5 Reasons The Oscars Matter Even Less Than You Thought
The Academy Awards are like Hollywood's Super Bowl (what with the betting pools, the bean dip, the coma-inducing length) but with one important difference: Super Bowl rings are actually awarded on merit.
You can't say the same about the Oscars. In an effort to shade the pageantry with a modicum of perspective, we'll be taking a look at the Academy's playbook of fuck-uppery. This is a gentle reminder to you, the discerning reader, that if you treat the Oscars as some sort of authority on what makes a film great, you're doing it wrong.

In 1974, Al Pacino and Jack Nicholson were in their prime, and turned in two of the most iconic performances in the history of American cinema--Nicholson as J.J. Gittes in Chinatown, Pacino as Michael Corleone in The Godfather Part II. That year's Best Actor Academy Award was the acting equivalent of Magic versus Bird in the '84 NBA Finals.

But your prime isn't necessarily a good place to be in the eyes of the Academy. No matter what it says on the statue, most Oscars are at least partially lifetime achievement awards that factor in things like how "due" you are, and how likely you are to die before ever getting nominated again.
Of course, anyone who's gambled on little league baseball or participated in a record breaking gang bang can tell you, trying to give everyone a turn only penalizes the people with talent. The Academy proved this point by giving Best Actor to Art Carney for playing an old fart on a cross country trip with his cat in a movie called Harry and Tonto. This is the acting equivalent of the NBA giving the'84 MVP to Kurt Rambis.

To be fair to the Academy, De Niro edged out the cat for best Supporting Actor.
Now we wouldn't begrudge an old man his moment of recognition if the Academy didn't operate in something we'll call "The Circle of Ineptitude."
See, skipping Pacino in 1974 meant that come 1992, he was "due." So 18 years after the initial screw up, the Academy gave Pacino the Oscar for doing a Yosemite Sam impression in Scent of a Woman. This, in turn screwed over Denzel Washington for Malcolm X, who then had to be given a make-up Oscar in 2001 for his role in Training Day that's mostly memorable for the Chappelle Show sketch it inspired.

This raises the important question: Who gives a shit? Why should we feel sorry for Al Pacino? The problem is that as little as they should matter, the actors, writers and directors who make our movies live and die with each Academy decision. It's why Pacino has shouted every line of dialog since 1992 in an inexplicable Cajun accent.

Everyone remembers the slick bit of larceny that opens Raiders of the Lost Arkwhere Indy leaves a bag of sand on a podium and yoinks a golden statue. That year at the Academy Awards, Chariots of Fire pulled the same trick, snaking the statue out from under Spielberg. This is a good example of the genre snobbery that makes phrases like "Oscar Bait" even possible. All anyone really remembers from Chariots of Fire is the scene where a bunch of dudes in John Stockton shorts sprint along the edge of a beach. If that's all it takes to win an Oscar, where's the Best Picture for Rocky III? If it can't even legitimately win the Oscar in the category "Best Homoerotic Coastal Track Meet," how the hell does it end up winning Best Picture over what is arguably the finest example of pure cinema Spielberg ever created?

"The Academy. I hate these guys."
A little bit more of that genre snobbery, mixed with some patronizing grandstanding to look "understanding": Marlee Matlin turned in a good performance as a feisty deaf janitor who gets boned by William Hurt in Children of a Lesser God, but what Sigourney Weaver did with James Cameron's ALIENS is nothing short of a miracle. Think about what Ripley was on the page after Cameron was done with her: A strange riff on Rambo (which he'd just rewritten) as a repentant mother looking to redeem herself as a parent. He stuck this characterization into the middle of a movie about drooling, fanged penis monsters that shit eggs with face-raping catchers mitts inside of them. And Weaver made it one of the single most influential performances in the last 25 years, obliterating the restrictions on what a woman can do in a movie, and paving the way for characters like Sarah Connor, Buffy Summers and Beatrix Kiddo.

And more!

There seems to be an unwritten rule in the Academy: "The statue we're giving out doesn't have any balls; neither should the movie we give it to." Since the most interesting filmmakers of the past 30 years have mostly been interested in America's obsession with violence, this made for some pretty unforgivable bullshit.
In 1990, the Academy rewarded a boring love letter to the Noble Savage fallacy, Dances With Wolves, snubbing Goodfellas. Consider the legacy of those two films: Name a director worth a crap in the past 20 years, and they'll cite Goodfellas as a major influence. It's arguably the finest mob movie ever filmed. The only time Wolves is mentioned these days is to point out where Cameron ripped off the story for Avatar.

Nothing you can do will stop it!
If Goodfellas isn't the most influential film of the past 25 years, it's a close second behind Pulp Fiction. Tarantino didn't just deconstruct the way people thought about filmmaking, he obliterated it in a coke-fueled fury, stabbing convention in the chest with a giant needle, rebuilding the noir as a candy coated cyanide pill cut with cayenne pepper, attached to a ball-gag and fitted to your unsuspecting head.

