Pranzo Oltranzista
Registered User
- Oct 18, 2017
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BTW, I don't mean to be argumentative and you don't have to answer if you don't want to, but I'm curious about how you can call it a very bad film with a very bad script when it was nominated for Best Picture and won Best Original Screenplay. I totally understand if none of it is to your taste. I have a loathing for American Beauty, myself, but I'm not going to argue with the experts about its objective quality. I just don't understand being so convinced that the experts have it completely backwards, especially such that you'd laugh at one's opinion (I mean, what's the point of students taking and staying in a screenwriting class if they believe that they know what a good screenplay is better than the teacher?). Anyways, I don't mean to put you on the spot. That part just seems a little strange to me. I can totally see and respect the film not being to everyone's tastes, though, especially nowadays.
No worry about putting me on the spot, and it's all part of a past life for me, but I have a Masters degree in Film studies, a PhD in Semiotics, I've been a film critic, I've taught Film studies and Art history in a University (I've taught Horror films and Science fiction films classes that were so much fun), and I've been a speaker at international conferences on cinema, literature, videogames and new media. So yeah, the "experts" of the Academy I don't care much for. And that teacher was an ass, not just for his Ghost-loving comments, but for his lack of general knowledge about the arts.
That being said, I don't think you need the diplomas or theoretical knowledge to acknowledge that the Academy Awards are a highly political game, and that they are not truly crowning the best at anything. I don't think 1990 was a particularly good year, but Kiarostami wrote Close-Up, Kurosawa wrote Dreams, and I don't think anybody in their right mind would suggest that Ghost might be considered in the same league.