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« TIFF: Bullied Girls and Violent Boys in Sweden | Main | Judi Dench as Paulina in "The Winter's Tale" »
Monday
Sep142015

On Kate Winslet's Oscar Win 

As The Dressmaker makes its premiere at TIFF here's Murtada on its leading lady's controversial Oscar win.

Kate Winslet is back! That seems to be one of the many “comeback” stories this fall season. Reviews for her supporting part in Steve Jobs have been stellar. And The Dressmaker is playing TIFF tonight! Has she ever been away though? Since her much maligned Oscar win for 2008’s The Reader, she starred in a much admired mini series (Mildred Pierce) for which she received multiple awards, worked with Steven Soderbergh (Contagion), Roman Polanski (Carnage) Jason Reitman (Labor Day) and her old Sense & Sensibility friend Alan Rickman (A Little Chaos). Some of these have been better received than others but none, with the possible exception of Pierce, have ignited the passion of even her most ardent fans.

Winslet’s a great actress who deservedly won the highest acting accolade in her profession. Yet there is a cloud above that win amongst Oscar obsessives. It is a somewhat unpopular win that still inflames a lot of passionate discourse even years later. Let’s examine why after the jump.

  

The Field

  • Meryl Streep (Doubt), a performance that is now considered lesser Streep. However it’s fun and big, full of juicy repeatable lines "I have such doubts". It’s the kind of performance that aged well and is on its way to becoming a campy classic.

  • Melissa Leo (Frozen River) was 2008’s indie breakout. This is the performance that led  to her current thriving career and an Oscar win two years later.

  • Angelina Jolie (The Changeling) was a makeup nomination for missing the year before for A Mighty Heart. No one remembers Changeling today.

  • Anne Hathaway (Rachel Getting Married) showed the range everyone suspected she had by going dark and raw and coming up victorious.

  • Sally Hawkins (Happy Go Lucky) won the critics trifecta NYFCC, LAFCA and National Society plus the Golden Globe for comedy and TFE’s own Film Bitch Award and endeared herself to many new and old fans.

  • Kristin Scott Thomas (I’ve Loved You So Long) rocked TIFF and had quite a comeback narrative that ultimately fizzled. But she got new fans and drew attention to her thriving career in French cinema.

  • Winslet (Revolutionary Road) won the Golden Globe for drama. The rare year when winners of both Golden Globe categories failed to get an Oscar nomination

Jolie aside, any of these performances could’ve been a worthy winner.

The Campaign

What was the exact moment when everyone turned sour on Winslet? Probably when she said “gather” while getting flustered accepting her second Golden Globe of the night for Road. By that time she had done numerous interviews, magazine covers and been everywhere clearly stating that she wanted to win an Oscar. And here she was with two awards in one night, and how dare she call Jolie “‘the other one”.

It is now expected that actors campaign aggressively for Oscar. How many events did Lupita Nyong'o attend on her long march to the Oscar podium? How many red carpets have Eddie Redmayne and Felicity Jones walked last year? Just look at the abundance of celebrities that attend the Governors Awards every year in November, all trying to get their films noticed. Someone like Cate Blanchett (for Blue Jasmine) can do one week of press and then stay in Australia for most of awards season, only attend the big events and major publications (NY Times and Vogue) and still win best actress. That's because she had the reviews and jump start on the competition. 2008 was very different year and Kate had lost 5 times before. And she had the audacity to actually say that she wanted it and that turned most people off.

There's also the category confusion factor. For most the season she campaigned supporting not to compete with herself in Road which rubbed people the wrong way. That was studio jockeying though. The Weinstein Company rushed The Reader into theaters when it was initially scheduled for 2009 and to appease their star, who was promoting the movie she made with her husband and best friend, they ran a supporting campaign. Once the critics and Academy shrugged off Road she was in the correct category but only for BAFTA and Oscar.

The Dark Knight Effect

Remember how mad everyone was that The Reader got what they saw as The Dark Knight’s spot. Even the Academy believed that and expanded the best picture field the year after. Of course Kate was The Reader’s face and the person who kept winning awards for it,  a constant reminder that a better received and popular movie was overlooked. “I haven’t seen The Reader”.

Stephen Daldry gets no respect partly because his movies have been so well received by AMPAS. He has a theater director’s knack for translating episodic novels into engrossing movies, reminiscent of the late Anthony Minghella (a producer on The Reader). Daldry’s movies are about words and emotional distress, not exactly visually striking which often gets them characterized as “dull”. Far from it. Have you not been moved by Billy Elliot’s need to dance? Or Laura Brown’s deep despair despite the perfect life she has?

