Oscars 2014: The long, expensive road to Academy Award glory and the tips
for successful campaigning
Campaigning for an Oscar has never been so costly or complex. As this year’s
awards race reaches its final stretch, Tom Teodorczuk tells us how it’s done
Published on January 26, 2014 in independent.co.uk
By Tom Teodorczuk
"I have to go to Washington to show the film to President Obama.” So said
Leonardo DiCaprio 10 minutes after his arrival at a Wolf of Wall Street Oscar
campaign lunch in a New York restaurant in December. As excuses go, it wasn’t
bad. It’s not known what the President made of this epic folly of fiscal excess
but it picked up five Academy Award nominations earlier this month. And news
that the White House would be watching the much-debated film can’t have harmed
its awards allure.
Welcome to the annual Oscars race: this year I’ve seen at close quarters the
ways leading filmmakers and actors maximise their chances of glory. The
consensus is that this year’s build-up has been the most interesting in years,
with most awards still lacking an overwhelming favourite. But how did the main
contenders get to be in the running? Here’s the lowdown on how to run a 21st
century Oscar campaign.
Get your timings right
The typical Oscar campaign these days is a six-month slow-burn, kicking off in
August and September when contenders screen at one or more of the Venice,
Telluride and Toronto film festivals, as was the case with the last six Best
Picture winners. Next, the hopefuls open in limited release while the feverish
lobbying of academy members begins with “For Your Consideration” adverts in
industry publications, lunches, dinners and screenings on East and West Coast.
“The studios now view a campaign as a strategic exercise in empowering academy
members to become advocates on behalf of their picture,” says Hollywood PR
consultant Bumble Ward.
Distributors roll the films out on a wide release only once they have bet on
awards word-of-mouth reaching the general public. Take 12 Years a Slave, the
narrow Best Picture favourite. It originally opened in the US on 18 October in
19 cinemas, before expanding in November; then, post-nominations, it was given
another push, and this weekend is playing in 1,231 cinemas. “With this
attention, people will go to see the movie,” director Steve McQueen told me at a
lunch for the film at Manhattan’s 21 Club. “We don’t have a lot of money for
promotion. We can’t put a big billboard on Sunset Strip.”
Take a look at the films they're talking about
Another tactic used by higher-profile contenders is to bypass the festival
season and opt instead for an aggressive December launch – the idea being that
they can rely on making an immediate splash, and that academy members will have
them freshly in mind when voting. Such an approach reaped dividends this year
for leading nominees The Wolf of Wall Street and American Hustle, with the
latter benefiting from a particularly starry ensemble, including actress du jour
Jennifer Lawrence.
Show them the money
The quest to win an Oscar doesn’t come cheap. Spending varies for each film but
the average cost for a campaign is $5m ($3m on advertising and marketing and $2m
on entertainment and travel costs). Money doesn’t necessarily buy awards glory,
though. Two of this year’s big spenders were the Coens’ Inside Llewyn Davis and
making-of-Mary Poppins drama Saving Mr Banks: the former staged two elaborate
folk concerts showcasing music from the film while the latter held an evening of
Poppins songs at LA’s Polo Lounge – yet the former received two minor
nominations and the latter just one.
However, you need to cough up cash to have a fighting chance as proven by the
number of acclaimed indie films that, despite early buzz, don’t end up getting
much love. This year, that fate befell Robert Redford sea-survival drama All is
Lost, with Redford blaming insufficient campaigning and distribution on the part
of studio Lionsgate for his perceived snub in the Best Actor category. Smaller
films need big promotional campaigns to get on to the radar of the members of
the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (to give it its full title). Yet
unless their productions pick up consistent nominations on the pre-Oscars awards
circuit, smaller studios won’t gamble on expensive marketing, instead hoping
that enough academy members watch their film of their own volition when they
receive it in the post – something that doesn’t happen as much as it should.
