View Full Version : Selma Movie not on the Oscars list: is it more Block on Black Actors
arista
19-01-2015, 07:31 PM
M. L. K. Movie Selma
British Black Actor
on Ch4HD News
saying how bad it is.
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/01/19/24D30C2400000578-2915775-image-a-37_1421635690572.jpg
British Actor David Oyelowo with the Power Women Oprah Winfrey
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2915775/Oprah-stars-Selma-march-hundreds-Alabama-honor-Martin-Luther-King-50-years-on.html
Its worse over here
Shaun
19-01-2015, 07:37 PM
I cannot stand the controversy about this.
I mean ignoring the fundamental truth here that the Oscars are meaningless and not remotely reflective of society on a whole - almost every time a 'black' movie has done well at the Oscars it's been because of a film that portrays them as victims, or involves slavery. 12 Years a Slave, the Help, the Blind Side, all recent examples of this kind of mediocre film getting OTT praise for tackling issues rather than the actual performance.
So I find it a bit hypocritical that movies like The Imitation Game or The Theory of Everything are getting criticised for so-called mediocrity (by people who've likely never seen Selma, or those two films) now.
I mean... I just cannot fathom how tiresome and boring it must be to take a list of award nominees and play "spot the minority", "are we all being represented?" games. Maybe the best 20 nominees were just all white. Sure, I agree that black actors need to be cast in more varied roles than is currently the case, but it's just a lose-lose situation really. If a black movie does well at the Oscars it's either because of an overbearing guilt-story or an overbearing "look at this white lady being nice to a black kid!!!" nonsense like the Blind Side
arista
19-01-2015, 07:39 PM
I cannot stand the controversy about this.
I mean ignoring the fundamental truth here that the Oscars are meaningless and not remotely reflective of society on a whole - almost every time a 'black' movie has done well at the Oscars it's been because of a film that portrays them as victims, or involves slavery. 12 Years a Slave, the Help, the Blind Side, all recent examples of this kind of mediocre film getting OTT praise for tackling issues rather than the actual performance.
So I find it a bit hypocritical that movies like The Imitation Game or The Theory of Everything are getting criticised for so-called mediocrity (by people who've likely never seen Selma, or those two films) now.
I mean... I just cannot fathom how tiresome and boring it must be to take a list of award nominees and play "spot the minority", "are we all being represented?" games. Maybe the best 20 nominees were just all white. Sure, I agree that black actors need to be cast in more varied roles than is currently the case, but it's just a lose-lose situation really. If a black movie does well at the Oscars it's either because of an overbearing guilt-story or an overbearing "look at this white lady being nice to a black kid!!!" nonsense like the Blind Side
The Oscar man Live on Ch4HDnews
is saying its just a error nothing more
arista
06-02-2015, 05:54 PM
They
are now saying it was not up for any awards
because he was a British Black Actor
Tom4784
06-02-2015, 07:27 PM
David Oyelowo certainly deserved a Best Actor nod, it's a crime that he was snubbed yet complete rubbish like American Sniper got nods when it's nothing but mediocre. I still don't understand why Bradley Cooper was nominated for Best Actor when his performance was nothing special at all.
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