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Oscar's filter: Worldview, not artistic merit, helps unpopular films dominate the Academy Awards
WORLD ^ | 2/25/12 | Megan Basham

Posted on 02/25/2012 10:31:50 AM PST by rhema

Nine films are competing for the Best Picture award to be handed out at the 2012 Academy Awards extravaganza on Feb. 26—and the average box office gross of the nominees is one of the lowest in the last 20 years. Only one of the nine, The Help, could be considered a genuine hit. And, as with popular nominees of the previous two years, few industry insiders give it much chance of winning. (One Oscar betting site currently pegs its odds at 33 to 1.)

Since underrepresentation of crowd-pleasers prompted the Academy's decision in 2009 to have up to 10 Best Picture nominees each year rather than five, the natural question when sizing up this year's race is, what gives? The answer lies in a story that shows how worldviews make a difference both in making movies and choosing winners.

Let's start with that expansion decision, which followed years of sliding Oscar night ratings. The president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Sid Ganis, said in a press conference that the Academy's goal was to expand the playing field for worthy films: "Having 10 Best Picture nominees is going to allow Academy voters to recognize and include some of the fantastic movies that often show up in the other Oscar categories, but have been squeezed out of the race for the top prize."

Yet while the move wasn't without precedent (prior to 1943, the Best Picture category often included as many as 12 nominees), many skeptical industry watchers surmised that while a desire to cater to the movie-going public played a part in the Academy's decision, the Academy had been shamed into it.

The 81st Academy Awards four months earlier saw the snubbing of The Dark Knight, one of the most financially successful, critically acclaimed films of the last decade: It was the highest-grossing movie of 2008 and also received a 94 percent positive rating on Rotten Tomatoes, a website that averages the scores of film critics across the country. It received neither Best Picture nor Best Director nominations. Instead, less-regarded films like The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and The Reader, which received only 72 percent and 62 percent positive averages, respectively, and grossed only small fractions of The Dark Knight's haul, made the cut.

Speculation that its popularity and superhero subject matter caused Oscar voters to diss The Dark Knight sparked widespread outrage across the blogosphere. Awards Daily, in a piece titled Oscar Shoots Self in Foot, wondered what criteria could have possibly accounted for the Academy's choice. "They don't think about ratings, they don't think about critics, they don't think about the public anymore (they certainly used to). So what do they think about?" wrote Sasha Stone. The Chicago Tribune's Marc Caro warned that Oscar might be flirting with irrelevance: "When the Academy denies top recognition to such critically and popularly beloved movies as The Dark Knight and Wall•E ... it risks confirming the suspicions of those who think it has grown out of touch with mainstream tastes."

During the question-and-answer session following his 2010 announcement of the Best Picture expansion, Ganis admitted, "I would not be telling you the truth if I said the words 'Dark Knight' did not come up."

The new, enlarged 2010 ceremony featured indie productions like The Hurt Locker and An Education going head-to-head with crowd-pleasers like Avatar, The Blind Side, District 9, and Up. The widely publicized insider wisdom was that Avatar, based on the seismic impact it had on the entertainment landscape, stood a good chance of winning, and the other three nominations were pure audience bait with little to no hope of taking home the big award. In the end, all the big box-office players lost out to the low-budget war drama, The Hurt Locker (which made less money at the box office than any Best Picture winner in modern Oscar history), and 5 million more viewers tuned in.

Why did that happen? Britain's Daily Telegraph argued that the Academy refuses to "bow cravenly to box-office success; instead it rewards serious, accomplished filmmaking." But here's another suggestion: Filmmakers with the talent and resources to make excellent movies (which usually means movies that treat ideas seriously) are choosing themes that the broad swath of Americans find uninspiring if not outright offensive.

Think about Best Picture nominees that also have big box-office numbers. They tend to be films in which the main characters struggle to overcome either their own inner weaknesses or outer obstacles to achieve a specific moral ideal. Gladiator, Erin Brockovich, The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Juno, Up, Inglourious Basterds, Seabiscuit, Slumdog Millionaire, The Departed, Avatar—all of these high-grossing Best Picture contenders of the last 10 years, whether you ascribe to their worldview or not, present a fixed concept of virtue. Character development and the subtext of the story serve to reinforce, not deconstruct, that concept.

Take last year's big winner, the natty, quintessentially aristocratic The King's Speech. For the good of his country King George perseveres to overcome his stutter and thus deliver a speech that uplifts and steels the hearts of his people during a war. Though it bore none of the usual markings of a movie likely to top $100 million, word of its excellence spread, and it eventually became a bona fide blockbuster. This year's sleeper hit, The Help, in which a young white journalist helps black maids in the segregated South speak out against oppression, followed a similar (indeed, even more dramatic) trajectory, as did 2009's The Blind Side, in which a wealthy family adopts an impoverished teenager. (It goes without saying that, though a conflicted character, The Dark Knight stands with those who battle on behalf of unconditional morality.)

The films Oscar voters have tended to award in recent years, on the other hand, frequently have themes of inner uncertainty and lack of a fixed moral compass. The characters may start out clutching onto an ideological ideal, but events of the story conspire to show how misguided or naïve they have been in trying to consistently apply that ideal to the vagaries of life.

