Thursday, December 5, 2024
25 C
Brunei Town

Latest

Etched into collective memory

Jake Coyle

The Academy Awards are on Sunday, but did last year’s Oscars ever really end?

When Hollywood reconvenes at the Dolby Theatre for the 95th Academy Awards, the ceremony will signal many things. The probable triumph of Everything Everywhere All at Once. A potentially historic night for Asians and Asian Americans in the film industry. Possibly a record number of jokes about Cocaine Bear.

But for many, nothing will register more than returning to the site of The Slap. In a way, we’re all still living in that frozen-in-time moment. Chris Rock’s face twisted to the side. Will Smith’s arm dramatically extended. A deathly hush over the Dolby Theatre.

A new low for the Oscars but a high point of public fascination, The Slap was immediately etched into collective memory, and its shock has kept reverberating. Rock, in a live stand-up special on Sunday, only just offered his fiery rebuttal, adding a fresh new volley in the still

For the first time, two sequels (Top Gun: Maverick, Avatar: The Way of Water) are nominated this year for best picture. But this year’s Oscars – whether they like it or not – will be a sequel, too, just one without the main stars in attendance. Smith has been banned by the motion picture academy for 10 years. Rock has been sticking with stand-up.

ABOVE & BELOW: Chris Rock during a performance for his comedy special ‘Chris Rock: Selective Outrage’; Jimmy Kimmel, host of the 95th Academy Awards, addresses the media before the roll out of the carpet for the event; and Will Smith hits presenter Chris Rock on stage while presenting an award at the Oscars last year. PHOTOS: AP

Harry Shum Jr, Jenny Slate, Tallie Medel, Ke Huy Quan, Stephanie Hsu, Michelle Yeoh, Brian Le, Andy Le, James Hong, and Jamie Lee Curtis pose with the award for outstanding performance by a cast in a motion pictures for ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’, at the 29th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards
ABOVE & BELOW: A crew member staples the white carpet to the ground in preparation for the 95th Academy Awards; and lead scenic painter Antje Menikheim readies an Oscar statue for the event

Host Jimmy Kimmel – who had been on the Dolby stage in 2017 for The Flub, a moment of Oscar infamy now practically forgotten – has said he will address The Slap. It would be “ridiculous” not to, he told The Hollywood Reporter.

The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, too, is making preparations. After a sluggish response to Smith’s actions that academy president Janet Yang has called “inadequate”, the Oscars will have their first ever “crisis team” to react to surprises.

Kimmel, who has hosted twice before, was brought in partly to have a steady hand on the telecast, which will restore all categories to the live show. Kimmel is the first solo host for the show since the last time he hosted, five years ago.

“We learned from this that the academy must be fully transparent and accountable in our actions,” Yang said at the luncheon last month, “and particularly in times of crisis you must act swiftly, compassionately and decisively for ourselves and for our industry”.

Kimmel’s challenge will be to reference The Slap without allowing another Oscars to become defined by it. Last year, after Smith’s blow and his subsequent yelling from his seat, the Academy Awards stumbled hazily through the rest of an airless ceremony, taking the spotlight away from the landmark win for the deaf drama CODA and documentary winner Summer of Soul, the award Rock presented to Questlove.

Smith also won his first Oscar, for King Richard. He didn’t apologise in that moment but did in a statement the following day. Smith soon thereafter resigned his academy membership.

This year, Everything Everywhere All at Once comes in with a commanding 11 nominations. Though an unlikely Oscar frontrunner, Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert’s multiverse mash-up is expected to win best picture after sweeping the top guild awards. The Daniels, as they are known, are favoured to best Steven Spielberg for best director. Former child star Ke Huy Quan is seen as a lock for best supporting actor. Michelle Yeoh could become the first Asian best actress winner.

CAN ANYTHING STOP ‘EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE’?

The A24 indie hit has had an enviable run leading up the Oscars, winning with the Screen Actors Guild, the Producers Guild, the Directors Guild and the Writers Guild. History says nothing can beat it. Yet some doubts persist that the madcap action comedy just isn’t Oscar material enough to win, and that the WWI film All Quiet on the Western Front – which won at the BAFTAs and comes in with nine nominations – could sneak in for the upset.

The harrowingly antiwar Netflix film, from Germany, has especially resonated in Europe where the war in Ukraine continues to rage. The documentary nominee Navalny, about the imprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, is more directly connected to the current events in Eastern Europe.

WHAT’S THE LATEST IN BEST ACTRESS?

Easily the fiercest and most controversy-generating category this year is best actress. It’s seen as a clash of heavyweight contenders in first-time nominee Yeoh and two-time winner Cate Blanchett, for Tár. Either could go home with the trophy. But much of the drama came in nominations, where Andrea Riseborough scored a nod for the little-seen drama To Leslie after a host of celebrities led an A-list grassroots campaign for the British actress.

At the same time, two acclaimed Black actresses – Danielle Deadwyler (Till) and Viola Davis (The Woman King) – were left out, prompting a debate about the influence of connections, money and race on awards campaigns.

Just as the whole affair seemed to be fading, Yeoh on Tuesday, with hours to go in Oscar voting, posted screenshots to Instagram of a Vogue article advocating for Yeoh to win over Blanchett. Academy rules prohibit “any tactic that singles out ‘the competition’ by name or titles”. Yeoh deleted the post. Throughout the race, though, she and Blanchett have each warmly celebrated the other.

spot_img

Related News

spot_img