How âMoonlightâsâ Oscar win blew another hole in the definition of âbest pictureâ
Even if last yearâs Oscars ceremony hadnât ended with the most embarrassing gaffe in the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciencesâ nearly 90-year history, the announcement that âMoonlightâ had won best picture still would have come as an industry-rattling shock.
Everyone had expected an easy win for âLa La Land,â which had entered the night with a pack-leading 14 nominations and key precursor awards. A star-driven throwback to vintage musicals, Damien Chazelleâs movie was considered much more in line with academy tastes than a gritty realist drama about a young black manâs impoverished Miami upbringing.
For the record:
4:25 p.m. Feb. 28, 2018A previous version of this post said that âMoonlightâ was produced on a $4-million budget. It was a $1.5-million budget.
In its unblinking view of race, homosexuality and frustrated masculinity, âMoonlightâ cut against deeply ingrained industry prejudices about the kinds of films that can expect to compete for Hollywoodâs highest honor. Produced on a shoestring $1.5-million budget, it was regarded even by its admirers as too small, too arty, too niche and, frankly, too good for the Oscars â a soulful heartbreaker in a contest that typically favors splashy crowd pleasers.
No one, in short, saw âMoonlightâ coming. But the shock of its 11th-hour victory, for all the confusion of the surrounding circumstances, brought with it a welcome jolt of clarity. Its win represents the latest development in a long, steady evolution for a motion picture academy that no longer behaves as stodgily or predictably as weâve come to expect.
From âGet Outâ to âPhantom Threadâ: The 2018 Oscars Buzzmeter Âť
One step forward has certainly been the academyâs dramatic recent efforts to diversify its predominantly white male makeup following the widespread #OscarsSoWhite criticisms that arose in 2015 and 2016. But it would be reductive and premature to assume that the membership overhaul, a process that remains very much in its early stages, helped push âMoonlightâ to victory.
Another factor is the ever shifting dynamics of film discussion in the internet age (which helped turn #OscarsSoWhite into a rallying cry). Awards season, already interminable for those who follow it, has become a protracted opportunity to digest and redigest the same movies again and again, to circulate reviews, think pieces, points and counterpoints endlessly on social media. Itâs a process that continually seeks change and renewal, dislodging frontrunners and elevating underdogs for the mere sake of keeping the conversation fresh.
But in all likelihood, the most significant shift in the best picture Oscar algorithm has been simple mathematics. In 2009, the academy announced that, for the first time since 1945, the best picture category would boast 10 nominees rather than five. (Two years later, the rules were tweaked again to accommodate anywhere between five and 10 picture nominees; that system remains in place today.) With this expansion, the organization also reinstated a preferential ballot that allows members to rank all the best picture nominees, rather than simply vote for one favorite.
That arrangement almost certainly accounts for the recent disparities between the picture and director categories, a once infrequent occurrence â few films won best picture without first winning best director â that has now become commonplace. The rationale behind these splits has been surprisingly intuitive, even discerning: While the academy has recently handed its directing prizes to bravura technical achievements such as âGravity,â âThe Revenantâ and âLa La Land,â it tellingly chose to give best picture in those corresponding years to â12 Years a Slave,â âSpotlightâ and âMoonlightâ â dramas that were smaller in scale and budget, perhaps, but arguably larger in emotional depth and social-political resonance.
Even when there hasnât been a picture-director split, weâve seen a welcome shift in perspective: No longer do voters automatically equate the biggest with the best. It would be hard to find a more suitable David-and-Goliath metaphor than the triumph of Kathryn Bigelowâs low-budget, low-grossing Iraq War thriller, âThe Hurt Locker,â over James Cameronâs record-shattering 3-D blockbuster âAvatarâ in 2010. The 2012 best picture win by âThe Artist,â Michel Hazanaviciusâ loving ode to silent filmmaking, may not have aged quite as well, but it, too, exemplifies the academyâs willingness to dismantle easy assumptions of what a best picture can be.
Full list of 2018 Oscar nominations Âť
The effects of this sea change are being felt in this yearâs particularly wide-open race. Special arrangements have doubtless been made to ensure the integrity of the envelopes, but the more lasting legacy of last yearâs upset can be seen in the unusual inscrutability of the best picture tea leaves. No single film has completely dominated the proceedings leading up to the ceremony, and pundits have been more reluctant than usual to make definitive pronouncements.
The closest thing to a frontrunner would appear to be Guillermo del Toroâs lavish Cold War-era fantasy âThe Shape of Water,â which, echoing âLa La Landâ last year, won the Producers Guild of America and Directors Guild of America awards and has more Oscar nominations (13) than any other contender. But while Del Toro is widely expected to win best director, many are predicting a best picture win for Martin McDonaghâs bitterly funny small-town noir âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,â which scored the Golden Globe for best motion picture drama and the Screen Actors Guildâs ensemble award.
