The National Board of Review has handed Slumdog Millonaire their Best Picture award, but the big surprise was their handing Clint Eastwood the 2008 Best Actor award for his snarlin' Gran Torino performance, and also giving their Best Original Screenplay award to Gran Torino's Nick Schenk .

Surprising because the NBR's praise doesn't square with MCN's David Poland calling GT a wash, N.Y. Times reporter Michael Cieply sounding derisively smart-ass about Eastwood's personality being less likable than his dog's, and another online columnist suggesting that Torino might be a Razzie award contender.
Something's wrong here. Somebody's over-reacting or something. Either the West Coasters are mis-reading this movie big-time and fickling out on their own orbits, or the NBR members are trying to whorishly out-do themselves. That said, a major New York columnist and a major critic are both thumbs-up on Torino, and a major Left Coast syndicate writer and critic is an admirer also, I'm told.
Slulmdog Millionaire took the Best Picture prize, and Benjamin Button director David Fincher won for Best Director.
Rachel Getting Married's Anne Hathaway blew away stiff competitors Kate Winslet and Kristin Scott Thomas to take the Best Actress award. Go figure.
Josh Brolin's Dan White performance in Milk won for Best Supporting Actor. (Very tough competition in this category also -- Heath Ledger for The Dark Knight, Robert Downey Jr. for Tropic Thunder, Philip Seymour Hoffman for Doubt, and Michael Shannon for Revolutionary Road.)
And Vicky Christina Barcelona's Penelope Cruz won for Best Supporting Actress, beating out Doubt's Viola Davis.
The NBR's Best Foreign Language Film award went to...Mongol?
The NBR weirdos made the right call, however, in giving their Best Documentary award to James Marsh's Man on Wire, their Best Animated Feature award to WALL*E and the Best Ensemble Cast award to Doubt.
Slumdog's Dev Patel won the Breakthrough Performance by an Actor award, and Viola Davis, who's been doing great work in movies and plays for many years, won the NBR's Breakthrough Performance by an Actress award for her one killer scene work in Doubt.
Frozen River's Courtney Hunt won the Best Directorial Debut award, and Slumdog's Simon Beaufoy and Benjamin Button's Eric Roth tied, apparently, for Best Adapted Screenplay.
The Spotlight Awards went to Frozen River's Melissa Leo and The Visitor's Richard Jenkins.
The NBR's Top Ten films in alphabetical order: Burn After Reading, Changeling,
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Dark Knight, Defiance, Frost/Nixon, Gran Torino, Milk, WALL*E, The Wrestler.
Top Five Foreign Language Films (in alphabetical order): Ege of Heaven, Let The Right One In, Roman de Guerre, A Secret and Waltz With Bashir.
Top Five Documentary Films (in alphabetical order): American Teen (what?), The Betrayal, Dear Zachary, Encounters at the End of the World and Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired.
Posted by Jeffrey Wells on December 4, 2008 at 3:44 PM
comment #1
Arran
says ...
Didn't they have The Bucket List on their top films last year?
'Nuff said.
Posted by Arran
at December 4, 2008 4:36 PM
comment #2
Krazy Eyes
says ...
Shouldn't Slumdog be on the NBR's Top Ten list or is it exempt since it won the best picture award?
Posted by Krazy Eyes
at December 4, 2008 4:50 PM
comment #3
thatmovieguy
says ...
I saw GRAN TORINO yesterday and it's pretty dismal. Eastwood's performance verges on self-parody and the screenplay is terribly heavy-handed. It's a mishmash of AS GOOD AS IT GETS and BOYZ N THE HOOD -- if you can imagine -- a movie for people who thought CRASH was too subtle. But it's exactly what I'd expect the NBR to celebrate.
Posted by thatmovieguy
at December 4, 2008 5:10 PM
comment #4
Chase Kahn
says ...
The only person the NBR likes more than Clint is Ed Zwick -- personally, I wasn't surprised to see Clint win it, the whole world thinks he's God himself.
Just look at the fact that CHANGELING got in the Top 11 to see how much they fall for it.
Posted by Chase Kahn
at December 4, 2008 5:23 PM
comment #5
lazarus
says ...
Eastwood's win is an insult to people like Sean Penn and Del Toro who are actually doing something memorable each time they go on camera, and giving us performances for the ages.
The Clint love needs to stop. It's out of control.
Posted by lazarus
at December 4, 2008 5:32 PM
comment #6
BurmaShave
says ...
If they give him a pass for TORINO, how crazy are they going to go for his Nelson Mandela movie?
Posted by BurmaShave
at December 4, 2008 5:47 PM
comment #7
byanyother
says ...
Yeah, what you're seeing is respect and reverence for Eastwood. He has an easy way about him in the movie that works -- what doesn't work very well is the writing, which is why it's stunning to see the script honored here.
Posted by byanyother
at December 4, 2008 6:07 PM
comment #8
lipranzer
says ...
Not going to comment on Eastwood, since I haven't seen the film yet.
Instead, the very interesting choice of LET THE RIGHT ONE IN as one of the best foreign films of the year. As far as foreign films go, my faves of the year so far are EDGE OF HEAVEN, I'VE LOVED YOU SO LONG, TELL NO ONE, and REPRISE, but it's nice to see the board not dismiss LET THE RIGHT ONE IN as being just a genre film. There's some real filmmaking there, and some spooky scenes, like the pool scene.
Posted by lipranzer
at December 4, 2008 10:09 PM
comment #9
EDouglas
says ...
It's probably just the last movie that NBR saw like Letters from Iwo Jima a few years ago... everyone knows that the NBR members have no memory (or taste) so they usually vote for whatever the last movie they saw... It's better than CHangeling but not by much. The last act is especially problematic.
Posted by EDouglas
at December 5, 2008 6:04 AM
comment #10
janee
says ...
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Posted by janee
at May 19, 2011 3:11 AM