Soundtracking: The "Alone Yet Not Alone" Snafu
Wednesday, January 30, 2019 at 8:00AM
Chris Feil in Alone Yet Not Alone, Original Song, Soundtracking

by Chris Feil

A moment that will live in Oscar infamy, it happened so fast we could barely take in the joy of “Oscar nominee June Squibb” as a realized concept. Five years ago Cheryl Boone Isaacs, standing next to Chris Hemsworth, downshifted from announcing supporting acting categories into the much more low-pressure Original Song category. And then unleashed chaos onto announcement morning.

What the hell was “Alone Yet Not Alone” from Alone Yet Not Alone?

This curveball was so flabbergasting as to make us feel alone - but our collective, instantaneous headscratching made us feel, well you get the point. Safely, we could call this nomination the one of the modern era that exactly no one, both professional prognosticators or average movies lover alike, had predicted. Conventional wisdom might have favored the likes of The Great Gatsby or even All is Lost to take the final spot among more widely beloved songs like “Let It Go”, “Happy”, “The Moon Song”, and oh yeah that U2 song from the Nelson Mandela movie (thus bringing an end to Those Years U2 Really Wanted an Oscar).

No, buried among the list of 75 eligible songs was this unlikely nominee, co-mingling with at least two dozen other similarly unfamiliar tracks. Yet this Christian folksong was somehow the one to break through. But what would come out from our immediate scrambling to figure out what the hell this nominee was was also the stuff of recent Oscar legend: it became one of Oscar’s few revoked nominations. Among the digging done on the unknown film, it was discovered that one of the song’s cowriters and former Academy board member Bruce Broughton had been emailing branch members directly for consideration of the track.

Swiftly, the Academy took action and brought the ire of Christian circles that felt that the revocation was moreso in response to the religious themes of the film and song. While this underlined the mileage between the Hollywood system (heck, even the independent filmmaking world) and that of the isolative, not unprofittable enigma of Christian filmmaking, this complaint ultimately was unfounded. Rules are rules, and after similar behavior famously got one producer ousted from his nomination tied to The Hurt Locker’s eventual Best Picture win, the Academy was already primed to punish wayward campaigning.

All around, this whole situation felt like more fuel to the fire of the wishful talk of eliminating the category altogether. The song’s narrative impact feels completely beside the point, with this revelation showing that the songwriting branch likely didn’t consider that when they adhered to their buddy Broughton’s email plea. Had they done so, they would have found a placid (and yes, accidentally lyrically silly) track without the finesse or impact of its co-nominees.

But what unfortunately “Alone Yet Not Alone”’s nomination tactics revealed is the unlikely road ahead for our underdog favorites. The sad story revealed here is that song like a “Drive It Like You Stole It” or a “So You Know What It’s Like” from Short Term 12 (in the Alone Yet Not Alone Oscar year) have a road too hard to climb by fair methods against more prominent competition.

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