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Oscars to reflect doom and gloom
21/02/2008 16:04  - (SA)  

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  • Los Angeles - Maybe it was the crippling writers' strike or the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Or was it something in the expensive bottled water in Beverly Hills where Oscar organisers are based.

    But whatever it is, Hollywood's on a big downer these days, and this year's nominations for the world's top film honours, the Oscars, reflect the sombre mood that has blanketed Tinseltown.

    Want betrayal, revenge, doomed love, murder and despair? Go see best film nominees No Country for Old Men, Atonement, Michael Clayton and There Will Be Blood?

    Prefer paralysis and disease? Try The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, which earned Julian Schnabel a best director nod, or documentary nominee Sicko from director Michael Moore.

    Howard Suber, founding chair of Ucla's Film and Television Producers Programme and author of The Power of Film, said he has never seen a bleaker view of human nature in a group of films since the French cinema of the 1960s.

    Sadistic oil prospector

    "A film like There Will Be Blood is decidedly un-American," he said. It stars Daniel Day-Lewis as sadistic oil prospector in the early 20th Century who will do anything to create wealth and gain power.

    The inclusion of teen pregnancy comedy Juno in the best picture category lightens the grim mood, and not surprisingly, it's the only bona fide box office hit among the bunch, so far grossing $125m in the United States and Canada.

    No Country has about half that amount at $61m. Blood has mustered only $32m, so far, and they are the most-nominated movies with eight Oscar nods apiece.

    This year's five nominees for best film look likely to score the second-lowest box office total for the group in 20 years, with their ticket sales equalling an anaemic 3% of the overall 2007 domestic box office of around $9.7bn.

    Many of 2007's big hits - Spider-Man, Transformers, Knocked Up and Superbad - were escapist fantasies and raunchy comedies, "mostly aimed at 11-year-olds, like most movies," said Los Angeles Daily News film critic Bob Strauss.

    The some 5 800 voters at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, however, are adults who work in the industry and favour serious dramas that look at complex questions of human nature, which is why a movie like No Country, a meditation on declining society morals, scores well with Oscar voters.

    'Escape all the bad news'

    But regular moviegoers, said Suber, don't want to face the reality of the world, which right now includes the war on terrorism, the US housing crisis and an ailing economy.

    "Audiences don't want to see realistic films about the war in Iraq. They want to escape all the bad news," Suber said.

    Leonard Maltin, film critic and historian for celebrity TV show Entertainment Tonight, said the disconnect between Oscar voters and general movie fans - as judged by box office - is the result of Hollywood making "safe" movies.

    Films like the Spider-Man, Shrek and Pirates of the Caribbean sequels have built-in audiences and storytelling formulas that studios rely on to boost ticket sales.

    Maltin and the Daily News' Strauss agreed that one of the academy's roles at Oscar time is to distinguish between those type of popcorn flicks and award-worthy artistic films.

    "They're supposed to judge quality, and quality's rare," said Strauss, "That said, I thought Transformers really kicked butt."

    - Reuters



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