For
Immediate Release
December 15, 2004
OSCAR® TO
MUSICALS: DROP DEAD, STEP LIVELY
Academy Awards Eliminates Original Musical Category
Los Angeles -- The
Academy's Board of Governors last night voted to eliminate the Original
Musical category despite the fact that there were the requisite number
of eligible films according to the Academy's own rules. This decision
was based on the Academy's arbitrary assessment that the films were
not up to Academy standards of quality.
"It's an outrage,"
said filmmaker and Slamdance Film Festival co-founder (and author of
this release) Dan Mirvish, who would have been a potential nominee for
two of the five eligible films. "I have a great deal of respect
for the Academy, but this decision was disingenuous at best, and arbitrary
and capricious at worst. The Academy is a huge stickler for the rules
when it comes to filmmakers following them, but it's clearly disregarded
the spirit and letter of its own rules because it suited them. You can't
score if the ref keeps moving the goalpost."
The five eligible
films were "Home on the Range", "Team America,"
"Greendale" (directed by Neil Young), "Open House"
(directed, co-written, and co-produced by Mirvish), and "Big in
Germany" (co-written and co-produced by Mirvish, with director
Robert Peters). According to the Academy's rules, three of these five
films would have received nominations.
"It's clear
that the Board of Governors looked at the slate and were unduly embarrassed.
The Academy has simply not recognized the strides of independent filmmaking.
The prospect of nominating a film made for less than the price of an
Oscar gift bag made them squeamish. And the two studio films were a
Disney flop and a puppet movie that skewered Hollywood. You think they
really wanted Trey Parker showing up in a dress again?" said Mirvish.
"Yet for the last four months, staffers at the Academy have been
telling me in no uncertain terms that as long we followed the exact
letter of the eligibility rules, that if there were five films - no
matter their size or quality - then there would be a category."
The five films are
still eligible for other categories, including Best Original Song. "Open
House" is submitting the song "Sellin' a Dream," performed
by Oscar-nominee Sally Kellerman (M*A*S*H) and Jerry Doyle, and written
by Lawrence Maddox and Dan Mirvish. The song, like all the songs in
the film, was performed live, on set, without predubbing or lipsyncing.
At festival screenings around the world, the song has been consistently
hailed by audiences and critics alike. Chris Gore of FilmThreat wrote:
"Kellerman is simply on fire in this film as her performance brought
hoots and applause."
Mirvish remarked,
"It's no secret that Robert and I made 'Big in Germany' largely
to fill out the category in case there weren't enough films. Now it
appears that no matter how many indie films we would have made, the
Academy wasn't going to recognize them."
"Since 'Chicago'
won multiple Oscars two years ago, there's been a lot of talk in Hollywood
about the return of the musical," added Mirvish. "So if the
Academy is serious about promoting musicals, then they would have stepped
up and supported this category as a challenge to Hollywood." The
Academy's rules for Original Musical require at least five original
songs for each film, and state that stage adaptations and films based
on previously recorded songs aren't eligible. Therefore, "Phantom
of the Opera," "Ray," "Delovely" and "Beyond
the Sea" would not have been eligible even under the broadest reading
of the rules. The rule has been in place since 2001, but this is the
first year that there have been five eligible films.
For more information,
contact Dan Mirvish at 310-839-2569 or 323-304-3593 (cel) or via email
at dmirvish@slamdance.com. For more on "Open House," including
hi-res stills, production notes, and an mp3 and mpeg of "Sellin'
a Dream" go to: http://www.slamdance.com/mirvish/open.html
Screeners and soundtrack CDs are also available upon request.
--
# # # --