Political
Oscars 2005
by Arianna Huffington
.
With
this year's Oscar nominations just out and already sparking heated
debate (Was Hollywood too chastened to nominate Michael Moore?
Too Jewish to embrace Mel's "Passion"? And what happened
to Paul Giamatti?), I thought it would be a good time for this
column's traditional salute to outstanding achievements in the
worlds of politics and entertainment — which have, after
all, become increasingly hard to tell apart.
This year, I've decided
to dub these awards "the Arnolds" — I mean, it
isn't every year that the chief executive of the most populous
state in the union also lands a prominent role in a Jackie Chan
flick (though the Governator playing a womanizing Turkish prince
was a bit of a stretch).
So, without further
ado, the envelopes please . . .
— Best Sequel:
"Shrek 2."
Worst Sequel: Bush-Cheney
2004.
— Performance
by a Grizzled Veteran:
Best: "Million
Dollar Baby's" Clint Eastwood gets another shot at glory
when he trains a female boxer to fight for all the marbles.
Worst: Kentucky's Jim
Bunning gets another term in the U.S. Senate despite running a
confused and incoherent campaign that leaves observers wondering
if he's lost all his marbles.
— Creative Writing:
Best: Charlie Kaufman
for his mind-bending screenplay, "Eternal Sunshine of the
Spotless Mind."
Worst: Alberto Gonzales
for his morality-bending memo calling the Geneva Conventions "quaint"
(a.k.a., "Eternal Torment of the Enemy Mind").
— Freshest New
Face: "The Phantom's" Emmy Rossum.
Scariest New Face:
The Ukraine's Viktor Yushchenko, after the dioxin kicked in.
— Best Performance
by a Rodent:
Movies: Scabbers the
rat in "Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban."
Politics: Tom DeLay.
— Best Sex Exploration:
Liam Neeson's Dr. Kinsey visits a gay bar to learn about the sexual
habits of homosexuals.
Worst: Illinois Senate
candidate Jack Ryan visits a sex club so he can watch his wife
get banged by strangers.
— Best Mega-Buck
Action Fantasy: Sam Raimi's "Spider-Man 2."
Worst: George Bush's
"A Democratic Iraq."
— Most Over-Rewarded
Lousy Performance:
Movies: Vin Diesel,
who received $12 million for mumbling and grunting his way through
"The Chronicles of Riddick."
Politics: George Tenet,
who received the Presidential Medal of Freedom despite presiding
over the CIA during two of the most tragic intelligence failures
in U.S. history.
— Best Art Direction:
"Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow's" simultaneously
retro and futuristic color scheme.
Worst: Tom Ridge's
simultaneously confusing and alarming terror alert color scheme.
— Most Vicious
Attack:
Movies: Daniel Travis
bleeds to death after being set upon by hungry sharks in "Open
Water."
Politics: John Kerry's
campaign bleeds to death after being set upon by vengeful Swift
Boat Veterans in "Muddied Water."
— Most Excruciating
Performance by Siblings:
Movies: The Olsen Twins
in "New York Minute."
Politics: The Bush
Twins in New York at the GOP Convention.
— Performance
by an Anchorman:
Best: Will Ferrell
in "The Legend of Ron Burgundy."
Worst: Dan Rather in
"The Myth of Jerry Killian's Memos."
— Best Bang-for-Your-Buck
Ratio: "The Passion of the Christ," which cost $30 million
to make and has taken in over $610 million worldwide.
Worst: "The Passion
of the Democrats," who spent over a billion dollars on the
2004 campaign and got nothing to show for it but Barack Obama.
— Most Compelling
Clash of Legendary Figures: "Alien vs. Predator."
Most Pathetic Clash
of No-Longer-Legendary Figures: Michael Eisner vs. Michael Ovitz.
— Performance
most likely to keep you awake at night:
Movies: Tom Cruise
in "Collateral."
Politics: Dick Cheney
in "The Vice-Presidential Debate" asserting three times
that he was absolutely convinced that terrorists will try to unleash
a nuclear weapon in the middle of an American city.
— Best Achievement
in Costuming: Colleen Atwood for her whimsical, high gothic outfits
for "Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events."
Worst: John Kerry for
his ill-chosen goose hunting and windsurfing outfits in "A
Series of Unfortunate Campaign Tactics."
— Most Convincing
Transformation: The Wayans Brothers' conversion from hapless black
FBI agents into snobby white heiresses in "White Chicks."
Least Convincing: The
White House converting the reason for the war from wiping out
Saddam's WMD to bringing democracy to the people of Iraq.
— Best Score:
Howard Shore's swirling and soaring music from "The Aviator."
Worst Score: The $139
billion in profits drug companies will pocket as a result of the
new Medicare prescription drug law.
— Most Ludicrous
Prison Scenes: Renee Zellweger singing Madonna songs with her
fellow Thai prison inmates in "Bridget Jones: The Edge of
Reason."
Most Revolting Prison
Scenes: U.S. guards torturing Iraqi prisoners in "Abu Ghraib:
There Goes the Moral High Ground."
— Performance
as a Stepford Wife:
Worst: Glenn Close's
scenery chewing turn in "The Stepford Wives."
Best: Laura Bush's
ever-smiling turn on Inauguration Day.
— Best Portrayal
of a Memory-Challenged Character: Drew Barrymore in "50 First
Dates."
Worst: Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul Wolfowitz in front of Congress for not being able
to remember the number of soldiers who'd lost their lives in Iraq.
— Best Fight
Scene:
Movies: Uma Thurman
and Daryl Hannah's knockdown, drag-out duel in "Kill Bill
Vol. 2."
Politics: Zell Miller
challenging Chris Matthews to a duel on "Hardball."
— Most Daring
Rescue:
Movies: Firefighter
Joaquin Phoenix braves hellish heat to save a trapped man in "Ladder
49."
Politics: John Kerry
braves watery doom to save Licorice, the family's pet hamster,
in "Humanizing the Candidate '04."
— Biggest Surprise
of the Year: "Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle."
Biggest Disappointment:
"Dubya and Dick Go Back to the White House."
— Most Romantic
Location: "Sideways'" rolling hills and wine vineyards.
Least Romantic: Bernard
Kerik's Ground Zero love nest.
— Longest Cold
Streak:
Movies: Ben Affleck
("Surviving Christmas," "Jersey Girl," "Paycheck,"
"Gigli," "Daredevil," "The Third Wheel").
Politics: Bob Shrum
(Kerry '04, Gore '00, Kerrey '92, Dukakis '88, Gephardt '88, Kennedy
'80, McGovern '72, Muskie '72).
— Best Rip-Off:
Nicolas Cage pinches the Declaration of Independence in order
to protect it in "National Treasure."
Worst: Ahmed
Chalabi pitches the idea of Iraqi independence to Cheney and company
and pockets $30 million from the national treasury — all
while spying for Iran.
Arianna
Huffington is a nationally syndicated columnist and author
of ten books. In 2003, she ran for governor as an Independent
in California's recall election. She also serves on several boards
that promote community solutions to social problems, including
A Place Called Home that works
with at-risk children in South Central Los Angeles.
This article
is © 2004 Christabella, Inc. (All rights reserved), and is
reprinted by permission of the author. |