Saturday, March 4, 2017

Oscar 2017 - Epilogue ( ...or why I'm done with this ...sort of ;) )




I don't have other subject this week & I normally don't do this. I think I wrote just one time a post-Oscar entry in the previous 8 editions I covered, no matter if my prediction rate was 100%, 50%, whatever... This year I had 7/10. That doesn't bother me. I always said that I give the predictions for fun, more important are the movies these awards bring on my "should watch" list year by year. Still, you cannot ignore who wins indefinitely...

The Academy Awards have a voting mechanism that should make these in theory the most objective award in cinema. If the Globes have behind something called "The Foreign Press Association" composed of 30-40 people, who you could expect to be more often "politically correct", for the Oscars there are somewhere around 5000+ members of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences voting. For 5000 people I would expect to see in the vote result some artistic criteria and less "politics". How do we know it's not like this?... Well...

It's the second consecutive year when the Oscar for best picture gets to a movie who has 3 awards or less in total (last year it did have only 2...). You would expect some correlation between "Best Picture" and other sections won. Well.. maybe if "other sections" include only technical awards we could forget the correlation, but for a movie which had: a Oscar for directing, one for actors, one for cinematography, one for production design, and two for music - and another movie who has an award for actors and one for script ... now tell me, how the 2nd gets to be appreciated overall as the best?

Statistics. Let's check an evolution of "Best Picture" of the previous year in the last 3 decades:

The '90s:
  • 1990: Dances with Wolves
  • 1991: The Silence of the Lambs
  • 1992: Unforgiven
  • 1993: Schindler's List
  • 1994: Forrest Gump
  • 1995: Braveheart
  • 1996: The English Patient
  • 1997: Titanic
  • 1998: Shakespeare in Love
  • 1999: American Beauty
The 2000's:
  • 2000: Gladiator
  • 2001: A Beautiful Mind
  • 2002: Chicago
  • 2003: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
  • 2004: Million Dollar Baby
  • 2005: Crash
  • 2006: The Departed
  • 2007: No Country for Old Men
  • 2008: Slumdog Millionaire
  • 2009: The Hurt Locker
The 2010's (up to now):
  • 2010: The King's Speech
  • 2011: The Artist
  • 2012: Argo
  • 2013: 12 Years a Slave
  • 2014: Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
  • 2015: Spotlight
  • 2016: Moonlight
Now tell me... Which ones since "The Hurt Locker" could qualify as a heavy, solid movie, a movie to impress you more than through its subject, a movie that stays in your mind for 10-15-20 year from when you've seen it. Or well... compare the latest with what you got left from "Dances with Wolves", "The Silence of the Lambs", etc...

Some analysis (if we're already at statistics). In 2009, the American Academy had the clever decision that the best movie to be chosen out of 9-10 nominations (for a higher impact on the public of more titles). Now, consider the following... On one hand we have votes given based on artistic criteria. On the other hand we have votes given based on "politically correctness" criteria. The votes for artistic appreciation will always have a higher dispersion rate. Just for the taste factor. In other words, as many the nominees number, as many votes the best movie will lose here. On the other hand, the votes given for "that's fair in this unfair world" will pretty much focus on the same title. Ergo - "Spootlight", "Moonlight" and whatever "...light" follows.

Politically correctness might have sense in casting, in payment rates, and in many parts related to work on a movie. But I think it doesn't have any place in appreciating a movie. The best movie is the best movie for its general artistic value, not because half or more of the cast is black or for the social themes approached as correct and fair may these be. Don't mix that with art. It would be as saying that Rubens is the greatest Flemish painter because he painted more fat women than any other cared to do. It's simply stupid.

It's hard to believe that I got to take the side of a musical I rated with 3 out of 5, especially considering that I don't have anything against "Moonlight", which is a good movie, but not that good... So, let's cut this short: Starting next year I'll only dedicate max one entry for Oscars instead of a full month as I did before. At least until I see it's given based on merit, or we're getting back to the best of 5 system that seemed more fair. Until then, this thing doesn't really matter anymore...

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