Oscars 2019: Five talking points, from Spike Lee storming off to Olivia Colman's touching speech
Green Book's Best Picture victory over Roma has proven controversial
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Your support makes all the difference.The Oscars ended with two major shocks on Sunday night in Los Angeles, as Olivia Colman took home Best Actress for The Favourite and Green Book won Best Picture.
Colman’s win in the Best Actress category brought Yorgos Lanthimos’s period piece back in the spotlight after being shut out for most of the evening, missing out on its two Best Supporting Actress nominations (for Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz), as well as nods in the Cinematography, Costume Design, Directing, Film Editing, Production Design, and Writing (Original Screenplay) categories.
Green Book, meanwhile, took home the biggest award of the night despite an awards season marred by scandal, and even though it was up against mammoth contenders such as Bohemian Rhapsody, The Favourite, Roma and the extremely popular Black Panther – the first superhero movie to score a nomination in the Best Picture category.
Here are the five biggest talking points from the ceremony.
Green Book disappoints as Best Picture win
This year’s Academy Awards was a tale of two shocks: one pleasant, one dire. The latter arrived with the announcement that Green Book had beaten out the category’s frontrunner, Roma, to Best Picture. It was a dismal reminder that progress is a slow, tedious process. Had Roma prevailed it would have made history, becoming both the first foreign language film and the first film distributed by Netflix (or any other streaming service) to win Best Picture.
It would have been a win that actually felt like the Academy was looking towards the future, smashing through the strict confines that have so far determined what we deem awards worthy and allowing this yearly celebration of film to finally start reflecting how diverse (on every possible level) the art form actually is.
But alas, no. Instead the Academy chose a film that has faced widespread criticism for its use of the “white saviour” trope, since its story of a friendship between two real-life figures – black jazz musician Don Shirley (Mahershala Ali) and his white driver Tony Vallelonga (Viggo Mortensen) – depicted the experiences of black Americans in the segregated South almost entirely through a white perspective.
Crucially, it ignored the realities of racism in order to deliver a neat story about Tony’s redemption as a racist man who learns to become a more tolerant person. Green Book’s win tonight doesn’t feel like much of a victory. It’s more of a case of the same old, same old when it comes to the Oscars. Clarisse Loughrey
Olivia Colman’s Best Actress win is a joyful surprise
It’s a win that many hoped for, but one that not many genuinely expected. Colman beat frontrunner Glenn Close to Best Actress, delivering a delightful (and thoroughly English) acceptance speech to boot. “It’s genuinely quite stressful,” she said. “This is hilarious. I got an Oscar! Okay, I have to thank lots of people. If, by the way, I forget anybody, I’m going to find you later and give you all a massive snog.”
Granted, Close has been wildly overdue when it comes to the Oscars, having failed to win the past six times she’s been nominated – it seems particularly outrageous now that she wasn’t awarded either for 1988’s Dangerous Liaisons and 1987’s Fatal Attraction.
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Yet, Colman’s handling of Queen Anne’s various comedies and tragedies in The Favourite soars above any other film performance this year. A figure pathetic, fearsome, and desperate at all moments, Queen Anne is filled with endless conflicting layers, all effortless delivered by Colman. Thanks to Deborah Davis and Tony McNamara’s masterful screenplay, The Favourite was one of the greatest possible platforms for what a unique talent Colman is. Clarisse Loughrey
Richard E Grant wins hearts, even if he doesn't win awards
No one has enjoyed awards season more than Richard E Grant. The 62-year-old star of Can You Ever Forgive Me? was, in his own words, “granted temporary membership to the A-list fame club” after the role earned him an Oscar nomination. Given the adorable viral video he posted in reaction to the nod, the countless selfies with every Hollywood actor he comes across, and the interviews in which he’s grinning ear to ear, it’s clear Grant decided to grab the opportunity with both hands.
He didn’t grab the Oscar, though. That honour, predictably, went to Mahershala Ali for his role as jazz pianist Don Shirley in the somewhat controversial Green Book. Ali is brilliant, of course – just look at his previous Oscar-winning role in Barry Jenkins’ Moonlight – but wouldn’t it have been wonderful if Grant had managed to pull off a surprise victory? This was his first ever nomination, 32 years after he was snubbed for his iconic role in Withnail and I, and he plays Jack Hock – the playful, conniving, antagonistic friend to Melissa McCarthy’s Lee Israel – like no one else could. Alexandra Pollard
Although Green Book walked away with Best Picture, the film with the most wins of the night was Bohemian Rhapsody. It’s news that will also come as a significant disappointment to many. Alongside three wins in the technical categories – for Best Sound Mixing, Best Film Editing, and Best Sound Editing – Rami Malek also picked up Best Actor for his role as Freddie Mercury.
