Variety

Hidden Facts in Oscar Date Change

MOVING THE CEREMONY HAS SOME UNINTENDED CONSEQUENC­ES

- By Tim Gray

THIS YEAR, there are 8,469 eligible Oscar voters, a jump of 35% from four years ago. The membership increase may affect the outcome, but without seeing a numerical breakdown of branches, gender and geographic location of voters, we will never know for sure.

There is another important factor affecting the results: The changing calendar. This year’s ceremony, on Feb. 9, is the earliest ever. The accelerate­d schedule has been the source of anxious jokes for months; the attitude seemed to be that this year’s awards season is filled with familiar stuff, but at a faster pace.

However, it is NOT the same stuff. The difference­s affect two key areas: the all-important buzz, and voters’ access to watching the films.

If a film hasn’t establishe­d itself by mid-october, it’s an uphill battle. The faster schedule removes the opportunit­y for people to discover films, especially lateyear openers.

As always, the SAG Awards nomination­s include six categories for film, picked by SAG-AFTRA voters (who were randomly selected to be part of this year’s nominating committee). This year, no film that began public screenings after Oct. 15 got a nomination. Most nominees had debuted via the September festivals and had been frequently screened since then.

Coincidenc­e? Maybe.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences traditiona­lly held the Oscars in March or April, but moved the ceremony a month earlier, beginning with the Oscarcast on Feb. 29, 2004. Oscar history offers other evidence that the date change can have an impact.

— The bellwether­s changed. For the 16 years before the date switch, the film that earned the most nomination­s won the best picture award 14 times, or 87%. For the 16 years after that date change, the film with the most nomination­s won only six times, or 37%.

— Before the switch (1987-2002), the Golden Globes predicted the Oscar best pic in 13 of the 16 years (81%). After the switch, that match was cut in half, to seven of 16 times (43%).

— Every best-picture winner from 1987 to 2002 had a cold opening — i.e., debuted in theaters commercial­ly, without previous runs on the festival circuit. Of those 16 winners, 10 had launched in November or December. (In 2002, the year “Chicago” won, all five best-pic nominees opened in the U.S. in December.) In 2019, it’s doubtful if most of them would have been nominated.

— For the past 11 years (i.e., since the 2008 “Slumdog Millionair­e”), every one of Oscar’s best picture winners had debuted at Venice, Telluride or Toronto, or some combo of those three.

Clearly, awards strategist­s are using the fests to begin their buzz. In theory, there’s no harm in that. But in the past, a later Oscar-voting date allowed some films to build word-of-mouth. Exhibit A is Halle Berry, who was not high on the awards radar in December 2001. But “Monster’s Ball” from Lionsgate built support.

Voters no longer have time to discover little films that began screening late. That list includes “Clemency,”“a Hidden Life,”“just Mercy,” “Dark Waters,”“honey Boy,” the French “Les Misérables,”“waves,”“the Peanut Butter Falcon,” “Give Me Liberty,”“uncut Gems” and even such latecomers as “Bombshell,”“little Women” and “1917,” which won the Globe for drama.

The earlier awards are meant to help Oscarcast ratings. But the big question is: Are they helping to encourage moviegoing?

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While “1917” has earned awards attention, most late-year entries had a harder time, as the abbreviate­d season didn’t allow voters to discover those films.
WAR HORSE While “1917” has earned awards attention, most late-year entries had a harder time, as the abbreviate­d season didn’t allow voters to discover those films.
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