Showing posts with label Foxcatcher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foxcatcher. Show all posts

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Oscar Nominations: Why Did 'Foxcatcher' Miss the Best Picture Cut?



Foxcatcher was robbed. We have the math to back it up.

The film, based on the true story of the twisted relationship between John du Pont and Olympic wrestlers Mark and Dave Schultz, was left out of this years best picture nominees. It did, however, score nominations for best director (Bennett Miller), best actor (Steve Carell), best supporting actor (Mark Ruffalo) and best original screenplay which are usually strong indications for a best picture nomination. In fact, this is the first time since the Academy broadened the best picture field that a movie boasting a best director nomination was left out of the running for the biggest prize.

The Academy could have nominated 10 movies for best picture this year, but it only picked eight, the fewest since it expanded the field for the top award in 2009 to allow for 10 nominees. The group further refined its rules in 2011 to make sure there are at least five nominees and 10 at most. Only movies earning 5% of total votes cast can make it onto the best picture list.

By our calculations, Foxcatcher should have easily been in the running for the Academys top film of the year. Its exclusion from the best picture list befuddled Dan Futterman, who co-wrote the screenplay along with E. Max Frye. I know two actors, script and director weird, Futterman told Speakeasy in a telephone interview Thursday. I feel really bad for [producer Jon Kilik], who worked for years on this, and [producer Megan Ellison], who took a huge chance on the movie when nobody else wanted to do it. Its too bad. Thats the one disappointment of the morning.

Foxcatcher finally reached movie screens in 2014 after a long gestation period and some delays. Frye worked on the script for about a year before the writers strike happened in 2007, and eventually Miller handed it over to Futterman, who worked on it off and on for about four and a half years. It was kind of an orphan movie for a while, Futterman said. There was no financing. There were no actors, and we were just trying to get the script right.

Interactive graphic: The Films of the Past That Should Have Been Invited to the Best Picture Party

The film debuted to fairly widespread acclaim, particularly for its performances by Carell, Ruffalo and Channing Tatum. Wall Street Journal film critic Joe Morgenstern called it an enthralling enigma of a movie, and it has an 87% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Miller won the best director prize at the Cannes Film Festival, and it earned a Producers Guild nomination and a best picture nod from the Golden Globes.

So what could have kept Academy voters who obviously thought highly of the acting, writing and directing from giving Foxcatcher a best picture nomination? The films detractors called it chilly and its characters unlikable, or they complained that it took too many liberties with its true story. Recently, Mark Schultz, who is played by Tatum in the movie, aired his grievances with the movie over social media, claiming the truth behind the story could be found in his book.

Its a really brave and hard thing to give your life over to people you dont know too well to make a movie out of it, Futterman said. It is absolutely a fictionalized version of these events collapsed a dozen years into two years but I understand the upset at seeing a depiction of yourself that feels a little distant from yourself.

Yet, Schultz eased off his complaints a little earlier this month, and fictionalized true story narratives are often nominated for best picture. In fact, historical dramas and biopics make up half of this years best picture slate, so the Foxcatcher snub is a mystery.

Another biographical film,Mr. Turner,likewise would be a safe pick to join the other best picture players if the Academy still required 10 nominees. Both films scored more than Selma, which was surprisingly left out of several key Oscar categories and other honors, such as those from the Producers Guild of America and the Directors Guild, as the nomination race hit its home stretch.

Turning things around, if the Oscars still included only five best picture nominees, our model shows that Birdman and The Imitation Game would lead the films scoring in the top five although, as history shows, that wouldnt necessarily guarantee a best picture nomination. (The films in bold were not nominated this year.)

Birdman 33 pointsImitation Game 32 pointsGrand Budapest Hotel 31 pointsBoyhood 28 pointsThe Theory of Everything 22 pointsFoxcatcher 18 pointsAmerican Sniper 18 pointsWhiplash 13 pointsMr. Turner 7 pointsSelma 3 points

Follow@Michael_Caliaon Twitter and write tomichael.calia@wsj.com

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Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2015/01/15/oscar-nominations-why-did-foxcatcher-miss-the-best-picture-cut/



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