Tuesday, 29 January 2019

Academy Awards Ceremony

At the very first Academy Awards ordinance in 1929, the writing awards were already split into two categories Best Writing, sure Story and Best Writing, Adaptation. (For the record, that first course of study saw the only instauration of an Oscar for Best Title Writing, an art that had become obsolete by the sideline year.)Over the next few decades, the delineation of the screenplay awards morphed a bit.For a while, triad awards were presented Best Original Screenplay, Best Original Story, and Best Story and Screenplay- confuse categorizations that speak to the tortured distinctions made by the Writers Guild when determining authorship. only for the last half century, the sensible division between an original screenplay and a screenplay based on a preexisting work has held.Writers and their audiences see a difference between the art of creating characters, situations and conference out of whole framework and the art of turning an existing work into a film paw with all the r equisite transformations that such a translation entails.This is not to avow that the distinction between an original and adapted work is always clear. In 2000, Joel and Ethan Coen s O Brother, Where Art Thou? was nominated for Best competent Screenplay thanks to a credit on the film that cheekily say it was based on Homers Odyssey.Eyebrows rose all over Hollywood O Brother had about as much to do with the Odyssey as did The supernatural of Oz or really any story about someone helpless who wants to go home.The Coens were perhaps prompt- ing the age-old debate as to whether any artwork, oddly a narratively driven artwork, is ever truly original. In a bulky sense, every storyteller obviously builds on the stories that came before him or her and relies on pre-programmed audience expectations.Harold Blooms Anxiety of Influence addresses this topic with great insight, and an entire academic discipline, the study of Intertextuality, analyzes this phenomenon.The Oscar nominees for B est Original Screenplay this year American Hustle, Blue Jasmine, Dallas Buyers Club, Her, and neon all utilize existing genre tropes, standard (or subverted) plot devices, patterns of dialogue derived from previous works, and so forth. Blue Jasmine is quite consciously based on Tennessee Williams A Streetcar Named Desire, with virtually every character and situation a direct outgrowth of the earlier work.The dialogue is new, but its debatable as to whether the work is Original in the strictest sense. Certainly it is much more of an allowance than O Brother, Where Art Thou? Conversely, one of the nominees for Best Adapted Screenplay this year is

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