A quick phone around by *The Telegraph* indicates that A.R. Rahman, Anil
Kapoor, Irrfan Khan, Freida Pinto, Dev Patel, Vikas Swarup and other members
of a strong Indian contingent are on their way to Los Angeles but will *Slumdog
Millionaire*, with 10 nominations in nine categories, actually pull it off
on Sunday?

Or will it, like the Indian cricket team used to, choke in the final?

Its main competitor is *The Curious Case of Benjamin Button*, a very curious
but technologically innovative film in which Brad Pitt is born old and grows
young and which has garnered no fewer than 13 nominations.

*Slumdog *is, no doubt, the front runner but Pete Hammond, a senior writer
at the *Los Angeles Times* who has been chatting privately to some of the
academy members, warns against overconfidence and suggests there could be
some huge upsets on the Oscar night.

The votes of over 5,800 members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences, who sent in their ballot papers by the deadline of 5pm on February
17, have already sealed the fate of the winners and the losers. Indians will
be reassured to learn that the tabulations are being done by
PricewaterhouseCoopers of Satyam fame.

Hammond, who was the first to reveal there was a plot by some jealous folk
in Bollywood aimed at ruining *Slumdog's *chances, has commented on the
curious coincidence of the first movie that was officially screened at the
White House by President Barack Obama.

Although *Slumdog Millionaire* "appears to have this Best Picture thing all
sewn up, there was a peculiar sign that occurred last week at the White
House when, according to CNN, *The Curious Case of Benjamin Button*, the
Best Picture contender with a leading 13 nominations, became the first movie
officially shown there since President Obama took over three weeks ago",
Hammond pointed out in the *Los Angeles Times*.

He added that "even with all those nominations, *Button* is a decided long
shot at this point but with Obama's special screening could that mean
another stunning comeback surprise is in store Sunday night?

"After all a year ago Obama himself was in the position of the unthinkable
underdog and look what happened to him!"

He also revealed the results of a personal straw poll: "Another eerie sign
came this weekend when three, count 'em, three (older) academy voters, whose
opinions I respect, all said the exact same thing to me at different times.
They weren't voting for *Slumdog Millionaire* because 'it's just not an
Oscar picture'.

"I thought it was very strange that I would suddenly be hearing virtually
the same kind of reasoning out of the mouths of three different academy
members, but there it was. All of them, by the way, had cast their Best
Picture vote for *Button*.

"Dare I say it? A sign?"

Did Hammond really mean that *Slumdog* could be pipped to the post by *
Button*? *The Telegraph *asked Hammond today.

His answer was yes and no.

Since writing his article, "I have talked to other people and I have found a
lot of *Slumdog* votes, too", he said.

However, Hammond, billed by the *LA Times* as "one of the film industry's
best known award season pundits", did seek to analyse whether Obama had
discreetly indicated his personal preference to academy members.

"You can read anything you want into all of this stuff but it is interesting
he chose to show that movie," reasoned Hammond. "Maybe that means something.
He was a huge underdog a year ago and look at what happened to him and that
is what *Button* is right now. It's a big underdog so maybe there is some
kind of symmetry here."

**Hammond continued: "*Benjamin Button* is the longest shot because Slumdog
has just swept this whole award season but in the past stranger things have
happened. I thought it was an interesting thought that Obama, this great
underdog who triumphed in the end, should choose to show that movie."

On the anti-*Slumdog* academy voters, Hammond said: "I know there is a
faction there that is not going to vote for *Slumdog*, basically, but the
overwhelming majority of academy members probably will. I think they are
going to follow the way the season has been going. The fact that it has won
everything made them watch the DVD, made them see the movie and they seem
impressed by it, impressed enough to not want to be too different from the
rest of the award shows out there."

On why some members were against *Slumdog*, he said: "They are older
members. They don't feel it is an 'Oscar film'. They look at this movie — no
stars, partially in the Hindi language, came out of nowhere, very much the
foreign flavour. They all voted for *Benjamin Button* which does reek of
being the kind of traditional film that won the Oscar movie of the past with
the technical wizardry, in addition to the story which is like a *Forest
Gump*."

Rahman, though, could take heart from Hammond's assessment: "The entire
academy votes on the music: they are fairly unsophisticated when it comes to
picking music scores. They like what they like musically and this one just
pops out because of the end song and all of that and it has a nice sound to
it, a different sound, an exotic sound. I think there is a kind of openness
to a lot of this now and this movie walks right into that. It wins both
music categories (Original Score and Original Song) easily."******

He felt that Bafta rather than the Golden Globes — Slumdog won seven awards
at the former and four at the latter — offered a more accurate indication of
the likely Oscar trends.

As to whether Slumdog was viewed as British or Indian by the academy, the
reply was complicated.

"I don't think they care," said Hammond. "It's a hybrid — it has a whole
British thing going, particularly with Danny (Boyle) directing it and Simon
Beaufoy (screenplay) and it has a strong Indian feel, obviously. It has an
American thing going for it, too. Who Wants to be a Millionaire? has a
strong American identification because we have that game show here. The game
show aspects Americans easily relate to the point where ABC is considering
bringing it back on prime time because of the success of *Slumdog*."
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1090220/jsp/nation/story_10564049.jsp

-- 
regards,
Vithur
  • ... Vithur
    • ... ramakrisha laxmana subramanian siva gopala acharya iyer .aiyooo amma idli wada dosa sambar chatni .

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