cos: (Default)
cos ([personal profile] cos) wrote2010-03-08 09:47 am
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Oscars

I didn't watch the Oscars. Sometimes I see someone say "I give up on the Oscars" after they make some particularly stupid award decision. I really gave up on the Oscars, a long time ago.

Go to this list of Oscars for "Best Costume Design" and scroll down to 1982, where you'll see:
    1982: Bhanu Athaiya, Madeline Jones and John Mollo - Gandhi
    Albert Wolsky - Sophie's Choice
    Piero Tosi - La Traviata
    Elois Jenssen and Rosanna Norton - Tron
    Patricia Norris - Victor/Victoria

You know what other movie came out that year? This one.

What's the point of an award that doesn't even have a credible pretense of being about merit?

[identity profile] slipstreamborne.livejournal.com 2010-03-08 05:59 pm (UTC)(link)
While I think the clothing worn by the puppets could have qualified for the costume design award, I don't think the puppets themselves can or should be considered "costumes". Costumes are generally seperated from any effect that alters the actual physical appearance of the actor--be it prosthetics (judged under the makeup category) or computer animation (visual effects) or anywhere in between.

Visual effects is probably the best category for puppetry, since it sadly isn't prevalent in film enough to be judged as its own genre. The puppets and animatronics used in films like Alien and E.T. are part of what won them the Oscar in that category, for example.

ETA: Agh, carn't spel!
Edited 2010-03-08 18:02 (UTC)

[identity profile] slipstreamborne.livejournal.com 2010-03-08 06:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah, but costuming isn't an equation of more elborate = better. Historical costuming--particularly when you also have to costume a large cast of extras--is requires just as much skill and work from the costuming department as ornate fantasy.

Given Dark Crystal won the BAFTA for visual effects, I think this was less an issue of definition than of how the Academy approaches technical awards (from a quick skim since it's inception it looks like only three films are generally nominated) and how in turn that affects film studios willingness to invest the money needed to front a nomination for less financially succesful films, but this is a problem that affects the awards as a whole.