As stars begin to flood the Oscars red carpet this weekend, an 鈥渆lephant in the room鈥 will walk among them. Is the #OscarsSoWhite campaign really the wake-up call Hollywood needs? looks at the history of Oscar controversies.
鈥淭he Oscars are,鈥 former Village Voice film critic J Hoberman once wrote, 鈥渂efore anything else, the industry鈥檚 main way to feel good about itself.鈥
Oscar night is preceded by weeks of horse-race speculation more becoming of a US presidential election. Then the stars line up, one long onerous parade of self-congratulation, the Western world鈥檚 cultural elite congealing to rub each other鈥檚 backs encouragingly. The Kodak Theatre transforms into a hermetically sealed monastery in which all the monks and nuns bow down before the golden statue which seems to be their master.
The industry has been self-medicating for a while now, dabbling in all kinds of placebos to cure the criticism laid against it. But occasionally, that insular kingdom can be invaded by the outside world. The ingratiating atmosphere can be punctured: From Patricia Arquette鈥檚 call for equal rights and equal pay for women last year, to Michael Moore鈥檚 rage against a 鈥渇ictitious鈥 president and his war for 鈥渇ictitious reasons鈥 in 2003, the Oscar-going crowds have been constantly confronted with their own failings in a full-frontal fashion worthy of Gasper Noe film.
The 鈥#OscarsSoWhite鈥 campaign and its accompanying boycott is yet another issue in a long line of what you could call 鈥榬eality checks鈥. The diagnosis is terminal.
This year鈥檚 outrage was prompted by an all-white list of nominees (something of a return to form after Steve McQueen became the first black director to win Best Picture in 2013). Ryan Coogler鈥檚 smart and savvy direction on the Rocky reboot Creed (which gifted a Golden Globe to Sly Stallone) went unacknowledged. Spike Lee鈥檚 eccentric and vibrant Chi-Raq was nowhere. Barely a whisper was heard for Idris Elba鈥檚 powerful showing in Beasts of No Nation. Even Will Smith鈥檚 wiggy and accented performance in the NFL drama Concussion, the kind Oscar voters fall over for, did not garner a mention.
Look over the categories. The omissions are striking. It鈥檚 not until you reach the Best Cinematography category that we find a film with a black star (Samuel L Jackson in The Hateful Eight). The problem is exacerbated by the politically- or socially-conscious nature of the Best Picture nominations: The Big Short, Bridge of Spies, Spotlight, Carol.听
The main parry against boycotting the whitewash argues that film awards ought to be meritocratic, like the Olympics or competitive chess. This thrust overlooks Hollywood鈥檚 wider culture which couldn鈥檛 care less for diversity. No amount of affirmative action on behalf of the Academy can solve it. Instead, the problem is structural.
It鈥檚 not just the public faces of movie-making that are dominantly white and male. Composers, visual effects artists, set designers, and editors are terrifyingly uniform. The high tower of Hollywood (one could say a Towering Inferno?) houses producers and financiers who are mostly white and male too. The 2015 Hollywood Diversity Report out of UCLA found that studio heads and senior managers of studios were overwhelmingly white and male as well.
Steve McQueen, perhaps the greatest filmmaker of our time pointed this out in a recent interview: 鈥淚 made two British movies [Hunger and Shame] and I never met one person of colour in any below-the-line situations. Not one. No black, no Asian, no one. Like, hello? What鈥檚 going on here?鈥
Hollywood鈥檚 major outlets are making films for themselves, and the evidence is telling: Glancing over last year鈥檚 mainstream releases, it shouldn鈥檛 be surprising the degree to which black actors are almost entirely absent outside of comedic roles. Of the top-grossing films last year, only Star Wars seemed to buck the trend. Everything else, from The Martian to Jurassic World, had black actors in bit-parts. You could almost call them 鈥榯oken鈥 roles.
This is not just a sin of omission. Its consequences were elucidated by another Oscar protester back in 1973. Marlon Brando, refusing his Best Actor award for his iconic role in The Godfather, sent a Native American woman in his place. She was assailed with boos by the gathered congregation. Brando鈥檚 reasoning holds up well today. He excoriated Hollywood for decades of Western pictures which made big bucks by 鈥渄egrading the Indian and making a mockery of his character, describing him as savage, hostile and evil.鈥
鈥淚t's hard enough for children to grow up in this world. When Indian children watch television, and they watch films, and when they see their race depicted as they are in films, their minds become injured in ways we can never know.鈥
Despite the present dearth of escapist fantasy and superhero franchises, film is as its best, its most visceral, when reflecting reality to its audience. Movies hold a mirror back to us, and through theme or subtext, point out both our flaws and our attributes. Society鈥檚 love for movies demands that we see ourselves in them, our own passions and fears and realities, not just those of a privileged few.
If we take film critic Mark Cousins鈥 point that the greatest of all movies 鈥渓ook like our dreams鈥, then the Oscars are merely a symptom of a wider nightmare.
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE