Oscar noms -- who got snubbed?
By most criteria, Paul McCartney and U2 have little reason to regard French composers Reinhardt Wagner and Frank Thomas with envy.
But Wagner and Thomas scored an Oscar nomination for best original song -- for Loin de Paname" from the little-seen French movie Paris 36" -- while neither Winter," U2's contribution to the soundtrack of Jim Sheridan's Brothers," nor McCartney's I Want to Come Home," from the family dramedy Everybody's Fine," finagled a place in the academy balloting.
And those were hardly the only notable omissions for original song. One anticipated contender, R&B diva Mary J. Blige's I Can See in Color," from Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire," was also snubbed. As were two of the most talked about songs from Rob Marshall's adaptation of the Broadway musical Nine" -- those performed by Kate Hudson and best supporting actress nominee Penlope Cruz.
Instead, Take It All," a torch song written by Maury Yeston and belted out by Marion Cotillard in Nine," received the nod. And two of Randy Newman's songs for the animated feature The Princess and the Frog" -- Almost There" and Down in New Orleans" -- will also compete for the Oscar.
Ryan Bingham was also nominated for The Weary Kind (Theme from 'Crazy Heart')" with his collaborator, Crazy Heart" soundtrack composer T Bone Burnett.
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Best Original Song Nominee List Missing a Few Songs of Note
U2, Paul McCartney and Mary J. Blige are among those who miss out on the short list. While T Bone Burnett and Ryan Bingham are up for Weary Kind (Theme From 'Crazy Heart')."