Best Pictures #45:
1930-31 (4th) Academy Awards
My Pick for
Outstanding Production
According to 85 Years of Oscar by Robert Osborne, by the
time the 4th Academy Awards for films released in the Los Angeles
area between August 1st, 1930-July 31st, 1931 was held on
November 10th, 1931, the awards had gained notoriety beyond the
Hollywood community. Winners were still announced to the press before the
ceremony, but the time between the announcement and the ceremony was shortened.
There seems to be a greater consistency in categories and nominees from the
previous year’s awards. The Academy Awards were beginning to fall into a nice
groove, though there was still a hiccup or two to work out. Norma Shearer, Best
Actress winner at the previous year’s Oscars for The Divorcee, was chosen to present the Best Actress award at the
1931 ceremony. However, she was also a nominee. The uncomfortable and awkward
situation of Shearer announcing her own name as the winner was thankfully
avoided when Marie Dressler won for Min
and Bill. To prevent this type of situation from happening again, at the
next year’s Oscars, and every ceremony since, the previous winner for Best Actress would present the award
for Best Actor, and vice versa.
The Outstanding Production nominees do not feel as diverse or exciting as the
nominees from the previous year (1929-30). Cimarron
and Trader Horn are certainly the
biggest and most ambitious productions of the nominated films. Both are about
(white) men overcoming wild, untamed
lands. The difference between the two films thematically is that Cimarron is about a man conquering and
taming a frontier, while Trader Horn
is about a man existing and surviving in, but not changing, a wild exotic land.
Neither treats the native peoples of those lands well. Both Yancey in Cimarron and Horn in Trader Horn treat the native people well
but the overall view of Indians and tribal Africans, respectively, is severely
lacking by today’s standards. It likely didn’t even cross the minds of most
people at the time. Both films are the type of big budget epic productions that
the Academy tends to acknowledge (Trader
Horn’s sole nomination was for Outstanding Production), and sometimes honor
(Cimarron was the big winner of the
night). Cimarron has an edge over Trader Horn because while Trader Horn is simply a big adventure, Cimarron is a dramatization of recent
history, Hollywood style. It is the story of the founding of Oklahoma, a state that
was hit especially hard by the Great Depression. It is a story of triumph; history told
the way grandparents tell their small grandchildren. It’s hard to keep in mind
that the time span of Cimarron, from
the Land Rush to 1929, from the Old West towns of wood to modern cities of
steel and concrete is a period of only 40 years. Many people that were alive at
the time of the film’s opening scene in 1889 were likely still around to see the film
in 1931.
I wasn’t expecting it, but Skippy is easily the film I enjoyed the most of the five
Outstanding Production nominees and the one I would most readily watch again. I
wasn’t expecting a film with a sentimental, dated tone to have such affecting
pathos, especially coming from such a young actor. Jackie Cooper remains the youngest Best Actor
nominee at 9 years old. Skippy, the
adaptation of a comic strip about a privileged, but mischievous boy, becomes
more than a light children’s/family movie as the story progresses.
The Great Depression had fully reared its ugly head by 1931, but none of the Outstanding Production nominees portray the Depression or its effects except for Skippy, though the film does so indirectly. Skippy spends his time is Shantytown, where his new friend Sookie lives. He has no prejudices or reservations about the kids that live in the shacks of Shanytown or spending his time there. Skippy is quick to offer Sookie $3 for the license fee to keep his dog. When his parents stop him from cracking open his piggy bank, he puts his mischievous mind to good use to try to raise the money for his friend. The comic strip on which Skippy is based began in 1925 well before the Depression but I’m sure that the conditions of Shanytown were not dissimilar from those many Americans found themselves in after 1929. Also, I’m sure that Shantytown conjured up the sights of Hoovervilles, a term coined in 1930 to described the shacks people found themselves living in under the term of President Hoover.
The Great Depression had fully reared its ugly head by 1931, but none of the Outstanding Production nominees portray the Depression or its effects except for Skippy, though the film does so indirectly. Skippy spends his time is Shantytown, where his new friend Sookie lives. He has no prejudices or reservations about the kids that live in the shacks of Shanytown or spending his time there. Skippy is quick to offer Sookie $3 for the license fee to keep his dog. When his parents stop him from cracking open his piggy bank, he puts his mischievous mind to good use to try to raise the money for his friend. The comic strip on which Skippy is based began in 1925 well before the Depression but I’m sure that the conditions of Shanytown were not dissimilar from those many Americans found themselves in after 1929. Also, I’m sure that Shantytown conjured up the sights of Hoovervilles, a term coined in 1930 to described the shacks people found themselves living in under the term of President Hoover.
Skippy had gags
that made me laugh and effective emotional moments that tugged on my
heartstrings. It also has a positive message, and, I hope, got across the idea
that helping people down on their luck, as Skippy does, should be second
nature, as it is to Skippy. This is undoubtedly a simple and sentimental film
with scenes and aspects that are undeniably dated, but more than enough of the
film works for me now, as I’m sure it did for audiences back then. 1930-31 was
not a very strong year for its Best Picture nominees, but Skippy is the film most worth watching and mostly likely to still
entertain and connect today. Unfortunately, Skippy
is a rare film and is not available on DVD/Blu-ray or streaming services but
airs occasionally on TCM. If you should come across it in the TCM schedule I
certainly recommend watching this enjoyable and rare classic film.
1 comment:
Yay! Skippy!!!
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