atonement, juno, Michael Clayton, No Country for Old Men, The Oscars, There Will Be Blood
atonement, juno, Michael Clayton, No Country for Old Men, The Oscars, There Will Be Blood

Top Oscar Contenders Flounder At Box Office

AP   |  CHRISTY LEMIRE   |   January 29, 2008 01:25 PM


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One film has an oblique ending that's left some viewers dissatisfied and others floored by its profundity. The other features a slowly developing plot and a brutal, operatically violent finale.

"No Country for Old Men" and "There Will Be Blood" are both gorgeous and bold, expertly crafted and intelligently acted. But most moviegoers have seen neither of them -- and they never will -- even though they're the two leading contenders for best picture at the Academy Awards.

Oscar-nominated films are often small, dark and unintended for mass audiences; they're about art, after all, not commerce. But that's especially true of this year's crop, which has little mainstream buzz and among the lowest box-office totals in recent years.

(The exception, of course, is the crowd-pleasing comedy "Juno," starring the hugely appealing Ellen Page as a quick-witted, pregnant teen. It had a budget of about $2.5 million and just crossed the $100 million mark at the box office. It is far and away the most financially successful of the five.)

Four of the movies nominated last week for best picture -- "Juno," "Michael Clayton," "No Country for Old Men" and "There Will Be Blood" -- got the so-called "Oscar bump" that comes from audiences checking them out the following weekend. (The sweeping romance "Atonement" dropped slightly.)

Still, they've only combined to make about $246.3 million domestically. In contrast, "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" already had grossed about $364 million all by itself by the time it won best picture in 2004.

In terms of ticket sales, about 7.3 million people have seen "No Country" (from Miramax and Paramount Vantage, a division of Viacom Inc.) and 2 million have seen "There Will Be Blood" (also from Paramount Vantage), compared with the approximately 51 million who saw the third "Rings" picture in theaters by Oscar night.

"I had someone ask me the other day, `Are academy voters out of touch in honoring these films that aren't popular with audiences?'" said Paul Dergarabedian, president of the box office tracker Media By Numbers. "But they're not supposed to be popular. They're honoring the cinematic merit of these films. (Or else) `Spider-Man 3' would have the most nominations. ...

"I always say it's either cinematic fast food or cinematic fine dining -- you pick what you want," Dergarabedian added. "And Oscar tends to honor the films that give a cinematic fine dining experience."

The 2006 nominees did a bit bitter with a cumulative gross of about $297 million, thanks largely to the winner, "The Departed," which ended up with more than $132 million. "The Departed" also had a revered director in Martin Scorsese and an all-star cast including Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon and Jack Nicholson.

The nominees from 2005 combined for about $245 million with the winner, the ensemble drama "Crash," making only about $55 million. But that year had huge buzz thanks to "Brokeback Mountain," the gay cowboy romance, which had America talking regardless of their interest in art-house films. The perceived front-runner until the moment the envelope was opened, it made $83 million.

But it's not just the contenders in the best picture category that are drawing specialized crowds. "Michael Clayton" is the only film with multiple acting nominations: for its star, George Clooney, and supporting actors Tom Wilkinson and Tilda Swinton. The suspenseful corporate thriller from first-time director Tony Gilroy has made a decent $41.5 million.

"Away From Her," which has made a best-actress front-runner of Julie Christie as a wife suffering from Alzheimer's disease, made just under $16 million in limited release last year. "La Vie en Rose," the Edith Piaf biopic, has grossed only about $10 million, despite a wildly heralded performance from best-actress nominee Marion Cotillard.

The languid Western "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford," with its creepy, nuanced supporting turn from nominee Casey Affleck, hasn't even made $4 million. And the experimental "I'm Not There," which features six different people playing various incarnations of Bob Dylan -- including supporting-actress nominee Cate Blanchett -- made just about $3.5 million in its limited run.

"They're not simple fare," said Boo Allen, a Dallas-based film critic and historian.

"The average moviegoer might hear that Brad Pitt is playing Jesse James, then they hear from someone who's seen it that it's two and a half hours long and very slow, it's more of a character study than a shoot 'em up, and it just doesn't touch a nerve," said Allen, who chose "La Vie en Rose" as his favorite film this season. "Something like `Juno,' that touches a nerve. You hear people say it's funny, it's about a teenager who gets pregnant. Jennifer Garner's in it, Jason Bateman's in it, the little girl's really funny. That lends itself to word of mouth and draws people in."

