PC Politics Vs. New Balloting: Three Reasons ‘Avatar’ Will Win Best Picture (One Reason Why It Might Not)
by Sonny BunchIt’s safe to say that the contest for the Academy Award’s best picture Oscar was never any deeper than a three horse race: The Hurt Locker, Avatar and Up in the Air were the frontrunners all along. As the weeks and months have progressed, it has become more and more apparent that Jason Reitman’s touching drama about a layoff artist looking for love has dropped off the radar. Two horses have pulled ahead as we head into the straightaway.

And it’s Avatar by a nose! If history is any indication, James Cameron’s eco-action flick will be the big winner at the industry’s annual self-love fest. Three main factors point to the bloated opus taking home the best picture statue.
First off, it’s a box office smash. Now, that doesn’t always translate into gold at the Oscars – see last year’s unconscionable failure to even nominate The Dark Knight, Christopher Nolan’s critically praised film that was, at the time, the second-highest grossing film of all time – but it’s a pretty solid indicator.
Recall Cameron’s previous triumph: Titanic received decidedly mixed reviews, turning into an awards-season juggernaut only after racking up record-breaking dough at the box office. You could make the argument that Lord of the Rings: Return of the King benefited in the same way, serving as the capstone to a trilogy that grossed more than a billion dollars domestically and almost two billion more overseas.
Also consider that in recent history one of the top two grossing nominees usually picks up the win. That would suggest the most likely victor this year is either Avatar or Up; given that the Academy is even more loathe to reward a cartoon than an action picture, it’s safe to say that Up isn’t a legitimate threat to the noble Na’vi.
Second, it’s a game-changer for the medium. Return of the King was something of a lifetime achievement award for the Lord of the Rings series, a recognition that the back-to-back-to-back filming schedule, advances in computer generated imagery, and the sheer scale of the endeavor needed to be rewarded. This is what led to what was arguably the weakest entry in the series winning gold at the Oscars.
Like box office success, technological advances by no means guarantee success at the Academy Awards: Who can forget Annie Hall trumping Star Wars in 1977? But Titanic certainly benefited from the lavish spectacle and impressive advances that accompanied that picture. Given the precarious state of Hollywood attendance figures, members of the Academy might lean toward rewarding a picture that ushers in a new method of getting rear ends in multiplex seats and served as the launch point for an important new era in filmmaking: The 3-D era.
Finally, and most importantly, Avatar’s politics are just right. If you look at the history of the Academy Awards, it’s not too much of a stretch to make the argument that the movie that appeals to the most liberal platitudes will take home the medal. This isn’t rightwing conspiracy mongering or whining so much as fact: Crash, American Beauty, Dances with Wolves, Titanic: Anytime you can paint white elites as boorish racists/classists/bigots – except for the one redeeming protagonist who realizes the folly of his people’s barbaric ways – you’ve seriously bolstered your Academy Award credentials.
Without belaboring the point too much, I find it hard to believe the members of the Academy will turn down the chance to award a movie that so appeals to the great triumvirate of modern liberalism: Environmentalism, the cruelty of military conflict, and the racism of Americans, past, present, and future.
None of this is to suggest that Avatar isn’t an entertaining popcorn picture – despite my problems with the story, which is just dreadful, I found it to be an engrossing piece of visual escapism. But without these three factors in its favor (especially the last), all talk of a best picture victory would be dismissed as so much nonsense.
There is a chance that Avatar could falter, but it has nothing to do with the quality of the films in competition. As Hendrik Hertzberg points out in the latest issue of The New Yorker, the bump from five best picture nominees to ten was accompanied by a shift in the voting procedures:
This scheme, known as preference voting or instant-runoff voting, doesn’t necessarily get you the movie (or the candidate) with the most committed supporters, but it does get you a winner that a majority can at least countenance. It favors consensus. … few people who have seen “The Hurt Locker”—a real Iraq War story, not a sci-fi allegory—actively dislike it, and many profoundly admire it. Its underlying ethos is that war is hell, but it does not demonize the soldiers it portrays, whose job is to defuse bombs, not drop them. Even Republicans (and there are a few in Hollywood) think it’s good. It will likely be the second or third preference of voters whose first choice is one of the other “small” films that have been nominated.
If The Hurt Locker pulls off the upset – a scenario I would certainly applaud, given that I considered it the second best picture of 2009 and my number one choice, A Serious Man, has no shot at winning – odds are it’ll be because of the accounting trickery inherent in the new system and not because a majority of voters chose it as the best picture of the year. Still, a win’s a win. Three cheers for consensus!






