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'Lord of the Rings' Tops AFI Awards
Daily News Yahoo ^ | Saturday January 5 11:48 PM ET | DAVID GERMAIN, AP Movie Writer

Posted on 01/05/2002 9:38:36 PM PST by LenS

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - The fantasy epic ``The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring'' won best-picture honors and two other prizes at the first American Film Institute (news - web sites) Awards on Saturday.

Denzel Washington was named best actor for playing a flamboyantly corrupt narcotics detective in ``Training Day.'' Sissy Spacek won lead-actress honors as a grieving, vengeful mother in ``In the Bedroom.''

Spacek, a five-time Academy Award nominee who won for ``Coal Miner's Daughter,'' could emerge as a front-runner for another Oscar.

``This film is so close to my heart,'' Spacek said. ``It was a real labor of love, I think, for all of those who worked on it.''

Robert Altman was picked as best director for his satiric murder mystery ``Gosford Park.''

Gene Hackman of ``The Royal Tenenbaums'' and Jennifer Connelly of ``A Beautiful Mind'' earned supporting-actor honors.

Hackman won for his role as an outcast patriarch who weasels his way back into the dysfunctional family he abandoned years earlier. Connelly won as the conflicted wife of schizophrenic math genius John Nash (Russell Crowe) in ``A Beautiful Mind,'' directed by Ron Howard.

Based on J.R. R. Tolkien's trilogy about hobbits, wizards, elves and a ring of ultimate power, the three parts of ``Lord of the Rings'' were shot simultaneously. Part two is due out next Christmas, with the final chapter coming in 2003.

``It's a classic epic. It's a true adventure,'' said Elijah Wood, who stars as the hobbit Frodo Baggins. ``I think it appeals to people of all ages, and it has for years and years.''

The 12 awards in the film categories were spread among nine movies. The only multiple winners were ``Lord of the Rings,'' which also won for digital effects and production design, and ``Moulin Rouge,'' honored for composing and editing.

``In the Bedroom'' and ``Black Hawk Down'' had led with five nominations each, but ``Black Hawk Down'' was shut out in every category.

Writer-director Christopher Nolan won the screenplay award for the convoluted, backwards-moving thriller ``Memento.'' Roger Deakins took the cinematography honor for the Coen brothers' film-noir update ``The Man Who Wasn't There.''

Many nominees turned out for the awards show, but there were plenty of no-shows, including Washington, Altman, Hackman, Connelly and James Gandolfini, who won best actor on a TV series for ``The Sopranos (news - Y! TV).''

``Sopranos'' co-star Edie Falco won the best TV series actress honor. The show also won for best drama series.

``Thanks for watching the show, which we love probably more than you guys,'' Falco said.

HBO's ``Curb Your Enthusiasm'' won for best comedy series.

``This is a rare opportunity for my family to see me on TV. They refuse to get HBO, so they have no idea what the show is about,'' said Larry David, the show's star.

Jeffrey Wright won the best actor award in a TV movie or miniseries as Martin Luther King Jr. in ``Boycott.'' Judy Davis took the best actress honor in a TV movie or miniseries as Judy Garland in ``Life With Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows.''

Garland's daughter, Lorna Luft, accepted the award on Davis' behalf.

``I would like to thank Judy Davis for her extraordinary courage, her exceptional talent and her love of my mother's memory,'' said Luft, a producer on the miniseries.

The AFI Awards, aired live on CBS, included nominees in 12 movie and seven television categories.

CBS newsman Dan Rather recapped television's reaction to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, citing David Letterman (news - Y! TV)'s return to work and a star-studded multi-network telethon for victims as symbols of the nation's response to the attacks.

The new show is the first big ceremony of Hollywood's long awards season. The Golden Globes take place Jan. 20, actor and director guilds give out their awards in March and the Oscars (news - web sites) cap things off March 24.

Nominees were chosen by two 13-member committees - one each for movies and television - which included AFI trustees, industry professionals, film and TV scholars, and critics. Winners were picked by a 100-member jury of industry insiders.

AFI, best known for its lists ranking all-time top American films or screen stars, provides industry training, holds film screenings and conducts movie-preservation efforts.


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Most cool.
1 posted on 01/05/2002 9:38:36 PM PST by LenS
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To: LenS
I saw LOTR again this evening it was really great. I can’t wait for the next movie to come out. This is one of the best films ever made. The theater was packed tonight as well.
2 posted on 01/05/2002 9:42:01 PM PST by soundsolutions
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To: soundsolutions
I have to agree. I loved it even more on the second viewing and felt it had an even greater emotional impact the second time around. I'll definitely see it several more times over the coming months.
3 posted on 01/05/2002 9:43:56 PM PST by LenS
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To: LenS
A great movie; an even greater story; the more who read it will want to see all 3 movies. In 15 years another new wildly talented director will make 6 movies of TLOTR and blow everybody away following the books, and also make The Hobbit and The Silmarillion.

LOTR is such a deeply spiritually inspiring story that it will generate creative visions forever.

