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Why 'Crash' conquered the 'Mountain' ; 'Capote' likely helped play spoiler
[Chicagoland Final Edition]
Chicago Tribune - Chicago, Ill.
Author: Michael Wilmington, Tribune movie critic
Date: Mar 12, 2006
Start Page: 12
Section: Arts & Entertainment
Text Word Count: 948
Abstract (Document Summary)

"Crash" probably won because more of the academy voters liked and admired it as a movie. They didn't shun "Brokeback"; they gave it three key Oscars (best director, adapted screenplay and original score) and a strong place in academy history. But I would argue that the majority -- and maybe it was a slim majority -- honestly preferred "Crash." In the end, it's more likely that the voting majority thought "Brokeback" was a good, honorable film, but slower, less engrossing and less moving compared with the jazzy, multistranded, Altmanesque L.A.-contempo "Crash," a movie about racism and crime in today's Los Angeles with a big-name ensemble cast playing for peanuts, a tricky structure of interweaving stories and an overall L.A. atmosphere and feeling that struck many Angelenos as right-on. It's a movie that, according to New York Daily News critic, Oscar expert and L.A. native Jack Mathews "played like gangbusters to people who lived in L.A."

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