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34 Comments
For me, Return of the King getting Best Picture partially redeemed the Academy in my eyes, because I'm still irritated about Tim Roth not getting Best Supporting Actor for Rob Roy back in 1995. His portrayal of, "The Fop" was transcendentally excellent. If Hurt Locker wins, I suppose I'll be able to stop holding that grudge.
Don't get me started about Avatar. There is not enough bile left in my spleen for that.
They can give Avatar an Oscar the size of the Statue of Liberty, I'm still not going to sit there to be lectured on the environment by a guy with a carbon footprint the size of Montana.
I really hope Avatar doesn't win, i don't think it deserves to, it looked stunning yes, but as far as story, plot, characters it was so far from original its a joke.
I was glad to see The Hurt Locker do so well at the Baftas on sunday, i just hope Kathryn Bigelow's luck extends to the Oscars.
If Avatar wins it will only serve to highlight how much of a bad joke the award has become. That movie really shouldn't have a shot at anything but the technical awards.
You're overlooking the dark horse in the race, Inglourious Basterds- which did take the Bafta Ensemble award, effectively Best Picture.
I'm still sulking because Bull Durham was ignored. (I can't stand that bug-eyed, saggy-boobed, bird-legged bimbo but loved Annie Savoy.)
But.
She wasn't saggy boobed back in the day. She's just a prime example of an old brood mare being rode hard and put up wet too many times……….
I remember her being quite perky as 'Dammit Janet'!!
I think the increase for best picture from five to ten nominees may produce what I call the "dilution effect", the votes will be spread out among two or three favorites, leaving a long shot open to actually getting the most votes. That effect is the reason for runoffs in elections; in the first round of voting, the most worthy option may not get the most votes. I've seen this happen when "America's Funniest Home Videos" does their $100,000 dollar show. A really crappy video that appeals to a niche audience will win because people split their votes among 3 or 4 really worthy videos.
there is one real reason why 'Avatar' won't win…
How many voting members went to the IMAX to see it in glorious 3-D? Not many, we suspect. The Aacademy screening copy sent out willdo little justice to the one thing the film has, which is visuals. 'The Hurt Locker' will fare better on the small screen, it is a more serious film, Bigelow is a BETTER director than her ex-hubby, and-
'Avatar' is still a Jim Cameron film. Meaning fun to play with but hard to take seriously…
Could be worse, you could be lectured to by Al Gore.
That would certainly bring me to my knees.
Isn't that how we got eight years of Bill Clinton?
It's supremely easy to predict the Best Picture, Actor, and Actress Oscars every year. Simply review the candidates and select that which depicts the most degraded or weepy view of humans and you know who the will be. It's been a sure fire system ever since Midnight Cowboy. True, there are those inexplicable years when something like Braveheart takes the prize, but you can bet that if he had triumphed at the end instead of being tortured, that would have lost as well.
Hollywood is completely dominated by a species I call Anti(s) – anti-freedom, anti-healthy-soul, anti-life. Their award choices (not to mention the films themselves) are clear evidence of that.
I heart you.
*sigh* My favorite was "Up." If only an apolitical animated film would finally win Best Picture. Now that would bring me back the the Awards show. (No, I don't consider Avatar and animated film.)
By the way, does anyone else think Steve Martin's looking a bit long in the tooth in those commercials? The first time I saw it, the TV was on mute, so I didn't even recognize him.
Avatar will win Best Picture and then it will win the Nobel Peace Prize. Oh yeah these awards mean soooo much.
I honestly don't think it will. First of all, as others have mentioned, it's not an "actors movie." That is, unlike Inglourious Basterds or The Hurt Locker, it doesn't have a knock-out ensemble cast (I don't believe this will play well with the actors in the Academy). Second, it did not receive a best screenplay nomination. That would make it the first best picture winner since 1932's Grand Hotel to take home Best Picture without being nominated in this category. Finally, the fact that it is the highest grossing move EVAR, actually hurts its chances rather than helping it. Yes, Titanic won gold, but it was an historical drama not a sci-fi fantasy.
Of course it's always possible that this is just wishful thinking. What say you?
He who is full of himself is incapable of the joy of simplicity. Go Avatar!
Whether or not James Cameron pays for the energy he consumes, if he is in fact, a Global Warming Alarmist, and he believes that carbon induced into the atmosphere by human activity is such an immenent threat to mankind that within our lifetimes ocean's will rise, destroying the habitats of tens of millions of people; that the seas will die; that countless animals are threatened; that giant storms will batter the planet killing millions; and that all the ice on the planet will melt away in a decade or two, taking away sources of drinking water for milions, and yet, he continues to live an extravagent life, availing himself to all the carbon producing activities that his wealth affords him, he would be a truly immoral person, and only able to lecture to the rest of us as one of history's greatest hypocrits.
