Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Tag: oscars

    • My Awards Show Has a First Name

      Posted at 2:55 pm by kayewer, on January 6, 2024

      This morning I cracked open my Sunday supplement copy of the New York Times (yes, I read an actual hard copy newspaper: three, in fact) to find the first section devoted to the biggest award of the season, the Academy Awards. Naturally I began to look, and I was disappointed but not surprised by the articles and ads begging the members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences (AMPAS) to consider certain productions for nomination.

      When the movie industry began, it seems that every motion picture was simply produced to entertain the general public. It was a baby industry learning to walk before it needed to talk, and even when “talkies” came to the theatres people were aghast at the concept of adding sound. Which is what parents have also complained about since time immemorial.

      Eventually movies found themselves being categorized into romance, drama, horror and musical and such, but still anybody who had a few coins in their pockets could enjoy a movie (and often receive a free snack). Those were the days of news reels and travelogues, when information was sent out in any way possible. The filming of events overseas were duplicated and sent to what must have been hundreds or even thousands of screening houses. A visit to the movies was an experience for everybody. Children were exposed to general grammar, and foreigners could even learn English as a second language.

      When the turnaround happened, I’m not certain, but sometime after the 1970s and the dawn of summer blockbusters, the films considered for awards began to shift from movies everybody could watch to art house productions produced by a certain class of people and which only selected people saw. The feel of the events shifted from the general public to the micro percentage of the population.

      Two of the Times’ staff–Manohla Dargis and Alissa Wilkinson–provided a comparison of who and what they considered the best films for consideration. The only films I recognized in the listings are Oppenheimer and Killers of the Flower Moon. The former was released in the summer and enjoyed the distinction of popularity with a film apparently released for the general public: Barbie. Nowhere did Barbie get a suggested best picture nomination. The latter film came out in the last half of the year. Which seems to be the norm for this new ritual: the films nobody got to see are released at the end of the year to be fresh in the minds of those who did see them, and the rest of the year be damned.

      The other films listed for a hopeful place in history have never appeared on a movie screen in my area (except perhaps one AMC with the reputation for art house fare from its past incarnations which it cannot abandon). Movies with tiles such as May December, Menus-Plaisirs – Les Troisgros, The Taste of Things and Asteroid City left me scratching my head. One is based on a true story about an older woman’s affair with a tween boy. One is a documentary film in French (English subtitles) about a renowned Michelin star restaurant, so why it would be considered for Best Picture rather than Best Documentary or Foreign Film is beyond me. Another is a romantic story about food (again), this time a cook and her gourmet employer, and the last is a dramedy about UFOs.

      These are movies that most people would not see. The “general public” has become the recipients of mass market pabulum, while the few percent attend the art houses and generally have the biggest say in anything to do with awards. Barbie is meaningless as a film to be memorialized, but it is possible that its director, Greta Gerwig, may be honored for her work on the project. The exclusivity of it all takes away from what the movie industry was designed for; not just entertainment, but enlightening the general public. We no longer need newsreels in the cinema, but we do need something to stimulate our brains.

      Of course I realize that the ordinary people out there wouldn’t want to see a film with subtitles, but I would consider seeing anything if I knew it existed first. The isolated publicity behind these films are keeping them away from even the curious. That isn’t fair if they also have some money in their pockets.

      A friend asked me if I would be willing to watch the Golden Globes, which tends to be a precursor to what pictures and persons win at the Academy Awards. Sure, I said. I’ll watch.

      But I will still be scratching my head.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged academy awards, barbie, film, movie, movie reviews, movies, oscars
    • Academy Aw(kw)ards

      Posted at 3:07 am by kayewer, on February 23, 2014

      I can honestly admit that I have not seen a single one of the motion pictures nominated for this year’s Oscars(R). I almost had seen one–Lee Daniels’ The Butler–but, though it was a great film, it didn’t receive any nominations. I can’t imagine that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences would consider one film about slavery enough contention, though it would have been interesting to see both of them duke it out. Think Adepero Aduye versus Oprah Winfrey, in gowns and heels, for the championship.

