Now if only they’d get rid of Best Animated Film!!

News flash: The media WAS. And Inside Out was winning.ShyViolet wrote:But hey, that way the media might have actually been comparing Inside Out with Room!
And as I always point out, ever wonder why Beauty/Beast was nominated?Still kinda blows my mind that only a year before the first Shrek came out Chicken Run was (deservedly) a critical darling and so many in the media speculated on whether or not it would be nom’d for Best Pic, as Beauty had been almost a decade before.
The problem--as we found out hoping for Joy's Best Picture acceptance speech for "Inside Out" in 2015, before the Golden Globes went and spoiled everything--is that the rules say you can have five sensible Picture nominees and a Best Animated Feature winner OR an animated Best Picture nominee out of eight or ten, but to get one, you have to have the other.ShyViolet wrote:Now if only they’d get rid of Best Animated Film!!. For crying out loud, animated films are just as much movies as any others. The fact that they’re animated is just a technique and one of many aspects that make up the film!
Back in 1929, the first Oscars had the idea of separating "Artistic"--or, as they called it, "Best Artistic/Unique Production"--from the Hollywood studio production films.Ben wrote:Wrote a good reply here and analysis on this new "Popular Oscar", already being derogatorily referred to as the Popcorn Oscar, but my pad gave up its battery before I could hit post and I lost it. Oh well, not going through that again.
They tried to do just that on Jon Stewart's second hosting in '08...Dear gods, what a disaster.Bill1978 wrote:If it is honestly about wanting to cut time etc, they need to do what I regularly suggest. You present the awards. The only 'entertainment' is the nominated songs get performed and have an In Memoriam. Scrap all the silly tributes and montages.
You're not far off on the date:Bill1978 wrote:I can see what the Academy is trying to do, but I just think it comes across as ridiculous. I don't really know when exactly the Academy became allergic to nominating popular stuff for Best Picture, but they need to go back to it (Quick look on Wikipedia makes me think it was 2003 when Return of the King won). I mean there is no way in hell a movie like Ghost would get a Best Pic nom these days, and Julia Roberts wouldn't get nommed for Pretty Woman.
We may love and adore all the visual spectacle of Infinity War and the like, but when Thanos snaps his fingers, do we really feel that emotional wallop one does at the end of Lion when we find out what has become of one of the main character's relatives (and, indeed, where he got his name from)? In some kind of way, actually maybe, but I know which one is the more enjoyable movie and I know which one is the "better” movie. It’s just that, in the past, *both* would have been box-office hits.
You can’t blame the Academy from wanting to reward those smaller stories, even more nowso that they really have to break through to be noticed, since they also take more Herculean efforts to get to the screen than a $200m studio film. It’s really the audiences that have abandoned these kinds of films in the majority, and why the kind of midrange films we used to get in cinemas have largely disappeared or migrated to TV.
It’s not as cut and dried simple to say there should be a popular/popcorn Oscar. I remember when the "arthouse" *was still* popular too.
(Which we now literally remember ONLY as "What the heck were we thinking??" and "The movie that stole Fellowship of the Ring's Oscar", pretty well guaranteeing that Return of the King was going to win two years later.)ShyViolet wrote:Take a movie like A Beautiful Mind, which came out in 2001.
We were so close. We were THAT....CLOSE....I think the only very challenging, even hard to emotionally sit through money-making film from the last 5 years was Inside Out. Really sad there aren’t more “popular” widely distributed films that take kind of risks that movie did.