Posted on 01/22/2019 3:53:06 PM PST by EdnaMode
Each year at the Left Coast crack of dawn, when the Oscar nominations are announced, theres generally at least one major nomination many pundits were predicting that fails to materialize. When that happens, entertainment media tends to rise up as one and say the s-word: snub. In truth, its not usually a snub; its just somebody getting passed over for other nominees who were loved a little more than the conventional wisdom realized. Thats why the chatter about it tends to get worn out by the end of the day.
But when the nominations were announced this morning, and it was revealed that Bradley Cooper had failed to get a best director nod for A Star Is Born, my feeling was: This may or may not have been a snub, but it was emblematic. It signified something arguably major in terms of what the Oscars are becoming.
I leave it to the movie gods, and the gossip columnists, to debate how much Bradley Cooper is personally liked or disliked in Hollywood. But his omission from the best director roster didnt happen in a vacuum. It crystallized the slow but steady fade of A Star Is Born, over the last month or two, from Oscar slam-dunk to solid-but-hardly-sure-fire Oscar front-runner to middle-of-the-road Oscar contender to hanging-on-by-its-fingernails Oscar movie thats still sort of in the game to the place it now holds: Oscar toast. And that, in a way, is a much bigger story than the issue of whether Bradley Cooper came off as too serious and self-involved over the course of awards season, especially in a certain much-talked-about newspaper-of-record magazine profile.
The gradual decline of A Star Is Born during awards season has been, for those of us who love the film, a somewhat depressing spectacle to watch. But now that the decline is more or less complete, I think its meaning has at last become clear. A Star Is Born was, and is, a rapturous knockout of a romantic melodrama (its not as if Im alone in seeing it that way), but its a movie thats completely and utterly bereft of a social message. In 2018, that makes it seem (dare I say it?) more trivial than the other contenders. Its just a love story. And though its a very grand love story, and was an extraordinarily huge hit, these days that isnt enough.
Just look at this years eight best picture contenders: Black Panther (a one-film revolution, and long overdue: the first epically scaled African-American superhero movie), BlacKkKlansman (a racial police drama of searing relevance), The Favourite (a costume drama of intense post-#MeToo consciousness about issues of female oppression and power), Roma (a drama of class consciousness and luminous empathy for a Mexican housekeeper, in an era when immigrants are being demonized), and Vice (a pointed political-satirical attack on the sins of a clandestine conservative demagogue).
Plus, a pair of movies that wear their social agenda in such a retrograde way that a lot of woke media types consider them to be beneath contempt, yet the agendas are still very much there: Green Book (a classic Hollywood liberal message movie about racial understanding) and Bohemian Rhapsody (which presents its Live Aid concert climax as the drama of Freddie Mercury finally coming to full terms with his sexual identity). I would argue, in fact, that though some of us have a major problem with the way that Bohemian Rhapsody plays down Freddies gayness, for the vast mainstream audience that embraced the movie, its old-fangled liberal message of self-acceptance was a crucial element of the films appeal. And A Star Is Born? Sorry, but in this company of ardent social earnestness it now looks like the crowd-pleaser that didnt get the memo.
Theres a hallowed Oscar tradition for all this, of course. The Academy Awards have frequently honored big-ticket message movies, even ones that clunked (like Gentlemans Agreement), and that dynamic just got ramped up in the 80s, during the era of films like Gandhi and Chariots of Fire. The celebration by critics, and now by the Academy of movies that bend with extreme prejudice toward a progressive agenda is a retro-fitted-for-the-Trump-era extension of that tradition. It reflects the evolving membership of the Academy, and it also reflects the trend weve seen in recent years, which is the Oscars veering closer and closer to becoming their own version of the Independent Spirit Awards.
Am I arguing for something else? Frankly, yes. I like films with social messages, too; thats an intrinsic element of what cinema is. Yet our humanity isnt only measured by our virtue. Its my belief that the movie industry, which has never in its history been more focused on creating mainstream product than it is now, should not spend Oscar night pretending that particular priority is somehow way, way down on its list. I was stoked to see Black Panther become the first superhero movie to get a best picture nomination, but why no nomination for its director, Ryan Coogler? The bottom-line reason is that popcorn movies are still not taken seriously on Oscar night. Adam McKays best director nod for Vice feels like a bit of a ringer to me its a movie far less celebrated, in the culture, than A Star Is Born or Black Panther. Its not exactly burning up the box office, either. But its got its activist firebrand messaging in the right place. And thats now the Oscar standard. Without it, youre just a belle at the wrong ball.
