Telluride 2018: World Premieres, Special Tributes, Oscar Dreams
Thursday, August 30, 2018 at 11:09AM
NATHANIEL R in Oscars (18), Telluride, Venice, film festivals

by Nathaniel R

Kidman will be travelling a lot this week with Boy Erased and Destroyer both hitting Telluride and TIFF We don't attend Telluride and are morally opposed to it, in point of fact, since they actually charge the press (and not a cheap charge either) to glorify their name. Curiously the press happily oblige so it's the most elitist of all the festivals, essentially. Weirdly, though, it's not hated despite everybody being so up in arms about the elitism of Oscar season... remarkably some of the same folks who sing Telluride's praises also bitch at the Oscars for their elitism. Cognitive dissonance runs amok in today's world. 

Nevertheless Telluride have positioned themselves as an Oscar giant. Each year they convince filmmakers to forego glitzier world premieres at other major festivals like TIFF and Venice to play in the beautiful mountains to well-moneyed folk for a couple of days. The future Best Picture winner usually plays here even if it sometimes premieres elsewhere (often at Venice, if not here).

So here's their lineup this year with their world premieres in red, plus a note on curious omissions... 

FEATURES

All of the titles in red are having their international premiere at TIFF except The White Crow and Trial by Fire

DOCUMENTARIES

Two Films that don't even have IMDb pages yet so we know nothing of them

Special Tributes... Oscar campaigning always starts early, y'all


 

 

Retrospective Screenings

 

 

Three very notable omissions this year that are suspected to be Oscar contenders: Beautiful Boy (Toronto), A Star is Born (Venice), and Widows (Toronto). Films that are skipping the festival circuit this year are November/December titles like Mary Queen of Scots, Welcome to Marwen, On the Basis of Sex, and Mary Poppins Returns though you can bet that at least a couple of those will show up at the AFI fest in November in Los Angeles which is the last festival premiere option before Oscar season proper.

Here's where the last 20 Best Picture Winners had their premieres so you can see how this has been evolving:

1998 Shakespeare in Love (regular movie theater premiere)
1999 American Beauty (regular movie theater premiere)
2000 Gladiator (regular movie theater premiere)
2001 A Beautiful Mind (regular movie theater premiere)
2002 Chicago (regular movie theater premiere)
2003 Lord of the Rings: Return of the King (regular movie theater premiere)
2004 Million Dollar Baby (regular movie theater premiere)
2005 Crash (TIFF the year before)
2006 The Departed (regular movie theater premiere)
2007 No Country for Old Men (Cannes)
2008 Slumdog Millionaire (Telluride)
2009 The Hurt Locker (Venice the year before)
2010 The King's Speech (Telluride)
2011 The Artist (Cannes)
2012 Argo (Telluride)
2013 12 Years a Slave (Telluride)
2014 Birdman (Venice)
2015 Spotlight (Venice)
2016 Moonlight (Telluride)
2017 The Shape of Water (Venice)

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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