Why The Artist Will Win Best Picture at the Oscars

Categories: Film, Hollywood

To say that only Harvey Weinstein could land a Best Picture Oscar for a silent film, as he is expected to do Sunday for The Artist, is more than just a reflection of the mogul's resurgent power of persuasion over Academy members -- it's actually true. A silent film has not taken top honors since the very first Academy Awards, held in May 1929 and honoring movies released between Aug. 1, 1927, and July 31, 1928, and at that first ceremony, there was no prize called Best Picture. The prize won that night by William Wellman's silent war film Wings was called Best Production, while F.W. Murnau's silent Sunrise took home the Best Unique and Artistic Picture trophy, an award conceived by the Academy's founding body to be just as exalted as Best Production, but to specifically honor creative innovation. That art-over-commerce prize was dropped immediately.

Harvey's unique gifts aside, The Artist wouldn't have captured the imagination of the industry if it didn't also speak to its anxiety du jour. For all of the silliness surrounding them, the Oscars are valuable as an indication of how Hollywood feels about itself in the given moment. This year, The Artist is not the best movie in the Best Picture field, but it is the best reflection of both the moment Hollywood finds itself in (facing a massive technology-driven industry transformation) and of why the Academy was created to begin with (to help the industry's powerful elite survive a massive technology-driven industry transformation). The Artist, then, isn't any silent film; it's a silent film that transforms a real, historical Hollywood crisis into a fairy tale, complete with a happy ending depicting the industry emerging from that crisis ever stronger. It's a fairy tale that Hollywood currently desperately needs to hear.

The Artist begins in 1927, the same year the Academy was conceived by MGM honcho Louis B. Mayer, who pitched the industry's elite that strength in numbers could help Hollywood survive two significant predicaments: heat from the morality police, which was increasing in intensity as the celebrity gossip media expanded; and the rapidly escalating transition to talkies. At the same time, studio chiefs were smarting from a recent wave of unionization, and Mayer's desire to consolidate power at the top of the industry later would be read as a move to protect his own bottom line by staving off further labor organization. The actual handing out of awards came later, as a PR move, an attempt to take the industry's product, dismissed by some as a degenerate fad, and rebrand it as an art form worthy of canonization and preservation.

John Goodman playing a Louis B. Mayer-like studio mogul in The Artist
Over the next few years, studio heads like Mayer (represented by the mogul played by John Goodman in The Artist) took advantage of the change in technology and their consolidated power to cut salaries, renegotiate contracts and generally eliminate squeaky wheels. As The Artist dramatizes, well-fed older players were shipped out, and cheap "fresh meat" was brought in. A typical performer's contract in the early days of talkies included a rider "approved by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences," which gave a producer the right to record and reproduce an actor's voice infinitely, and didn't require payment for audio tests and retakes. These were just some of the ways in which AMPAS, as Anthony Holden writes in Behind the Oscar: A Secret History of the Academy Awards, served to "protect the studio bosses' muscle against rebellious technicians, and to keep talent in its place."

The Artist dramatizes the flexing of that muscle in a way that ultimately and cheerfully endorses the subservient relationship of the talent to the producer/studio. When the Goodman character fires Valentin, the star defiantly pledges to strike out on his own. "I'll make a great movie," he says. "And it's not like I need you for that." The rest of the narrative essentially proves him wrong: If Valentin wants to make a movie that anyone cares about, he needs to do it with a studio. That we're supposed to accept his film-closing rebirth as an Astaire-esque dancing movie star -- contracted by the same mogul who all but left him for dead -- as a happy ending and not a humiliation, is a baffling turn of events, if we're also supposed to sympathize with his plight as an independent artist. The Artist, then, is a film in which an iconoclast hits rock bottom by staying true to himself, and learns via near-death experience to embrace conformity.

Falling in line was unquestionably the order of the day. By 1930, the year of the second Oscars (and the year in The Artist when Valentin's passion project flops), the Academy was sponsoring training seminars called "sound schools," designed to baptize huge numbers of technicians in the latest technology -- increasing the speed of the transition, and decreasing the chance that one studio could hold a significant technical (and thus, commercial) advantage over another. The conversion to the new was made total, and anyone who didn't follow was left behind. The Artist dramatizes this trauma of being outpaced by technology as the reluctant Valentin must adapt to the new by exorcising his silent film past before he's allowed to skip to the all-singing, all-dancing future.