For example, The Hurt Locker, while an excellent film, features soldiers unsure of their role in the Iraq War, questioning whether they fight because their cause is just or because they love the rush that comes from combat. The Descendants, one of the favorites to win Best Picture at the 84th Academy Awards on Feb. 26, follows a man whose concept of marriage and family is decimated after he discovers his comatose wife had been cheating on him. He must learn, through blow after blow to his ego and his notion of what it means to be a parent, to accept new ideals, drawing wisdom from his teenage daughter and her pot-smoking boyfriend. When one minor character tries to apply an overarching virtue—forgiveness—to the distressing situation, she is portrayed as something of an embarrassment.

The 2010 indie nominee, The Kids Are All Right, which superficially made the case for same-sex parenting, featured partners who, along with cheating and lying to each other, are unsure of their sexual feelings and unsure whether those feelings are good or bad. Besides the inessentiality of fathers, the only moral ideal the film leaves its characters with is that acknowledging their uncertainty and slogging on despite it is better than fixing on a single definition of marriage and family.

Though not a Best Picture nominee, The Iron Lady (for which Meryl Streep is considered the frontrunner for Best Actress) serves as perhaps the best illustration this year of how a filmmaker's thematic choices may keep the public away from a movie they would otherwise have great interest in.

The basic facts of Margaret Thatcher's life are these—a lower-middle-class grocer's daughter struggles to win acceptance in the male-dominated Tory party of the 1970s before going on to become first leader of her party and then prime minister of Great Britain. During her time in office she triumphs over her political rivals, governs her country to renewed economic prosperity, and collaborates with other world leaders to help end the Cold War.

It would not have taken a hagiography to make a movie about Thatcher that resonated with American moviegoers. But it would have taken the perspective that Thatcher deeply believed in her stated political and moral ideologies, and that her dedication to them was what drove her to overcome all obstacles. Instead, in between showing a young Thatcher as blindly enthralled by politicians as other young girls were by the Beatles, director Phyllida Lloyd shows Thatcher's motivations and her own feelings about her goals to be suspect.

Told through the conceit of Thatcher looking back on her life while enduring the hectoring of her now-deceased husband, she considers that it may have been ambition rather than righteous passion that drove her: She quietly grieves what her triumphs may have cost her. In the end, the ideologies the Iron Lady stands on are shifting sand—perhaps not worth her lifetime of dedication. No wonder, despite its brilliant acting and riveting subject, the film failed to win much attention from moviegoers.

As in the case of The Iron Lady, filmmakers don't necessarily have to believe in absolute moral values to draw audiences, but if they want to make movies that make money for something other than mammoth spectacle and genre pandering, they should probably create characters who do. If Academy members want to draw more viewers to their TV screens next year, they might give more attention to well-made movies that feature crusaders, caped or otherwise.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: academyawards; movie; oscar; thatcher
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1 posted on 02/25/2012 10:31:57 AM PST by rhema
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To: rhema

So what stops us from staging a conservative counter-Oscars?


2 posted on 02/25/2012 10:40:38 AM PST by UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide (REPEAL WASHINGTON! -- Islam Delenda Est! -- I Want Constantinople Back. -- Rumble thee forth.)
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To: rhema

Which of this year’s nominees is he talking about?

The Artist
The Descendants
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
The Help
Hugo
Midnight in Paris
Moneyball
The Tree of Life
War Horse


3 posted on 02/25/2012 10:41:17 AM PST by Borges
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To: UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide

Most Best Picture winners tend to be fairly conservative.


4 posted on 02/25/2012 10:42:35 AM PST by Borges
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To: rhema

If a movie pushes the homosexual agenda, drug addled entertainers, the “black struggle”, how evil corporations or the USA are then it will get the full attention of the Academy. Only these are considered to have “artistic merit”.

Oh, occasionally they will include narcissistic a movie about Broadway or the movie industry.

The Oscars are a lost cause and not worth watching.

(I know; don’t be so mealy mouthed. I should tell you what I REALLY think!)


5 posted on 02/25/2012 10:45:24 AM PST by BwanaNdege (Man has often lost his way, but modern man has lost his address - Gilbert K. Chesterton)
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To: BwanaNdege

BP winners from past years have been “The King’s Speech”, “Slumdog Millionare”, “No Country for Old Men”, “The Departed” etc. Where do you see those themes?


6 posted on 02/25/2012 10:47:25 AM PST by Borges
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To: rhema

I saw 4 of the 9. The Help, The Descendants, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, and War Horse. My wife would like to go see The Artist before Sunday night but I just can’t bring myself to want to see it....Maybe she can talk me into it after Mass tomorrow afternoon. Anyway, The Help was good, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close was so boring!!! The Descendants was another snoozer....I slept good in that movie my wife says....lol. Very true story. War Horse was very good. Out of the 4, War Horse was the best.


7 posted on 02/25/2012 10:56:49 AM PST by napscoordinator (A moral principled Christian with character is the frontrunner! Congrats Santorum!)
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To: BwanaNdege

I wrote off the Oscars way back in my younger days when I heard the acceptance speech for “Hearts and Minds”. When I heard the praise for the Khmer Rouge, my parents heard me cuss a blue streak at those commie (censored).


