Is anyone else tired tired tired of biopics winning best actor/actress performance oscars?over the last 30 years, 17 of the top two performance oscars have gone to folks playing real life individuals in films generally centered around that person's life (note: i'm not counting N.Kidman as Virginia Woolf)but more than 50% of those biopic oscars have gone out in the last 6 years aloneis anyone else tired of the growing trend of giving an actor an award for mimicking a real person rather than creating a character?in 2 of the last 4 oscar ceremonies, 2006 (idi amin, queen eliz II) 2005 (truman capote, june carter cash) you had both awards going to these types of rolesi'd love to hear other people's opinions on the value of creating a character and the value of recreating a real person
2/23/2009 4:21:29 PM
I think a lot of people find the idea of portraying a real life icon more attractive than pulling off one that is made up. Do I think that's right? Not really. Maybe people find it more inspiring when a performance is based off a real life character. Maybe it's easier to relate some of your own struggles or problems with a character that actually existed. Whatever the case, the trend of awarding actors in biopics as you put it doesn't really surprise me.
2/23/2009 4:24:25 PM
Can you tell me who should have won it then those years? Kate Winslet won for best actress last night--she wasn't portraying a real person.[Edited on February 23, 2009 at 4:31 PM. Reason : .]
2/23/2009 4:29:56 PM
i thought that's all the oscars gave awards out for
2/23/2009 4:34:13 PM
i think the growing trend is only in relation to the growing amount of biopics being made.people enjoy seeing history recreated through the lens of a camera. They enjoy seeing actors take on the roles of historical figures and heroes and reenacting moments that have impacted not only them but the world. I think the roles mean more and stick with the average person longer. Thus gaining more praise than the average fictional role.
2/23/2009 4:35:42 PM
2/23/2009 4:39:20 PM
the only 4 oscars out of the last 12 to go to "created" characters wereDaniel Plainview (there will be blood)Jimmy Markum (mystic river)Hanna Schmitz (the reader)Maggie Fitzgerald (million dollar baby)
2/23/2009 4:42:54 PM
2/23/2009 4:43:14 PM
i think that could definitely be a good discussion.
2/23/2009 4:48:37 PM
but do people have higher standards for people portraying real characters? (especially those who are in the collective memory of the voters) thus, when someone does a good job of portraying those characters, it's even more impressive?
2/23/2009 4:57:41 PM
aight1948 - 1998 (100 Best Actress/Actor Awards given) - 10 go to Biopic performances1999 - 2008 (18 Best Actress/Actor Awards given) - 11 go to Biopic performancesi'm sorry, but thats absurdyou have more in one decade than in the previous 5???
2/23/2009 5:02:43 PM
how many biopics were made in those 5 decades though?i think more biopics have been made in the last 15-20 years than in the previous 40.and from 1998-2008 how many of the nominated actors and actress came from biopics (not just the winners)?i did a very quick count of just actors from 1998-2008 and got 19 from not just biopic, but non-fictional characters. i'll do a better count later, but that should get us started[Edited on February 23, 2009 at 5:13 PM. Reason : add][Edited on February 23, 2009 at 5:17 PM. Reason : add]
2/23/2009 5:12:35 PM
more of every type of movie has been made
2/23/2009 5:14:05 PM
2/23/2009 5:22:56 PM
for the women2008 02007 22006 12005 12004 02003 12002 1 #note: nicole kidman was playing a fictionalized version of Virginia Woolf2001 1*2000 11999 11998 1so again, 2008 and 2004 represent years when no biopic was there, 2002 is an odd year because it wasn't a biopic situation, but nicole kidman was definitely playing a real person so 2001 represents the only time this decade that an actress playing an only-on-the-script character beat a person playing a flesh and blood character...
2/23/2009 5:37:31 PM
2/23/2009 5:56:37 PM
so last king of scotland wasn't really a biopic either. that movie was fiction. per the wiki:
2/23/2009 6:04:14 PM
which is more impressiverobert deniro helping breathe life into the life of vito corleone, mafia bossorrobert deniro mimicking al capone, mafia bossi'm not saying a masterful performance of an existing individual isn't worthy of an oscarwhat i'm saying is 75% of the top performance oscars over the last 10 years have gone to people playing real-life individualsjust watch a fucking documentary people[Edited on February 23, 2009 at 6:07 PM. Reason : ^yeah, my term "biopic" has been loose and fast this whole time]
2/23/2009 6:07:09 PM
2/23/2009 6:12:33 PM
i don't know. you look at most fictional characters and actors have usually based them off of real individuals. and lots of depictions of historical people haven't exactly been dead-on impersonations (see hoffman's truman capote for an example). lots of times a biopic just means they're basing their character off someone everyone knows. often a fictional character is just based off of someone else (or an amalgam more likely).lots of the credit in fictional movies should be given to the screenwriter who created the character to begin with.
