INDULGENCE, COMPLACENCY, AND ARTISTIC PURGATORY
For example why did no one question Alexander Payne in casting Matt Damon in Downsizing, or in fact question the entire second act of Downsizing? Is it because he had a pretty respectable in Sideways, Election, Nebraska, and The Descendants? He certainly also had some flops with Gray Matters and I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry. Or why did no one question George Clooney AND the Coen Brothers for their horrible mess Suburbicon (also starring… Matt Damon) which utterly failed as a social commentary AND as a film (more on that here).
Or most egregiously, why did no one stand up to Steven Spielberg and go: “The Post could be amazing if you took more risks with it.” However because he’s Spielberg no one bothered and as a result nothing about it is particularly envelope pushing, it’s typical awards bait. Meryl Streep has a few moments in it that allow her to shine, but these days Meryl Streep could also sneeze and get an Oscar nomination. Which I don’t think is a healthy thing, go ahead, explain to me how her performance in Florence Foster Jenkins deserved a Golden Globe nomination over something like Kristen Wiig in Ghostbusters or hell even Auli’i Cravalho for Moana if you want to get creative.
Sure a day that an artistic veteran like Spielberg or Streep or Tom Hanks phones it in is still often better than the heroic best efforts of some. However they’re taking up a spot and resources that could have gone to a newcomer. A newcomer who isn’t going to tell the same old tired story of some whiny white (usually male) protagonist (which could probably be used to describe the following major films from 2017 – Live by Night, Gold, The Great Wall, A Cure for Wellness, Beauty and the Beast, T2: Trainspotting, Song to Song, CHiPs, Free Fire, The Circle, King Arthur: Legend of the Sword, Alien: Covenant, Wakefield, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, The Mummy, Baby Driver, Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets, Wind River, Stronger, American Made, Breathe, Goodbye Christopher Robin, The Snowman, Suburbicon, Thor: Ragnarok, Daddy’s Home 2, LBJ, Justice League, Darkest Hour, The Disaster Artist, The Greatest Showman, All the Money in the World, Downsizing, The Post, Phantom Thread and more). If they aren’t operating at their very best do they really deserve our time and money as audience members if we know they’re capable of better? Do they even enjoy the purgatory of making films that don’t challenge them or are they just doing it because it’s easy.
My hope for 2018 and beyond is that women and minorities are inspired the modicum of progress that was made in 2017. Also more importantly that those efforts are honored at the awards shows, instead of continuing to laud people based solely on their reputation/previous bodies of work.