some thoughts on recent movies i've seen, and academy awards...
there was a definite french theme...
big winner artist (picture, director, actor, music?) was french production, director/writer & leads (actress wife of director)...
biggest garnerer of nominations (won for cinematography), scorcese's hugo, set in france and based in part on life of genius trailblazer of early cinema - melies...
midnight in paris by woody allen - won an oscar for best original screenplay...
spielberg's tin tin... used french comic as source material...
all except allen movie would be great family movies, imo, but more than that, and can be appreciated by adults...
artist was a composite of AT LEAST five sources that i could detect...
plot had elements that could have been derived from a star is born (former star's career hits skids, becomes involved with a talkie up 'n comer)
also singing in the rain (silent star's career on downward trajectory, while an unknown actress/singer sees her star on the rise...
biographical aspects of charlie chaplin, who resisted the onset of talkies (afraid that the universal elements of the tramp character as expressed in mime and pantomine would be irretrievably lost and his worldwide appeal damaged by the babel-like fragmentation of language... he was almost certainly the most popular and famous movie star in the world at the advent of sound movies ((jazz singer by al jolsen i think commonly cited as first in US - late '20s?)))... several years later, he released city lights as a silent movie... 5-7 years later in modern times, the only voices heard were in artificial situations like a factory intercom... and about a decade or more later, in another joke, in the great dictator, until near the end of the movie (when you hear chaplin in his own voice), in the dictator half of his dual role performance, he speaks gibberish, nonsense german... BTW, city lights and modern times were imo his masterpieces (and highly praised by heavyweight directors like kubrick and tarkovsky), but the gold rush was great, and the great dictator had its moments...
the dog in the artist has some similarities to that in tin tin...
an important later scene (film burning) could have been a page/chapter torn from the life of melies...
* some may have no interest in silent films as it seems like an antiquated, dated form... the artist does benefit from a contemporary sensibility in terms of pacing and editing, and even with relatively few inter-titles, it is so well done, there is never any point where the viewer would be less than clear on what is going on... i think i was primed to see this because after seeing a buster keaton retrospective on TCM in oct or nov (classics like the general, which orson welles called not just one of the best civil war films ever, but films period, sherlock, jr., our hospitality and steamboat bill), and around the same time the aforementioned city lights by chaplin, which might have been my first real exposure to the genre, i nearly instantly appreciated it and became a fan... chaplin had greater range, and was one of the first i think to mix drama with comedy (like in the kid)... keaton was a genius physical comedian... in some ways, some of the sight gags are funnier than virtually anything i see in contemporary comedies... instead of relying on special effects, keaton had to be ceaselessly inventive in stunts, and he was a fearless acrobat (jackie chan before jackie chan... not only did he do his own stunts, he did everybody's stunts!

)... there is a scene in steamboat bill during a hurricane where the front of a house (not just a facade) falls towards towards him, and narrowly misses crushing him to death by inches when he barely clears the window opening... this was an actual stunt, and i think the crew walked off at one point, because if keaton had missed his mark, or something had gone wrong, he definitely could have been killed...
** if anybody liked or is potentially interested in hugo, ebert's review alerted me to the fact that it included material about melies and the birth of modern cinema... i'm watching a doc called the magic of melies which delves further into the backstory, and it is pretty compelling... it could be of interest to anyone who holds an even casual historical curiosity about the birth of film... his techniques were pioneering, ahead of their time and later widely emulated... it also includes some of the earliest surviving shorts, some over a century old...