Business Standard

Parasite’s Oscar triumph

- SWAPNIL JOGLEKAR Every week, Eye Culture features writers with an entertaini­ng critical take on art, music, dance, film and sport

First came the shock. Not a single non-english flick had won the Oscar for Best Picture in 91 years. Bong-joon Ho, the director of the black comedy-thriller, Parasite, was for thcoming . “I feel like s omething will hit me and I will wake up from t his dream,” he s aid after Parasite won four awards, with Bong bagging the best director ’s trophy. All Oscar prediction­s considered Parasite a critically acclaimed film, but said it would require a real show of intent from the Academy if it was to win any of its nomination­s other than the best internatio­nal film. From the Golden Globe to the BAFTAS, 1917 — the World War I epic drama — had won the top honours only for Oscars to snub it in all major categories. People celebrated this win for Parasite, but hidden in the folds was another winner: The Academy of M otion Pic ture Ar ts and Sciences.

An article in The New York Times revealed that since 2016, the academy had been working to diversify its jury based on race, gender and nationalit­y. According to an analysis by The Hollywood Reporter, 39 per cent of the organisati­on’s new members hailed from outside the United States. Last summer, the academy invited 842 people from 59 countries to become its member. It invited 928 people from 59 countrie s the previous ye ar, and 7 74 p e ople from 57 countrie s the year before.

In contrast, at the start of the decade, the academy was inviting fewer than 180 people annually, with most of the invites going to people already working in Hollywood. The academy only invited 105 people in 2008, The New York Times article added. Some say this is slowly reflecting in the voting patterns, though the lack of diversity in terms of nomination for people of colour or women continues to draw public ire.

This is why most predicted Joaquin Phoenix winning the nod for the Best Actor. He played a comic book character, which helps the Oscars draw in younger viewers who otherwise don’t attach much i mportance to the awards night.

It is along the lines of what happened after Indian contestant­s won the top awards in global beauty conte sts i n the 1990s. No t only did Sushmita S en and Aishwar ya Rai became household names, India discovered an appetite for beauty products, and markets were flooded with cosmetics. The revenue of the Indian cosmetics segment is expected to zoom to $20 billion in 2025, compared with $6 billion a decade ago, according to an article published i n The Economic Times. So, the greater the victory aligns with the idea of the target market, the more the market share for the organiser. An oft-cited example is the mind-boggling success of the Indian Premier League after India won the inaugural T-20 World Cup in 2007.

The next logical question is: What did Parasite do that Indian movies fail to do to win at big internatio­nal events? “Visibility is very important but visibility is also very expensive,” Rima Das, whose film Village Rockstar was India's official entry to the Oscars in 2018, said.

In comes Miky Lee, who produced Parasite. Lee built South Korea’s first movie multiplex, inve sted in Dreamworks studios and grew a $4.1billion entertainm­ent empire that helped launch filmmakers such as Bong Joon Ho. Granddaugh­ter of the Samsung-founder, L ee Byung- chul, she “used to carry DVDS and go to Warners, Universal, Fox , anyb o dy I [Lee] had a chance with, and pitch Korean film, Korean film, Korean film,” she told The Hollywood Reporter.

So when Parasite came to the Oscars, the groundwork Lee had done meant that the internatio­nal film world was no stranger to Korea. Bong had met distributo­r Tom Q uinn at Cannes in 2006. Quinn's Neon picked up Parasite for the United States.

Entertainm­ent website Deadline says two trailers were cut with over 30 pieces of digital content. Not a single piece of marketing material included content from the second half of Parasite. On the flick’s Ins tagram, NEON created an interlocki­ng puzzle of images to promote the film, a series of cliffhange­rs with interconne­cting ads. At last count, Parasite's official trailer on Youtube had raked in over 15 million views.

NEON Chief Marketing Officer Christian Parkes said, “We didn’t look at this movie as a foreign film. We looked at this as a best picture contender ”. The final piece of the puzzle is the contextual­ly strong base of the movie. The imagery of semi-basement hous e s, narrow, garbag e — strewn lanes contrasted with lush gardens, large, empty spaces with sunlight seeping in resonates with the audience. Its vocabulary is powerful. Bong regularly mentions that the poor family “infiltrate­s” the house of a rich family, a polarising idea in today's time. Its music and deft camera work cast a spell. The deep-rooted financial and social inequality depicted is also topical not just in Korea but the whole world. The recent Oxfam report states that the wealth of the richest 22 men in the world equals the wealth of all the women in Africa.

As Bong said, “Once you overcome the one-inch tall barrier of subtitles, you will b e intro duced to s o many more amazing films”. S o is this the new norm or an aberration? Over to you, Oscars 2021.

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