The film, however, has been argued by many to be nothing but a karaoke-style paean to Queen, with many critics picking up on how the film downplays the AIDS crisis of the 1980s - Mercury was diagnosed with HIV in 1986 and died of AIDS-related bronchopneumonia in 1991 - and Mercury’s sexuality. Indeed, the film focuses solely on Mercury’s relationship with Mary Austin (played in the film by Lucy Boynton), leaving his relationship with Jim Hutton (Aaron McCusker), who was with Mercury until his death, as an epilogue untold, leading to accusations that the project “straight-washes” or “de-queers” its subject.
It should be mentioned, crucially, that Academy voters made their decision in the light of the allegations facing Bohemian Rhapsody’s director, Bryan Singer. Last month, The Atlantic published multiple accusations that Singer had sexually abused underage boys. The director denies all allegations. That the Academy sees fit to reward the film in any way has, inevitably, made a statement about how the film industry reckons with the work of alleged abusers. Clarisse Loughrey
The Academy takes two steps forward for diversity, one step back
Four years on from the #OscarsSoWhite controversy, and two years since the Academy took steps to rectify its predominantly white, male demographic by inviting 774 new members, it’s clear that progress has been made. Regina King won Best Supporting Actress for her role in If Beale Street Could Talk, BlackKklansman director Spike Lee finally won an Oscar after decades of snubs, and Black Panther’s costume designer Ruth Carter, and its production designer Hannah Beachler, both became the first ever African American winners in their categories.
Still, the fact that there are still firsts like these in 2019 is a pretty sorry state of affairs – and the fact that the night ended with Green Book, with all its problematic racial politics, winning Best Picture shows there is still work to be done. Alexandra Pollard
See all the action as it happened below.
You can find a full list of winners here.
"To be standing here, representing one of the greatest artists of all time, James Baldwin, is a little surreal," says King.
She says she's an example of what happens when support and love are poured into someone, and thanks her mother who is in the audience.
Maya Rudolph, Tina Fey, and Amy Poehler arrived to the stage to present Best Supporting Actress, while also providing tonight’s equivalent of the opening monologue. Begging the question: why weren’t they the hosts for tonight? The Oscars got so close to finding the ideal combination and stopped just short , because somehow the prospect of three of America’s finest talents actually getting to deliver fantastic, silly, and not-even-unnecessarily-cruel jokes – like “Hey Chadwick Boseman, Wakanda plans you got later” and revealing there were the cheese sandwiches from Fyre Festival under everyone’s seats – isn’t good enough because they…. didn’t have any controversial tweets that could be dug up right before the ceremony? Clarisse Loughrey
Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images
Dame Helen Mirren and Jason Momoa are presenting the next Oscar for Best Documentary Feature. Free Solo, Of Fathers and Son, RBG, Hale County this Morning, this Evening, and Minding the Gap are the nominees.
Tina Fey dissed the failed Fyre festiva at the beginning of the ceremonyl: "Hey everybody, look under your seats. you're all getting one of those cheese sandwiches from the Fyre festival!"
Free Solo marks another expected win, thanks to its exhilarating depiction of rock climber Alex Honnold’s quest to perform a free solo climb of El Capitan in June 2017. However, there will be some undoubtedly upset that Bing Liu’s Minding the Gap lost out, thanks to its ability to find great emotional depth in the story of a friendship between three skateboarders. Clarisse Loughrey
Given that Bohemian Rhapsody is a celebration (albeit an eminently flawed one) of the unique brilliance of Freddie Mercury, there’s something a little sad about watching a Queen performance without him. Adam Lambert stomped, glared and crooned as best as he could during tonight’s medley, but no one can fill Freddie’s shoes. Still, apparently Brian May and Roger Taylor once told the former American Idol contestant, "'If Freddie was here with us still, you guys would get a big kick out of each other." So perhaps he would have approved. Alexandra Pollard
Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images
Regina King kicks off tonight’s proceedings in exactly the right direction. She was the favourite in the category (ironically, ahead of the actual stars of The Favourite, Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz) and will be one of the few categories Barry Jenkins’s sublime If Beale Street Could Talk can actually win in, with Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Original Score also in with a possible shot. Clarisse Loughrey
Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images
King described her win as "a little surreal". "James Baldwin birthed this baby" she said, before adding: "I'm an example of what it looks like when support and love is poured into someone."
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