Braveheart actually wasn't a surprise. It picked up many guild awards (and two major Golden Globes) leading up to the ceremony. Once DGA winner Ron Howard was left out of Best Director, Braveheart's path to the Oscar was pretty clear.
The Screen Actor's guild is pretty clear about where they stand on animated films. By the way, that also applies to Mo-Cap films like Avatar as well. Soft support from the actor's guild is exactly why Avatar stumbled down the stretch.
Didn't Titanic win the Best Picture Oscar without its screenplay being nominated?
Still hope somehow Inglourious Basterds takes the big prize.
You're right. I was too hasty when I wrote that. I double-checked my sources and it should say that Avatar would be the first movie to win best picture without both a screenplay nod PLUS at least one acting nod since Grand Hotel. Thanks for pointing that out!
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Why am I the only one that viewed The Hurtlocker as inherently anti-war and anti-American?
I personnaly do not care. I know it still is something to be desired by those of you that work in the industry and I am not trying to belittle the award itself but long ago it became a venue to trumpet "Art Films" rather than movies. They may have changed the rules to make more popular films nominated but the mindset of the voters has not changed. I am not talking politics here. The one term I dislike the most is film. I here it from all the actors and directors etc. I do not go to see a film I go to see a movie.
I do not believe it is possible to create "Art" intentionally. You can paint a picture and if that picture trancends the subject matter and moves you then it can be judged to be "Art" if it passes the test of time. The same thing can be said of movies. Movies are meant to entertain. They need to do that first and foremost. It is only the insecure, self important types that make films.
I saw Avatar, enjoyed it some, but found it rather boring and long.
I was on the edge of me seat for The Hurt Locker. I felt like I was really there, hoping like hell that guy would defuse the bombs before we all got the crap blown out of us.
How anyone in OD can walk around with balls that size is beyond me. Those guys are heros, hands down!
Carbon is the basis of life on this planet. You, me and everybody is built of carbon. It's a good thing. CO2 especially is critical to plant life on earth. It is not a pollutant. Please stop referring to a "carbon footprint" as some sort of bad thing. If you must complain about Cameron's energy usage, state it explicitly. You may also want to note that he apparently pays for the energy he consumes. He's not stealing it from you.
I didn't even think the visuals were all that original, but I think it's because I've been fed on a steady diet of fantasy video games and animes. They all look like Pandora, or better. You know how many floating islands and mountains there are in fantasy video games and animes? How many unusual creatures?
Avatar was just baaaaaaaaaaad.
Here's why I think "The Hurt Locker" might win
1. It is a great film.
2. The director is a woman.
3. There is a possibility that the people who vote for the Oscars are getting sensitive about their left wing image. Giving the award to "The Hurt Locker" would show their patriotic bona fides
4. Obama is now the Commander in Chief directing the war in Aghanistan, and there are still troops in Iraq.
5. "Avatar" was the big winner at "The Golden Globes", and there was a large TV audience for their gala event. Oscar night may end up becoming an encore to "The Golden Globes" if the same winners are picked.
I am not predicting that "The Hurt Locker" will win big, but if it does, it would not surprise me.
Who cares! I´ve got the big revelation of Avatar 2 right here: did you know the unobtainium is always found beneath Navi burial sites?
That´s right. Dead Navi + microbes + geological pressure + time = $$$$
And you all know what happens if you disturb sacred burial grounds. They come back… Also, in an attempt at more subtlety, the villain will speak in a German accent and wear an eyepatch and a spiked helmet.
There´s simple and then there´s dumb.
The reason Avatar will win is because it SHOULD win. Case closed. The Hurt Locker was mind-numbingly DUMB. Sure, Avatar's message is silly but c'mon, if you take two quite silly movies and one just happens to lift the entire industry – worldwide – upon its shoulders and the other is a complete who cares? then I think the choice of which film deserves an Oscar for Best Picture and Best Director is obvious. The award is for best filmmaking, not for best filmmaking by a female.
Hurt Locker won the PGA (producers guild), DGA (directors guild), WGA (writers guild), BFCA (broadcast film critics) and Baftas (British academy awards), which normally would be a strong indicator that it is going to win best picture. Inglourious Basterds won the SAG, Avatar won only the Golden Globes. However, Hurt Locker's box office was nearly non-exisitent (less than twelve million). But a film making as little as Hurt Locker has never won the PGA, DGA, WGA and Baftas either. Still it's kind of hard to believe that AMPAS won't award best picture to Avatar, for making over 700 million domestic if for no other reason.
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