The Academy
Awards are on! And, for reasons unclear even
to myself, I am drawn to theses fatuous festivities
like a white zombie to Bela Lugosis satanic
sugar mill. People throw parties for the Oscars,
invite people on their A list over, get Brazilian
about itits a sort of New Years
Eve of pop cult, having in its favor the postmodern
virtues of being both camp and solemn. The Oscars
are a national event, a yearly rite that, with
its competing factions and heated debates over
non-choices, rivals the elections.
Speaking of which, if they are all that darn important to our culture, how come
we dont get to vote on them? Who are these gnomes of the Academy, anyway?
A bunch of old hacks, producers of terrible crap movies, doddery actors and minor
functionaries whove weaseled their way up the ladder so creepily that no
one can quite explain how they went from taking the minutes of the meetings in
the fifties to being head of the Academy. Its a shocking businessa
cabal of old farts, of Zitatenfresser ("citation-chewers") deciding
on our collective national dreams! In truth, though, we kinda like the whole
mysterioso business of "the Academy," the Unseen Ones voting on this
stuffgrown men in funny hats (if were lucky), wheezing, chanting
over scraps of paper, consulting ouija boards and gross receipts.
Earlier in the evening I watched the Independent Film Spirit Awards. They were
held in a big tent, seemed more egalitarian and relaxed than the Big Show coming
up, and the presenters were certainly funnier and hipperPeeWee Herman,
James Woods, Jenna Rolands, and John Waters ("Get more out of life, go see
a crap movie"). Javier Bardem saying independent movies were the only ones
he liked to go to in Madrid was interesting to hear and Ellen Burstyns
speech about movies reflecting humanity back to itself was uplifting (or would
be if I could remember what she actually said). (Although Laura Linney really
should have got both awards for her uncanny performance in "You Can Count
On Me.")
There were a lot of great quirky movies nominatedand wonderfully odd documentaries,
too (Mark Sugers Dark Days about the tunnel people and Keep the
River on Your Right about a gay Jewish cannibal)but the odd thing about
the Independent Film awards was that many of the nominees cropped up again at
the OscarsTraffic, Requiem for a Dream, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragonand
a bunch of these supposedly die-hard independistas were already signed up to
sell out to the big studios. Or, like Jim Jarmusch, already hadwhat was
Ghost Dog? Am I missing something? And to hear Jarmusch and Forrest Whittaker
prattling on about the dopey flick as if it were were some mystic revelation
was baffling and irritating. Rationalization is a rampant vice, but when it gets
involved with movies it becomes a form of Olympic Self-delusion. Maybe it was
just too subtle for me. Yeah, thats probably what it is.
Feeling pious that I had communed with the free spirits of the independent film
community, I switched over to the Oscars, and, instead of feeling superior to
the whole goofy business, I initially found myself pulled in willy-nilly by the
sheer Krantzian glitz of the whole thing. Stars getting out of limos! (People
I barely know the names of, mind you.) The vast Disneyesque red carpet! The Egyptian
monumentality of the Oscar statues on the outside of the Shrine Auditorium! Wolfgang
Pucks almost Dada object, the Oscar-shaped caviar hors doeuvres!
The drooling crowds straining at the ropes! Flashbulbs! Bizarre tuxedos and gossamer
gowns! Jennifer Lopezs dress could easily have come out of the Emperors
New Clothes Salon.
The Oscars have a built-in boredom mechanism in their favor that makes even the
tritest speech seem almost eloquent. In that regard, awards ceremonies have a
lot in common with airport waiting areas. Sort of endless and blandplus
commercials. Although some of the commercials were pretty spectacular, the Pepsi
extravaganza with Britney Spears, the fireflies and the Internet thing. But using
Martin Luther Kings "I have a dream" speech in an Alcatel commercial
was just crasshave they no shame?
On to Humpty Dumptys annual self-coronation. Spare your outrage, o my brothers
and sisters, at the pusillanimous choices, the elevation of mediocrities and
the fawning celebration of over-paid panderers to the groundlings. This is not
the time or place for paying homage to the best and brightest, the innovators,
and mad geniusesthats for history and tiny theaters. What the Oscars
resemble most of all is one long commercial. And, in fact thats what it
ispaid programming for the movie industry disguised as an awards ceremony.
Hollywood is a fishing village that has only one export, and, like some ghastly,
over-rouged giantess foolishly admiring her own enhanced reflection, the Academy
chooses those movies that most resemble itself. The revulsion you feel, comrades,
is at those monstrous glossy Revlon lips kissing their own powdered buttocks.
Big, over-blown spectacles with obscene budgets win the day. Do you seriously
believe that Russell Crowe is the greatest actor in the world? He sat through
the monotonous thing with such Senecan stoicism you felt he hadnt quite
shed his Maximus persona. Was Gladiator the best movie of last year or
Steven Soderbergh the best director? I dont think so. Julia Robertswho
I dont think is a great actress, either (although a perfect fit in Erin
Bra-ckovich)was utterly disarming in her acceptance speech.
My favorite Hollywood movie of last year, The Wonder Boysabout writers
and 2,611 page manuscripts, and with wonderful actingdidnt get the
props it deserved. Who could resist Michael Douglas in that pink chenille robe?
But at least Bob Dylan won for best song. The shining moment in the whole proceedings,
as far as Im concerned, was Sir Bobs gnarled face 60 feet high on
the screen. Like some reproving ghost from the other side of the earth (he was
in Australia) mumbling little rhyming curses as the foppish, decadent, and pompous
watched him reverently and vaguely apprehensively. He seemed the embodiment of
the authentic in the palace of tinsel, an ancient reminder of mortality and truth.
But, Dylan being Dylan, this, too, was a performancethe best of the whole
evening. The man who has given us a coral reef of Dylansdustbowl singer,
street-urchin, son of Ramblin Jack, folk messiah, neon Rimbaud, Old Testament
prophet, Amish farmer, howdy-neighbor country boy, white-face death's-head mummer,
Shropshire Lad with flowers in his hat, Christ-like Bob, born-again Bob, Hasidic
Bob, Late-Elvis Dylan with the big WWF belt, Endless-Tour Dylan, Living National
Treasure Dylanhad come up with yet another mesmerizing persona. (Andrew
Oldham: "When youve played Sydney, Australia, for the 700th time,
you need a persona, darling.") With his skinny mustache and gaunt
face, he looked like Vincent Price, some old silent movie actor, the gypsy who
tells you the day on which youll die. It was a revelation to see him burning
through the screen at this strange, vulgar, hypocritical eventthe Academy
Awards being a little like a glorified Wal-Marthuge, overwhelming, soulless,
and yet uncannily incarnating the oxymoronic soul of America.