Gonna borrow you for a second, LighknightBat Vader said:Why would they need to find ways to be impressed by it? If they liked it more than other films they should vote to give it an Oscar.Sexual Harassment Panda said:And if that leads to more interest in a genuinely good movie that would be overlooked by many without the academies acknowledgement, that's a pretty good thing.Bilious Green said:Studios care. Banners saying "Winner of X Oscars" look good on DVD cases.Dizchu said:Who cares about the Oscars anyway? I mean they're nowhere near as meaningless as the Grammys, but they're pretty pointless themselves.
Money will always play a part, and you could argue that it's self-indulgent on the industries part. But... The optimist in me likes that they try to acknowledge the braver works.
Star Wars isn't something that needs any more attention given to it, and it (IMHO) was a pretty 'meh' film in most respects. Not only derivative of the first Star Wars film, but also just about every other modern action film too. It had some nice touches, but I thought it was painfully average in most respects. Far from deserving of awards.
IIRC the voters are largely made up of industry insiders who I don't think would find any reasons to be impressed by The Force Awakens.
Because:
It's not a particularly good film in any respect. I would think if that's obvious to myself, and others then it would be painfully obvious to a more discerning and savvy viewer. Unless the phrasing of "find any reasons" is what the problem is. It's not even particularly good as a Star Wars film, I can't think of reasons beyond fan-boyism to give it a best picture nom.Lightknight said:2. Of course it didn't get a nomination. It was wildly popular but wasn't good in any particular category. I mean, none of the actors were "best actor" quality. The writing wasn't fantastic. The graphics were nice but not world shattering. The music was either not new or forgettable. What do we expect them to get for it?
The goal wasn't to make the best movie ever. It was to reestablish the franchise with a return to the look and feel of the originals. They succeeded and did a pretty good job. If they want to push the envelope it will be with subsequent installments or spinoffs.
If you like.Bilious Green said:Honestly, I don't think the Oscars are a platform that is particularly interested in acknowledging braver filmmaking, as the Academy, probably due to its voter makeup, tends to be fairly safe and conservative in its selections; that's why we have "Oscar-bait" as a term, because it's not that hard to make a movie that will appeal to the Academy voters established tastes. It's the more art house/avant garde festivals that give attention to more daring filmmaking.Sexual Harassment Panda said:And if that leads to more interest in a genuinely good movie that would be overlooked by many without the academies acknowledgement, that's a pretty good thing.
Money will always play a part, and you could argue that it's self-indulgent on the industries part. But... The optimist in me likes that they try to acknowledge the braver works.
I suppose it's a relative scale. Something like The Artist is a "braver" production than Transformers 11 (or whatever we're up to now). Call me a cynic, but I think the new Star Wars has a lot more in common with the sequelitis pop-corn flicks than it does with the kind of productions that might actually win.