The Odds' Nominations Report Card

The Odds' Nominations Report Card

Published: February 02, 2010 @ 6:08 pm
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By Steve Pond

So we have the first slate of 10 Best Picture nominees since 1943 – and despite the fact that it contains no documentaries and no foreign films (besides the British-made “An Education”) and no real comedies, the lineup seems to have given the Academy the kind of range it was looking for.

And by that, I mean the range between arty little movies with critical credibility, and big moneymakers with lots of fans who might want to watch the Oscar show.

Certainly, the 10 seems likely to be an experiment that will continue beyond this year, a gamble that once the numbers come in on March 8 (and does anybody doubt they’ll be way up?) will be deemed a qualified success.

But leaving the Best Picture category behind, and looking around the rest of the ballot, what’s the prognosis? Did the various branches and committees do their jobs, or did they mess things up?

I’ll refrain from judging some of the categories where I have yet to see several of the nominees (documentary, short films), or the ones where I don’t feel qualified to critique the choices (sound editing, sound mixing).  But here's my report card on how Oscar voters in other categories handled their assignments:

 

Acting: The actors branch made a couple of lazy choices (Matt Damon, Penelope Cruz), and several nice ones (Jeremy Renner, left, and Maggie Gyllenhaal).  Their picks were a whole lot o’ predictable, perhaps, but the results won’t be embarrassing until the final Best Actress envelope is opened on March 7. And that’ll be the fault of the entire Academy, not just the actors branch. B

Writing: The two vaguely surprising choices, “In the Loop” and “The Messenger,” are good, solid ones that I’m happy to see. The branch, often one of the Academy’s more adventurous, didn’t go too far afield in its nominees this year, which means no delightful left-field surprises.  But I can’t really quarrel with a single one of its picks. A-

Directing: The five films that got the most nominations were “Avatar,” “The Hurt Locker,” “Inglourious Basterds,” “Up in the Air” and “Precious.” If it stands to reason that the films with the most nominations are the best directed, then those should be the five directing nominees. They were.

It might be more fun to mix things up, and you could certainly quibble with the idea that these are the five best films of the year. But given the other nominations, it hardly makes sense to, say, substitute Neil Blomkamp (“District 9,” four nominations) for Lee Daniels (“Precious,” six noms). The directors did their job -- and anybody who was at the DGA Awards on Sunday knows that there's nothing to apologize for in this lineup. A

Foreign language: If you accept the one-film-per-country rule, the various committees to which the foreign-language process is entrusted avoided most of the pitfalls into which this category often falls. There were no major scandals, and while lots of good films fell by the wayside (I’m not a particular fan of “Police, Adjective,” but it probably should have made the shortlist), the final five is solid.

Tags: Academy Awards, Awards, Deal Central, oscars
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The Odds is an informed, bemused, skeptical and authoritative look at all aspects of the Academy Awards race. Steve Pond, author of the L.A. Times bestseller The Big Show, has been covering this particular circus for more than two decades, much of that time as the only reporter with full backstage and rehearsal access to the Oscar show.

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