Speranza
In a triumph long deferred, “12 Years a Slave” won the best picture Oscar at the
86th Academy Awards on Sunday night, the first time Hollywood conferred its top
honor to the work of a black director.
“I’d like to thank this amazing
story,”
said Steve McQueen, the British-born filmmaker who grasped a prize that
has eluded African-American directors and their movies since the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences gave its first Oscars in 1929.
“Everyone
deserves not just to survive, but to live,” said Mr. McQueen, who dedicated the
film to those who had endured slavery, both in the past and in the
present.
Only minutes before, McQueen had been overlooked for the
directing award, which went to Alfonso Cuaron for “Gravity,” a 3-D blockbuster
whose story of survival in space had been locked with McQueen’s film and
David O. Russell’s “American Hustle” in a ferocious contest for the best picture
statuette.
In the end, Fox Searchlight, which
distributed “12 Years a Slave,” about a 19th-century man, Solomon Northup, who
was kidnapped into slavery, carried the day with the help of an advertising
slogan that reminded Oscar voters of their chance to make history.
“It’s time,”
said the ads.
“12 Years a Slave” won
only three awards, including best supporting actress and best adapted
screenplay, while “Gravity” won seven, the most of any film.
Diversity was a
leading motif for ceremony that was hosted by Ellen DeGeneres, a happy-go-lucky
lesbian who spent most of the evening in a tuxedo, and which also honored Jared
Leto as best supporting actor for his role as a trans-gender AIDS patient in
“Dallas Buyers Club.”
The best actress award went to Cate Blanchett for “Blue
Jasmine,” despite a late-season challenge by Dylan Farrow, who publicly wrote
that its director Woody Allen and his films should be shunned because he had, by
her account, sexually molested her as a child.
Allen, her adoptive father,
has strongly challenged the charge.
“Thank you so much, Woody, for casting me,”
said Ms. Blanchett, who never
mentioned the
blowup, but made a point of thanking
Allen for using “Blue
Jasmine” to tell a woman’s story.
Jennifer Lawrence followed minutes later to
present the best actor award
to Matthew McConaughey for “Dallas Buyers Club.”
“Why are you laughing?”
Lawrence challenged the audience, which has come to
expect a trip, fall or charming faux pas every time she takes the stage.
But
she pulled it off without a hitch, and McConaughey thanked God and everyone
else with a toothy movie star smile.
John Ridley, who won the best adapted
screenplay Oscar for “12 Years a Slave,” invoked the suffering individual at the
heart of his story.
“All the praise goes to Solomon Northup,” said Mr. Ridley.
“These are his words, this is his life.”
Spike Jonze won the original script
Oscar for “Her,” a Warner Bros. film that had a powerful following, particularly
among young viewers, who responded to its quirky story of one man’s love affair
with his digital operating system.
There were no big Oscar surprises, but this year’s Academy Awards show
featured an engaging host and a best picture winner that even a critic can
love.
It was the only win for “Her,” but that was enough to lift it above
“American Hustle,” which was slammed hard by the voters.
Widely seen as one
of three films in contention for the top honors, it left empty-handed, a
humiliation for a film with 10 nominations and one of the better box office
totals, with about $146 million in ticket sales.
No one could accuse this
show of taking itself too seriously.
At DeGeneres’ behest, a stack of pizzas
arrived with a red-hatted delivery guy at the two-hour mark, and both Meryl
Streep and Julia Roberts were among those who dug in.
At the halfway mark, Degeneres, now in a white suit, prowled the audience like a cat, handing out
lottery tickets to runners-up, and trying to break a record for retweets with a
“selfie” that found her stacked with movie stars, including Ms. Lawrence, Ms.
Streep and Kevin Spacey.
Twitter’s website went down soon afterward, with early
reports indicating that it failed to handle the pop of traffic.
Later reports
said DeGeneres’s “selfie” was retweeted more than 1 million times, breaking
the site’s previous record, which was set by President Barack Obama after his
re-election.
“We have made history tonight,” said DeGeneres.
