The Jerusalem Post

Film academy considers Oscar eligibilit­y rules change

- • By GLENN WHIPP

LOS ANGELES (Los Angeles Times/TNS) – Crip Camp, a documentar­y about a “summer camp for the handicappe­d run by hippies” that inspired the disabled rights movement, opened the Sundance Film Festival in January with volunteers turning away ticket holders because every seat in the Eccles Theater was spoken for.

Outside, there was a massive scrum with rumors flying that Barack and Michelle Obama, executive producers on the film through their company, Higher Ground, might be attending. That proved to be wishful thinking, but their absence didn’t dampen the response to the movie. Crip Camp left Sundance with the festival’s Documentar­y Audience Award, great reviews and the feeling that it could follow the path of American Factory, the Netflix/Higher Ground film that won the documentar­y Oscar this year.

Crip Camp might still wind up at the Oscars. But if it does (provided the Oscars actually take place), it will be traveling a different path – as might every movie with awards aspiration­s in 2020, owing to the current COVID-19 pandemic.

The motion picture academy’s leadership has been actively discussing altering its rules in recent days, with an announceme­nt likely in the next couple of weeks that could ease the requiremen­ts for movies to qualify for the 2021 Oscars.

“It’s all we talk about,” said a source close to the academy not authorized to comment on record.

The academy issued a statement Thursday, noting that it is “in the process of evaluating all aspects of this uncertain landscape and what changes may need to be made,” adding that its leadership is “committed to being nimble and forward-thinking” in its evaluation­s.

“Translated,” says one of the academy’s 54 governors, “that means everything is on the table this year because we have no idea what the next several months are going to look like right now.”

Crip Camp was set to open theatrical­ly Wednesday in Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco, concurrent with its streaming premiere on Netflix. The documentar­y will still land on Netflix, but whether it ever plays in theaters remains in question with the nationwide closure of cinemas because of the novel coronaviru­s.

Currently, for a movie to qualify for the Oscars, motion picture academy rules state that it must play for at least seven days in a Los Angeles County commercial theater, with at least three screenings per day for paid admission. The academy’s board of governors went out of its way to reaffirm that rule at its April meeting last year, with then-president John Bailey calling the support of the theatrical experience “integral to the art of motion pictures.”

But with moviegoing off the table for the foreseeabl­e future and studios such as Universal Pictures and DreamWorks releasing current films and the upcoming animated Trolls World Tour for home viewing, and Warner Bros. and others rushing their recent releases to VOD, it may be difficult for the “theatrical experience” to be integral to anything this year, including the Oscars.

Filming on many of the year’s most promising titles – Sofia Coppola’s family comedy-drama On the Rocks, Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of West Side Story, David Fincher’s Herman Mankiewicz biographic­al drama Mank – has been completed, and the movies are in various states of post-production.

Wes Anderson’s latest, The French Dispatch, is locked and was presumed to premiere at Cannes in May, though that film festival, like everything else these days, has been postponed. Thai filmmaker Apichatpon­g Weerasetha­kul’s latest, the Tilda Swinton-led drama Memoria (bought by Neon, the studio behind Oscar winner Parasite) was likely heading for Cannes too, as was Leos Carax’s musical, Annette, starring Adam Driver and Marion Cotillard.

Spike Lee’s Da 5 Bloods, the story of four black veterans returning to Vietnam to deal with their trauma (and search for buried treasure), is also completed.

“Done. Finished. Locked And Loaded,” Lee wrote in an email to The Los Angeles Times.

The marketplac­e for these movies though will depend on how long the COVID-19 outbreak lasts and how the current pandemic might alter the landscape once the new normal of self-isolation and social distancing ends.

If and when theaters reopen, there could be a glut of previously postponed movies vying for release dates and screens. Awards season contenders (again, presuming there is even an awards season to begin with) might need to shift to 2021.

Already, thanks to production shutdowns, two prime Emmy contenders set to premiere this spring – the latest installmen­t of FX’s acclaimed limited series Fargo, starring Chris Rock, and National Geographic’s Genius: Aretha with Cynthia Erivo starring as Aretha Franklin – are thought to now be out of contention, though their ultimate fate could depend on whether the Television Academy loosens its rule about how many episodes a series must air before its May 31 Emmy deadline.

“Everyone’s freaking out right now... about everything,” says a veteran awards consultant. “A month ago, we were so done thinking about the Oscars. Now, I’d give everything just to be able to focus on something so trivial again.”

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? A STILL from ‘Crip Camp.’
(Courtesy) A STILL from ‘Crip Camp.’

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