Friday, March 2, 2018

Women looking for Oscar love in best picture cliffhanger

(L-R) Laurie Metcalf, Greta Gerwig, and Saoirse Ronan pose backstage at the 75th Golden Globe Awards Photo Room in Beverly Hills, California, US, January 7, 2018. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/Files
 

LOS ANGELES: Women are hoping for some long overdue love at the Academy Awards on Sunday, where the biggest prize in the movie industry is wide open after an awards season dominated by Hollywood's sexual misconduct scandal.

Romantic fantasy The Shape of Water — Fox Searchlight's tale of a mute cleaning woman who falls in love with a river creature — goes into Sunday's ceremony with a leading 13 nominations, including best picture, director, and actress.

But awards pundits say the coveted best picture Oscar is a four-way race with Fox Searchlight dark comedy Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, Universal Pictures racial satire Get Out, and Warner Bros. British World War Two drama Dunkirk also in the running.

"The star of this year's Oscars is female empowerment. A film with a female perspective has not won best picture since Million Dollar Baby in 2005," said Tom O'Neil, founder of awards website GoldDerby.com.

"This year, four of the nine nominated movies have a female perspective. That's remarkable," he said.

With accusations of sexual impropriety against filmmakers, actors, and directors emerging every week since October 2017, the Time's Up women's resistance movement has been as hot a topic in Hollywood as the suspense over who will take home the industry's highest honours.

The sexual misconduct scandal follows years of efforts by women to close the gender pay gap in Hollywood and get the behind the camera jobs that determine what films are produced.

Greta Gerwig — director of best picture contender Lady Bird about a volatile mother-daughter relationship — is vying to become only the second woman to win the best director in the 90-year history of the Oscars.

Three Billboards — starring best actress front-runner Frances McDormand — is seen as channelling the rage of the #MeToo movement and already has won Golden Globe, BAFTA, and Screen Actors Guild awards.

"It's the story of a woman raging against male injustice for refusing to find the killer and the rapist of her daughter. This is the theme of what's happening throughout Hollywood," said O'Neil.

Dave Karger — special correspondent for entertainment website IMDB.com — said that while Shape of Water has the most overall appeal to Academy of Motion Picture voters, Jordan Peele's bold Get Out, a look at modern race relations through the prism of a horror movie, "is emerging as the underdog of choice".

Peele, making his directorial debut, would be the first black man to win the best director Oscar.

"Last year, the movie with far and away more nominations than any other ended up losing best picture to a movie that spoke more to the times," Karger said, recalling the 2017 win of black drama Moonlight over presumed front-runner La La Land.

British betting firm Ladbrokes says the odds are tightest between Shape of Water and Three Billboards.

"It's really interesting that we have still got a fight and a race on our hands and it's not a foregone conclusion," said Ladbrokes spokeswoman Jessica Bridge.

No such suspense surrounds the main acting races, where McDormand is heavily favoured to win for Three Billboards and British actor Gary Oldman's role as wartime leader Winston Churchill is expected to bring his first Oscar.

No comments:

Post a Comment