"My movies will rape your soul!"
Of course, Pulp Fiction came out the same year as Shawshank Redemption, regarded by iMBD users and whoever programs TNT as the greatest film ever made. Pretty good year for movies, yet neither won Best Picture in 2004--that went to Bob Zemeckis's Forrest Gump. We suppose Gump was edgy in its own right, seeing as it was a revisionist history in which a retarded descendent of the Ku Klux Klan is given credit for everything good that happened in the 20th century. Gump was a pretty enjoyable film at the time, and hasn't aged quite as badly as Wolves. But Pulp Fiction changed the way people made movies for an entire decade. Forrest Gump changed the way people said the name Jenny for a couple of years.
By the year 2000, Julia Roberts made a lot of people a lot of money in Hollywood, without ever winning Best Actress, most likely because she's not that fucking good. The film she was in, Erin Brockovich was like cutting the crusts off Silkwood, shoving it in an Easy-Bake Oven and setting the dial to "feel-good." Her main competition, Ellen Burstyn, already won her statue back in the 70's for Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, so it was safe to snub her portrayal of Sara Golfarb in Requiem for a Dream. Didn't matter that Burstyn turned in the performance of her fucking life: Not only was Roberts "due," but Requiem was about ugly people, doing gross things, not pretty people in halter-tops smiling like someone shoved a carrot up Mr. Ed's ass.








