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Sunday, 17 March, 2002 Campaign For Oscar Votes Takes 'Ugly' Turn Mike O'Sullivan Los Angeles 16 Mar 2002 11:58 UTC
As readers open up film industry publications, they are greeted with full-page ads for Oscar-nominated pictures, introduced by the words "for your consideration." The ads also appear in local newspapers. Targeted are
the 5700 members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences who will
select this year's winners of Academy Awards.
"I take my vote very seriously," he says. " And everyone I know gets their ballot and pays real attention and tries to live up to the responsibility." This year, says
Mr. Howard, the campaign to reach Oscar voters took an ugly turn after stories
appeared on the Internet and in a New York gossip column accusing the subject
of his film, mathematician John Nash, of making anti-Semitic statements and of
abandoning an illegitimate child. Internet columnist Matt Drudge also said the
movie ignores incidents suggesting Mr. Nash is homosexual. As the controversy
developed, it was reported in the mainstream media.
Mr. Nash and his wife said the same thing in a recent interview to be aired on CBS Television, according to remarks released by the network before the broadcast. No one in Hollywood is sure where the stories originated, but suspicion falls on the studios that are promoting rival films in this year's Oscar competition. Officials at Miramax, a competing studio known for aggressive Oscar campaigning, denied any connection with the attacks. Director Howard says, whoever is responsible, this year's Oscar competition has borrowed a page from the negative campaigns of politics. "In our case,
John Nash is 72-years-old, he's alive, a noble figure who's endured a great
deal," says Mr. Howard. "For anyone to try to distort behaviors that are
reported to have occurred at the absolute height of his delusions, in the midst
of a hellish 35-year period of schizophrenia, is, I think, not doing the world
or John Nash or themselves any kind of service. I have no respect for that
whatsoever."
The actor says it is irresponsible to quote statements made by Mr. Nash at the height of his mental illness. "At some point, he thought he was a mouse. He also declared himself governor of Antarctica," explains Mr. Crowe. "This is a fellow who was getting messages from aliens through The New York Times. I mean, he was a very sick man." Director Ron Howard says it is fair to promote a film during the Oscar campaign if it is done without attacking other movies.
"It's a small
film, with a fairly small budget. It can't possibly compete in the marketplace
with the bigger films in terms of those enormous ads that they take out," she
says. "So our job as actors is very instrumental in simply getting people into
the theater."
"To see all the films is a hard thing for an Academy member. What you're trying to say to people is look at this film, if you haven't seen it on the big screen, then pop it in your video or get your dvd out and watch it and consider it," she says. Nicole Kidman says the purpose of the campaigning is to get movie academy members to make an informed decision as they cast their votes for the Oscars.
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