Scott Feinberg answers the question that everyone has been asking since the Academy announced its nominations last month.
Last
month, when the nominations were announced for the 84th Oscars, the most common
reaction -- after "Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close for best
picture?!" -- was, "Why are there only two nominees for best original
song?!" (For the record, they are "Man or Muppet" from The
Muppets, music and lyrics by Flights of the Conchords' Bret
McKenzie, and "Real in Rio" from Rio, music by piano
maestro Sergio Mendes and Carlinhos Brown, lyrics by Siedah
Garrett.)
Indeed,
in the 76 years in which the best original song Oscar has been presented (it
was introduced at the seventh Oscars), there have never been this few nominees
in the category. For its first 11 years, any number of songs could be
nominated, and as many as 14 were (at the 18th Oscars); ever since, though, the
Academy has capped the category at five. Before the 45th Oscars, the Academy
decided that, henceforth, in years in which “fewer than 20 qualified works”
were submitted, there would be only three nominees (which is why there was that
number at the 61st, 78th, and 81st Oscars), or, if there were fewer than four
qualified submissions, no award would be presented at all.
Then,
before the 82nd Oscars, the Academy did with the best original song category
what they did with the best picture category before this year’s ceremony:
facing accusations that they had been filling out the category with unworthy
nominees, they raised the bar to make it harder to get nominated and no longer
guaranteed any specific number. There can now be anywhere from two to five
(there were four last year), or none at all, depending on how the 236 members
of the Academy’s music branch score the submissions. They screen clips of each
song in its respective film and assign them all a grade(from best to worst, 10,
9.5, 9, 8.5, 8, 7.5, 7, 6.5 or 6). If two or more songs score 8.25 or higher,
then each of them -- or the five highest-scoring among them -- will be
nominated. If only one meets that benchmark, then that and the next highest
scorer will be nominated. And if no songs meet it, then no award will be
presented at all.
This
means that, of this year’s 39 approved submissions, no more than two songs --
and possibly as few as one -- scored 8.25 or higher. It means that songs by the
likes of Mary J. Blige, Elton John, Lady Gaga, Chris
Cornell, Sinead O’Connor, will.i.am, Pink, Brad
Paisley, Robbie Williams, Zooey Deschanel, Zac Brown and
even Academy favorite Alan Menken did not. (Blige Tweeted that it
"feels like the Academy is being mean" to only nominate two when it
could have nominated five). And, as even Bruce Broughton, the chair of
the Academy’s music branch, has had to admit, it means that we can probably
expect another change of the rules for the best original song category.
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