Posted on 02/01/2019 8:07:36 PM PST by Simon Green
Screenwriter, director and American Psycho author Bret Easton Ellis wonders whether Black Panther deserves its Oscar nomination for Best Picture, and thinks Oscar voters are supporting it for the sake of diversity, not because its especially good.
Ellis often speaks about the film industry in a way that doesnt endear him to the Hollywood left. In 2012, he apologized to Hurt Locker director Kathryn Bigelow for suggesting that she had only won Oscars because she was a hot woman. He has also expressed amusement at widespread Hollywood revulsion toward President Trump, though he has stressed that he is not a Trump fan.
In the latest, 100th episode of his B.E.E. Podcast, available only to paid subscribers, Ellis mused: No superhero movie has ever gotten a Best Picture nomination. But believe me, Disney is doing everything in its power to make sure this happens. Even though there is no one out here in La La Land Ive met who thinks Black Panther is that good as a movie. Yet, as a piece of representation, they are supporting it.
Ellis recorded the podcast on Jan. 17, before the Oscar nominations were announced, and correctly guessed that Black Panther would score a Best Picture nomination. But he asked: Does it really deserve one?
The entertainment press and the studio is selling the notion that Black Panther is a grand piece of cinematic art that cannot be ignored. And this notion is being shoved down our throats and we can only smile in disbelief. Or perhaps understand that this is just the moment were trapped in. A joke, a hoax. Its all fake news, folks, Ellis said.
He said the Oscars are a good indication of how Hollywood views itself, whether or not voters choose the the best films.
Representation is so important to them. And with a huge fatuous inclusivity and diversity push. What the most flattering pose might be in the moment as if inclusivity and diversity have anything to do with awarding a movies merits. Yes, this is the culture the Oscars are pushing, and it is rather nauseating, he said.
It was a good movie better than most. But hardly the type of movie the academy normally would nominate.
It got an affirmative action boost.
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