The Performance

No less an expert than Sandra Bullock, whose mother was German, said Winslet realistically portrayed German women of a certain generation. The accent is perfection, with impeccable clipped German intonations. But what sticks in mind is what a very confident physical performance it is. Sexually frank with that earthy sexuality that Winslet embodies so well, coupled with weariness throughout showing the heavy burden this woman carries. Winslet conveys how guarded and secretive Hanna Schmitz was yet her face is so expressive that even the heavy makeup as she ages onscreen doesn't obscure the well of transparent emotions. No matter what was thought of the film it can’t be denied that Winslet opened up her well of nerve and emotion and was fiercely committed and ultimately very moving. While Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind is seen by many as her career capper so far, Hanna Schmitz in no less a fantastic creation. The Oscar is justified and deserved for a career of excellent performnces and also for the very fine performance that she won for. Let’s relive that triumphant moment.

Do you think Winslet deserved her Oscar that year? Have your thoughts on The Reader changed since its release? Who gets your vote?

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Reader Comments (62)

I love Winslet, but I couldn't stand either of the films she had in contention that year, as good as she was in them both. She was much better in Revolutionary Road, however.

Kristin Scott Thomas was robbed. ROBBED.

September 14, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterPaul Outlaw

Is "Doubt" really considered lesser Streep? She won the SAG for it, and her surprise is hilarious (she runs to the stage hi-fiving people like a Price is Right contestant being called out from the audience). Interestingly enough, SAG had the exact same Best Actress line-up as the Academy, just with Winslet's nom being for RR instead.

September 15, 2015 | Unregistered Commenterjakey

The thing with Kate Winslet though is that it's hard to say she should have won any of the years she was nominated.

2001, ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE for Iris
2004, ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

She would have had two wins in my book before being nominated for any of her performances in 2008.

September 15, 2015 | Unregistered Commenter3rtful

My vote went to the unnominated Sally Hawkins (sniffle) but I did and still do cherish Anne Hathaway's work in Rachel Getting Married. What a knockout performance speaking of actresses that get backlashes due to Oscar wins even though they're wonderful actresses

September 15, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterNathanielR

I LOVE Meryl Streep in Doubt, she was my favorite that year by far, but I realize that am more of a fan of Doubt than most. Also, a Streep win for Doubt would have prevented that ghastly third win for The Iron Lady, so Viola Davis would have her Oscar as well.

Overall, Winslet was a deserving winner. It is a solid performance in a respectable movie. A Greer Garson sort of win, if you will. I agree that a) she was better in Revolutionary Road and b) she should have won for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

On a guilty pleasure sidenote, I love her and Eli Wallach in The Holiday. "I like corny, I'm looking for corny in my life!"

September 15, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterCarmen Sandiego

that year I preferred RR to Reader but for me Kate wins her Oscar for Titanic. She was robbed!

September 15, 2015 | Unregistered Commentersummer

Shoulda got it for Titanic — it was total Star is Born moment in league with Vivien Leigh in Gone with the wind.

September 15, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterBia

"No one remembers Changeling today." such blind hate for Jolie made that article impossible to read.

September 16, 2015 | Unregistered Commentersati

The Angelina Jolie/Changeling comments are funny. I mean—don't get me wrong—her success (and apparent fandom) are quite impressive. She's become a huge Movie Star—all without one single good movie in her resume. I'm curious, has this ever happened in Hollywood before Saint Angelina?

September 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterPHIL

No, no. Doubt is not a lesser Streep. I think it's one of her very best actually. I'd be happier to have seen Streep win her third for Doubt instead of The Iron Lady.

Back to Winslet, I'm not that mad at her win now as I was at the time, it was a very good performance and she had that amazing year with another good performance in Revolutionary Road. It was maybe because of the campaigning and all but we have seen worse since then (particularly Anne Hathaway and Melissa Leo). So I get it now. I actually miss her in the race, yeah this season will be good to see her back!

September 30, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAFK

That video is a treasure trove of little Oscar moments - chief among them, for me, Michael Shannon clapping as hard as he can behind Kate when her nomination is announced, and then giving her a standing O when she wins. But you also have Angelina's black dress and green earrings, Anne Hathaway holding her hand over her heart when McLaine introduces her, and Meryl air-kissing Sophia Loren.

Winslet wasn't my favorite - Sally Hawkins was - but of the nominees, I think she deserved it.

January 9, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterRebecca

Haha, I was going through my saved posts from my reader and forgot this was from 2015. Typing into the void.

January 10, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterRebecca
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