The Top Two Winners Movies


The Top Two Movies Winners in Oscar 2010


Oscar chose "Hurt Locker" Over "Avatar"



"The Hurt Locker," a movie that was produced with limited-budget but limitless willpower, dumped the highest-profiting film in history and won the best picture Oscar . The director of the spine-chilling war drama, Kathryn Bigelow, became the first woman to ever win the best director Oscar. James Cameron, director of "Avatar" — and her former husband — cried all the way to the bank.

"The Hurt Locker" took an early 4-3 lead and then go back home with the best picture and director Oscars for a totality number of six Oscars. Its best movie editing award correctly predicted the best picture winner, as it historically does.

The three Oscars wins for "Avatar" came in the technical sorts, as expected, including cinematography — not expected, since so much of the movie was created inside computers. The final totality included two Oscars for "Precious," "Crazy Heart" and "Up."

Bigelow won it, because she simply made the best film: The impact generated by the film was upnormal. Situations involving crippling bombs are common enough, but somehow Bigelow made the bomb scenes human, not technical. Perhaps that was the woman in her?

Sandra Bullock, an frist class star found in B-Class roles, won the best actress Oscar for "The Blind Side." She teared up in thanking her mother as she said "not letting me ride in cars with boys until I was 18 because she was right. I would've done what she said I was gonna do."

Jeff Bridges raised a squall from the audience when he won as best actor for "Crazy Heart" Thirty-eight years ago, he was nominated for his first major feature role for "The Last Picture Show" . on the fifth. He thanked to his parents, especially father Lloyd, "who taught me the basics of acting. Thank you, Mom and Dad, for turning me on to such a groovy profession."


A mighty yell went up when Mo'nique was named best supporting actress. She played the rude role, abusive mother in "Percious" She thanked the academy for proving "it can be about the performance and not about the politics." And she also thanked McDaniel, the first black Oscar winner for Gone with the Wind, "for suffering all she had to, so that I would not have to."

Christoph Waltz was amazed when he won best actor at Cannes in May 2009, and he was still wondring when he won the supporting actor Oscar. It is his performance, more than any other, that distinguishes Quentin Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds," and in effect, he's the leading man.

"The Hurt Locker" began its extra-successful night with its Oscar for Boal's original script. Its structuring was indeed original, depending as much on external suspense as on our intension about what the hero, the bomb disposal expert James, was capable of.

The adapted script Oscar was going to Geoffrey Fletcher for his successful "Percious" in an upset, since "Up in the Air" was thought to be the front runner. In a highly emotional speech, Fletcher dedicated the Oscar, as the film was also dedicated, to "precious girls and boys everywhere."

"Up," a movie so perfect it was also nominated for best picture, won for best animated film. Director of pixar Peter Dector  spread the credit in his accepting speech, but he led the charge to change perceptions of animated movie, and "Up" overpassed categories to reach adults without kids as escorts.

"The Cove," which was produced by
Fisher Steven, won the best documentary Oscar. An exciting in the documentary movie, it was about an attempt to show Japanese fishermen as they were selfish, blockade and murdered dolphins.

"Crazy Heart" won for the best song. It's a scarce song written for a film that actually seems as if it could have been a big hit years ago in the hero's career.

In the metier sorts, "Avatar" won for the best art direction and production design, which was  right, since they designed a new planet and all things inside it. "James Cameron," Rick Carter said, "this Oscar sees Cameron ." James checked the comprehensive detail work on the creation and even the life of that world.
"Avatar" also won for the best visual effects over "District 9" and "Star Trek". The category also includes the film's 3-D presentation, which was central to its success. Lastly, "Avatar" won for cinematograp.
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  • Highlights
  1. Location: Kodac theatre ~ Los Angeles ~ USA
  2. Event: The 82nd Acadmey Awards
  3. Date: 7 March 2010
  • Important Actions: 
  1. "The Hurt Locker" won 6 Oscars & "Avatar" won 3 Oscar 
  2. Kathryn Bigelow is the first woman won the best director oscar
  3. Sandra Bullock won the best actress for the first time
  4. Jiff Bridge won the best actor for the first time




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