In this morning’s roundup of Oscar news ‘n’ notes from around the web, it’s not a good day for honorary Oscar winners: one cancels a show, while another gets branded an untalented pothead.
Patrick Goldstein looks at the New York Times’ Magazine’s extensive profile of “Precious” director Lee Daniels and wonders if the guy is so outspoken that he’ll alienate Oscar voters. He certainly could have lost a few votes by telling Hirschberg that he “kind of co-directed” “Monster’s Ball” and gave Halle Berry the line readings for her Oscar-winning performance. But, you know, the Oscars could use a brash maverick or two in the mix, so maybe they’ll take to this one. Me, I can’t wait to see what the guy has to say next Tuesday when “Precious” kicks off theWrap Screening Series at the Arclight Sherman Oaks. (The Big Picture)
Can I back up for a minute? On Wednesday, I linked to Goldstein’s Big Picture column in which he called the choice of new Oscar producers Bill Mechanic and Adam Shankman “a safe pick,” and then complained that if you want a great TV show, you should hire a great TV producer. His first choices: Aaron Sorkin and Thomas Schlamme. On Thursday, I got an email from a friend who’s worked on close to 20 Oscars shows, and who just had to comment on Goldstein’s suggestion. “[H]e suggests Sorkin & Schlamme, two great guys who I know, respect and have worked for, but they are not VARIETY TELEVISION PRODUCERS! DOESN'T ANYBODY GET THIS AND UNDERSTAND THE DIFFERENCE???” Point taken. Goldstein’s picks have made wonderful single-camera TV, where you’ve got a week to shoot a show; if your point is that it takes TV people to produce a good TV show, you probably ought to pick the right kind of TV people.
Honorary Oscar winner Ennio Morricone’s show at the Hollywood Bowl has been cancelled. Illness? Lackluster ticket sales? Nobody’s saying. The only good news in this is that 1) if you’re a musician in the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, you now get paid without having to do anything, and 2) if, like me, you think “Once Upon a Time in America” is the greatest film score ever written, but you have tickets for U2 that night, you won’t feel so conflicted. (Variety) (Morricone photo, left: AMPAS)
Richard Schickel reviews the new biography of another recent honorary Oscar winner, Robert Altman. Although it might not be fair to author Mitchell Zuckoff to call Schickel’s piece a review of his book; mostly, Schickel spends 1,000 words complaining about Altman, and then blames Zuckoff for not sharing his opinion that the director was a hack who smoked too much dope. (Los Angeles Times)
Sasha Stone surveys the reviews and writes off “Amelia” as a DOA best-picture contender. In the process, she asks a sensible question: “how do you honor Big Hollywood if the sweeping epics that Oscar used to love can’t get arrested by the chorus of film critics and voices online that hand down a verdict before the public gets a crack at it?” If you’re a studio, I think you just cross your fingers and hope that voters ignore that chorus.