2/23/2009 6:12:52 PM
It isn't an outrage, but it is definitely ... an interesting trend.That said, Sean Penn has won for fictional and real-life-insipred characters.So has Daniel Day-Lewis.Ben Kingsley's been nominated 4 times for 2 fictional and two non-fiction roles.And I'm not sure most of the people (voters) who watched theses movies critically have spent significant amounts of time really getting research done and trying to figure out whether or not actors are "perfectly channeling" their real-life counterparts. They're just good roles in good movies.Johnny Depp has been nominated for roles based on Disney Rides, Stage Performances, and J.M. Barrie. But he's a good actor, so he'll keep getting nominated even if he does it for cartoon dog voices.The point is, Ray Charles and Johnny Cash may not have been the most inspired performances ever , and it is a little easier to be critical and call something a cheap imitation if there is TONS of footage and memory of a real-life person. I don't think the same things were being said when F. Murray Abraham won for Salieri.Should we be upset if a person wins for a character in a movie remake of a movie adapted from a novel (Al Pacino, Scent of a Woman) over a performance wholly original (Clint Eastwood, Unforgiven)? Oh, wait, he beat out Denzel as Malcom X and Downey, Jr. as Charlie Chaplin. OK, still good then ...[Edited on February 23, 2009 at 10:04 PM. Reason : a]
2/23/2009 10:04:09 PM
2/23/2009 10:08:44 PM
2/23/2009 10:11:35 PM
2/23/2009 10:26:12 PM
ah, you're correct, i had 82 and 80 in my notes, i assumed salieri was 80for some reason i did not count salieri in the mix, for pretty much the same reason i don't count virginia woolf
2/23/2009 10:39:43 PM
2/23/2009 10:41:17 PM
i'd also love to see some data on when movies released in december (generally in limited release) became the predominant BP noms/winnersi think we've had a break from that recent tradition with slumdog, no country, departed, crash(and yes, i understand most of the people in flyover will only see these movies after a win/big nom pull, but it still sucks)
2/23/2009 11:33:58 PM
wall-e should have won best picture
2/23/2009 11:53:43 PM
2/24/2009 9:24:28 AM
^^^^i agreemy inability to buy dicaprio's accent really hurt my belief in that character, plus i don't think he was that good anyway
2/24/2009 10:46:43 AM
Just as a though, thinking of the people who vote on Oscars (predominately actors) maybe it's considered a greater challenge to portray a real life person. If you're creating a character you have more leeway but in interpreting a person, people actually know what that person is like and have more basis for comparison. I also would say that the portrays that win are more than just mimicing someone, a good performance of a real character requires something much deeper than just an impersonation to be good. There's a world of difference between Sean Penn's performance in milk and that guy that's always in the TBS commercials, or between Josh Brolin's W and Will Ferrel's.
2/24/2009 2:35:50 PM
2/24/2009 2:42:15 PM
umm, think again
2/24/2009 3:07:35 PM
^even if they're the largest block, 22% hardly qualifies as "predominant"
2/24/2009 3:08:36 PM
i think that's exactly what it qualifies as. Its almost one quarter of the voting membership with 75% being distributed amond 14 other branchesArt Directors Cinematographers Directors Documentary Executives Film Editors Makeup Music Producers Public Relations Short Films and Feature Animation Sound Visual Effects Writers [Edited on February 24, 2009 at 3:18 PM. Reason : add]
2/24/2009 3:14:24 PM
I guess if all we have to go on is an uncited Wikipedia article, you're right
2/24/2009 3:26:04 PM
Here's another uncited list:
2/24/2009 3:27:00 PM
Well then
2/24/2009 3:31:03 PM
Ok, I'll concede the voters for Oscars are not predominately actors. That was an aside anyways(hence the parentheses)....maybe it's considered a greater challenge to portray a real life person. If you're creating a character you have more leeway but in interpreting a person, people actually know what that person is like and have more basis for comparison.I also would say that the portrays that win are more than just mimicing someone, a good performance of a real character requires something much deeper than just an impersonation to be good. There's a world of difference between Sean Penn's performance in milk and that guy that's always in the TBS commercials, or between Josh Brolin's W and Will Ferrel's.[Edited on February 24, 2009 at 4:21 PM. Reason : ...]
2/24/2009 4:20:02 PM
i will make my prediction right here in this thread..in 2011, Liam Neeson will win the Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role for his portrayal of Abraham Lincoln in Lincoln[Edited on February 24, 2009 at 4:38 PM. Reason : 2011]
2/24/2009 4:38:15 PM
ahaha. i thought that was a joke. but it's totally not. and you're probably right. other than maybe the year. it could get delayed or something as big movies like that tend to be delayed.
2/24/2009 4:42:42 PM
haha yeah i guess i should specify that he will win in 2012 for his role in 2011's Lincoln. Spielberg has plenty of time, but you're right you never know with hollywood
2/24/2009 5:09:23 PM
That will be his second consecutive Oscar after his 2011 win for his role in 2010's Taken 2: Taken it to the Streets
2/24/2009 5:18:19 PM
LOL I will be at the midnight premiere for that one.
2/24/2009 5:51:37 PM
Who cares about the overpaid hollywood fucktards
2/24/2009 6:40:20 PM
oh mancould you imagine if they waited to release LINCOLN until obama was running for re-electionSHITWOULDBEAT TITANIC
2/24/2009 9:53:27 PM
heck just make a movie about obama's run for his first term of presidency to get Will Smith an Oscar
2/24/2009 10:02:30 PM
he did call DIBS on playing obamaand i'll say this one more timemy problem isn't the performancesits the fact that there is a marked increase in the recognition their receiving[Edited on February 24, 2009 at 10:12 PM. Reason : ^and don't forget the closest he's ever come was for playing ALI]
2/24/2009 10:11:57 PM
2/24/2009 10:13:20 PM
just watched michael clayton again for the first time since i saw it in theatersi had to double check who clooney lost the oscar to (DDL for TWBB)if he had lost to a biopic, i would have burned hollywood to the ground
3/1/2009 1:49:08 AM