Life is good! :-)

4 posted on 01/05/2002 10:01:32 PM PST by Cascadians
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To: Cascadians
Awww, I was hoping Peter Jackson would tackle those for his followups. Especially "the Silmarillion".
5 posted on 01/05/2002 10:17:47 PM PST by Long Cut
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To: Cascadians
Making The Silmarillion will not be possible so soon. The movie rights were only sold for The Hobbit and LOTR. Considering the current hostility of the Tolkien estate's board towards any movies (understandable, Tolkien sold the rights in the late 60's for about $20,000 -- about $250,000 in today's money -- so that his heirs could afford the death taxes that would be due when he and his wife died), we'll have to wait longer. Also, there's too much material to do all of the Silmarillion. But turning the Lay of Beren and Luthien or the Tale of the Children of Hurin into movies would seem possible if the board ever changed it's mind.
6 posted on 01/05/2002 10:20:26 PM PST by LenS
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To: LenS
It has always seemed strange to me that the winner of the Best Picture Award's Director does not win Best Director... if he made the Best Picture, shouldn't that make him the Best Director????
7 posted on 01/05/2002 10:30:39 PM PST by Swordmaker
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To: Swordmaker
It has always seemed strange to me that the winner of the Best Picture Award's Director does not win Best Director...

In the academy awards this happens about 75% of the time. But the Best Picture award goes to the Producer, and is concerned with the totality of the picture, not the direction of the actors alone. Motion pictures is a collaboratory art form, like Opera. The old auteur doctrine of the 1960's, which is that the picture is solely the director's product has pretty well gone by the boards.

8 posted on 01/05/2002 11:23:56 PM PST by Lucius Cornelius Sulla
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To: LenS
Hollyweird is good at "honoring" the most putrid garbage.
9 posted on 01/05/2002 11:26:23 PM PST by ambrose
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To: ecurbh
ping!
10 posted on 01/05/2002 11:48:41 PM PST by John Farson
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To: LenS
Superiorly delightful report! I saw parts of the awards. It has a much nicer ambience than the Academy Awards.
11 posted on 01/06/2002 12:06:22 AM PST by GretchenEE
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To: GretchenEE
That's the first indication LOTR's first installment will win the Oscars in the spring. The Academy usually goes for epics and if its commercially successful that's even better. I predict LOTR will sweep most if not all of the nominations on Oscar night.
12 posted on 01/06/2002 12:09:03 AM PST by goldstategop
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To: LenS
FotR might break the billion dollar mark alone before it is finished in the theators. That is NOT counting the other two movies, the video/DVD release of the three movies and merchandise from the three movies.

Trust me. Just give it time. They will find a way to talk the Tolken family into let them make the other books into movies. A couple of hundred million dollars, a percent of the gross and/or profit of the movies might do the trick.

13 posted on 01/06/2002 12:13:47 AM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: LenS
FotR might break the billion dollar mark alone before it is finished in the theators. That is NOT counting the other two movies, the video/DVD release of the three movies and merchandise from the three movies.

Trust me. Just give it time. They will find a way to talk the Tolken family into let them make the other books into movies. A couple of hundred million dollars, a percent of the gross and/or profit of the movies might do the trick.

14 posted on 01/06/2002 12:13:53 AM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: Paul C. Jesup
This movie has legs, with little competition over the next few months, word of mouth buzz and awards boosting it.
15 posted on 01/06/2002 3:12:29 AM PST by spycatcher
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To: goldstategop
I haven't yet read the trilogy; am reading The Hobbit now, but I have read synopses of the three books and have seen FotR twice. ;-) Having read the synopses, I predict the Academy and other film awards groups are going to have a more and more difficult time blessing these movies as the themes -- and Tolkien's faith in Christ -- become more widely known and understood. But I think by the time the third installment comes out, the movies will have taken on a life of their own and will be rather difficult not to honor. That is my hope, anyway, and Tolkien certainly handed the filmmakers some fine material to make into movies.

There is another facet to how the trilogy could encounter some significant resistance, and that is our national fear that if we give too much honor to one soul or one thing, it might somehow seem to be taking too much power from the people to overcome us. I put forth Tom Hanks as an example. Having won back-to-back Oscars for best actor, Hanks could have put in the performance of 15 lifetimes and not gotten it again, consecutively. We Americans also have this thing about not honoring something so highly that it becomes an artificial standard against which all other attempts at excellence must fall short. So I'm hoping if any of the trilogy has to get somewhat less honor, it will be the second movie, so that the final one can sweep everything in sight.

16 posted on 01/06/2002 4:30:24 AM PST by GretchenEE
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To: jrherreid; HairOfTheDog; RosieCotton; billbears; ObfusGate; austinTparty; Texas2step; billbears...
ping
17 posted on 01/06/2002 6:36:17 AM PST by ecurbh
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To: ecurbh
add me to the ring ping list please :)

I was in theonering.net chat room last night during the awards. We were all in there booing last night when Moulin Rouge won best score. Twas alot of fun.

18 posted on 01/06/2002 6:46:22 AM PST by dogbyte12
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To: ambrose
OH Ambrose.... The more people like this story, the crabbier you get about it. I will be reminded of the nasty side of all good creatures while I am cleaning up horse[poo} in the barn. I'm off... :~)
19 posted on 01/06/2002 7:09:37 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: dogbyte12
add me to the ring ping list please :)

No problem.

20 posted on 01/06/2002 12:23:12 PM PST by ecurbh
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