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Argo wins best picture Oscar, Ang Lee takes best director

Ben Affleck's Iran hostage drama Argo wins best film Oscar

Monday, 25 February, 2013, 8:23am

Iran hostage thriller Argo won the best picture Oscar on Sunday, the highest honour in the movie industry, while Ang Lee was a surprise choice for best director for Life of Pi.

“There are eight great films that have as much right to be up here as we do,” said Argo producer and director Ben Affleck.

The not-so-unexpected win for Argo was announced in one of the biggest surprises in the history of Oscar telecasts as first lady Michelle Obama made an unprecedented appearance from the White House to declare the film the top winner of the evening.

It was the first time since Driving Miss Daisy in 1990 that a film won the top prize at the Oscars without its director also being nominated.

Daniel Day-Lewis made Oscar history and won a long standing ovation on becoming the first man to win three best actor Oscars. He collected the golden statuette for his intense performance as former US president Abraham Lincoln in Lincoln.

“I really don’t know how any of this happened,” said Day-Lewis, who has dual Anglo-Irish citizenship.

Jennifer Lawrence was named best actress for playing a feisty young widow in comedy Silver Linings Playbook, tripping up on her dress while approaching the stage. She beat Jessica Chastain and France’s Emmanuelle Riva, 86, in one of the closest Oscar contests this year.

Taiwanese director Lee beat front-runner Steven Spielberg in the directing race, in a controversial year that saw four of Hollywood’s leading names omitted from the Academy Award directing shortlist.

Spielberg’s account of Lincoln’s battle to abolish slavery and end the US civil war went into Sunday’s three-hour plus ceremony with a leading 12 nominations. But it ended up winning just two.

Argo also won best film editing and best adapted screenplay for its gripping and often comedic tale of the CIA mission to rescue six US diplomats from Tehran shortly after the Islamic Revolution.

In other contests, Anne Hathaway won her first Oscar, and harrowing Austrian film Amour was voted best foreign language film.

Hathaway, who starved herself and chopped off her long brown locks to play tragic heroine Fantine in Les Miserables, was considered the overwhelming favourite for supporting role in the screen version of the popular stage musical.

“It came true,” she said, looking at the golden statuette.

“Here’s hoping that some day in the not too distant future the misfortunes of Fantine will only be found in stories and not in real life,” Hathaway added.

Amour, the heart-wrenching tale of an elderly couple coping with the wife’s debilitating stroke, gave Austria the best foreign language film after it had dominated awards shows in Europe and the United States for months.

Another Austrian, Christoph Waltz, was the surprise winner of the closest contest going into the ceremony. He took best supporting actor honours for his turn as an eccentric dentist turned bounty hunter in Quentin Tarantino’s slavery revenge fantasy Django Unchained.

It was Waltz’s second Oscar, after winning for the Tarantino movie Inglourious Basterds in 2010.

A jubilant Tarantino also won the Oscar for best original screenplay, and credited the actors who brought the characters in all his films to life. “And boy this time, did I do it!” he said.

Brave, the Pixar movie about a feisty Scottish princess, took home the golden statuette for best animated feature.

The Oscar winners were chosen in secret ballots by some 5,800 members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.


Key Oscar wins

*Full winners' list

BEST PICTURE

  • Zero Dark Thirty
  • Django Unchained
  • Argo [Winner]
  • Les Miserables
  • Amour
  • Life of Pi
  • Beasts of the Southern Wild
  • Silver Linings Playbook
  • Lincoln

BEST ACTOR

  • Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln [Winner]
  • Denzel Washington, Flight 
  • Hugh Jackman, Les Miserables
  • Bradley Cooper, Silver Linings Playbook
  • Joaquin Phoenix, The Master

BEST ACTRESS

  • Emmanuelle Riva, Amour
  • Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty
  • Naomi Watts, The Impossible
  • Quvenzhane Wallis, Beasts of the Southern Wild 
  • Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook [Winner]

BEST DIRECTOR

  • Steven Spielberg, Lincoln
  • Michael Haneke, Amour
  • David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook
  • Ang Lee, Life of Pi [Winner]
  • Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

  • Alan Arkin, Argo 
  • Robert De Niro, Silver Linings Playbook 
  • Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Master 
  • Tommy Lee Jones, Lincoln 
  • Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained [Winner]

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

  • Amy Adams, The Master
  • Sally Field, Lincoln
  • Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables [Winner]
  • Helen Hunt, The Sessions
  • Jacki Weaver, Silver Linings Playbook

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

  • Amour Austria [Winner]
  • Kon-Tiki Norway
  • No Chile
  • A Royal Affair Denmark
  • War Witch Canada

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM

  • Brave [Winner]
  • Frankenweenie
  • ParaNorman
  • The Pirates! Band of Misfits
  • Wreck-It Ralph

BEST ORIGINAL SONG

  • Before My Time from Chasing Ice
  • Everybody Needs A Best Friend from Ted
  • Pi’s Lullaby from Life of Pi
  • Skyfall from Skyfall [Winner]
  • Suddenly from Les Miserables

BEST SCORE

  • Anna Karenina
  • Argo
  • Life of Pi [Winner]
  • Lincoln
  • Skyfall

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

  • Anna Karenina
  • Django Unchained
  • Life of Pi [Winner]
  • Lincoln
  • Skyfall

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS

  • The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
  • Life of Pi [Winner]
  • Marvel’s The Avengers
  • Prometheus
  • Snow White and the Huntsman

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