While they haven't exactly been boffo in terms of box office, this year's awards contenders are undeniably strong in terms of art. Veteran cinematographer Roger Deakins, who's up for two Oscars for "No Country" and "Jesse James," compared the nominees to the kinds of films that pushed boundaries in the 1970s.

"It's one of the best years because there's so many intelligent films that are provocative. They're actually about something as well as being entertaining," said Deakins, the longtime Coen brothers collaborator, who's also been nominated for the more mainstream "The Shawshank Redemption."

"It really makes you feel part of a real cinema," he added. "There's brilliant, brilliant people out there."

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- VivaZapata See Profile I'm a Fan of VivaZapata permalink

good commentary. hollywood can't be blamed for people's lack of appreciation of something other than a moronic chase scene or endless sword fights or the good old ratatattat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:51 PM on 01/30/2008
- blaze See Profile I'm a Fan of blaze permalink

I moved from Seattle to the far "sticks". One of the "I wish I hadn't done that moments" that I had was when I realized that most of the movies that I really want to see don't make it to the suburbs. I watch the blockbusters because the CGI and amazing action just works better on the big screen. I watch the "art" films on the big screen because I want to support the creators.
That said, let's please give the writers what they ask for. None of these movies would be worth anything without them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 01/30/2008
- Jella See Profile I'm a Fan of Jella permalink

Juno was a good movie, and worth the time and effort. Deep movies I usuually see at the non corporate theater that caters to indie films. I'd rather give my money to them.

I guess they need to put out trash like Meet the Spartans, in order to afford to make the better films the show up in award show nods. I then see the films at home via rentals.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:37 AM on 01/30/2008
- devilyousay See Profile I'm a Fan of devilyousay permalink

The Oscars aren't about Box Office Success. That's what the People's Choice Awards are indicative of.

The Oscars are about cinematic excellence and should stay that way.

What this article is missing is the truth. It's so misleading, much like Big Media Accounting, it's frightening.

Box office success is no longer dictated by domestic BO. It's dictated by International gate receipts. The Golden Compass, considered a fop in North America, has broken the $300 million mark and is a huge success overseas.

The Oscar nominated movies are going to make a large sum of money off DVD because the demographic that goes to them has the cash for great home theatre systems.

Ask Harvey Weinstein, who said the movies he was panned for in 2007 are making huge wads of cash on DVD.

Domesstic BO is becoming irrelevent and as downloads, DVD, and new media becomes the vanguard of distribution, it will mean even less.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 01/30/2008
- Waldimore See Profile I'm a Fan of Waldimore permalink

Anyone confused about what's going on in the presidential primary season need only visit here and read the comments posted. All these young people who want to be inspired the way young people were inspired by JFK in 1960 need to realize a couple of things: we were a generation who still had the attention span to sit through a serious, well-made movie and then discuss all the aspects of the story and the film's technical merits. (And I was in elementary school in 1960). It was easier to inspire a thoughtful generation who didn't need everything pre-packaged and spoonfed to them. Too many Americans only want to be 'entertained mindlessly.' I can watch SAW, Spiderman, The Wedding Crashers, Hitch, be scared or laugh myself silly and have a good time. But if that's ALL I had as a choice, that wouldn't be enough to keep a brain alive. It's scary to be living in a 'Dumb & Dumber' society.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:53 AM on 01/30/2008
- rbspickles See Profile I'm a Fan of rbspickles permalink

In the past 20 years, if the movie won the academy award for best picture, it sucked. They are boring, slow paced, or just a non event story line. Every since Out of Africa won, it's sucked year after year. Academy Award winner? That means boring as hell. Just because some megalomaniacs in LA want everyone to think they are smarter than the rest of us doesn't mean we have to listen to their "expert" opinions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 AM on 01/30/2008
- pennyfortheguy See Profile I'm a Fan of pennyfortheguy permalink

Okay; a high body-count flick where the heroine would be the elf-like mother-to-be of twins set in 2014 incorporating HK teams out of Halo3 sent to protect her as she makes her way to the big dance/stomp/aids benefit/rap-off held in an innocuous hood somewheres. A melding of what the masses are clamoring for, the vicariously bloodthirsty, horny little scamps.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 AM on 01/30/2008
- pennyfortheguy See Profile I'm a Fan of pennyfortheguy permalink