      When you haven’t seen any of the films, you may not have a cause for which to cheer, so the interest in the whole affair goes away. Of course there is Ellen DeGeneres hosting, which would make it worthwhile if she were on camera more than the guest presenters, nominees and winners nervously trying to give acceptance speeches under the timer. Also, it would be nice if the ceremonies came on at a decent hour and were finished by bedtime.

      There were years in which I cheered on practically everybody and everything in the program, because I had seen them all. Now, with scriptwriters seemingly pandering to the popcorn market rather than the intellect of the moviegoers, the industry has gone back to releasing the films they tend to nominate all at the same time, close to nomination time. That means summer blockbusters are snubbed, and anything approaching decent entertainment coming out the other ten months of the year have been forgotten. Butler came out late last summer, but was an emotional and well-executed story. It deserved better than it got from the Academy.

      The other day I saw another movie which I hope does not fall from memory when the 2015 awards come out. Please don’t laugh: The Lego Movie. Of what I’ve seen of late, that is one of the most original ideas yet. Adults can have real fun watching this computer animated movie that resembles a live action effort as if a crew painstakingly built whole brick sets by hand. There is enough nostalgia and in-jokes to keep us amused. For kids, it’s action-packed, full of laughs and not over-the-top with violence.

      On the other hand, I have sat in a perpetual state of ennui through all the trailers of late. Too much improbable battle imagery, too little new insight or real storyline or people wearing actual clothing (as in shirts and pants and skirt, rather than thongs and battle armor). When you’ve seen one epic leap into a yawning computer generated void (like in 300: Rise of an Empire), you’ve seen them all at least twice in other films. OF course, a movie like that won’t get a glance from the Academy, nor will the new Spiderman movie or–probably but regrettably–the last Hobbit movie. They don’t have the in with the nominating crowd. If more of those films were nominated for awards, I wouldn’t tune out after Ellen DeGeneres does her opening monologue.

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      Posted in Theatre/Movies/Entertainment | 2 Comments | Tagged academy awards, oscars
    • Oscar Nigh a Winner

      Posted at 2:17 am by kayewer, on February 24, 2013

      So it’s award season at last, and the movie industry would like to convince you that there are some good pictures in contention for a sleek humanoid trophy.  My issues with movie awards is that the guys in suits who bankroll the films we watch all year go out of their way to promote their films as great, yet a majority of the big attendance productions don’t get recognized at award time.

      I think it’s a plot.  And not one found in a script.

      The theatres put out a few movies a week.  Most get packed theatres the first weekend, then they taper off because social rules state that if you don’t see the film the first weekend, you’ll be on the back-end of the discussions about it.  In fact, one must know all about the actors, the shooting schedule, the special effects, the scandal and the spoilers before entering the theatre.  If you don’t, some goof seated behind you will fill you in while talking on his cell phone to his computer geek friend who can’t leave the house while Worlds of Mayhem Part 19 is loading on his gaming system.

      The movies that get nominated for minor categories like costumes, effects and such might well be designed for that purpose.  One or two well-done movies still need competition to look good when they win.

      The blockbuster movies are specially filmed, casted, promoted and fine tuned to lure a huge demographic of people who fit in a nice middle range in the system of categorizing populations.  You buy the tickets, the nachos and the promotional clothing and tie-in gear.  By the time you leave the theatre, the hype is over like the restroom door slamming behind you; quickly forgotten. Like a roller coaster with one big plunge, there is a moment of exhilaration, then it’s just another ride.

      The B-grade movies draw a more exclusive demographic and will never make in profits what was spent.  They also never get nominated for an award.

      I actually did see Les Miserables and it was a good movie.  It was not great, but it had the mechanics of a well made production, and that is what matters.  It won’t win anything major because it is a movie version of a Broadway musical based on a classic novel.  That’s three strikes in a world where brief YouTube videos are more popular than novels and musicals are looked upon as creative fodder for filler films rather than a trustworthy source for good movie material.  I don’t agree with that, but it would take more than a blog to explain it all.

       The award season is still begging for good movies.  Sure we recognize the best, but even that isn’t all we could have.

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