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<< The horror that was the 1970s | Home | Quiet Storm blows >>

March 13, 2006

Annie Proulx’s very bad night


So, you write a short story about a couple sheep herders learning about love in the mountains. It's published. They make a movie of it.

That's the first surprise.

It's Hollywood, so the movie shouldn't be very good. Odds are, you know? But it's not. It's very good.

That's the second surprise.

It's so good, it's nominated for best picture. The director: nominated. The screenplay: nominated. And so on. Eight in all.

That's the third surprise.

It doesn't win best picture, but the director and screenwriters win.

So, the writer who wrote the story that was made into the movie, a pretty good movie, a film so good it won Oscars, should be feeling pretty much on top of the world now, right?

Wrong!

We should have known conservative heffalump academy voters would have rather different ideas of what was stirring contemporary culture. Roughly 6,000 film industry voters, most in the Los Angeles area, many living cloistered lives behind wrought-iron gates or in deluxe rest-homes, out of touch not only with the shifting larger culture and the yeasty ferment that is America these days, but also out of touch with their own segregated city, decide which films are good. And rumour has it that Lions Gate inundated the academy voters with DVD copies of Trash - excuse me - Crash a few weeks before the ballot deadline.
Surprised?

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2 comments about

'Annie Proulx’s very bad night'

Should we remind Annie Proulx that the Heffalump - per A. A. Milne, who knows about such things - exists only in the mind?

Pooh on this whole line of thought.  I liked Brokeback Mountain, and I don’t really give a flying fish what the Academy thinks about anything.

Posted by CGHill on 03/13

The problem with relying on the opinions of others is that it leaves yourself open to, well, the opinions of others.

And who was it that said they’d rather be among the people the Academy snubbed, than those who were rewarded?

Posted by Bill Peschel on 03/14
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