Charlie Kaufman and Donald Kaufman
Adaptation
Continuing the two-way battle throughout most of these awards, About
a Boy and Adaptation were the top two finishers in Best Screenplay,
with Adaptation landing on top in this battle by a very narrow
margin.
The reflexive nature of Charlie Kaufman's (and his fictional twin's)
script obviously struck a big chord with our voters, as it won an
overwhelming portion of the first place votes available.
Alternatively clever, touching and insightful, Kaufman's meditation
on the creative process and the passion involved was one of the more
unique scripts to come along the pipes since, well, Being John
Malkovich.
In what nearly became a demonstration of the power of group voting,
About a Boy nearly won this category without a single first place
vote. The Weitz brothers, along with Peter Hedges, did a terrific job
of bringing Nick Hornby's insightful commentary to the screen. It
doesn't take much to see that there's a bit of "lost boy" syndrome
among this group.
Charlie Kaufman placed his other major script of the year in the top
three, with Confessions of a Dangerous Mind sitting comfortably in
third place. Quirky enough to be a Kaufman original, it was in fact
taken from Chuck Barris's unauthorized autobiography (heh) of the
same title. Taking Barris's claims at face value, it makes up the
baseline of a film that is rich in metaphor but also works of its own
accord as a thriller.
The screenplay for the latest edition of The Lord of the Rings makes an
appearance in this list again, taking one step down from last year
from third to fourth. The most altered of the three films from the
source (so says Peter Jackson), The Two Towers had a lot of work to do, a lot of
plot to convey and a lot of rearranging, with proper interlacing
important to the multiple stories present.
Fifth place goes to the character drama About Schmidt, a quiet but
hard-hitting drama about Midwest life and late-life crises.
Reflecting the strength of the year, all of the top five scripts were
adapted efforts, the opposite of last year's group of four originals
and one adapted.
Just missing the top five were a few love-it-or-hate-it screenplays;
PT Anderson's twisted love tale Punch-Drunk Love, M. Night
Shyamalan's Signs and Steven Soderbergh's Solaris. All had their fans
but not enough to push them into the top group. A script that
probably could have gotten higher with more exposure is Dylan Kidd's
Roger Dodger, which got only three votes, but all of them were for
first place. At number ten was the screenplay for Frailty, the twisty
and suspenseful supernatural thriller.
Among some major Oscar contenders, The Hours sat just outside the top
ten at number 11, and Chicago just a bit lower at number 14. The
general ignoring of Gangs of New York continued here, with no votes
at all going to it. (Reagen Sulewski/BOP)
Top Ten
|
Position |
Actor |
Film |
Total Points |
1
|
Charlie Kaufman and Donald Kaufman
|
Adaptation
|
110
|
2
|
Peter Hedges, Chris Weitz and Paul Weitz
|
About a Boy
|
104
|
3
|
Charlie Kaufman
|
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind
|
73
|
4
|
Frances Walsh, Peter Jackson, Stephen Sinclair and Philippa Boynes
|
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
|
65
|
5
|
Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor
|
About Schmidt
|
56
|
6
|
Paul Thomas Anderson
|
Punch-Drunk Love
|
51
|
7
|
M. Night Shyamalan
|
Signs
|
49
|
8
|
Steven Soderbergh
|
Solaris
|
40
|
9
|
Dylan Kidd
|
Roger Dodger
|
39
|
10
|
Brent Hanley
|
Frailty
|
36
|
Best Picture
Best Director
Best Actor
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor
Best Supporting Actress
Best Scene
Best Cast
Best Use of Music
Worst Picture
Best Trailer
Best DVD
Best Overlooked Film
Return to the 2003 Calvin Awards