This year’s Academy Awards
face a slightly unusual circumstance: more people than usual will be watching
the results keenly to see how the nominated individuals fare, but, perhaps,
(hopefully), more people than ever before have also realised how trivial and
irrelevant are those results. Following a few months of political tumult,
and in the midst of a global uncertainty in just about all regards that matter,
people who care about movies know that there’s no consequence in who the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences think gave the best supporting
performance, or which film they think was photographed best. Award names like
“Best Picture” and “Best Actress” have always merely been the Academy’s
homonyms for the actual best film and actual best lead performance by a female
actor in a year; any concurrence between superlative artistic merit and
industry recognition has always been strictly coincidental; statistically, the
two matters are mutually independent.
But this year there’s
increased attention on the results, because, for one, the Academy has managed
to nominate films and individuals that resonated more deeply through the
culture than recent years’ selections, and because viewers understand that
Oscar success, while fatuous and meaningless in itself, is a marvelous help to
the career of many film-makers; if the movies and individuals we love win
Academy Awards this evening (tomorrow morning before dawn in South African
time), they’re likely to be given both more opportunities and more freedom in
making the kinds of movies they feel strongly about. For example, Martin
Scorsese went through the routine struggles of making the feature films and
documentaries he dreamed of making, and ran into the usual kind of financial
and creative obstacles that plague directors in the system; but since he
won his Oscar in 2007, for The Departed,
he’s found much greater freedom in Hollywood to bring his grand visions to
exhilarating, sublime realisation, and that freedom has shown in the three
films of his that have been released here (Shutter
Island, Hugo, and The Wolf of Wall Street) that was
markedly missing from all his previous films.