Christopher Waltz winning best supporting actor for Inglorious Basterds is the must justified Oscar ever.
ReplyNever watched the Oscars. If I wanted to have that much fun I'd start by gnawing my own foot off.
ReplyOnce the Zombie Apocalypse comes i will start with everyone on the Academy board since 1938
ReplyIf the barometer is political relevance, (which this column states that it is) Crash wins over Capote. It strikes me as silly to be offended by Crash winning over Brokeback Mountain on a political level. Brokeback Mountain and Crash were both politically relevant in contemporary times, its just a matter of gay issues vs racial issues, understated realism vs. exaggerated dialogue drama. Capote is a period piece, about specific individuals, based on a true story. Its a good biopic, but it only speaks to that specific, true life event.
ReplyI think that The Shining was more worthy of best picture than Raging Bull. Still, they both deserved it more than Ordinary People.
ReplyForrest Gump didn't NOT deserve an Oscar...It wasn't the best picture of that year, but it wasn't the worst either.
ReplyWhat? So you admit it wasn't the best movie of the year but say it still kind of deserved to win an award for being the best movie of the year?
True but it was going toe-to-toe with The Shawshank Redemption and Pulp Fiction.
I personally think Shawshank deserved the Oscar over Pulp Fiction but the simple fact that neither won still pisses me off to this day.
In some ways I absolutely agree with you, but I think that the examples used are kind of terrible. I agree with the statements about Do the Right Thing, Dr Strangelove and Raging Bull, but I truly hated Saving Private Ryan. The Thin Red Line, also nominated in 1998, was better in just about every way. All that anyone remembers about SPR was the opening scene, which may have been realistic, but I found it pretty boring. And while Pulp Fiction is extremely entertaining and its stylistic elements were very influential, it doesn't really have THAT much substance, so probably didn't deserve the Oscar. While perhaps augmenting Goodfellas' influence, I agree that it definitely deserved best picture and was one of the best movies of the 90s.
Reply Hide All See All 7 RepliesI absolutely love The Thin Red Line, and I agree with you that it was much better than Saving Private Ryan (or Uncle Sam Meets Steven Spielberg, Impregnates Him and Names the Son SPR if you would prefer...). Quentin Tarantino should've gotten Director and especially Screenplay, but not Picture... That should've gone to Shawshank. Forrest Gump is one of the worst movies that I've ever seen. I absolutely hate it, and Tom Hanks can't act worth my dead mother's shit.
Rotten Tomatoes score for Saving Private Ryan is 93% and IMDB's score is 8.5. Thin Red Line's score stands 78% and 7.6. So yeah Thin Red Line is clearly the better movie. And Tom Hanks can't act? What exactly are you basing that on? The fact that he won two Oscars for best actor in a row? I smell hipster bullshit and I'll bet your opinion is based solely on the fact that he's big and famous so he must suck.
Dobalina, I must disagree with your reasoning. I really wanted to like Saving Private Ryan and I was looking forward to it--but the only message that I could find in it was "the brutality of war". This appeared to be the only message that critics could find: it's the only thing they ever cite about the film, as well as capably directed action sequences. But the thing is, EVERY single war movie tries to depict the brutality of war. Though SPR may have communicated it effectively, it brought nothing new to the table (but I'm not complaining about any of the acting). The Thin Red Line, on the contrary, is an entirely original and unconventional work, which includes both exciting action sequences and much more interesting and in depth analyses of conflict and human nature. And if you're just using these sorts of numbers to support your case, I think you're missing the point of this article regarding the measure of a movie's greatness. But you're entitled to your own opinion.
Dwoods94, yes the Thin Red Line was original, so original that it was based off the James Jones book. Wow! I mean, it had never been done before, except in the book which was written in 1962 and the other movie that was made in 1964, but other than that it was so original. Oh and all of the action in the book that would have made for an awesome movie, eh f**k it, we'll show scenes of dude being shot, that's like action... And the fact that EVERY movie about war is a commentary on the brutality of war is a analysis of previous movie that you are doing after viewing it the the "SPR" lens and that war movies after Saving Private Ryan have imitated.
Bobarazzi, I'm not sure if you've seen The Thin Red Line, because it is clearly very original in terms of structure, characterisation, philosophy and exposition--not all that reliant on the book other than the events described--a very superficial point, given that that's not really the point of the movie. And I'm sure you would agree that it is not at all like From Here To Eternity, Jones' novel to which The Thin Red Line was a sequel. And the brutality of war point? SPR was made in 1998...I think that people and filmmakers knew about the atrocities of war before then. SPR was very well directed, has pretty good action scenes, and I can completely understand why people like it, but is just not that original or insightful.
@Dobalina Rotten tomatoes is a ridiculous way to judge a movie, and imdb scores are even worse. Don't get me started on judging an actor by how many oscars he's won immediately after reading an article critizicing the oscars as meaningless. Having said that, I like hanks, and the thin red line is better than saving private ryan.
@bobarazzi that is literally the stupidest thing i've ever read. You're able to criticize a movie as unoriginal because it was based off a book? So....there goes the godfather. Cinema is a language of images, literature a language of words, anything original in a movie won't be contained in the book it was based off of.
This was a great article until you said Chariots of Fire should've lost an Oscar to Raiders of the Lost Ark. Raiders was a fun movie but in terms of quality of acting and story Chariots of Fire blows it out of the water (also awesome soundtracks, IMO). Also, Harrison Ford is a terrible actor, and nothings gonna change that.
ReplyI was all good until you said that Raiders of the Lost Ark was better than Chariots of Fire. It was a fun movie, but in terms of actual quality, Chariots of Fire wins any day. Also, Harrison ford can't act worth a damn. Just sayin'.
ReplyEvery year at Oscars time I read this article to remind me how pitiful the Oscars truly are. The article is more entertaining as well.
ReplyThere are very few movies that I regret seeing, but Forrest Gump is one of them. Comedy, my ass. I've seen some pretty nasty s**t (horror movies, blood-n-guts splatterfests, psychological mind-fucks, and a bit of most everything else that's out there). Most of those were far less disturbing than Forrest Gump.
ReplyIt looks like this year,like last year, Best Picture is going to to to a film that nobody saw! It helps to realise that the Academy Awards are the one night out of 365 that the film industry pretends it's about art. The rest of the year, it's Adam Sandler movies, Twilight sequels, and rom-coms.
ReplyPretty unfair to Dances with Wolves, I saw it and Goodfellas at the theatre the year they came out and thought that while Goodfellas was an excellent film Dances with Wolves deserved the Oscar. Many of the other points are excellent, but Dances with Wolves was an epic film.
ReplyDances with Wolves was a great film, but most people probably haven't bothered to watch it and just decide to hate on it cause Kevin Costner is in it.
I liked Shakespeare in Love, but when it won over Saving Private Ryan, that's definitely a headshot. Epic fail.
ReplyIts still happening, Albert Brooks should be a lock for best supporting actor this year for Drive. But he's gonna lose to Christopher Plummer, cus he's old (like near death old), playing a gay & partially I think it's down to jealousy towards Brooks (he didnt even get a SAG nomination) from all the actors in the Academy who probably don't like that a "comic actor" was so much more impressive than them in the past year.
ReplyIn all fairness to the Academy, Star Wars got beaten out for the Oscar by Annie Hall, which is a fantastic movie that deserved its accolades and is acknowledged as a Best Picture win the Academy got right.
ReplyStar Wars is not "good film". It is fun, epic, and enjoyable, but in terms of acting, writing, and casting, it is a sack of shit. Honestly, it's in the same vein as Transformers, but at the time ridiculous, FX-overloaded blockbusters didn't exist, so it was ground-breaking that sense.
@BartyCrouchJr. True, but at least it had a coherent plot that wasn't just the B-plot of a completely different movie sold as it's own movie.
I watched "Saving Private Ryan" again recently. The dialogue is really cheesy.
Reply Hide All See All 4 RepliesLet's not forget about Matt Damon and Sam Malone, LOL.
MATT. DAMON!
soldiers tend to speak less when bullets are flying during a world war... nothing against inglorious basterds, but it was sort of "inaccurate."
That's largely because it established a lot of war movie cliches that have been overused since then
What does it say about modern film criticism that "The passage of time reveals a movie's true quality, not the number of gold statues it won," which is easily the most perceptive sentence I've read about film crit in the last year (and I deal with it for a living) came in CRACKED?
ReplyIt depends. If that statement really hits home with you, than that tells you that just because someone has written an article for CRACKED doesn't mean it's totally without substance.
Or that if someone spends a lifetime critiquing movies, doesn't mean they have any substance. To say the art world is pretentious is like saying the sky is blue.
To say nothing of all the pretentious "message" movies released late in December!
ReplyTo say nothing of all the pretentious "message" movies released late in December!
Reply