LOS ANGELES – Was it ultimately a race about race?
The best picture Oscar is meant to honor the year’s greatest achievement in film, and “12 Years a Slave” had no shortage of supporters before winning the top honor last weekend. But for all the film’s artistry, the undercurrent of many “12 Years a Slave” conversations hinged on race and how Hollywood has for decades given short shrift to one of the most inglorious chapters in the nation’s history.
The film’s distributor anchored its awards campaign around the line “It’s time,” easily interpreted as an attempt to exhort members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences into voting for the movie because it was the right thing to do.
The film’s director, British filmmaker Steve McQueen, said repeatedly during the long awards season that Hollywood appeared more comfortable making Holocaust movies than slavery stories. And in her opening monologue, Oscar host Ellen DeGeneres even joked that if McQueen’s telling of the enslavement of Solomon Northup didn’t take the top Academy Award, voters could be branded as “racists.”
Whether or not Oscar voters were motivated by fear of looking racially insensitive, or to correct a perceived historical wrong, can never be known. But one top Oscar strategist said that Academy Awards voters have a long history of honoring movies that take on the subject of race relations.
“Look at ‘A Soldiers Story,’ ‘In the Heat of the Night,’ ‘Ray,’ ‘Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner’ and ‘Sounder,’” said Tony Angellotti, reeling off the names of films that collectively garnered 30 Oscar nominations with nine wins. “This kind of socially aware vote for a movie that spotlights racism is rooted in the academy’s DNA.”
All the same, two Oscar voters privately admitted that they didn’t see “12 Years a Slave,” thinking it would be upsetting. But they said they voted for it anyway because, given the film’s social relevance, they felt obligated to do so.
In winning the best picture honor, “12 Years a Slave” became the first feature directed by a black man to collect the definitive Academy Award, capping a remarkable year for people of color in Hollywood. The Kenyan actress Lupita Nyong’o from “12 Years a Slave” won for supporting actress, “Gravity” filmmaker Alfonso Cuaron became the first Latino to win the directing Oscar and “20 Feet From Stardom,” a look at African-American back-up singers, was named top documentary feature.
Even if they didn’t win any Oscars, 2013’s most acclaimed films included the civil rights tale “Lee Daniels’ The Butler,” the Jackie Robinson story “42” and the South African biography “Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom.”
Though most Oscar ceremonies carry a bit of suspense, the tension inside the Dolby Theatre on Sunday night was palpably different.
Would “Gravity,” an apolitical thriller about a space accident, return to earth with the best picture? Or would Oscar voters endorse “12 Years a Slave,” a film that many feared was so unsettling they put off viewing it until the last moment, if they watched it at all? Or as DeGeneres said in her opening monologue, “Possibility No. 1, ‘12 Years a Slave’ wins best picture. Possibility No. 2, you’re all racists.”
When Will Smith opened the envelope and announced the winner, there was almost an air of relief inside the cavernous theater before the A-listers and others rose as one in applause.
“I think the African-American community is glad the film was chosen as best picture because that is a validation of African-American history and the pain and suffering within that history, and the survival of that history,” said Brenda Stevenson, who teaches African-American history a UCLA. “In that way, it does help to heal.”
Stevenson, who teaches parts of Northup’s memoir in undergraduate and graduate courses, said that “12 Years a Slave’s” win is a milestone in part because the award proves that a story illuminating the horrors of antebellum slavery can “resonate with a large audience.”
Made for $22 million (with rebates reducing its final cost to close to $18 million), the film has grossed more than $50 million in domestic release, and its Oscar glory will undoubtedly boost its box office prospects, even though it’s set to be released on DVD this week. Executives at distributor Fox Searchlight believe the Oscar victories could bring several million dollars more in ticket sales.
Minutes after “12 Years a Slave” collected the best picture statuette, McQueen was asked about the significance of his victory nearly 75 years after “Gone With the Wind,” which had a decidedly more romanticized view of slavery, took the same honor.
“Well, it obviously is a mark of development,” McQueen said backstage. “The background characters are now in the foreground, and their history, and their lives – how they lived – are being recognized in a way more than before. And I think it’s indicative of what’s going on now. I think people are ready for this narrative.”
Hollywood, however, has shown scant interest in making movies about the black experience. It took the producers of “Lee Daniels’ The Butler” two years to raise the funds to make the movie, cobbling together its budget from an array of investors. Producer Thomas Tull spent as much time trying to make “42.” And River Road Entertainment and New Regency Pictures bankrolled the bulk of “12 Years a Slave” after distributor Fox Searchlight initially passed on backing it.
As McQueen sees it, support for movies like his arrives gradually, and he understands why movie studios have been more willing to explore the inhumanity committed by Nazis than past citizens of the United States.
Slavery, the director said a few days before the Oscars, was “horrendous, violent, vicious, nasty” and “it’s understandable that people had difficulty coming to terms with it or visualizing it via cinema. But now I feel people are receptive. People now are wanting to engage in that history in order to go forward more than any other time. Possibly because there’s a black president, possibly because last year when the movie came out was the 50th anniversary of the civil rights march on Washington and the ‘I Have a Dream’ speech.”
As Brad Pitt, one of the winners of the best picture Oscar put it backstage, “At the end of the day we just hope that this film remains a gentle reminder that we’re all equal. We want dignity and opportunity for ourselves and our family, and that another’s freedom is every bit as important as our own. That’s it. That’s everything.”
Send questions/comments to the editors.
Comments are no longer available on this story