Hello Everyone! It has been four years since I started this Blog. Now I am actually breaking a tradition here as I usually review a Don Bluth movie. However, the Academy must have wanted me to criticize them again, because it’s been over a year since I did a huge rant about them. So last week the Academy announced 3 big changes to the Oscars. One of which is something that doesn’t make much difference. The second I may be able to live with. The third, however, is a terrible idea and whoever thought of it should really take a good long look in the mirror. So let’s begin:
The first and least foolish decision is that in 2020 the Oscars will be moving from Late Feb or early March (on winter Olympic Year) to early/ mid February, the idea is to attract more viewers, by shortening award season. This idea may work but, I don’t feel it will make much difference. Award Season at the moment really begins in early January with The Golden Globes and ends in late Feb with the aforementioned Oscars. The reason it won’t make much difference is because, the other award ceremonies will also move their dates earlier. I've got news for them, “the other Award Shows really like to predict the Oscars.”
The second change is that they are going to be more cautious on the length of the ceremony. It is only supposed to run for 3 hours but tends to run anywhere from a couple minutes to two hrs over (it usually only runs an hour over). What they are going to do is eliminate some of the smaller categories out of the telecast by presenting them during commercial breaks and then highlight the acceptance speech when the telecast resumes. Now the Tonys do the same thing which I can't say I like but I don't mind it because it’s traditional for them. My opinion that doing this during the Oscars is disrespectful because these people work very hard and receive very little fame or fortune. You can make the telecast shorter without removing them and by not performing the best song nominees. Also by removing all the fillers such as Neil Patrick Harris’ predictions, Chris Rock selling Girl Scout cookies, and Jimmy Kimmel going across the street to another theater and surprising the audience as they were watching a Wrinkle In Time . It seems that the Academy prefers These Moments, over what they are supposed to be doing which is honoring the previous years best in film.
Now the final and worst of all is that there is going to be a new category called Best Popular Film. First of all the title needs to be changed immediately! You hear this every year, “why did this or that picture not get nominated for best picture”. Some of them for instance The Avengers probably is not best picture material (although my 7th grade mind did think it was ) but other movies like Logan definitely are. My last rant about the Oscars was on the animation category which is very much like a participation trophy. That is saying that with the animation category, an animated movie winning best picture within 10 to 20 years is basically zero percent. Getting nominated is a little higher but still very low. The Academy is basically doing the same exact thing to Blockbusters! What exactly do they mean by popular films? Do they mean how much the audience scored it on sites like cinemascore or do they mean box office numbers and if so how much does a movie need to make? For instance does it merely need to make back its budget or make a billion dollars? Also if this is like a participation trophy, if they had this from early beginnings, would fan favorite movies which were best picture contenders when they came out such as Get Out and Avatar even be nominated for best picture. There have been fan favorite movies that have gone on to win best picture like the final Lord of the Rings film, Titanic, and even earlier The Sound of Music. In other words would those movies still have won or would the Academy have felt the best popular film trophy would have been sufficient?The only thing that the Academy has clarified about this new category is that the nominees for best popular film will still be eligible for the best picture award.
In conclusion, I think two of the decisions are bad, one worse than the other, and the other will not make a difference. All of these changes are for ratings but the best popular film award might just backfire on them!
My thanks to everyone that has read my blogs for the last 4 years and my volunteer staff for helping to get every blog out! I will be forever grateful to all of you! Goodnight and Bee Happy!™
Mr.Bee
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very nice, I pray you are well
ReplyDeleteIt pains me to say it, Mr. Bee, but I agree with ALL your points.
ReplyDelete