The AMPAS is in a no-win situation here.
First of all, artsy-fartsy movies winning the Best Picture Oscar instead of the year's highest grossing movie is nothing new at all. It's easy to find examples of this over the entire history of the Academy Awards. The AMPAS tried to appease the Joe Six-pack segment of movie fans by expanding the list of Best Picture nominees from 5 to 10 in hopes more crowd-pleasing movies would make the cut. That hasn't really worked.
There are movie rival awards programs that cater more to the top money-making movies. The People's Choice Awards are still around. MTV still airs its movie awards show (I'm still trying to figure out why MTV is still called "MTV" since the channel rarely has any fucking thing to do with music at all, so why do they still have an annual music awards show as well as a movie awards show?).
The situation is getting worse for the AMPAS since a growing number of awards-worthy movies are effectively bypassing the theatrical release platform. Fewer grown-up movies more likely to be praised by critics are playing in commercial cinemas.
I still believe a movie should be required to play in at least some theaters in order to be eligible for Oscar nominations. If the feature is really a made-for-TV movie playing on a streaming service then it ought to go into the Emmy's ballpark. The AMPAS has loosened that theatrical release rule since it would otherwise have a much smaller pool of movies to consider for Oscar nominations. Still, the Oscar risks losing its relevance if a growing number of nominated movies are really made-for-TV movies.
I think the declining ratings numbers for the annual Oscars broadcast is a symptom of a larger decline of the entire movie industry. Commercial theaters are hurting pretty bad. I believe the nearly non-existent theatrical release window has severely de-valued many movies. Some of them play exclusively in theaters for a very short amount of time. That also means they have the attention of the general public for a very short amount of time. Once that movie goes to one of the various streaming platforms it quickly gets lost in a big pile of other movies and quickly forgotten.
20 years ago most movies had a far longer period of advertising value. There were weeks or months worth of trailers, TV commercials, billboards, etc leading up to the theatrical release. The movie would play in theaters for at least a couple or so months (unless it was a flop). The film would go into second run. Then there would be an ad campaign for the home video release. When it arrived in brick and mortar video stores there would be lots of copies on the shelves to rent and posters in the store windows. A lot of that physical advertising has vanished. Retail promotion of movies has been reduced to whatever end caps are on display in Walmart or Target. Most retail movies-music-books style stores were put out of business by Amazon. And now streaming services pretty much have physical media on its death bed. Instant gratification tends to cheapen anything that doesn't require any waiting to acquire, see or experience.
I think the way all this ultimately shakes out is with a bunch of commercial theaters disappearing or maybe even the entire theatrical release platform. If theater chains start shuttering dozens or hundreds of locations it's going to kill most of the cinema equipment market. Digital projectors and their associated products will go bye bye. In the future it may literally require a LED-based "jumbotron" display in order to show a movie to a crowd of hundreds of people. Those high-cost devices aren't going to get installed just anywhere. By the time that happens the general public really won't care. Because the "feature" playing on that jumbotron will just be some TV show.
First of all, artsy-fartsy movies winning the Best Picture Oscar instead of the year's highest grossing movie is nothing new at all. It's easy to find examples of this over the entire history of the Academy Awards. The AMPAS tried to appease the Joe Six-pack segment of movie fans by expanding the list of Best Picture nominees from 5 to 10 in hopes more crowd-pleasing movies would make the cut. That hasn't really worked.
There are movie rival awards programs that cater more to the top money-making movies. The People's Choice Awards are still around. MTV still airs its movie awards show (I'm still trying to figure out why MTV is still called "MTV" since the channel rarely has any fucking thing to do with music at all, so why do they still have an annual music awards show as well as a movie awards show?).
The situation is getting worse for the AMPAS since a growing number of awards-worthy movies are effectively bypassing the theatrical release platform. Fewer grown-up movies more likely to be praised by critics are playing in commercial cinemas.
I still believe a movie should be required to play in at least some theaters in order to be eligible for Oscar nominations. If the feature is really a made-for-TV movie playing on a streaming service then it ought to go into the Emmy's ballpark. The AMPAS has loosened that theatrical release rule since it would otherwise have a much smaller pool of movies to consider for Oscar nominations. Still, the Oscar risks losing its relevance if a growing number of nominated movies are really made-for-TV movies.
I think the declining ratings numbers for the annual Oscars broadcast is a symptom of a larger decline of the entire movie industry. Commercial theaters are hurting pretty bad. I believe the nearly non-existent theatrical release window has severely de-valued many movies. Some of them play exclusively in theaters for a very short amount of time. That also means they have the attention of the general public for a very short amount of time. Once that movie goes to one of the various streaming platforms it quickly gets lost in a big pile of other movies and quickly forgotten.
20 years ago most movies had a far longer period of advertising value. There were weeks or months worth of trailers, TV commercials, billboards, etc leading up to the theatrical release. The movie would play in theaters for at least a couple or so months (unless it was a flop). The film would go into second run. Then there would be an ad campaign for the home video release. When it arrived in brick and mortar video stores there would be lots of copies on the shelves to rent and posters in the store windows. A lot of that physical advertising has vanished. Retail promotion of movies has been reduced to whatever end caps are on display in Walmart or Target. Most retail movies-music-books style stores were put out of business by Amazon. And now streaming services pretty much have physical media on its death bed. Instant gratification tends to cheapen anything that doesn't require any waiting to acquire, see or experience.
I think the way all this ultimately shakes out is with a bunch of commercial theaters disappearing or maybe even the entire theatrical release platform. If theater chains start shuttering dozens or hundreds of locations it's going to kill most of the cinema equipment market. Digital projectors and their associated products will go bye bye. In the future it may literally require a LED-based "jumbotron" display in order to show a movie to a crowd of hundreds of people. Those high-cost devices aren't going to get installed just anywhere. By the time that happens the general public really won't care. Because the "feature" playing on that jumbotron will just be some TV show.
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