The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Final votes pour in

Deadline approaches for Academy Award voting

- By Jake Coyle

As the final votes pour in ahead of the Academy Awards’ Tuesday afternoon deadline, Hollywood is drawing to a close an awards season that has, from Nate Parker to Mel Gibson, often been a confoundin­g morality play.

By even movie standards, the dramatic swings of fortune are hard to believe. Parker, hailed as an Oscar sure-thing at last year’s Sundance Film Festival, saw his “The Birth of a Nation” torpedoed by the fallout of a tragic 18-year-old rape allegation against him. But just as Parker was disappeari­ng, Mel Gibson, a pariah for the last decade, engineered an unexpected comeback that culminated with six nomination­s for his “Hacksaw Ridge,” including best picture.

Hollywood’s scales of justice, never particular­ly scientific, have rarely been harder to read.

The sometimes puzzling ethical calculus has prompted many to question the standards — some amalgamati­on of art, fame, race, facts and rumor — used to weigh the bad behavior of stars and would-be nominees.

Some of the closest races this Oscar season — including that of Casey Affleck, one of the best-actor favorites — have been over whether a contender was nimble enough to outrun his past. Everyone agrees: such judgments are playing an increasing­ly significan­t role in awards season and show business, in general.

Gibson was one of the few to publicly defend Parker, who in 1999 was charged — along with his Penn State roommate and “Birth of a Nation” collaborat­or Jean Celestin — with raping another student. Parker was acquitted, Celestin was convicted, but the charge was later overturned, and the alleged victim, whose family said she never recovered from the incident, killed herself years later .

Parker has steadily maintained his innocence, but his Facebook responses and his evasion of the topic at a press conference at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival did little to stem the backlash against him. (An attorney for Parker didn’t respond to interview requests.)

“I don’t think it’s fair,” Gibson said during a Hollywood Reporter round-table interview. “He was cleared of all that stuff. And it was years ago.”

Gibson (who declined to be interviewe­d) has had his own scandals to overcome. His anti-Semitic tirade in 2006, recorded while being arrested on suspicion of drunk driving, was seemingly the end to his stardom. He later plead no contest in 2011 to domestic battery of former girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva. Damning audio recordings surfaced of their arguments, too.

But his comeback was seemingly made official by the Oscars. And Gibson is now reportedly in talks to direct a sequel to “Suicide Squad.”

The spotlight of illustriou­s platforms like the Oscars tends to shine a light on previously dormant cases. It was the 2014 Golden Globes lifetime achievemen­t award for Woody Allen that led Ronan Farrow to renew the 25-yearold molestatio­n allegation­s against the filmmaker, which Allen has long denied.

Even Roman Polanski, whose “The Pianist” won best picture in 2003, was forced to step down as president of France’s Cesar Awards after protests by women’s groups. The director pleaded guilty in 1977 to unlawful sex with a minor.

“This mirrors the larger trend within the culture,” says Scott Berkowitz, president of the anti-sexual assault organizati­on RAINN . “People are paying vastly more attention to sexual violence issues and personal behavior and the atmosphere has become much more sympatheti­c toward victims and much more scornful of defenders. Part of that trend has been because of celebrity cases.”

Though it’s done little to upset his winning streak, Affleck has been trailed through awards season by sexual harassment allegation­s made against him in 2010 while directing the mockumenta­ry “I’m Not There.” Producer Amanda White, in a civil suit, alleged Affleck made “unwelcome sexual advances” during shooting. Cinematogr­apher Magdalena Gorka, in a separate suit, said Affleck got into bed with her without her consent. The suits were settled for undisclose­d sums. A publicist for Affleck said the terms of the settlement preclude him from discussing it.

 ?? SUMMIT VIA AP ?? This image released by Summit shows director Mel Gibson, center, and actor Vince Vaughn on the set of the film, “Hacksaw Ridge.” Gibson is nominated for an Oscar for best directing for his work on the film.
SUMMIT VIA AP This image released by Summit shows director Mel Gibson, center, and actor Vince Vaughn on the set of the film, “Hacksaw Ridge.” Gibson is nominated for an Oscar for best directing for his work on the film.
 ?? FOX SEARCHLIGH­T PICTURES VIA AP ?? In this image released by Fox Searchligh­t Pictures, from left, Armie Hammer portrays Samuel Turner, Nate Parker portrays Nat Turner and Jayson Warner Smith portrays Earl Fowler in a scene from “The Birth of a Nation.”
FOX SEARCHLIGH­T PICTURES VIA AP In this image released by Fox Searchligh­t Pictures, from left, Armie Hammer portrays Samuel Turner, Nate Parker portrays Nat Turner and Jayson Warner Smith portrays Earl Fowler in a scene from “The Birth of a Nation.”

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