You seem more offended than the men it's directed at.
Emma Stone: "These four men and Greta Gerwig created their own masterpieces this year."
Eh, felt like this was in poor taste. Asian brothas and sisters aint going to forget you played an asian character, Emma. lol
I got into an argument yesterday because of this. It's disrespectful to everyone including Greta Gerwing. The idea that ****ting on men helps bring equality is the single most illogical and brain dead idea people can think of. It's appalling to me that people feel it's perfectly ok to insult one group of people to support the cause of another group. You can't gain support for your cause if people feel like they are being insulted or talked down to. It was completely classless of Stone.
Speaking of Dunkirk, I caught up with a very happy Christopher Nolan at the Govs Ball and showed off my lunch box. His brilliant WWII epic took three Oscars, earning him many shout-outs from winners onstage. It was the second-best haul of the night after Shapes four, even though there was disappointment that Hoyte van Hoytemas cinematography wasnt one of them. So whats gonna win next year? Nolan asked me half-jokingly. He predicted Black Panther will be among the Best Picture nominees in 2019, which would make it the first comic-book movie to break that ceiling with the Academy. I reminded him that it was because of The Dark Knights exclusion that the Academy went to 10 (and now up to 10) nominees to get movies like that included, but to no avail so far. A top Disney exec told me flat out that they would be campaigning not only Black Panther for the big prize but also the upcoming Mary Poppins Returns (from director Rob Marshall), which he was raving about, particularly for star Emily Blunt. who he says knocks it out of the park in the role for which Julie Andrews already has an Oscar. Lin-Manuel Miranda co-stars. and he says there are a lot of great new songs in it as well.
That and Portman did it better. This time it just felt forced. If women wanted to be treated as equals, why single her out of the 4 men? Is she or is she not on the same level.
What if someone had said These four white people and Jordan Peele?
Pete Hammond from Deadline
http://deadline.com/2018/03/oscars-...y-oldman-eva-marie-saint-analysis-1202311545/
Wait a sec, did Nolan just hype the new Mary Poppins? LOL
Right. It's an industry problem, and until we start seeing widespread changes at an industry level, we're not going to see many changes in how the Academy votes.Unless you're joking, it doesn't seem cynical to me
That's what make me chuckle.
And also she didn't shout out Dee Rees, a lesbian black woman, who directed Mudbound one of the highest reviews of the year and was still snubbed. Netflix or not Dee Rees deserved to be on there too. But everyone ignores her.
Barely anyone calls out the fact that in 5 years we've only gotten 1 black actress nominated for Best Actress (Davis played games with that Fences nod tho), in over 10 years we haven't gotten a Latin American actress nominated for Best Actress, plus we've only had 1 Asian actress nominated for Best Actress ever, same with Spanish actresses. And then look at the Best director category. I don't think there has ever been an ethnic woman nominee (please correct me if I'm wrong). I see little to no one saying that at the ceremony.
I'm not saying Gerwig didn't deserve people shouting her out or bigging her up. But to me it just goes to the whole "feminism so white" concept, when they seem to be ignoring ethnic directors like Ava Duvernay (snubbed for Selma) or Dee Rees it seems to me like they don't care about women talents from other races.
But I probably pay attention to that more
Just make Ricky Gervais the permanent host.
Heck, I'd watch at least.
I'll say this about Emma Stone's comment (and Natalie Portman's for that matter), and leave it be.
Whether they intended it this way or not, their comments do come across as a bit guilt-trippy towards the male nominees, and I would say that that is unfair to them. Yes, there is an issue of gender and race inequality in Hollywood. Yes, it is an issue worth addressing. However, I don't think calling it out at the expense of other people is necessarily the best course of action. They didn't ask to be nominated, and they were being recognized for their strong work (in Del Toro's case, the culmination of a career). Del Toro, Anderson, Nolan, and Peele all deserved to be there just as much as Gerwig, so for the Best Director group to be qualified all season long as "four men and Greta Gerwig" is a bit dismissive to say the least. Are they supposed to feel bad because they are male directors that got nominated? I get that the comments were meant to call out the industry in general, but to use that specific category as your platform, well, you can't help but implicate those men as well. I think Del Toro's reaction to Portman's remark at the Globes summed it up perfectly. It was an almost "What did I do?" kind of look.
I doubt it was Stone's or Portman's intentions to insult the male nominees, but speaking for myself, if I were in their shoes it probably would've rubbed me the wrong way.
Having said that, it honestly boggles my mind that Dee Rees and Mudbound got snubbed. I know for a fact Netflix campaigned the hell out of it. The only conclusion I can reach is that the Netflix bias is very real, because nothing else makes sense.
I seriously couldn't care less about the ratings. I will watch the show every year regardless of how crappy the ratings get.
I do think movies like Logan should be nominated. Not because I want them to get those sweet, sweet ratings, but because they deserve it. Logan was much better than say Darkest Hour. I would have kicked that out of the pool and instead of stopping at 9 films, I would have nominated 10.
Don't nominate films to drive ratings. Nominate them because they deserve it (and only when they deserve it).
They could fix the ratings issue in one year, have 2 best picture categories, one like it is now and one for big blockbusters. Criteria for the blockbusters can be hammered out. Lets face it in 10 plus years only 2 movies that the normal movie goers and academy both liked were avatar and the lord of the rings. The rest have been %90 indie films that most dont get to see for a variety of reasons.
The Oscars have leaned this way, yes. But, I don't want such an award. Making a separate category is to call it a lesser art form. I already hate animation has its own category (I will fight anyone who says Wall E was not better than the majority of nominees that year) and this would further basically say a film like Logan cannot be considered real art.
I hate this idea.
So what is the academy going to do now that this show is the lowest in history since ratings began recording? First step IMHO is nominating more movies like dunkirk and logan where they are like by most movie goers but also trancend the summer blockbuster stigma of big dumb spectacle. Thoughts?
AgreedI do think movies like Logan should be nominated. Not because I want them to get those sweet, sweet ratings, but because they deserve it. Logan was much better than say Darkest Hour. I would have kicked that out of the pool and instead of stopping at 9 films, I would have nominated 10.
Don't nominate films to drive ratings. Nominate them because they deserve it (and only when they deserve it).