Jelperman wrote:
What a load of horseshit! First of all, I doubt the special effects for King Kong or the other nominees were paid for with food stamps. Besides, I thought Peter Jackson was this perfectionist moviemaker. Which is it?
Lucas funded the PT out of his own pocket. Jackson did not do the same with King Kong, nor did he spend three years putting it together, nor did he go down the same road he'd already gone down several times. He had a deadline that he had to meet, a budget that he had to work within and he when he needed extra money, he sacrificed part of his own salary. True, it's unlikely that we're going to see him in a breadline anytime soon. But comparing him to someone who throws money at every little problem is specious.
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By your logic, movies with major stars and high-calibre supporting actors shouldn't be rewarded since lower budget movies can't afford say, Tom Hanks or Russell Crowe. Movies with higher sound budgets shouldn't win Best Sound over lower budget films either. The list goes on.
By your logic, there's no difference between actors and technical crews. In fact, in the real world, actors regularly take pay cuts for films they want to be part of. That's why Crash could be made so cheaply. When was the last time you heard of Ben Burtt taking a pay cut?
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So if a well-known great actor (i.e. one with a high salary) turns in the best performance, it shouldn't count?
I said nothing remotely resembling this.
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What's wrong with that? Those teams earn the money by fielding teams people want to pay to see. Should a lower-payroll team that makes the playoffs be spotted a few runs to make it "fair"? The NFL has salary caps and shared revenue. What do you get out of that? Teams like Arizona, Cincinnatti, and Detroit that collect their share of money, won't spend any more on players than they absolutely have to and being mediocre-to-bad teams every year. On the off chance that one of the teams should have some success in spite of this scheme, the owner will start dumping the better players, then fire the coach when the team tanks. The best is the best and rewarding failure sets a bad example.
Hey, in your world, does the shortest route from A to B involve starting at Z and working backward? Where the fuck did I say
anything about rewarding failure?
First of all, these teams -- and let's make clear that I'm primarily talking about the Yankees and the Braves, even if you aren't -- earn their money because their owners are RICH. They exist in large markets, they have nationwide TV contracts, and they sell a lot of advertising. It wouldn't matter if every player on both teams stunk, they'd still have these things. But because baseball has no limits on payrolls, their owners can afford to buy up whoever they want. The only means that other teams have of competing is to empty their own pockets, but in most cases it's not something they can afford to do for very long, regardless of success. The Florida Marlins won the World Series and then completely fell apart the next year because Wayne Huizenga couldn't afford to keep the team together. The days of the best remaining the best until someone beats them are over.
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The highest-paid actors earn their salaries the same way the highest-paid athletes or others in show business do: by getting people to pay to watch. Now as Harrison Ford found out, people aren't about to pay good money to watch him in a depressing love story. There's a certain kind of movie that brings in mass audiences, and that's usually the kind of movie Oscar voters look down their noses at: Comedies, action movies and science fiction/ comic book films.
OK, I don't think I get it. Is it the actor that people pay to watch, or is it the kind of movie? If Harrison Ford appears in an action movie as opposed to a depressing love story, does the assumed success of the former over the latter (according to your premise) have anything to do with Ford, or is he just along for the ride? And where does this "well-known great actor" that you mentioned above fit into this theory?
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How many actors directed by Peter Jackson have been nominated for Oscars? 1
How many for Lucas? 2
How many times did one of Lucas's casts win the SAG's Best Acting by an Ensemble award? How many times did Lucas win the Best Director Oscar?
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If he is such a bad screenwiter, why did Star Wars produce more memorable quotes (and more of them) than any film since Casablanca?
This is a weird kind of barometer of quality, and I'm not sure how you would prove such a thing. In any case, I'm not seeing it. Apart from "may the Force be with you" and "I've got a bad feeling about this" (and that one's debatable), I can't think of any "memorable quotes" that have actually had any mainstream impact. I'd argue that The Godfather had a great deal more.
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The Oscars are a popularity contest within Hollywood. Nothing more, nothing less. It's like the polls in college sports. They're going to vote on who is the best.
Is this any more or less valid than you or anyone else in this thread flatly stating that your favorite whatever is the "best" and that it should have won?
There is something that everyone bashing the Oscars in this thread seems to be forgetting. You seem to be forgetting it
even as you're saying it. The Oscars are Hollywood's awards FOR THEMSELVES. With the exception of Best Picture and Best Foreign Language film, every nomination for any particular category comes from those working in that category. If ROTS didn't get a nom for FX, that's because there weren't enough FX artists who thought it deserved it. If Lucas hasn't gotten a single nom for director throughout the PT, that's because there weren't enough directors who thought he deserved it.
In 78 years, only 18 directors have won more than once, and only three of those more than twice. Yet you read a thread like this and find people who are practically outraged that George Lucas hasn't won for every film he's directed. Guess what? That puts him in the same group with Orson Welles, Alfred Hitchcock and Martin Scorsese. Francis Ford Coppola did NOT win Best Director for The Godfather, and I doubt anyone can name who did win that year without looking it up.
The Oscars reflect the personal tastes of Academy voters as much as they do their times, and just as box office doesn't determine relevance or quality, sometimes (often) neither do the Oscars. If you're going to piss and moan that the Oscars are irrelevant because of who won the FX award, maybe you should stop and take a deep breath and try to figure out just how relevant the sixth Star Wars film is to anything that's NOT the Star Wars film series. Does that mean that you can no longer enjoy it? Well, it doesn't for me. In fact, in addition to all of the Star Wars films, I still enjoy Raging Bull, Goodfellas, Blade Runner, Goldfinger, Lost Highway, Alien, A Fistful of Dollars, Office Space, Fight Club, Being John Malkovich and any number of etc. etc. films and directors that never even got close to the Best Picture or Best Director Oscars. My taste doesn't depend upon the approval of others. If you feel that what you love must be recognized as the absolute pinnacle of quality by the rest of the world, you're in for a long and difficult road -- not to speak of how you'll have to deal with yourself if you should ever change your own mind about what's "best".