
Godzillaser
MemberMothra LarvaeJan-16-2015 6:06 AMI was shocked......
I thought the film will be nominated in best visual effect, sound mixing and sound editing.
*crying a lot*

FordBrodyLover99
MemberMothra LarvaeJan-16-2015 6:28 AMYeah, but thats just how awards are. Sometimes they just ignore movies entirely, and this year Godzilla got snobbed. The awards are apparently too fancy for such trivial things as monsters(atleast this year. JW will be nominated next year for visual effects, for sure). But we`ll make it, with or without the nominations.

Danzilla93
MemberBaragonJan-16-2015 6:36 AMDull surprise.
This isn't a shock, considereing how Hollywood works. Godzilla's sound design, if nothing else in the movie, should have gotten at least a nomination. But its just not something they really felt deserved the attention of being recognized.
And quite frankly, if Interstellar can be passed up COMPLETELY for ANY award, than Godzilla being passed up shouldn't shock us. -_-
"Fantasy is the impossible made probable. Science Fiction is the improbable made possible." -Rod Serling

JRR
MemberMothra LarvaeJan-16-2015 8:40 AMit isn't shoking, from the moment it came out i knew it wouldn't win any oscar, but at least it didn't get nominated for a razzie

dinoboy22
MemberMothra LarvaeJan-16-2015 8:49 AMim not surprised either. in my opinion the movie shouldve been nominated for its special effects

G. H. (Gman)
AdminGodzillaJan-16-2015 9:45 AMYeah, I'm not shocked either. It wasn't as universally loved as the other nominations, so even the technical awards seemed like a long shot. I was pretty sure it was going to get cut out of the visual effects running, but I thought it might have a chance at sound design. Guess not.
No big deal though.

Sci-Fi King25
MemberGiganJan-16-2015 12:51 PMI was just a little bit surprised that it wasn't nominated.
“Banana oil.”- George Takei, Gigantis: The Fire Monster

NateZilla10000
MemberMothra LarvaeJan-16-2015 2:04 PMI'm dissapointed with it not being nominated for anything, but I guess I had this coming myself. The Oscars nowadays are wildely biased to the media's praise; they seem to rate films on how well recieved they are by audiences than actually taking in-depth review of the material in front of the (example, their apparrent love for Disney). Godzilla had some controversy around it, so snubbed it will be.
However, I will say, if Intersteller wins Sound Design and/or Sound Mixing, I will be LIVID. That film doesn't even deserve to be nominated for those categories; I don't care who produced or made it. The sound effect placement and levels of volume were absolutely atrocious in that film. Some scenes, you couldn't even hear what the actors were saying due to the ear-splitting sounds drowning them out (even though they were ment to be heard, as they were having conversations about what was going on). Visual Effects, sure. What they did in that department deserves recognition. But not the sound department.

G. H. (Gman)
AdminGodzillaJan-16-2015 3:17 PMI think if the Oscars ranked films by media praise and audience appreciation we'd see stuff like Guardians of the Galaxy nominated for Best Picture. The fact that Best Picture noms are typically films the mainstream has never heard of tends to prove that.
I'm on the fence about whether or not Godzilla deserved an Oscar nom for effects or not, but I can't put all the blame on the Oscars. The fact is Godzilla simply wasn't as well recieved by the industry as the other noms and we have no idea if Warner Brothers even bothered to campaign it for an Oscar. If WB put no effort into taking out ads or campaigning the movie for special effect and sound, then there was no real push to get it nominated to begin with.
All of this being said, I'm tired of superhero movies being nominated for special effects. I can't think of s superhero movie that had some really standout special effects or looked like something difficult to pull off. Effects-wise I'd put Godzilla ahead of Guardians of the Galaxy, Captain America Winter Soldier and X-Men: Days of Future Past, personally.

GG
MemberGiganJan-16-2015 4:10 PMThe Oscars aren't worth the time of day anyway, i dont even watch them.
Good grief.

G. H. (Gman)
AdminGodzillaJan-16-2015 4:24 PMI like the Oscars. I understand certain criticisms torward it, (Not all. I think some people just get butthurt and lash out) but it's fairly entertaining and it's moved some very talented people's careers into some great places. And I'm glad it exists to honor film in general-- Which is how I tend to see it: A yearly celebration of film. Whoever wins is just a byproduct of the celebration.
The criticism I don't hear very often, and I think is the most legitimate of them all, is that I understand less and less what Best Picture, for example, means. With so many movies released per year trying to do such different things the comparison becomes hazy. As a result I wish there was more variety with the nominations.
Other than that I enjoy watching them for what they are.

indiana jones
MemberMothra LarvaeJan-16-2015 5:44 PMwhat surprised me is ho small the movie was, its like, the film comes out...and that was it, thats all
"That is one big pile of sh*t" -Doctor Ian Malcom

JohnSmith
MemberMothra LarvaeJan-17-2015 4:37 AMIt's not surprising but unfortunately it is just ridiculous. The sound design of Godzilla definitely deserved a nomination, and as for VFX nomination, I do not agree that X-men nor Capt 2 had more impressive VFX. I mean, the helicarrier from Capt 2 is not a good enough reason for it to be nominated over Godzilla. Even Edge of tomorrow had better VFX than Capt 2. Either way Apes will win and rightly so.

Something Real
MemberGodzillaJan-17-2015 10:38 PMGODZILLASER - I understand you disdain for the Oscars not having recognozed Godzilla. However, it is not unexpected; the Oscars have ever been focused on films that deal with more, shall we say, "realistic" and/or "human" issues. There is, in my opinion, a frightful lack of imagination when it comes to the men and women whom are responsible for nominating films for the Oscars. Perhaps there will come a time in which movies are judged for how well they are received by the common people instead of on the obscurity/fame of their directors and the amount of boring/controversial/depressing realism they depict. Regardless, keep your chin up! :)

Ariccio
MemberMothra LarvaeJan-18-2015 10:25 PM"The oscars are won by films about disabled people crying. That's the only criteria."
-Nerdcubed