Next year, Oscars to field 10 best-picture nominees
With yesterday's news that in February, the Oscars will field 10 best-picture nominees, the horse race that is the Academy Awards promises to look a lot more like - a horse race.
With yesterday's news that in February, the Oscars will field 10 best-picture nominees, the horse race that is the Academy Awards promises to look a lot more like - a horse race.
"This year [when Slumdog Millionaire emerged victorious], five formidable films were nominated, but The Dark Knight, Iron Man, and WALL-E were not," Academy president Sid Ganis said yesterday by phone. "We've felt for a while that we should widen the net of nominees."
In truth, it's a back-to-the-future move. During the 1930s and 1940s, the Oscars boasted 10 best-picture nominees. But it's been 65 years - when Casablanca took the top prize - since 10 films were in contention.
While Ganis framed the change as one that would better represent the breadth of films out there, some industry analysts see it as a defensive move to prop up the sagging ratings of the Oscar telecast.
"This is less a boost to the film industry than it is a way to expand the audience of the Oscar telecast," said Len Klady, columnist for moviecitynews.com and veteran Oscar handicapper.
In recent years, Oscar has embraced indie movies such as Slumdog, No Country for Old Men, and Crash. Since fewer people see indie flicks, fewer people have a horse in the race and, correspondingly, fewer watch the telecast.
In 2004, when Lord of the Rings: Return of the King became the last pure popcorn picture to take the top prize, the telecast had an average of 43.5 million viewers. In 2008, when indie favorite No Country for Old Men won, the numbers dipped to 32 million. "Boosting the numbers of the TV audience wasn't the primary reason for the move," said Ganis. "But, sure, we're hoping more people will tune in."
There would still be a separate category for animated films, Ganis said yesterday, but he expected that animated films and documentaries would be more likely to crack the final 10 than the final five.
Will 10 nominated films mean an even longer telecast? No, Ganis said. But the only way to achieve this would be to cut out Oscar tributes like the Jean Hersholt Award and the Life Achievement Award. Asked to confirm the industry rumor that those tributes would be awarded at a dinner and not be part of Oscar night, he answered, "No comment. But stay tuned."
It's well-known that an Oscar nomination boosts box office and ancillary revenue for a movie. Was the decision to double the number of nominees conceived in the spirit of enriching producers, at the expense, perhaps, of diluting the honor of the award?
"We debated whether it might affect the honor of the award, but concluded it would not cheapen coin of the realm," he said.
Asked which other titles would have made the cut if there had been 10 nominees in 2008, Ganis replied,
"No comment."
My own guess is that Iron Man and The Dark Knight would have been nominated, perhaps also Doubt, Wall-E, The Visitor, Frozen River, and maybe the documentary Man on Wire. In that scenario, one of the multimillion-dollar behemoths would certainly have taken a big bite out of the tail - and box office - of Slumdog Millionaire.
On a more optimistic note, many filmmakers figure that doubling the number of nominations means doubling their chance of being nominated.
In that scenario, the movie-industry event will be like a kiddie soccer league banquet, where every player takes home an acknowledgment.