Los Angeles Times

The role diversity will soon play

Soon the academy’s diversity push may mean more interestin­g Oscar nomination­s.

- By Glenn Whipp

The academy’s diversity push will probably mean that soon Oscar nomination­s will be less predictabl­e.

What would real change at the Oscars look like?

Three years into its diversity initiative aimed at doubling the number of women and minorities in its ranks by 2020, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has now added nearly 2,400 members, including this year’s record class of 928 invitees.

It’s not a stretch to say that today’s motion picture academy — now consisting of more women (31%, up 6% since 2015) and people of color (16%, double the number three years ago) — has been altered significan­tly.

However, that change has yet to really manifest itself at the Oscars. It’d be hard to argue that the Academy Award winners of the past couple of years have been appreciabl­y different from those of previous seasons — or markedly distinct in and of themselves.

By the time Oscar nomination­s are announced, the Golden Globes, Screen Actors Guild Awards and Film Independen­t Spirit Awards have already provided an awards season road map. And Oscar voters haven’t exactly taken the road less traveled.

Yes, the academy gave its best picture honor to a sci-fi movie for the first time this year. But “The Shape of Water” had been in play with a number of other awards groups too and already had claimed top prizes from the directors and producers guilds.

And, yes, “Moonlight” prevailing in 2017 felt like a collective epiphany redefining what a best picture winner could be. But its Oscar came just a year into this record membership expansion.

A more inclusive voting body may have influenced the outcome to a degree, though one could just as easily see “Moonlight’s” triumph as an acknowledg­ment of its excellence as well as an overdue realizatio­n that a movie depicting black lives could win the academy’s highest honor without having to focus on slavery. (Or it could have been a reaction to Donald Trump’s election and/or a counterbal­ance to all that “La La Land” love. Take your pick.)

So how would we know if we were in the middle of a real

Oscars revolution? For starters, how about a foreign language film earning a best picture nomination for the first time since 2012’s “Amour”?

In this dramatic membership expansion, the academy has, to its credit, cast a wide net, inviting hundreds of internatio­nal filmmakers, actors and crafts people. (“What it is is we realize now how much talent there is out there,” academy president John Bailey told me last year.)

Last year, 283 internatio­nal industry profession­als received invitation­s. Nearly half of this year’s class — 460 invitees — came from 59 countries across the globe.

Those invitation­s have vexed awards season consultant­s who have complained about figuring out how to reach the far-flung new members who speak a wide variety of languages and may live thousands of miles from the nearest official academy screening.

But the inclusion of so many celebrated internatio­nal filmmakers and artists — this year’s directors class included the likes of Hong Sang-soo, Lee Chang-dong, Chloe Zhao and Be la Tarr — can’t help but alter and ex- pand the landscape in a meaningful fashion. I can’t presume to know how “Call Me by Your Name” director Luca Guadagnino is going to vote next year, but I suspect his Oscar ballot will be interestin­g and inclusive in every possible fashion.

On that note, it’s possible to make a case that the surprise best picture nomination for Paul Thomas Anderson’s “Phantom Thread” this year owed a little to this increased internatio­nal emphasis. A chamber piece romance set in London in the 1950s, the film featured an alluring mystery at the heart of its love story as well as dry (dare I say “British”) humor and a global cast.

“Phantom Thread” may well have been nominated three years ago, but its across-the-board recognitio­n — the film earned six Oscar nomination­s, after pulling in just two from the Golden Globes, four from BAFTA and none from SAG — could be seen as a manifestat­ion of a new sensibilit­y. It’s all speculatio­n, of course. But however you choose to spin it, it’s pretty terrific.

Many academy members have griped that the group’s diversity push has diluted the prestige of the institutio­n. Rather than acknowledg­e the limitation­s of a body whose membership was ridiculous­ly, overwhelmi­ngly white and male, these members cited the names of invitees they felt unworthy of inclusion — as if the academy didn’t have a long history of welcoming members sporting spotty résumés.

“We have settled on numeric answers to the problem of inclusion, barely recognizin­g that this is the industry’s problem far, far more than it is the academy’s,” Bill Mechanic, a former 20th Century Fox and Walt Disney Studios executive, wrote in a letter to the academy’s board in April, resigning his position from the group’s board of governors.

Mechanic isn’t the only academy member who feels this way. But he was vastly outnumbere­d on the group’s 54-member board of governors, which is why he left. This year’s record class of invitees makes it clear that the academy is pushing forward, and there’s little reason to believe that the momentum will abate in the next two years.

By that time, we may begin to see the kind of profound changes that would improve the Academy Awards, changing them from an awards season afterthoug­ht into something potentiall­y powerful and provocativ­e. If the Oscar nomination­s become more difficult to forecast, thanks to a deeper, more inclusive membership, then maybe the kinds of movies and performanc­es considered “Oscar worthy” will continue to broaden.

The first test will be upon us soon enough. No superhero movie has earned a best picture nomination in the history of the Academy Awards. But then there’s never been a superhero movie like “Black Panther.” Christophe­r Nolan is already predicting a best picture nomination. We’ll soon see if this new academy proves him right.

 ?? Matt Kennedy Marvel Studios-Walt Disney ?? COULD “BLACK Panther,” with Chadwick Boseman, left, and Michael B. Jordan, make history by earning an Oscar best picture nod?
Matt Kennedy Marvel Studios-Walt Disney COULD “BLACK Panther,” with Chadwick Boseman, left, and Michael B. Jordan, make history by earning an Oscar best picture nod?
 ?? Laurie Sparham Focus Features ?? IN ANOTHER ERA, it is possible that the outstandin­g movies “Phantom Thread” (with Vicky Krieps and Daniel Day-Lewis), left, and “Moonlight” (Alex Hibbert) might have fared less well among academy voters.
Laurie Sparham Focus Features IN ANOTHER ERA, it is possible that the outstandin­g movies “Phantom Thread” (with Vicky Krieps and Daniel Day-Lewis), left, and “Moonlight” (Alex Hibbert) might have fared less well among academy voters.
 ?? David Bornfriend A24 / TIFF ??
David Bornfriend A24 / TIFF

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