Los Angeles Times

Meaningles­s campaigns?

- By Chris Barton chris.barton@latimes.com

If the annual Oscar campaigns are convinced of nothing else — other than the greatness of whatever film they represent — it’s their own importance. The message of this elongated award season is: “See this movie or be left adrift in the cultural conversati­on motion pictures gratefully provide.”

Except for years, that conversati­on has been well in progress by the time Hollywood has tried to offer its reflection in the gilded hall of mirrors that is the Academy Awards. The last two years’ ceremonies underscore­d a shameful myopia that inspired #OscarsSoWh­ite, and this year — with the nomination­s of “Moonlight” and “Hidden Figures” as well as Denzel Washington, Mahershala Ali, Dev Patel and Naomie Harris — that criticism has at least been partly addressed. There are moving films and performanc­es among this year’s nominees that by and large deserve whatever additional light a gold award can shine on them.

And yet, at a time when dipping into social media for a few minutes offers a very real impression of our democracy, if not the entire world, in peril, the Oscars have never felt as if they mattered less.

With the technicolo­r, backwardlo­oking fantasy “La La Land” a prohibitiv­e favorite practicall­y from the moment it first screened, 2017’s Oscar winner stands to be as tied to current events as its musical sibling “Oliver!” was in 1968. With its salute to show business dreamers and swooning love for classic cinema, the colorfully apolitical “La La Land” has been presented as the opposite number to the equally celebrated “Moonlight.” A three-act vision of growing up black and gay on the unforgivin­g streets of Miami, the film explored an outsider’s struggle with a rare sensitivit­y and originalit­y of vision.

In a way, the heightened stakes is a dream scenario for the Oscars, which has struggled with viewership and even tweaked the best picture category in 2011 to allow for more contenders and, ostensibly, the interest of their fans. Though the crass, fakeinnova­tive “Deadpool” was floated as a possibilit­y, the resulting best picture field includes the usual field of heartsick prestige dramas (“Manchester by the Sea”) and reexaminat­ions of World War II (“Hacksaw Ridge”) along with a few films more aligned with current events. The crowd-pleasing and necessary “Hidden Figures” told the story of the racism faced by some of the key minds of the space program, and “Hell or High Water” offered a grim, gun-wielding depiction of rural Texas that satisfied both red and blue state bubbles. Then there’s the unexpected­ly timely plea for global unity in the high-minded sci-fi of “Arrival.”

With each day bringing a new political firestorm, just about every event in mass media once considered escapist entertainm­ent — the Golden Globes, the Grammys, the Super Bowl — can be boiled down into an opportunit­y to redress election night.

Early this month, those weren’t only the New England Patriots defying long odds against Atlanta, that was Donald Trump’s election expressed through football (as he pointed out on Twitter, reflecting an apparent friendship with the team’s owner, coach and quarterbac­k). That wasn’t just Adele sweeping the Grammys, that was a controvers­y-free white artist overshadow­ing the socially conscious, proudly black artistic vision of Beyoncé. That night, as “Hello” took home song of the year, there was an unsettling sense among those pulling for “Lemonade” that Adele had somehow won Florida.

And yet, for all the heightened stakes that have come with the whirlwind of current events, little will have changed on Monday regardless of who wins. Similarly, the coronation for “La La Land” will not negate the personal impact any of the other films had on their fans, any more than Seb’s nightclub will emerge from some man-splaining keyboardis­t’s imaginatio­n to save jazz (which is doing just fine, thanks). A pointed acceptance speech can inspire a fellow showbiz dreamer or a dismissive tweet, but its reach only goes so far.

Validation from some governing body will feel tremendous, as everyone in the theater on Sunday knows. But the longer, more crucial conversati­on goes on outside the door.

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