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Updated: Monday, 08 Mar 2010, 2:57 AM PST
Published : Sunday, 07 Mar 2010, 2:34 AM PST
Posted by: Scott Coppersmith / myFOXla.com
LOS ANGELES - The Academy Awards went according to expectations Sunday night,
as the Iraq war drama "The Hurt Locker" was named best picture and
Jeff Bridges and Sandra Bullock took home the top acting awards.
"The Hurt Locker" won a total of six Oscars during the 82nd
annual ceremony, out-dueling the 3-D fantasy "Avatar" to win the
top prize. The dramatic portrayal of an elite bomb-disposal unit in
Iraq also earned a best director prize for Kathryn Bigelow, making
her the first woman to win that honor.
"This really is -- there's no other way to describe it. It's
the moment of a lifetime," said Bigelow, who won the best-directing
Oscar over the nomination of her ex-husband, "Avatar" director
James Cameron.
"First of all this is so extraordinary to be in the company
of such powerful, my fellow nominees, such powerful filmmakers who
have inspired me and I have admired for, some of whom for decades,"
she said.
She credited screenwriter Mark Boal, a reporter who spent
time embedded with a military unit in Iraq, saying he "risked his
life for the words on the page and wrote such a courageous
screenplay."
Bigelow also thanked the people of Jordan, where the movie
was filmed, and dedicated the film's success to the Armed Forces.
"And I'd just like to dedicate this to the women and men in
the military who risk their lives for us on a daily basis in Iraq
and Afghanistan and around the world," she said. "And may they come
home safe."
Boal, who was also one of the film's producers, also thanked
American soldiers as he accepted his screenwriting Oscar.
"I was a reporter back from Iraq with the idea for a story
about these men on the front lines of an unpopular war," said Boal,
who dedicated the Oscar to his father, who died one month ago. "I
thought it might make a movie. The result wildly exceeded my
expectations. And that is thanks to so many people. ... Most of all
to one extraordinary individual and visionary filmmaker, Kathryn
Bigelow. This belongs to you.
"I would also like to thank and dedicate this to the troops
-- the 115,000 who are still in Iraq, the 120,00 in Afghanistan and
the more than 30,000 wounded and 4,000 who have not made it home,"
he said.
In addition to best picture, director and original
screenplay, the film also won Oscars for sound editing, sound
mixing and film editing.
Bridges won the best actor prize for his role as
hard-drinking country singer Bad Blake in "Crazy Heart." He
dedicated the Oscar to his parents, Lloyd and Dorothy Bridges, whom
he thanked for "turning him on to such a groovy profession."
"Oh my dad and my mom, they loved show biz so much," he said.
"I remember my mom getting all of us kids to entertain at her
parties. You know, my dad sitting me on his bed and (teaching) me
all of the basics of acting for a role in `Sea Hunt.' They loved
show biz so much and I feel an extension of them. This is honoring
them as much as it is me."
He also thanked his wife of 33 years, Susan, and their three
children.
"I wouldn't be up here without you," he said.
Bridges had been nominated for Oscars four times before --
for a leading role in "Starman" and supporting parts in "The Last
Picture Show," "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot" and "The Contender."
Bullock completed her transformation from romantic-comedy
queen to dramatic actress with her Oscar win for best actress for
her turn as a Southern housewife who mentors a young black football
player in "The Blind Side."
"Did I really earn this or did I just wear you all down?"
Bullock joked as she accepted the award. "I would like the Academy
for allowing me in the last month to have the most incredible ride
with rooms full of artists that I see tonight and that I've worked
with before and I hope to work with in the future who inspire me
and blaze trails for us."
She dedicated the award to "the moms that take care of the
babies and the children no matter where they come from. Those moms
and parents never get thanked."
She also tearfully thanked her late mother, opera singer
Helga Bullock "for not letting me ride in cars with boys 'til I was
18 because she was right, I would have done what she said I was
gonna do."
"For making me practice every day when I got home -- piano,
ballet, whatever it is I wanted to be," she said. "She said to be
an artist you had to practice every day. And for reminding her
daughters that there's no race, no religion, no class system, no
color, nothing, no sexual orientation that makes us better than
anyone else."
Austrian actor Christoph Waltz and standup
comedian-turned-dramatic actress Mo'Nique continued their winning
ways by claiming the Oscars for their respective supporting roles
in "Inglourious Basterds" and "Precious: Based on the Novel `Push'
by Sapphire."
Bridges, Bullock, Waltz and Mo'Nique had already won Golden
Globe and Screen Actors Guild awards.
Waltz, who portrayed a Jew-hunting Nazi in writer/director
Quentin Tarantino's World War II adventure, gave Tarantino full
credit for the award.
"Quentin, with his unorthodox methods of navigation, this
fearless explorer, took this ship across and brought it in with
flying colors. and that's why I am here," Waltz said while
accepting his first career Academy Award at the Kodak Theatre in
Hollywood. "This is your welcoming embrace and there is no way I
can ever thank you enough. But I can start right now. Thank you."
Mo'Nique won her Oscar for her role as an abusive mother in
"Precious."
"First I would like to thank the Academy for showing that it
can be about the performance and not the politics," Mo'Nique said.
"I want to thank miss Hattie McDaniel for enduring all that
she had to so that I would not have to," she added, referencing the
first black performer to win an Academy Award, for "Gone with the
Wind."
"To my amazing husband Sidney, thank you for showing me that
sometimes you have to forego doing what's popular in order to do
what's right," Mo'Nique said. "And baby, you were so right."
The Disney/Pixar film "Up" was named best animated feature.
Director Peter Docter thanked the members of the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences for recognizing "this oddball film." He
also thanked his family for inspiring him.
"It was an incredible, incredible adventure making this
movie," Docter said. "But the heart of it came from home."
"Up" was also nominated for best picture.
The Kodak Theatre ceremony featured 10 nominees for best
picture for the first time since 1943, when "Casablanca" won the
Oscar.
"Avatar" and "The Hurt Locker" both had nine nominations
going into the ceremony, making them obvious front-runners. But
while "Avatar" has been dominant at the box office, "The Hurt
Locker" was an awards-season favorite, earning the top prize from
the Producers Guild of America and a best director award for
Kathryn Bigelow from the Directors Guild of America. Both the PGA
and DGA awards have traditionally been precursors to Oscar glory.
Tarantino's World War II yarn "Inglourious Basterds" had
eight nominations, while the gritty teen drama "Precious: Based on
the Novel `Push' by Sapphire" and the high-flying recessionary
romance "Up in the Air" each had six.
Other films up for best picture were "The Blind Side,"
"District 9," "An Education," "A Serious Man" and "Up."
"Avatar" won Oscars for best visual effects, art direction
and cinematography.
Geoffrey Fletcher won the Oscar for best adapted screenplay
for "Precious."
"I don't know what to say," Fletcher said. "This is for
everybody who works on the dream every day, Precious boys and girls
everywhere."
Fletcher also thanked his mother, whom he called the "angel
of my world," and his father, "who spent so much time with us and
taught us everything."
Ryan Bingham and T Bone Burnett won the Oscar for best
original song for "The Weary Kind (Theme from `Crazy Heart')."
The Oscars were presented during a ceremony hosted by Steve
Martin and Alec Baldwin. Despite efforts to shorten the program by
eliminating the traditional live performances of nominees for best
original song, the ceremony still stretched over three and a half
hours.