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Hollywood reduced to supporting role at Oscars
Bob Tourtellotte
LOS ANGELES—Four European actors and the maverick Coen brothers shared
top honours at the Oscars, relegating the traditional Hollywood of big
stars and box office hits to a supporting role this year. Violent drama
“No Country For Old Men” was the big winner on Sunday night with four
Academy Awards, more than any other film, including best movie, director
and adapted screenplay for brothers Joel and Ethan Coen.
The film’s fourth award, for best supporting actor, went to Spain’s
Javier Bardem for playing a creepy killer of few words. It was the first
Oscar for a Spanish performer in the 80-year history of the world’s
premier cinema awards. As expected, Briton Daniel Day-Lewis won best
actor in “There Will Be Blood,” in which he stars as a ruthless oil
prospector in early 20th century America.
But there were surprises in the actress categories. Scotland’s Tilda
Swinton was named best supporting actress in “Michael Clayton” ahead of
pre-award favourite Cate Blanchett, while French star Marion Cotillard
beat Julie Christie as best actress with her acclaimed performance as
troubled chanteuse Edith Piaf in “La Vie En Rose.”
Cotillard was the first French woman to win the award since Simone
Signoret in 1960. “Hollywood is built on Europeans,” said Swinton. “Go
back and look. I’m just really sad I couldn’t give my speech in Gaelic.
Don’t tell everybody. We’re everywhere.”
The prizes marked the first time since 1964 that all four top acting
awards went to artists outside the United States, where the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is based. The overseas influence
reflects the growing importance of box office receipts from abroad to a
film’s success, but an Oscar ceremony filled with foreign-born stars and
few box office hits made for low U.S. television viewership.
The program was the least-watched Academy Awards ever with only 32
million viewers compared to the record 1998 telecast when 55 million
people tuned in to see “Titanic,” with Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate
Winslet, claim the best film award.
“OUR CORNER OF THE SANDBOX”
But in the end, it was the Coen brothers, born and raised in Minnesota,
who proved to be the big winners. Their movie, based on Cormac
McCarthy’s novel about a drug deal gone wrong in south Texas, explores
the theme of moral decline and was among four sombre films up for best
picture. The Coens, who won an Oscar for writing the idiosyncratic 1996
crime caper “Fargo,” have long worked outside the traditional Hollywood
studio system.
“No Country” was the most commercially successful of their 12 feature
films, although it posted relatively modest sales of $64 million at
North American box offices. Accepting his Oscar, Joel Coen talked about
how he and Ethan had made films since they were kids and said his
brother had taken a camera to the airport as a boy in the 1960s to make
an amateur film called “Henry Kissinger, Man on the Go.” |