By RACHAEL GROESSLER
Let’s get one thing out of the way – you don’t have to tell me the history of the Academy Awards is littered with many sins of omission. Some years they get it hopelessly wrong – I’m looking at you 1994: Forrest Gump got Best Film over The Shawshank Redemption, Quiz Show, Four Weddings and a Funeral and Pulp Fiction.
They are partial to epics and musicals and can be parochial (Gwyneth Paltrow for Shakespeare in Love over Our Cate Blanchett for Elizabeth; there is no other explanation).
There’s a definite anti-comedy bias going on (so many examples, so little time) and, sometimes it seems as though objective analysis of a film’s artistic worth is the last thing on their minds. The Oscars can be subjective, personal, political and probably even factional. It’s like anyone’s workplace really but with gold art-deco statues, fabulous jewellery and broadcast rights.
As for trying to pick the winners, this can be guessed based on the hype around a film, the number of nominations, or the subject matter (like Kate Winslet said in Extras “do a Holocaust film – guaranteed an Oscar”…she then went on to win an Oscar for a Holocaust film, The Reader). The most accurate pointer is what has dominated the lead-up awards, of which there seems to be more and more every year. This year, it’s been changeable and, with a couple of exceptions, picking the winners is a bit tricky. But I shall do my best.