Still, more than a few observers are casting aside the statistics and looking to see if another âMoonlightâ might be waiting in the wings â perhaps in the form of Jordan Peeleâs racially charged horror-thriller, âGet Out.â Others have high hopes for Greta Gerwigâs âLady Bird,â and not everyone has discounted a sneak attack by Christopher Nolanâs epic âDunkirk.â
An homage to old-school creature features, a grisly Coen-esque tale of retribution, a scarily incisive satire of white liberal guilt, a ruefully funny portrait of teenage girlhood, a structurally unconventional World War II escape thriller: None of these films brings the words âbest picture Oscarâ automatically to mind. Every one, in fact, has a personal, idiosyncratic sensibility that resists the empty prestige and easy sanctimony so often assumed to be the academyâs preferred diet.
Itâs telling that one of the few contenders everyone has decisively ruled out is the 1971-set newsroom drama âThe Post,â which entered the season looking like it might be the movie to beat, given its surefire topical resonance and Oscar-friendly pedigree (Steven Spielberg! Tom Hanks! Meryl Streep!). Despite solid reviews and robust business, Spielbergâs film received just two nominations; predicting the academyâs taste, it turns out, isnât as easy as it used to be.
But then, was it ever really so easy? Over 90 years, the range of films that have received the academyâs coveted seal of approval has stretched far across genre, theme, style and, most of all, quality. This award has been bestowed on masterpieces such as âAll About Eve,â âCasablanca,â âThe Godfatherâ and âLawrence of Arabiaâ but also on mediocrities such as âThe Greatest Show on Earthâ and âAround the World in 80 Days.â
It has gone to visually staggering epics such as âGone With the Wind,â âBen-Hurâ and âTitanic,â sobering wartime dramas such as âAll Quiet on the Western Front,â âThe Deer Hunterâ and âSchindlerâs Listâ and more than a few beloved musicals, including âAn American in Paris,â âWest Side Storyâ and âThe Sound of Music.â Westerns have been underserved, though âUnforgivenâ makes up for a lot. And Iâm surely not the only one who would like to impose a moratorium on great-man biographical dramas from âThe Great Ziegfeldâ to âThe Kingâs Speech.â
Curiously enough, I began watching the Oscars in a year that radically redefined the kinds of movies the academy was capable of honoring, long before preferential ballots and coordinated diversity efforts. It was 1992, the year âThe Silence of the Lambs,â Jonathan Demmeâs dark dream of a serial-killer thriller, became the first and still only horror film (Iâm not counting âCrashâ) to win best picture. That same year, Disneyâs âBeauty and the Beastâ became the first animated feature to receive a best picture nomination.
The year 1996 brought a so-called indie invasion, as the Hollywood studios saw their supremacy suddenly challenged by mid-budget art-house favorites such as âThe English Patient,â âFargo,â âSecrets & Liesâ and âShine.â That was the dawn, too, of the Harvey Weinstein/Miramax era, which minted such winners as âShakespeare in Loveâ and âChicagoâ and took Oscar campaigning to new levels of competitive nastiness.
In light of the sexual misconduct accusations made against Weinstein over the past several months, that era now looks even more dubious (through no fault of the films themselves, which are as good or as bad as they ever were). But the Miramax paradigm did cement a more egalitarian, indie-forward attitude; the idea of a deft little comedy beating a colossal war epic is no longer such a startling concept.
Sometimes, of course, the colossal war epic still wins: In 2004, âThe Lord of the Rings: The Return of the Kingâ pulled off another academy milestone by becoming the first fantasy film to win the top prize. To date, no science-fiction film has ever won, although âGravityâ came awfully close in 2014, and âAvatarâ and âDistrict 9â were both nominated in 2010, the latter almost certainly as a result of the academyâs expanded best picture field.
That expansion, of course, was intended as a corrective of sorts after 2009, the year Christopher Nolanâs Batman epic âThe Dark Knightâ failed to secure a nomination. One of the ironies of that decision, for better or worse, is that while superhero movies have come to dominate the Hollywood assembly line, not one of them has been nominated for best picture. (Some, doubtless, hope that the cultural and commercial supremacy of âBlack Pantherâ will turn the tide next year in a way that even the genre-reinvigorating âWonder Womanâ couldnât manage.)
In the meantime, the unpredictability of the best picture Oscar winner in the post-âMoonlightâ era leaves us plenty of cause for hope: that âAmourâ will not remain the only foreign-language film nominated for best picture this decade. That a great documentary might slip into the running. That an action-franchise reboot as good as âMad Max: Fury Roadâ (if such a thing is even possible) might wind up not just a bridesmaid but also a bride.
And of course, that this Sundayâs best picture envelope is the right one, whatever surprises it may bring.
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.