Oscars 2015: How to watch tonight's big show - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 01:27 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

Oscars 2015: How to watch tonight's big show

The 87th annual Academy Awards, the biggest, glitziest and most-coveted movie industry awards are being handed out tonight in Hollywood. Here's what you need to know.

Action at the 87th Annual Academy Awards gets underway starting at 7 p.m. ET

Workers roll out the ceremonial red carpet over the Hollywood Walk of Fame stars on Hollywood Boulevard on Feb. 18, 2015 in preparation of 87th Annual Academy Awards at Dolby Theater on Sunday. (Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

The 2015 Oscars, the biggest, glitziest and most-covetedmovie industry awardsare being handed out tonight in Hollywood.Here'swhat you need to know to take in the star-packed show.

What:

The 87th Annual Academy Awards. Our CBC arts team is on the ground in Hollywood and will be live blogging from the parties, the red carpets and behind the scenes at the yearly Tinsel Town love-in.

Where:

The Dolby Theatreat Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood, Calif.

When:

The red carpet pre-show starts at 7 p.m. ET with the awards ceremony beginning at 8:30 p.m. ET. The broadcast, which has run more than 4hours long in years past, will be televised live on ABC andsimulcast onCTV in Canada.

The host:

Neil Patrick Harris, star of the hit TV showHow I Met Your Mother, is going for an awards-showtrifecta, hostingthe 2015 Oscars after four hosting stints at Broadway's Tony Awards and two at TV'sPrimetimeEmmy Awards.

Audience members can bet their coat check chits that they'll bein for some big Tony-style musical numbers and NPH'ssignature snappy sense of humour.

The big race:

This composite shows Michael Keaton as washed up actor Riggan Thomson in Birdman and Ellar Coltrane as Mason Evans Jr. in Boyhood. (Fox Searchlight/IFC Films)
The biggest race of the evening, and possibly the hardest to predict, is in the best picturecategory. For months, critics and fans have agonized over the seemingly neck-and-neck race betweenBirdman andBoyhood.

The former is a bombasticsatire about a washed up Hollywood actor by Mexican director Alejandro Gonzlez Irritu. The later is an emotional andsentimental portrait of anAmerican family as told by indie director Richard Linklater.

Critical acclaim and awards season success for bothBirdman and Boyhood make the winner even harder to predict. Dare we mention the other deserving nominees also running in the best picture category.

  • Whiplash.
  • The Theory of Everything.
  • The Imitation Game.
  • American Sniper.
  • Selma.

Bookmakers and film critics will have up untilthe last minute to make up their minds.The Oscar for best picture are the very last golden statuettes to be handed out at the yearlygala. A full list of the nominees can be found here.

CBC's arts reporter and resident film critic, Eli Glasner, makes his predictions here.

The Canadian contenders

How to Train Your Dragon 2 producer Bonnie Arnold and director Dean DeBlois accepting the award for Best Animated Feature Film at the 72nd Annual Golden Globes Awards. (NBC)
Canadians are up for a number of golden statuettes, three in theanimated film categories alone.

How To Train Your Dragon 2director Dean DeBlois,who took a Golden Globe for best animated feature, is up for an Academy Award in the same category. He's from Aylmer, Que. Longtime Waterloo, Ont.-resident,Chris Williams, co-directed Big Hero 6, which also has a nod for best animated feature.

Graham Annable of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., is also nominated for a best animated feature Oscar as a co-director for The Boxtrolls.

The Lego Movie's anthem Everything is Awesome was nominated for best original song. (Warner Bros. Pictures/AP)
And Norway-born, Montreal-raised Torill Kove is up for a prize in the best animated short film category for Me and My Moulton.

The Lego Movie's ubiquitous anthem Everything is Awesome, which was co-written by Canadian songwriter Joshua Bartholomew, is up for best original song.

Oakville, Ont.-born sound mixer Craig Mann is nominated, along withtwo colleagues, for hiswork in drumming movieWhiplashin the best sound mixing category.

Watch for full coverage, including photo galleries and all the winners, here onCBC.ca/arts.

CBC's film critic Eli Glasner will be live chatting with theCBC Community Teamin the aftermath of the awards on Monday starting at 12 p.m. ET.