Los Angeles Times

Another piece of Oscar puzzle

High-profile films such as ‘By the Sea’ get spotlight in hopes of generating buzz.

- By Steven Zeitchik

For those who follow the film business casually, the parade of major festivals this time of year — with its banging drums of big premieres and loud echo of pundit reactions — can seem endless.

The march does, in fact, come to a conclusion. And that end will, well, begin, when the weeklong AFI Fest opens Thursday night in Hollywood.

A product of Los Angeles’ American Film Institute, AFI Fest is the last of a group of gatherings that starts at Southern France’s Cannes Film Festival in May and intensifie­s with confabs in Venice, Telluride, Toronto and New York after the summer has passed.

Together, they set the stage for which movies will be a hit or an Oscar power in the film world’s busy end-ofyear period — and which will slink away into the wintry night.

AFI offers the final crop of such hopefuls, and this year they are predictabl­y high-profile. The world-premiere screenings will begin with the Angelina Jolie-Pitt-directed love story “By the Sea” on Thursday, continue with Will Smith’s newsmaking NFL-themed film “Concussion” on Tuesday and wrap on Nov. 12 with “The Big Short,” an adaptation of Michael Lewis’ financial-crash book by Brad Pitt’s Plan B Entertainm­ent.

The trio of movies, which will play at the TCL Chinese Theatre, will have the potential to take a diverse awards season that lacks a frontrunne­r and jolt it anew.

“There are so many great filmmakers and so much content to choose from out there that to have a nurturing environmen­t like AFI is wonderful opportunit­y to make a movie stand out,” said Jeremy Kleiner, a principal at Plan B. “AFI has certainly done that in the past, and I think it’s going to happen again this year.”

To whom it happens — and how — is a puzzle.

“Concussion,” which Sony releases on Christmas Day, is perhaps the most intriguing case. Telling the story of Bennet Omalu (Smith), the doctor who more than a decade ago began making connection­s between football hits and a deadly brain injury, the Peter Landesman film arrives with the high hopes of a whistleblo­wing drama — and an ionic charge thanks to hacked emails that suggested the film might have been diluted to please the NFL.

“Football is a beautiful pageantry that occupies an entire day of the week — it’s Rockwellia­n American,” Landesman said in an email, when asked about the themes of the movie. “And it’s also dangerous. We have to embrace that contradict­ion. Now that we know, we can all make informed decisions for ourselves.”

As for the allegation­s of pandering, he wrote, in part, “Anyone who actually sees the movie will take that strange, almost arbitrary, accusation for what it was — uninformed nonsense. It felt like someone was reaching for a story that simply wasn’t there. We made the movie responsibl­y. End of story.”

Jolie-Pitt’s film comes with plenty off-screen intrigue — it’s a passion project for the hyphenate, who wrote, produced, directed and acted in it. It’s also her first collaborat­ion with Pitt in 10 years, since their relationsh­ip-defining “Mr. & Mrs. Smith.” The openingnig­ht slot raises the profile — and, commensura­tely, the expectatio­ns.

“The Big Short,” meanwhile, has an author whose work has made for big Oscar and box-office hits — they include “Moneyball” and “The Blind Side.” The film comes with a stalwart cast that includes Christian Bale, Ryan Gosling, Brad Pitt and Melissa Leo, and a director, Adam McKay, best known for making studio comedies with Will Ferrell.

Though its interest in those who profited from the 2008 financial crisis by shorting the market may seem like a bygone subject, filmmakers say the movie remains relevant.

“We’re still living that event,” Kleiner said. “It happens to be in the past but we’re still experienci­ng the results of decisions that were made. The film hopefully will help people have an understand­ing of what that was.”

The prospect of AFI screenings inserting themselves into the Oscar race is partly by design and partly incidental, organizers say.

“Premieres are one of those things we’re thinking about when we put together the schedule,” said AFI Fest director Jacqueline Lyanga. “But when we’re looking at the season we’re also looking at what we want to say as a festival. It’s been a tough year internatio­nally and we’re heading into an election, so we’re thinking of the kinds of conversati­ons we want to stir. Award season is part of it, but it’s not just about award season.”

Indeed there are a host of other offerings beyond the world premieres, some of them of the more global variety. They include events for Michael Moore’s Europe-hopping policy documentar­y “Where to Invade Next.” There are also screenings for Charlie Kaufman’s stop-motion movie “Anomalisa” and foreign-film favorites such as “The Lobster,” a dystopian comedy about relationsh­ip culture.

And there are events beyond traditiona­l movies, including a raft of programmin­g on virtual reality, with a keynote Saturday by Glen Keane, a tech pioneer and former Disney animator.

Much of the film industry, however, will have its eyes trained on what it will mean for the unfurling Oscar season.

AFI has certainly launched some big movies of late — an electric screening for “Selma” set that film on the path to art-house hitdom and a best picture nomination a year ago, while “American Sniper,” debuting on the same night,” would use the screening to slowly build momentum until it became the highestgro­ssing movie of 2014.

Of course, coming in so late could also mean the momentum has been seized elsewhere — a particular challenge in recent years with the increased clout of fests such as New York.

That can make it harder for AFI to land premieres — and some films as well. Among the movies that had high AFI hopes not materializ­ed at either the box office or awards podium in recent years were “Saving Mr. Banks,” “Hitchcock” and “A Most Violent Year,” the 2014 opener.

But in a year when there’s less clarity — though films such as “Spotlight,” “Room” and “Bridge of Spies” have their supporters, none are runaway contenders — AFI is a chance for a savvy studio to step in and get a big boost as they go right into their November or December release.

It’s also a chance for those that opened quietly elsewhere to wait out the noise and come in when others are flagging.

IFC, which had last year’s awards darling “Boyhood,” has been under the radar with “45 Years,” a critically lauded movie that premiered in Berlin last winter and played a number of the post-summer festivals to relatively little fanfare.

Andrew Haigh’s slowburn drama about a long marriage shaken by new revelation­s is choosing AFI as a launchpad of sorts; though the film has played Telluride and Toronto, AFI will be the first appearance for star Charlotte Rampling, who with costar Tom Courtenay will be given a tribute at the fest in the hope of boosting the actors’ awards chances.

“I can’t say I’ve seen all the movies disappoint­ing at the box office or underwhelm­ing critics,” said IFC Films President Jonathan Sehring. “What I can say is that we conscienti­ously didn’t want to go up against all of them. This is the best approach.”

The Oscar conversati­on can also move in unexpected directions with AFI’s traditiona­l “secret screening,” as “Sniper” was last year. Pundits are keeping a eye on two films, David O. Russell’s “Joy,” and Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s “The Revenant,” December releases from awards darlings that have yet to screen.

Lyanga says that Oscar speculatio­n is valid but shouldn’t consume the AFI oxygen.

“We’re in a position that we can look back at the past film year and have a conversati­on about what’s to come,” she said. “This is a great opportunit­y to do both.”

 ?? Jaap Buitendijk Paramount Pictures ?? CHRISTIAN BALE is part of a standout cast in “The Big Short,” which is about the financial crisis of 2008.
Jaap Buitendijk Paramount Pictures CHRISTIAN BALE is part of a standout cast in “The Big Short,” which is about the financial crisis of 2008.

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