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  Right Oscar, right winner, wrong movie?
Last updated: 2007-02-26


Right Oscar, right winner, wrong movie?
2007-02-26

People
Jennifer Hudson
Peter O'Toole
Forest Whitaker
Bette Davis
Robert Altman
Martin Scorsese
Kevin Costner
Russell Crowe
Nicole Kidman
Alfred Hitchcock
Robert Redford
Al Pacino
Mel Gibson
Elizabeth Taylor
Audrey Hepburn
Event
2007 Oscar Awards
Movie
To Kill A Mockingbird
The Departed
Raging Bull
My Fair Lady
The Last King Of Scotland
Dreamgirls
Dog Day Afternoon
Apocalypto
Little Miss Sunshine
Lawrence of Arabia
Gladiator
The Godfather
Yes, "The Departed" was smart, highly entertaining moviemaking. But nary a critic would say it was Martin Scorsese's best film -- not by a mile.

Yet nobody but a heartless grinch would begrudge the masterful director his hard-won Oscar, the first in six nominations. It just points to a simple rule of Oscar history: An award isn't always about the actual work at hand. Often it amounts to a statement: that someone has finally arrived, or, in Scorsese's case, is long overdue.

In other words, when Oscar comes calling, it's not always for the right film.

Many fans thought it a crime when Scorsese didn't win the director prize for "Raging Bull" in 1981, losing out to Robert Redford for "Ordinary People," or for "Goodfellas" in 1991, when he lost to Kevin Costner for "Dances With Wolves."

"Yes, 'The Departed' is not a film that history will rank up there with 'Raging Bull,'" says Jonathan Kuntz, a professor of film history at UCLA. "But sometimes these awards are like lifetime achievement awards."

(And sometimes they ARE lifetime achievement awards: Alfred Hitchcock and Robert Altman are both legendary directors who never won a directing prize and instead won special awards -- Hitchcock in 1968 and Altman last year, months before he died.)

Ask any film buff, and they'll name a litany of actors and actresses who won for roles that even the performers themselves considered unworthy. Bette Davis was passed over in 1935 for "Of Human Bondage," so was rewarded for "Dangerous" the next year -- a role that film historian Leonard Maltin calls "rather cheesy." And Elizabeth Taylor didn't win for "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" in 1959, but two years later for "BUtterfield 8" -- a film she freely disparaged, Maltin says.

More recently, how about Al Pacino? Nominated seven times for acting awards, including for "The Godfather" (parts one and two) and "Dog Day Afternoon," he didn't win until "Scent of a Woman" in 1993.

"The last thing they're voting on at the Oscars is the best work of the year," says Tom O'Neil, columnist for theenvelope.com Web site. "It's about passing out hugs." And sometimes, he says, the hugs come not too late, but too early.

"When Nicole Kidman won for 'The Hours,' it was all about her becoming a superstar," O'Neil opines. And when Russell Crowe won for "Gladiator," he continues, "It was about welcoming him into the Hollywood colosseum."

Is a system where people get rewarded retroactively or prematurely all that bad? Don't blame the academy, says Maltin, who also covers film for "Entertainment Tonight." The problem Oscar voters face is that they have no advantage of hindsight," he says. So when people say, 'How could so-and-so never have won,'" well, it's all about timing and luck of the draw. Why did Peter O'Toole not win for "Lawrence of Arabia?" Because he happened to be up that year against Gregory Peck for 'To Kill a Mockingbird.'"

At least one analyst says the system is wrong. "I think Scorsese's win is absolutely payback to a person who deserved it for his other work," says Richard Walter, head of the screenwriting program at UCLA's film school. Walter calls this year's best-picture winner "Scorsese's most uninteresting film in years -- a bunch of men talking on cell phones, and occasionally a woman talking on a phone."

"They should honor the person when they make a really good movie. Otherwise, why should the other nominees have to stand around and see a lesser film win?"

It's worth noting there apparently is no "payback" Oscar for certain categories -- or at least it takes a whole lot longer. Sound engineer Kevin O'Connell was nominated for the 19th time this year, and still didn't win -- a record for Oscar losses. (He was nominated with two others for sound mixing on Mel Gibson's "Apocalypto.") "I'm already checked into therapy tomorrow," he quipped before the show.

Sunday's show was seen by 39.9 million people, according to Nielsen Media Research. That's up from the 38.8 million who watched "Crash" win the best picture award in 2006.

There were instances Sunday night when the academy chose to pass up a chance to redress a longtime omission. Despite a current of affection for O'Toole, who's never won an acting award in his long and storied career, the academy instead honored Forest Whitaker's powerful (and most deserving) turn as Idi Amin in "The Last King of Scotland."

Just to prove you don't need a long resume to win an Oscar, there was newcomer Jennifer Hudson winning the supporting actress award for "Dreamgirls." And in an achievement that should have budding writers everywhere leaping with joy (or envy), Michael Arndt won the original screenplay award for his very first screenplay, "Little Miss Sunshine."

For film buffs worried that their favorite has been passed over for the wrong reason, it's worthwhile heeding the carefree attitude of the late Katharine Hepburn, herself a four-time best actress winner.

"Don't worry about not being nominated," she said in a telegram to Audrey Hepburn, who'd been passed over for "My Fair Lady," according to "Inside Oscar" by Mason Wiley and Damien Bona.

"Someday," she wrote, "you'll get it for a part that doesn't rate it."

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