8 posted on 02/25/2012 10:58:13 AM PST by Fred Hayek (FUBO, the No Talent Pop Star pResident.)
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To: UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide
So what stops us from staging a conservative counter-Oscars?

At the 2009 presentation, the very pro-American and pro-military film The Hurt Locker cleaned up. Problem was, nobody went to see it. It was a very low-grossing film. Everyone went to see Avatar instead.

9 posted on 02/25/2012 11:03:11 AM PST by Drew68
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To: napscoordinator

Of the movies you mentioned I only have seen The Help which I thought was good and very close to the way things were and in places may still be. War Horse was more of a kids movie. I was jerked emotionally up and down through the whole movie and I got a bit sick of that because I am not a kid.


10 posted on 02/25/2012 11:03:47 AM PST by Ditter
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To: Borges
Most Best Picture winners tend to be fairly conservative.

Million Dollar Baby, Chicago, American Beauty, deer hunter, one flew over the cuckoos nest, midnight cowboy, out of africa, platoon, driving ms daisy, ordinary people , kramer v kramer,

I think it's a mish-mosh... The Passion of the Christ getting snubbed for foreign language and best picture is about the most recent example of what will NEVER win an oscar. Politics has everything to do with best picture.

Now I'm off to go watch Act of Valor. Let's see what the Hollywood bunch did and will do for recruiting SEALs. I think it looks like Top Gun. Lot of fellers are gonna want to try to be a SEAL. Just one little problem I see with that.

SEAL training and service is NOT Hollywood and NOT just about blowing crap up.. it's a way of life and even though they're getting some publicity now, they're life is a warrior's life.

11 posted on 02/25/2012 11:42:25 AM PST by Dick Vomer (democrats are like flies, whatever they don't eat they sh#t on.)
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To: rhema

The author of this piece decided on a storyline and then cherry-picked to back up her thesis. You could write this story every year, just picking different movies to compare.


12 posted on 02/25/2012 11:43:11 AM PST by drjimmy
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To: UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide

Not having enough conservative actors and actresses.


13 posted on 02/25/2012 12:16:09 PM PST by Biggirl ("Jesus talked to us as individuals"-Jim Vicevich/Thanks JimV!)
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To: rhema
The 81st Academy Awards four months earlier saw the snubbing of The Dark Knight, one of the most financially successful, critically acclaimed films of the last decade: It was the highest-grossing movie of 2008 and also received a 94 percent positive rating on Rotten Tomatoes, a website that averages the scores of film critics across the country. It received neither Best Picture nor Best Director nominations.

C'mon, they gave Heath Ledger the Oscar for it, and he didn't even bother to show up to accept it.

I know he was dead, but did you really expect a Batman picture to get a Best Picture nomination?

Bear in mind, that the year it was nominated was the last year with only five Best Picture nominees.

Under the current rules, with 10 nominees, The Dark Knight probably would have been nominated ... along with an animated feature and something with Sandra Bullock in it.

14 posted on 02/25/2012 12:17:32 PM PST by x
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To: rhema

The academy has always considered financial failure a sign of artistic merit. Lots of Oscar winners are movies nobody watched before the award or will watch again after.


15 posted on 02/25/2012 12:18:39 PM PST by discostu (I did it 35 minutes ago)
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To: rhema

How about this:

The vast majority of what hollywood makes is crap. For the most part, unimaginative, lowest common denominator, for a public that really doesn’t expect much.

Then - this crap is fed through an industry based marketing/popularity contest - in which the insane ward inmates & fags and leftist wanna be intellectuals rate their own work.

Why anyone would care what this system produces as a “winner” is beyond me. Most of the people involved aren’t worth the time of day.

It was over when “Shakespeare in Love” beat “Saving Private Ryan”. Fonzi jumped the shark right there.

I will make my own judgements - and just watch “Magnolia” again for the XXth time - waiting for some quality film to sneak out of Hollyweird.


16 posted on 02/25/2012 12:28:48 PM PST by Eldon Tyrell (question,.)
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To: rhema

The Oscars are irrelevant. I go to the movies to see ones I think I might like- and those are not likely to be ones the Oscars will go to.


17 posted on 02/25/2012 12:34:22 PM PST by GenXteacher (He that hath no stomach for this fight, let him depart!)
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To: discostu

Best Picture winners are money makers for the most part. ‘The Last Emperor’ was the last one that could really be called a flop. And the films that win BP get the ‘Oscar Bump’ at the box office.


18 posted on 02/25/2012 12:40:55 PM PST by Borges
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To: Eldon Tyrell

SIL was a more original film than SPR. There wasn’t anything in the latter we hadn’t seen before in many other WW2 films.


19 posted on 02/25/2012 12:42:33 PM PST by Borges
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To: Dick Vomer

POTC was not eligible for the Foreign Language Oscar. Those films have to be submitted by a given foreign country.


20 posted on 02/25/2012 12:46:50 PM PST by Borges
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