Americans are into keepin' it real...real dumb as Chris Rock'd say. These're intelligent, contemplative films. Seen them all, though I'd not consider myself as MENSA material. I think the fact that within one year three movies of this magnitude go begging for an audience says something about our collective cognitive process, appreciation of true art.
Therefore, viva 'SuperBad', the entire 'American Pie' collection and films of this stripe. Ah, to be an old codger.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:15 AM on 01/30/2008
- StanTheManic See Profile I'm a Fan of StanTheManic permalink

Most Americans' taste is in their mouths. You can actually HEAR this country getting dumber by the minute. If you tell me the top Oscar movies aren't doing well at the box office, I say 'can't wait until they play in my home town!'

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:12 AM on 01/30/2008
- iblinders See Profile I'm a Fan of iblinders permalink

Always said, never give firewater to an Indian.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 AM on 01/30/2008
- CFAmick See Profile I'm a Fan of CFAmick permalink

As much as I love NCFOM and want to see the others, they're not exactly uplifting. That's why I didn't see The Kingdom, Lions For Lambs, Grace Is Gone, In the Valley of Elah, and probably won't see Stop Loss. I'm watching this stuff in the news everyday, and it's depressing. Sometimes I just want to kick back with Jackass 2.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 AM on 01/30/2008
- mpgarr See Profile I'm a Fan of mpgarr permalink

I saw "There Will Be Blood" and found it to be a very good movie--definitely worthy of its OSCAR nominations---but it is not a movie that is going to attract the broad mass of movie goers---I am glad that filmakers still do make serious movies instead of so much of the throwaway movies that seem to be par for the course these days....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 AM on 01/30/2008
- pchdriver See Profile I'm a Fan of pchdriver permalink

No Country For Old Men was astonishing from start to finish -- my favorite of the bunch. Michael Clayton and Juno were both stellar, too.

The other two are a little more problematic. The first act of Atonement was sublime, gorgeous, but the narrative lost its way...what works in a novel, structurally, doesn't always translate well to cinema. And though There Will Be Blood had marvelous elements, it lacked the tension needed to sustain and drive its 3-hour length. But, wow, what a final scene!

Some great movie-going lately...everything from Lars and the Real Girl to Superbad to The Diving Bell and the Butterfly. It's been a brilliant season for film.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 PM on 01/29/2008
- sagopalm See Profile I'm a Fan of sagopalm permalink

Some people go to the movies to be entertained. Others go to appreciate the art of film making. Many go for both.
And sometimes the two are combined.
The Academy Awards in my view are designed to accommodate both. Some of the grand movie events of all time have won and some have not.
Great art has the ability to stand the test of time. Great films do as well. A great Klimt painting for instance will never be mistaken for Thomas Kincaid (or, in many circles even uttered in the same breath).
The Academy nominated The Towering Inferno for Best Picture in the early 70s, surely a black eye for the category. I mean, honestly can anyone actually sit through that entire movie from beginning to end? It was fun at the time but, it doesn't stand up. It's a dated, glorified tv movie at best. You don't have to be a critic or auteur to be able to see that.
I enjoy the Oscars and most movies nominated are of higher quality. The academy does have the presence of mind not to nominate garbage like Jackass...although I laughed my ass off!The winners are not always the best art but are usually films that will be appreciated for years to come.
Movies like No Country For Old Men, Brokeback Mountain and Raging Bull will be recognized for decades. Shrek the 3rd is not likely to be.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 PM on 01/29/2008
- SimplySimon See Profile I'm a Fan of SimplySimon permalink

Screw art! Give me entertainment that makes sense. Give me "Juno" and forget the rest. I must be brain dead even though I have 5 films at MoMA and dozens at MoT&R, I don't get the Coen brothers, ever. I thought "old Men.." (and I am an old man) sucked! The author Cormac McCarthy is harsher than rot gut whiskey and more cynical and depressing than Kubrick and that's saying something.

Entertainment, a trip to the moon on gossamer wings, is not just bloody acting, cute accents or slick style; it's a symphony with related themes. Most of this crap is like kids punching each other on the arm to see who can take pain and smile through the tears.

And there's a better Jesse James story out there--he may not have died in 1872 and the Fords may have been James' relatives. Hollywood is about box office not art and there ain't no Orsen Welles in this bunch, thank you very much.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 PM on 01/29/2008
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