"And the Winner Is..." -- My movie column in the Feb. 28th American Conservative reviews the Best Picture race. It is available to electronic subscribers. An excerpt:
This         year's Oscar nominees for Best Picture comprise one of the weaker slates         in memory, yet an enormous audience will no doubt tune in February 27 to         watch the Academy Awards.
       
        That the public still cares about the Oscars, or films in general, is         curious. Now in its second century, going to the movies is almost as         old-fashioned as such one-time rivals for the entertainment dollar as         vaudeville and brass band concerts. Yet, although the average American         spends over 1,600 hours annually watching television, compared to just         13 hours at the movies, they remain at the top of the pop culture food         chain.
       
        Popular music strongly challenged cinema for supremacy in the Sixties         and Seventies, but has since splintered into micro-styles. In contrast,         movies have gotten so expensive that only a few are released each week,         allowing the studios' expert marketers to concentrate (albeit briefly)         the national attention.
       
        Despite television's pervasiveness, it lacks the prestige of film         because, to be frank, as an advertiser-supported medium, TV aims         primarily at women. A back-of-an-envelope calculation suggests that         American men transfer about one trillion dollars annually to women to         spend, so television networks (subscriber-supported HBO, the most         prestigious network, excepted) pursue female viewers.
       
        In contrast, males buy the majority of movie tickets, so films cater to         them. And, as feminists have been known to complain, in our society (as         in all societies), renown accrues mostly to things guys like. Men just         care more than women do about constructing vast hierarchies of fame,         such as the Oscars.
       
        Although female studio bosses are common today, the Academy Awards are         still extraordinarily male-dominated. For example, women have picked up         only three of the approximately 385 nominations for Best Director, and         (alert Nancy Hopkins!) none at all for Best Cinematographer.
       
        Female screenwriters have become scarcer over time. Frances Marion was         the highest paid writer in Hollywood's first two decades, but among the         86 individuals with three or more screenwriting nominations, only eight         are women, and just three are from the liberated post-1970 era.
 
 
 
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