Lupita
Nyong’o, who had been charming Oscar voters with her fresh face and mostly
modest demeanour for months, cut loose just a little bit backstage.
“I think it
belongs to me!” Nyong’o replied to a question about who deserved credit for
the “golden man” in her arms.
In sharp contrast to last year, winners weren’t
somewhat rudely piped off when they went long.
And one or two were even
entertaining in their gratitude. “Happy Oscars to you, let’s do ‘Frozen 2’ ,”
sang Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez, as they picked up an award for
their song from the movie “Frozen.”
Less happily, Leonardo DiCaprio got
nothing for his work, both on the screen as an actor and off-screen and as a
producer, on “The Wolf of Wall Street.”
But “The Great Gatsby,” in which he had
starred back in the early part of the year, won awards for production and
costume design.
“Captain Phillips” also came up empty-handed, a
disappointment for both Sony Pictures, which distributed the film, and Tom
Hanks, who had once seemed a likely best actor candidate for his performance as
a real-life captain hijacked by pirates.
Hanks, in the end, hadn’t even been
nominated, and the film slipped into the peculiar twilight reserved for movies,
like “True Grit,” that shine brightly, then mysteriously fade on Oscar
night.
If there were the usual number of winners, it felt like a year of
heavy losses as the annual memorial sequence scrolled through a list of film
figures who died since the last show.
Harold Ramis, Karen Black, Hal Needham,
Saul Zaentz, Elmore Leonard, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Shirley Temple Black
were just a few of those remembered, and, with them, not one golden era, but
several, seemed to be passing.
Weirdly, the night’s proceedings were
punctuated by a theme of movie heroics, though the year’s films were populated
more by survivors, as in “12 Years a Slave” and “Captain Phillips,” or
antiheroes, as in “The Wolf of Wall Street” and “American Hustle.”
The show
featured a montage of classic movie heroes crammed mostly with references to
characters portrayed in films past — Abraham Lincoln, Gandhi, Harvey Milk and a
dozen or so others.
Oscar lore has it that the Academy has a soft spot for
Holocaust stories, like “Schindler’s List,” the best picture winner in 1994.
T
his year, it bestowed a documentary short Oscar on “The Lady in Number 6: Music
Saved My Life,” about Alice Herz Sommer, a 110-year-old Holocaust survivor who
died just days before the ceremony.
The best documentary feature was “20 Feet
From Stardom,” a film about backup singers decidedly more fun than the
issues-heavy fare that often dominates the category. And it brought a welcome
win to the Weinstein Company, which distributed the film through its Radius-TWC
division, and which saw several of its other contenders this year — “Philomena,”
“August: Osage County,” “Lee Daniels’ The Butler” — fall short of the biggest
awards.
In what has become a secondary category — few here will watch
subtitled films — there was no surprise when Italy picked up another best
foreign film Oscar, its 11th, for “The Great Beauty.”
The film, about the
life-reckoning of a literary Neapolitan-born Roman, had been picking up pre-Oscar awards all
season, though it had taken in just $2.2 million at the domestic box office
since its release by Janus Films in November.
The season had brought an unusual surge of black-themed Oscar
contenders — “Fruitvale Station,” “Lee Daniels’ The Butler” and “Mandela: Long
Walk to Freedom” among them.
But in the home stretch, only “12 Years a Slave”
was left standing, as the obvious choice for Academy members who might agree
with Fox Searchlight, that it was, indeed, time for a black filmmaker to claim
the best picture statuette.
By the end of the night, with most of Hollywood
eager to move past the pageantry, the rainstorms that pounded Los Angeles on
Friday and Saturday even seemed appropriate.
Enough with this Oscar business.
Here comes Darren Aronofsky’s “Noah” and the blockbuster season.
Certainly,
the moviegoing audience was looking forward.
This weekend, an action thriller,
“Non-Stop,” and a religious drama, “Son of God,” sold more tickets than the best
picture nominees “Nebraska,” “Her” or “Dallas Buyers Club” had scraped together
since their releases.
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