Saturday, November 1, 2014

The Life Of Emile Zola - 10th Best Picture Winner

The Life Of Emile Zola - 10th Best Picture Winner
1937
#69

Starring:
Paul Muni
Gloria Holden
Gale Sondergaard
Joseph Schildkraut

Directed By:
William Dieterle

1937 Academy Awards
Winner:
Best Picture
Best Supporting Actor
Best Adapted Screenplay

Other Nominated Films:
The Awful Truth
Captains Courageous
Dead End
The Good Earth
In Old Chicago
Lost Horizon
One Hundred Men And A Girl
Stage Door
A Star Is Born


So...this is another blog post I failed to publish back when I watched the film...ah the joys of being easily distracted. Guess that's why I write them on Evernote so I can then eventually post them here? LOL Anyways...

This is a rather political movie, with its rallies against social ills and antisemitism but that is the truth of what Zola was about.
Of course the establishment wants to stamp out any dissonance, to the point of destroying people's lives. 
How even indicative of today, people thinking someone who commits suicide is better off than someone poor and living.

Of course even scandal can sell, as the success of novel Nana can attest. People like scandal.

Aside from not finding a way to publish, the thought of censoring someone because they criticized you is ridiculous. 
However I will say the difference is that Zola's criticism is constructive, not meant to be destructive but critical to induce change.
Sad that only 23 min in and Cezanne is done...

But even more surprising is that this movie is from 1937, in the midst of WW2, with someone speaking against those with anti-Semitic leanings. This was obviously mean as a cry against what was happening in Europe but was it heeded?
And this was set in 1894! And it won Best Picture!
Even then, people are more than happy to turn a blind eye to social injustice. It doesn't affect me so it's not my problem. Never lifting a hand to help anyone in need, hiding in the bubble of a world they have. 
And to show a corrupt army and government! 
It's isn't until someone well known takes up and gives voice to the troubles does someone listen! It's a shame that at the making of this movie we were still oblivious to the horrors of Hitler's crimes.

And then railroad someone? This continues today, so the government can keep secrets. The same thing is currently playing out at the end of the 9th season of Bones - a cover up at the FBI, with someone in the Bureau is dirty, and Booth is trying to uncover it. When being questioned for a possible promotion, he is instead accused of killing an American, without order and a Delta Force team is sent to silence him. When survives, the claim they were simply coming to arrest him...in full tactical gear and blowing doors in...

What is it they say? Those that don't know their history are doomed to repeat it? Well those that ignore their history are doomed to repeat it too. 

Shakespeare In Love - 71st Best Picture Winner

Shakespeare In Love - 71st Best Picture Winner
1998
#59

Starring:
Gwyneth Paltrow
Joseph Finnes

Directed By:
John Madden

1998 Academy Awards
Winner:
Best Picture
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actress
Best Art Direction
Best Costume Design
Best Original Musical or Comedy Score
Best Original Screenplay

Other Films Nominated:
Elizabeth
Life Is Beautiful
Saving Private Ryan
The Thin Red Line

This is one of the BP Winners that I'd seen before, more than a few times. So rare is it for a comedy to win Best Picture. To me, that is kind of strange, in a way, given the awards are a popularity contest after all. Comedies tend to reach wider audiences than drama so you'd think more would be nominated in general but they just aren't. And to that end, most of those nominated are more what currently people would call a dramedy - part drama, part comedy, and frankly, closer to what real life is like. Most people have times of drama and joy in their lives, the lucky ones having less drama and more joy. But when people think of rewarding something, proclaiming something has more merit than others, I guess things that seem bigger spectacles or that fall into a narrower genre are seen as more work and more deserving than something that reflects real life? Unless that real life was like 30+ years ago...

Films based in part or in whole on one of the works of Shakespeare (on in this case a work and his life) have a decent-ish track record for being nominated for Oscars, with at least 20 films in the history of the awards having been nominated, tho only a few have won their nominated titles, like West Side Story and Olivier's Hamlet (not to mention the number of Oscars Olivier himself was nominated for and won for various works of Shakespeare he was a part of).

This one isn't so much about a specific play, though Romeo and Juliet is the main feature, but about story of what went into writing such a play and performing it and the lives of those that create it. One reason why it was so notable is that through the comedy, it uses a very real point of historical issue - that of the rule that women were not to be seen on stage and therefore all the parts of every play, including the young Juliet Capulet, were played by men or boys. Such a prohibition still speaks to society today in the plight of those denied, well, anything because of their gender, race, age, sexual orientation, etc. Look into history - this was set in the late 1500s and yet today, more than some 400 years later, this is still an issue of today's society. you'd think we'd have all come a lot further in 400 years time...

Also interesting to note that this beat 2 highly acclaimed WWII movies, both of whom many people expected to win Best Picture. While SiL wasn't a total surprise, it's just one of the many times the Academy has given that top prize to something unexpected.

Check out more about the 71st Academy Awards
Check out more about the films of 1998