http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1881233,00.html

Reflections on Oscar: Bollywood Takes HollywoodBy RICHARD
CORLISS<javascript:void(0)>
 Monday, Feb. 23, 2009
[image: oscars slumdog]
*Slumdog Millionaire* won eight Oscars from its ten nominations.
Lucas Jackson / Reuters

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Oscar went international with a vengeance Sunday
night,<http://live.blogs.time.com/2009/02/22/the-81st-annual-academy-awards/>
as
the underclass-boy-makes-good fable *Slumdog
Millionaire*<http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1874832,00.html>
took
home eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Director (Danny Boyle)
and Adapted Screenplay (Simon Beaufoy). In addition, three of the four
acting prizes went to foreigners. For England's Kate
Winslet<http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1880401,00.html>,
it was sixth time lucky after being named Best Actress for her role as a
concentration camp guard in *The Reader*. Spanish enchantress Penelope Cruz
won Best Supporting Actress as a fiery painter in Woody Allen's *Vicky
Cristina 
Barcelona*<http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1833089,00.html>,
becoming the first Spanish
actress<http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,998151,00.html>
to
win an acting Oscar. And in the ceremony's most emotionally honest moment,
the mother, father and sister of the late Australian star Heath Ledger
accepted his Oscar for Best Supporting Actor in *The Dark Knight*. "We have
been truly overwhelmed by the honor and respect being bestowed upon him with
this award," his mother said. (See pictures of Heath
Ledger.)<http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1705980,00.html>
RelatedStories

   - In India, Cheers and Jeers for*Slumdog*'s
Oscars<http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1881235,00.html>
   - Liveblog: The 81st Annual Academy
Awards<http://live.blogs.time.com/2009/02/22/the-81st-annual-academy-awards/>

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In the 3-1/2hr. show hosted by *Australia* star Hugh
Jackman<http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1879177,00.html>
—
the first non-American (and non-comedian) to emcee the event in 22 years,
and the first-ever Aussie — the one glamour award won by an American was
Best Actor; it went to Sean Penn, who played gay-rights activist
Harvey Milk<http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,920281,00.html>
in
the bio-pic*Milk*. This was the one half-surprise in an evening of few big
upsets. The oddsmakers had Penn tabbed as a slight underdog to Golden Globe
winner Mickey Rourke, whose performance in *The Wrestler* had all the
earmarks of a sentimental Hollywood comeback. (See pictures of Mickey
Rourke.<http://www.time.com/time/photoessays/10questions/0,30255,1874436,00.html>
)

Viewed as a whole, the top awards spanned genres that represent commercial
moviemaking as it is, was and would like to be. The "is": *The Dark
Knight*,<http://www.time.com/time/specials/2008/top10/article/0,30583,1855948_1864351_1864361,00.html>
which
has earned more than a billion dollars at the worldwide box office (in the
process becoming the second highest grosser in film history, after *Titanic*),
and which showcases big-budget action pictures as only Hollywood can make
them. The "would like to be": the message films *Milk* and *The Reader*,
which hammer home Hollywood's liberal views on gays and unslakable
fascination with the Holocaust. And the "was":*Slumdog*. With its skimpy
budget ($14 million) and mongrel pedigree, it might seem the odd dog out;
but the movie is really classic old-Hollywood — not just in its inspirational
story of a poor
kid<http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1485842900/bctid13419832001>
pursuing
an impossible dream, but in its goal of keeping a mass movie audience
entertained.

If Hollywood nativists are rankled that the top prize and the headlines went
to the foreign-est movie ever to conquer the Oscar, the feeling may be
similar on the subcontinent, where *Slumdog*'s box office take hasn't
approached that of any robust local film. As pleased as they might be about
the picture's international éclat, the folks in
Mumbai<http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1873926,00.html>
also
realize that the first "Bollywood" production to make a major impact at the
Academy was written, produced and directed by Englishmen — subjects of the
old Raj. In the '80s,*Gandhi*, another film about Indians and made by
colonialists, took Best Picture. This time, though, the entire cast is
Indian or of Indian heritage; none of them had made an English-language
feature film before; and three of the Oscar-winners were Indian: superstar
composer A.R. 
Rahman<http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1876545,00.html>,
the renowned lyricist Gulzar and one of the sound mixers, Resul Pookutty.
Rahman remembered his roots by hailing "all the people from Mumbai and the
essence of the film, which is about optimism and the power of hope and our
lives". (Watch Danny Boyle answer readers'
questions.)<http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1485842900/bctid13707453001>

The biggest upset in the specialty categories was the Best Foreign Language
Film win for the Japanese *Departures*, about an out-of-work musician who
takes a job preparing corpses at a funeral home. It emerged victorious over,
among others, the French school drama — and Palme d'Or winner — *The Class*
 (*Entre les Murs*) and the odds on favourite, Israeli animated documentary
*Waltz With 
Bashir*,<http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1862371,00.html>
both
of which had earned critical races in the States. Nobody, though, was
startled that the Oscar for Feature Animation went to *WALL-E*, and that *Man
on Wire* was voted Best Documentary Feature. And *The Curious Case of
Benjamin Button* converted just three of its 13 nominations — all in the
technical fields.

Hoping to zazz up what has been a predictable show with precipitously
declining ratings in the U.S. in recent years, the Academy gave the job to
producers Bill Condon and Larry Mark, the men behind the Oscar winning
movie *Dreamgirls*. They commissioned Aussie director Baz Luhrmann (*Moulin
Rouge!*) to confect an elaborate production number proclaiming The Musical
Is Back. They also trotted out a retinue of old, Oscar-winning royalty —
Sophia Loren, Shirley MacLaine, Robert De Niro and Anthony Hopkins — to give
individual tributes to the nominees in the acting categories; the ploy was
at first sweet but ultimately laborious, as the honorees squirmed in closeup
at the fulsome praise lavished on them. (See pictures of the Best Oscar
dresses. <http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1881197,00.html>)

Sometimes viewers eagerly anticipate squirming; that's the fun of live TV.
On Sunday night the big chances were if/when Rourke won an Oscar — his
acceptance speech the night before at the Independent Spirit Awards was five
minutes of wondrously ribald thank-yous and genial insults — and the
honorary award given to legendary-infamous clown Jerry
Lewis<http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1880395,00.html>,
now 82. Would the long-ago star-director of imaginative, raucous comedies
prance out and shout "MEL-VIN!"? Would he, bearing in mind how he's been
scorned by mainstream U.S. critics but revered in the pages of *Cahiers du
Cinema*, give his acceptance speech entirely in French? Would he lecture the
Academy because it cited him for his humanitarian efforts and not his comic
genius?

Alas, *non*. A subdued Lewis spoke only briefly, in a grateful and serious,
almost stricken tone. Veteran Oscar watchers hoped in vain that we might
have a glimpse of the Jerry who, as the Academy Awards host 50 years ago,
cavorted and mugged for nearly 20 minutes when, at the end, he was told the
show had run short. This year, the Oscar show ended right on time. But the
odds are that, 50 years from now, no one will remember much about it —
except that the underdog *Slumdog* won.

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