Jean Dujardin as silent film star George Valentin (left), with Bérénice Bejo
Like Singin' in the Rain, a film to which it's often compared, The Artist is an example of the kind of mythic history Hollywood tells about itself in order to promote its own survival in times of trouble. When Rain was released in 1952, studios were struggling to adapt to both a 1948 court order that forced the studios to give up ownership and management of movie theaters, and the growing lure of television. The Artist has been released into a similar period of transition, as celluloid technology is being replaced by digital, and theater attendance is threatened by the habits of a new generation born into an on-demand world. If the Oscars truly are Hollywood's way of telling us what it's thinking about itself, then the dominance of The Artist reflects the paranoid uncertainty of a contemporary movie industry barreling toward an uncertain future, and looking to the past for reassurance.

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kobe frome
kobe frome

Fascinating to read up on the historical circumstances of the Academy and industry politics, thank you (so I can skip the books:P) However they are every bit as specific as The Artist paints its producer-star/performer in broad brushstrokes, with only the individual interactions being highly specific. 

If we are to read the return to employment under Zimmer as surrendering to industry, an indentured servant in historical conditions you cite, then we also have to consider that Valentin was never a free agent from the start: when he made A Russian Affair, A German Affair and the swashbuckler with Napoleon cameo (!), ALL under Zimmer! 

Valentin isn't some Pickford-Fairbanks-Chaplin figure who called his own shots at his own United Artists. Just because he is partly based on Fairbanks Sr., the film's specific plotting still makes him a contractual employee. The Zimmer figure is there as an abstraction to an extent providing narrative conflict intersecting with his love and work life, not documentary mindfully alluding to the producer-actor struggle specifically: but simply abstraction of the long-shot viewpoint of "new in; old out." This generalization is why some viewers are able to identify with the simple premise: it is the universal rite of passage, for all people of a certain age and position in technology-driven field.

And a "fairy tale" is up to one's own discretion of definition: one can say Valentin traded in suicide, for a MUCH smaller profile as a hoofer (not really Astaire-level skills or stardom either) who now works alongside a woman rather than saves her, as a daring-doo hero he used to be. He is no longer an one-man show, but part of an entire production process, the current of history at that juncture in time. "Conformity" seems too historically driven reading of the plot, since Zimmer is shown frequently undercut by whoever happened to be the bankrolling star at the moment: Valentin when he's on top could keep an extra Zimmer just fired; Peppy when she's on top could strongarm Zimmer into giving the script to a has-been who's been forgotten by the public. If anything, Artist is showing power was up for grabs within its own limited universe of abstracting different interest groups, all of whom answering to the ultimate: whatever made money with audiences.

It's logical argument that Oscar showered on Artist as an industry picked its desired image, but the product in question is much looser in actual content, to the point you can even draw up another lengthy piece about the tension between French and American cultures and the neutralization (lots of awards going both ways over this movie, and sales over other movie deals) of The Artist's "problematic identity" by Oscarizing it.

John Bengtson
John Bengtson

 I've created a series of five blog posts about the historic studio and film location connections between The Artist (2011), and Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Buster Keaton, and Harold Lloyd. Keaton's debut short One Week and The Artist were filmed on the same studio block. Other scenes from The Artist were filmed across the street from where Chaplin filmed The Kid. Here is a link to the first of the five. http://silentlocations.wordpre...

D_d_stanley
D_d_stanley

The Artist IS the best picture this year!!! Far better than any of the other movies nominated. It has it all! Good story, sympathetic characters and wonderful casting. In one word its; magical!I've seen it twice already and I could easily see it 10 times more.

Liz Coopersmith
Liz Coopersmith

"The Artist, then, is a film in which an iconoclast hits rock bottom by staying true to himself, and learns via near-death experience to embrace conformity."Oh, see, I don't agree with that. He wasn't embracing conformity, he realized he had to re-invent himself in order to continue working. Actors, producers, writers do this all the time. The producer character didn't fire him because he didn't like him, he fired him because Valentin wouldn't make the movies that were making money. It was well-established in the movie that Valentin was a great presence, was very popular, his only problem, was that he wouldn't change with the times. Staying true to himself meant making movies that no one wanted to see at that point. Whatever artistic expression the movie industry provides, it is, in the end, an INDUSTRY. For good or bad, It is a consumer-desire driven business with a bottom-line.

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