The Borneo Post

Oscars to add ‘best popular film’ award, shorten gala

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LOS ANGELES: Organisers of the Oscars — under fi re for plummeting ratings and accused of elitism — on Wednesday announced the creation of a new category to honour top blockbuste­rs and said they would shorten the ceremony to attract more viewers.

“Change is coming to the Oscars,” tweeted the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which has traditiona­lly put together the glittering awards gala each year in late February or early March.

Earlier this year, the 90th Oscars on Mar 4 lasted nearly four hours, and posted all-time low television ratings with 26.5 million viewers.

For 2019, organisers are hoping to produce a “more accessible” three-hour show — by presenting some of the awards during commercial breaks, Academy president John Bailey and chief executive officer Dawn Hudson told members.

Edited excerpts of those presentati­ons will then be shown during the broadcast.

They will also create a new award for “outstandin­g achievemen­t in popular fi lm” — a response to accusation­s that for the past decade or more, the Academy has honoured arthouse fare only seen by limited audiences.

The Academy did not offer specifics about how the category will be defi ned.

The fi nal reform will be to hold the ceremony earlier in the calendar year — in 2020, it will shift to Feb 9. In 2019, the date already set — Feb 24 — will be maintained.

Industry observers have complained that sometimes, the Oscars come nearly two months after the Golden Globes, making Tinseltown’s awards season a marathon of gowns, glitz — and stress.

“We have heard from many of you about improvemen­ts needed to keep the Oscars and our Academy relevant in a changing world,” Bailey and Hudson said in a letter to members, a copy of which was sent to AFP.

“The board of governors took this charge seriously.”

But the new measures were immediatel­y met with criticism — with some suggesting the new “popular fi lm” would mean critical and box office hits like “Black Panther” might be snubbed in the race for the coveted best picture statuette.

“The last thing that the Academy should now be doing is creating a reactionar­y new category that is, in effect, the Popular Ghetto,” said Owen Gleiberman, the chief fi lm critic for Hollywood news outlet Variety.

“Instead, it should be working to take off its blinders and make more room in the big tent for every movie that comes out. That’s how to win viewers back to the Oscars without trashing the essence of what movies are.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Academy president Bailey speaking at the Foreign Language Film Oscar nominees reception in Beverly Hills, California, in March. — AFP file photo
Academy president Bailey speaking at the Foreign Language Film Oscar nominees reception in Beverly Hills, California, in March. — AFP file photo

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