012
Amour
Django Unchained
Life of Pi
Argo
Once Upon a Time in Anatolia - Nuri Bilge Ceylan; Zeynep Ozbatur Atakan; Can Yilmaz
Moonrise Kingdom
Lincoln
Les Miserables
Silver Linings Playbook
The Intouchables - Nicolas Duval Adassovsky; Laurent Zeitoun; Yann Zenou
2013
12 Years a Slave (still)
Her
Prisoners - Kira Davis; Broderick Johnson; Adam Kolbrenner; Andrew A. Kosove
The Great Beauty - Francesca Cima; Nicola Giuliano
Before Midnight - Richard Linklater; Sara Woodhatch; Christos V. Konstantakopoulos
The Wind Rises - Toshio Suzuki
The Wolf of Wall Street
Gravity
Nebraska
American Hustle
2014
The Grand Budapest Hotel
Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
Gone Girl - Ceán Chaffin; Joshua Donen; Arnon Milchan; Resse Witherspoon
Tale of the Princess Kaguya - Yoshiaki Nishimura; Seiichiro Ujiie
Whiplash
Selma
Intersteller - Christopher Nolan; Lynda Obst; Emma Thomas
American Sniper
Boyhood
2015
Carol - Elizabeth Karlsen; Christine Vachon; Stephen Woolley
The Big Short
Mad Max: Fury Road
Inside Out - Jonas Rivera
Spotlight
Bridge of Spies
The Revenant
Room
2016
Moonlight (still)
Arrival
Fences
La La Land
Hidden Figures
The Salesman - Asghar Farhadi; Alexandre Mallet-Guy
The Handmaiden - Park Chan-wook; Syd Lim
Your Name - Koichiro Ito; Genki Kawamura; Katsuhiro Yumiya
Hell or High Water
Manchester by the Sea
2017
Lady Bird
The Shape of Water
Call Me By Your Name
Phantom Thread
Get Out
Coco - Darla K. Anderson
Blade Runner 2049 - Broderick Johnson; Andrew A. Kosove; Bud Yorkin; Cynthia Sikes
The Post
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Dunkirk
2018
Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse - Avi Arad; Phil Lord; Chris Miller; Amy Pascal; Christina Steinberg
Roma
BlacKkKlansman
The Favourite
Hereditary - Kevin Scott Frakes; Lars Knudsen
Black Panther
Bohemian Rhapsody
Shoplifters - Kore-eda Hirokazu; Kaoru Matsuzaki; Hijiri Taguchi; Akihiko Yose
A Star is Born
Vice
2019
Parasite (still)
Jojo Rabbit
Joker
Little Woman
1917
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood 
Marriage Story
Portrait of a Lady on Fire - Benedicte Couvreur
The Irishman
The Lighthouse - Lourenco Sant’Anna; Rodrigo Teixeira; Michael Volpe; Robert Eggers
2020
Nomadland (still)
The Father
Soul - Dana Murray
Judas and the Black Messiah
Minari
Sound of Metal
Mank
Wolfwalkers - Tomm Moore; Stephan Roelants; Nora Twomey; Paul Young
2021
Drive My Car
CODA
Belfast
Dune
The Power of the Dog
West Side Story
Nightmare Alley
Licorice Pizza
King Richard
Titane - Amaury Ovise; Jean-Christophe Reymond
2022
Everything Everywhere All At Once (still)
All Quiet on the Western Front
The Banshees of Inisherin
The Fabelmans
Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio - Guillermo del Toro; Alexander Bulkley; Gary Ungar
Marcel the Shell with Shoes On - Andrew Goldman; Edward Chiodo; Caroline Kaplan; Dean Fleischer Camp; Jenny Slate
Nope - Ian Cooper; Jordan Peele
Aftersun - Barry Jenkins; Mark Ceryak; Amy Jackson; Adele Romanski
Top Gun: Maverick
Triangle of Sadness
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