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- Oct 21 Sun 2012 23:45
逆光飛翔
- Mar 25 Fri 2011 13:11
'The Social Network' review
By: Ryan Fleming • October 1, 2010
'The Social Network' movie poster
Review: In The Social Network, David Fincher tells the story of the founding of Facebook. And while it might not be totally accurate, it is easily one of the best films of the year.
- Mar 25 Fri 2011 12:46
'The Social Network' takes home three awards at 2011 Oscars, not Best Picture
By: Andrew Couts • February 28, 2011
What's cooler than winning one Academy Award? Winning three Academy Awards — which is exactly what The Social Network did this year. (That does not, however, include Best Picture.)
To no one's surprise, The King's Speech took Best Picture at this year's Academy Awards, beating out The Social Network and a slew of other deserving nominees. But that doesn't mean the dark and twisted dork movie about the (fictional) beginnings of Facebook walked away empty handed.
To start, screenwriter Aaron Sorkin's script won in the Adapted Screenplay category, beating out the Cohen brother's True Grit, Toy Story 3, 127 Hours and Winter's Bones. The Social Network also won in the glamorous Film Editing category, which will surely make editors Angus Wall and Kirk Baxter celebrities at their local bar. And Nine Inch Nails frontman, Trent Reznor, ginned-up the last Academy Award in the Original Score category.
The King's Speech and Inception tied for most awards won last night, having each received a total of four statues.
- Mar 25 Fri 2011 12:33
Here's Who You Think Should Win The Oscars
2011/2/28
With the Oscars 2011 awards broadcast only hours away (it's tonight at 8 p.m. Eastern, 5 p.m. Pacific on ABC), we can't wait another minute — we'd like to know who's going to win, and we want to know now.
Here's an exclusive infographic that could give us a hint or two.
However, according to Webtrends, this pre-show buzz might not indicate the real winners. When Webtrends experts were looking at the details of the data, "it was clear that this is the 'people's choice' – a popularity contest and not necessarily the view of the Academy."
How did Webtrends get this data? It scoured blogs, Facebook, Twitter feeds and other microblogs, putting a finger on the pulse of the online world, picking up the pre-buzz and figuring out who might have a good chance of winning.