“The deep, dark secret is that a lot of academy members don’t watch a lot of the
movies,” says Scott Feinberg, Awards Analyst at The Hollywood Reporter. “To get
them to watch the movies is the biggest challenge.”
Remember it’s political
The Oscars race is akin to an election campaign: you create an appealing message
for your film to solicit votes without saying anything indiscreet. Steve Coogan,
nominated this year for Best Adapted Screenplay for Philomena, concurs: “You’ve
got to be really on your toes because the subject matter of this film [about the
Irish Catholic Church’s “adopted baby” scandal] is contentious to some people.
It’s as much about avoiding banana skins [as anything else]. So far, I’m still
standing up.” Oscar tactician Harvey Weinstein made the relationship between
politics and campaigning explicit last year by calling on Stephanie Cutter,
President Obama’s former Deputy Campaign Manager, to help promote Silver Linings
Playbook. She was alleged to have been paid to tweet about the comedy and flag
it up as “politically significant” for its treatment of mental health issues;
this year she has been tweeting positively about the Weinstein Company’s
Philomena.
Meanwhile, why not go one better and get the Prez himself on your team? In
recent years, key Oscar hopefuls such as Lincoln, The Help and Mandela: Long
Walk to Freedom have enjoyed official White House screenings. Though in November
a story suggested the President was cutting back on these high-profile events in
order to stay out of Oscar politics: indeed, Leo DiCaprio left his
aforementioned lunch early to present the leader of the free world with a
screener, not watch the film with him.
Then there are the dirty tricks, with rivals purportedly orchestrating whisper
campaigns against each other. This year, much mud was slung at Saving Mr Banks
over its supposedly cleaned-up portrayals of both Mary Poppins author P L
Travers and Walt Disney, with matters coming to a head at the National Board of
Review Awards, when Meryl Streep shocked attendees by calling Disney racist and
sexist while presenting an award to star Emma Thompson. Thompson, long expected
to be a Best Actress nominee, was a surprise omission. As in politics,
contenders are not always entirely scrupulous in their assertions. Actor Michael
Fassbender publicly vowed to eschew campaigning this year and yet a PR
consultant that I spoke to spotted him “working the room” at the Bafta Tea Party
in California held on the eve of the Golden Globes. Fassbender received a Best
Supporting Actor nod for 12 Years a Slave.
Expect the unexpected
So, you’ve landed the nomination and you’re riding a wave of buzz – but watch
out for the mistake that could derail you in the final stretch. One Oscar
campaign consultant highlights the case of Dallas Buyers Club stars Matthew
McConaughey and Jared Leto, who were criticised for not mentioning Aids in their
victorious Golden Globes speeches; minutes after they received Oscar
nominations, however, they paid tribute to Aids victims on the film’s Facebook
page.
At this point too, more whimsical narratives can play on academy members’ minds.
Jeffrey Wells, who writes the industry blog Hollywood Elsewhere, thinks this is
why, in the Best Actor category, the long-favoured Chiwetel Ejiofor might
eventually miss out for his harrowing performance in 12 Years a Slave. “Both
Matthew McConaughey and Bruce Dern [nominated for Nebraska] have excellent
personal stories that resonate,” he says. “McConaughey is saying after almost
going under by being in all those stupid romcoms, ‘you too can change and make a
difference’. Dern is saying after years of playing supporting roles he finally
gets to be the lead – ‘you too can be the leader in your own life’.”
As to who will win Best Picture? 12 Years a Slave is still favourite but film
journalist and awards pundit Anne Thompson thinks American Hustle could clinch
it. “[It’s] nominated for all four acting awards which is a sign of extreme
strength since the actors’ branch of the academy is by far the biggest.”
After this strategic whirlwind, the ceremony itself, this year on 2 March, will
come as a relief to those in contention. When I asked Steve McQueen whether he
was looking forward to it, he replied: “My wife is going to be wearing a nice
dress so I’m very happy about that!”
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/oscars-2014-the-long-expensive-road-to-academy-award-glory-and-the-tips-for-successful-campaigning-9082711.html