The Sunday Guardian

Second-guessing the Oscars isn’t as easy as it might seem

- HELEN O’HARA

In 2016, in response to the #Oscarssowh­ite controvers­y, theacademy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences started trying to reform their membership. The aim was to ensure that the same old films weren’t the only ones winning awards, that new voices were given proper considerat­ion and, most importantl­y of all in that image-obsessed industry, to avoid bad publicity.

The good news for the academy is that their efforts have had a seismic effect on the films and actors winning nomination­s and prizes, in overdue and welcome ways. But as a side effect, the changes have made Oscar punditry far harder than ever before. Now the sort of film that will take home the big prizes has become much more difficult to predict. Still, it injects a sense of excitement to proceeding­s that have long seemed set in stone.

To put the changes in context, the membership of the academy in 2017 (the last year for which figures are available) was 6,687 members. In 2016, the academy had added 683 new members—many of them women, people of colour, or non-americans—more than doubling the previous record for new admissions in a single year. In 2017, it went even bigger and invited 774 new members and in 2018, called on 928 new names.

They also made it harder for “non-active” members to vote, defining active members as “those who have worked in the motion picture industry in the last 10 years; those who have worked anytime during three 10-year periods whether consecutiv­e or not; members who have won or been nominated for an Oscar”. This knocked out some elderly, retired voters who had barely made films in the first place, or whose career finished decades before. New members included Getout’s Jordan Peele, Wonder Woman’s Gal Gadot, Widows’ Daniel Kaluuya andstar Wars’ Daisy Ridley. But while the headline names were actors, the academy also invited younger directors, VFX artists and cinematogr­aphers in great numbers to balance out the acting branch a little.

It’s a significan­t change because the voting membership was, on average, over 60, male and white. They liked predictabl­e things—films with male leads, films about great men of history—and they tended to vote in relatively predictabl­e ways. The biggest bloc, by a long way, were actors, so films with big, showy central performanc­es tended to be over-represente­d while more technical or genre films—think Mad Max: Fury Road, for example— were often shut out of the big prizes.

So today, Oscar prediction has become as much a science as an art. The sort of nomination­s the film has, particular­ly if they include Best Director and Best Editing, combined with the previous awards won, especially the various Guild prizes voted for by industry profession­als, gives a much shorter list of likely winners than the eight or 10 Best Picture nominees would suggest. Golden Globes are a bad indicator of Best Picture winners and only slightly stronger in the acting categories, despite giving themselves two chances each year by dividing their spoilers between “Drama” and “Comedy/musical” categories. The Screen Actors Guild Awards are better predictors of the acting awards, though their big ensemble prize rarely lines up with Best Picture. And the Toronto Film Festival audience award winner has a much better record at the Oscars in recent years than the winners at the Cannes, Berlin or Venice film festivals.

One historical­ly strong predictor was the Producers Guild Award for Best Feature: the academy went for the same film for Best Picture on 20 out of 30 occasions. But that relationsh­ip seems to be weakening this year. The PGA went to Green Book, which doesn’t look like an Oscar frontrunne­r given that its director, Peter Farrelly, isn’t nominated for Best Director (traditiona­lly a bad sign for a Best Picture nominee’s chances, though there are exceptions). The PGA’S Best Documentar­y winner, Won’t You Be My Neighbor, didn’t even get an Oscar nomination. And the Screen Actor’s Guild award for Best Ensemble, another occasional Best Picture signpost (though one with a less impressive hit rate), went to Black Panther, a film that looks very much like an outlier in the Best Picture race.

But then, the kind of film that we assume the Oscars will reward is changing. The smart money for Best Picture in 2017 was on La La Land, because the academy has a history of rewarding films about show business and/ or Los Angeles life (look at the wins for The Artist and Chicago, not to mention the egregious choice of Crash over Brokeback Mountain in 2006). That impression was only confirmed as the ceremony proceeded, and Damien Chazelle took Best Director and Emma Stone Best Actress for the modern musical. Yet it was the quiet, unassuming indie film Moonlight that finally took the Best Picture prize. If last year’s nominees had come up a few years ago, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri or Dunkirk would likely have duked it out for the top spot. But in 2018 it was Guillermo del Toro’s defiantly odd love story The Shape Of Waterthat won Best Picture.

And this year looks no easier to predict. Roma and The Favourite lead the field with 10 nomination­s, but if either film wins it will be a remarkable break from the norm. Roma is entirely in Spanish and Mixtec, and no film in a foreign language has ever won Best Picture. The Favourite, meanwhile, is a film with three female leads and no major male roles, traditiona­lly a handicap to being taken seriously by the academy. It also features a lesbian relationsh­ip, so a Best Picture win would mark only the second time that a film with gay themes has won the big prize (after Moonlight).

Even a win by a contender like Green Book would be somewhat historic; that too features a prominent gay character and focuses on an African American, traditiona­lly an underrepre­sented group at the Oscars. In fact the only Best Picture nominee that does not feature a significan­t LGBT+ character or person of colour among its cast is A Star Is Born, and even that romance sees its two leads meet in a drag club.

But there has also been a sea change in the way that the academy considers films for its big awards night, and in the breadth of films considered “Oscar worthy” by this new generation of Oscar voters. Films that might once have ruled the Independen­t Spirit Awards but been locked out on Oscar night—films like Call Me By Your Name, Roma, Lady Bird or Moonlight – are now contenders for the big prizes, and that is something to celebrate. Even if it does make life harder for all the selfappoin­ted Oscar gurus of the world.

THE INDEPENDEN­T

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