No one with sound priorities.
Hahaha. Yup. :D
Yup. James Woods is a perfect example.
Yea, wasn’t he on TV at a time?
Don’t they give him an award every year?
Send him back to the trash can of life and weld down the lid along with the rest of the Hollywood Elite.
One good movie in the bunch, it’s the nominee for Best Foreign Picture, the Polish movie “Cold War”.
Black Panther was pathetically bad. Bad CGI in the final fight scene with distorted characters and every African stereotype in the book, the “Gorilla” clan making ape sounds and the people with the plates in their mouths just to name a few. Also, it was boring - I fell asleep in the middle.
Typo:
You’d better have a SOCIALIST message.
Speaking of which, isnt it time for another movie about some heroic commie who was so-called blacklisted? We rubes need one of those every 5 -10 years to be reminded how virtuous actors are.
I never even heard of this A Star Is Born.
Is it a remake. Or remake of a remake?
Or is it original and uses the same name? M
It’s a disgrace that Cooper and A Star is Born weren’t nominated. It’s a great movie, I guess he didn’t offend enough people with it.
Remake of a remake of a remake.
This is actually the 4th version of A Star if Born, the 5th if you count a Bollwood version with a different title that I read about.
The first is a straight drama from 1937, the second is the most famous, with Judy Garland and James Mason (she sings, but he doesn’t, big number: the man that got away), a musical one from the 1970s with Barbara Streisand and Kris Kristofferson, I always think it might be called “the Rose” but I’m never sure if that’s right or not, and this new one.
It’s really an excellent movie. Nothing is laid on too thick. There’s a scene in a drag bar, but nobody is going on about respect us, respect us; there’s a scene where the performers are saying a prayer before they go on stage, but again, you’d have to be a pretty thin skinned atheist to be offended by it. There is some sex, but it’s not graphic, one full frontal shot of Lady Gaga that actually isn’t “sexy”. And the songs are really good. Willie Nelson’s son is in the band in the movie, and he wrote some of the songs along with Lady Gaga. She is quite believable as an ordinary girl, not someone whose already a world famous singing star. Andrew Dice Clay plays her father and their interactions are very true to life. It is an adult movie, to be sure, but not everything needs to be for 12 year olds, I’m sure most here would agree.
I’ve only seen this one and the first one, I do want to see the Garland/Mason one, maybe I’ll watch it while I boycott the Oscars.
The new one is on pay-per-view, etc. by now, but is still playing in some theaters.
Also, include Clint Eastwood and Jon Voight.
I remember the Garland and Stresand ones.
I forgot or never knew about the 1930’s one.
The Rose had Bette Midler.
The documentary about her is up for nomination. (How much do you want to bet it will win?)
Just my opinion: I watched the Judy Garland version on cable recently. It was AWFUL. It’s a very long movie—2 1/2 hours long with a lot of forgettable musical numbers, one that I thought would never end. Also, I thought Garland looked old and not very attractive. Maybe because it’s a 1950’s movie—not a good decade for film.
“The Rose had Bette Midler.”
AH HA! Thanks!
That first Star is Born is pretty good, and it has a really, really weird little bit at the end. After the big sob story ending, they put up a shot of what looks like a script page describing the very end you just watched. It almost looks like it was a mistake. I tried googling it, and even asked my movie buff friend about it, but I wasn’t ever able to get an explanation. It was very post modern for such an old movie.
It’s a back-from-the-dead thread!
The British version of the Oscar is the BAFTA.
“Bohemian Rhapsody may be competing for seven BAFTA Awards at this Sundays ceremony, but director Bryan Singer is no longer nominated. The British Academy of Film and Television Arts has officially removed Singers name from the Bohemian Rhapsody nomination for Best British Film following new allegations of sexual misconduct against the director.
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