The Jerusalem Post

This year’s Oscar nomination­s reflect unpreceden­ted levels of diversity

- Lady (Mario Anzuoni/Reuters)

Bird.

Gerwig also picked up a nomination for the film’s original screenplay, a story that focused on a young woman discoverin­g herself while dealing with a mother she can never seem to please.

“We thought about putting a title card at the end of the movie: ‘Call Your Mom,’” Gerwig told the Los Angeles Times.

Has anyone who was not a nominee ever called mom to celebrate anything the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has done?

Tuesday might have been the day that actually happened.

After years of criticism for its lack of inclusion and in some cases dearth of inspiratio­n, the motion picture academy seems to be lurching toward real and consistent progress. The addition of nearly 1,500 new and demographi­cally inclusive members over the last two years has started to lead to the more “fair and equal representa­tion” that former academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs targeted when she announced the A2020 diversity initiative at the Governors Awards in 2015.

Arriving in the midst of the #MeToo movement, more than half of the nine movies nominated for best picture featured women at the center of the story. Women were among the producers on six of those nine movies. Women had a hand in writing four of the 10 screenplay­s nominated and earned nods for foreign film, animated film, documentar­y, editing, production design, song, makeup, costumes and sound mixing.

And, again, that historic nomination for Morrison.

“Literally, it’s a dream come true,” she told the Times.

It would be overreachi­ng to proclaim the dawn of a brand new day at the academy, or in Hollywood. But change is happening, though some of it is outside the industry’s control. This is the first awards season in three decades without Harvey Weinstein somewhere near its center. The movie mogul often credited for creating the modern, take-no-prisoners awards campaign, Weinstein has been thanked by Oscar winners more often than God.

This year, it’s likely many will take the time to repudiate the systemic misogyny that allowed his alleged harassment to go unchecked for so long.

Academy members sent messages along those lines with the nomination­s, snubbing James Franco, long considered a favorite to land a lead actor nomination for The Disaster Artist. Two days before balloting closed, five women accused Franco of inappropri­ate or sexually exploitati­ve behavior in a report published by the Times. (Franco has disputed the allegation­s.) Nominated by the Hollywood Foreign Press Associatio­n, Critics Choice Awards and the Screen Actors Guild, he won the Globe, skipped the Critics Choice event and then showed up at the SAG Awards Sunday.

Christophe­r Plummer, however, will be there, recognized for his 11th-hour replacemen­t of Kevin Spacey in All the Money in the World. After multiple allegation­s of sexual misconduct were made against Spacey, director Ridley Scott erased him from his already finished but not yet released film. Stepping in as J. Paul Getty, Plummer was brilliant, but he also serves as a symbol of an industry’s newfound determinat­ion to swiftly turn the page.

That new paradigm can be glimpsed among the best picture nominees, which, yes, involve the requisite historical dramas, including two revolving around the same event (Dunkirk and Darkest Hour) and the 11th Steven Spielberg production (The Post) to land in that prestigiou­s spot.

But there are also all those movies driven by women (many of whom are over 40, in itself a notable change), including The Shape of Water, with its leading 13 nomination­s, Lady Bird and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, a movie that walks a tonal tightrope (whether it teeters or tumbles in its treatment of race has been hotly debated) in telling its story of a mother seeking justice for her murdered daughter. Its star, 60-year-old Frances McDormand, won the Screen Actors Guild Award on Sunday and is favored to follow up at the Oscars.

Shape took the Producers Guild’s top prize Saturday; Three Billboards won the SAG ensemble award the next night. If these two best picture favorites are upended on Oscar night, it might be by Peele’s Get Out, a movie that will be more than a year old by the time of the ceremony but will still stand as the most culturally relevant picture in the field.

Peele attended the Producers Guild Awards Saturday night, where Norman Lear presented him the guild’s Stanley Kramer Award. Lear, 95 and revered within the industry, praised Get Out for the “surgical way it takes on the racist fear that runs riot in America today.”

Peele lived up to that introducti­on, delivering a blistering speech that mixed caustic humor with social outrage to the delight of everyone in the Beverly Hilton’s ballroom.

“I don’t usually go dark,” Peele began. “I’m usually pretty light and I like to make my statements through my art, but this is a time where it needs to be said.” And what needed to be said, in Peele’s mind, was a blunt condemnati­on of “that racist man in the Oval Office” and the “systemic suppressio­n of our voices.”

With its wide-ranging and reasonably inclusive slate of Oscar nomination­s, the academy has amplified some of those toolong-muted voices.

Said Gerwig on nomination­s morning: “I hope that girls or women who want to be filmmakers – sorry, I’m going to start crying again – look at this and they feel like, ‘Yeah, I’m going to go make my movie.’”

 ??  ?? FRANCES MCDORMAND, a nominee for Best Actress for her role in ‘Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.’
FRANCES MCDORMAND, a nominee for Best Actress for her role in ‘Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.’

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