Oscars Best Picture: Why Endgame Deserved A Nomination




Being a huge Marvel fan who loves superhero movies and saw Endgame in theaters nine times, I have some major opinions regarding Avengers Endgame being snubbed by the Oscars for a best picture nomination.


I’ve also seen every movie nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars this year, which gives me a wider perspective for comparison. 


 WARNING! THERE WILL OBVIOUSLY BE SPOILERS FOR ENDGAME!


(Though, honestly, if you haven’t seen it by now, you’re one of the four people who have been living under a rock. Congratulations?)




OSCARS

The Oscars have ten best picture slots to put potential deserving movies. Before 1944, it was a regular occurrence that ten movies were nominated. There is also the case that in 1935, twelve movies were nominated. I get it. That was a long, long time ago. 


In 2009 and 2010, the Oscars nominated ten movies for the first time since 1943, reestablishing the precedent for nominating ten. This year the Oscars decided to only nominate nine movies. This was a particularly phenomenal movie year, which makes it that much more surprising that they didn't fill out all ten slots.  Let’s get to the other nominees and some other potential snubs.


OTHER MOVIES

Honestly the field is pretty stacked this year. Movies like 1917, Marriage Story, JoJo Rabbit, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Parasite, The Irishman, and Little Women are phenomenal movies that deserve recognition of the highest degree. That leaves Joker and Ford v Ferrari. I can get further into these movies on separate reviews later, so I'll just gloss over them now with no spoilers. 


Joker is a great movie with a spectacular individual performance. No one denies Joaquin Phoenix's stellar work, but is that enough to claim it as one of the ten best pictures of the year?


Ford v Ferrari is another great movie with exceptional camera work and exquisite editing. Christian Bale (not nominated) is wonderful in this movie. Beyond being beautifully shot and having one great acting performance, I'm not sure Ford v Ferrari deserves to be in the top ten either.


So who does deserve those two spots instead? Personally, I would have gone with Uncut Gems starring Adam Sandler (not nominated), which takes you on an anxiety driven trip through the world of sports gambling, and The Two Popes (both leads individually nominated), which addresses the problems of the Church through the perspectives of both liberal and conservative Church leadership. 


OK, so if I switch out those movies, there still leaves one remaining empty slot, which Endgame deserves to occupy. Here's why...


ENDGAME: THE FACTS 


Avengers Endgame made just shy of 2.8 billion dollars at the box office in 2019, shattering records across the board, including breaking Avatar's (best picture nominee in 2009) total box office gross. 


So a lot of people saw it. Great! But was it good? 


I'd argue that you can't make that much money and not be good, but here is some actual objective proof. On Rotten Tomatoes, Endgame got a 90% fresh audience score and a 94% fresh critic score. Just to compare, here are some other critic scores for the Best Picture nominees:  Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (85%), 1917 (90%), Ford v Ferrari (92%) and Joker (69%). Also Endgame got an A+ Cinema Score. Statistically it should merit a best picture nomination. 


Avengers Endgame had the unenviable task of wrapping up twenty-one other movies in a meaningful and satisfying way. This was a massive undertaking that involved including more than thirty major characters from all of the other films! This could have resulted in a muddled mess of plot holes and inconsistencies but instead was clean, coherent, and satisfying to audiences. Directors Anthony and Joe Russo along with producer Kevin Feige deserve so much credit for expertly navigating all of the source material prior to this movie and ultimately making a well received piece of art. 


You might ask, while it's an entertaining movie, what makes it as cinematic and Oscar worthy as movies like Joker? (Which, I’ll remind you, received 69% on the Rotten Tomatoes critics score)


ENDGAME: GRAPPLING WITH THE HUMAN CONDITION


Endgame deals with a very deep emotion that everyone can relate to at one point or another: loss. Each character processes this grief in a distinct way.


In the beginning, we see our most optimistic hero, Captain America, struggle with the fact that he has failed, and with that failure, lost his two best friends. He creates a support group for others who lost loved ones before later mentioning to Black Widow that maybe it's time to just give up and move on. 


Black Widow also deals with the loss of a close friendship, as well as her personal identity; while everything she has ever known comes crashing down around her, she grapples with grief by attempting to maintain appearances, even if it’s a false sense of control. 


Hawkeye's downward spiral from losing his family results in a dark turn of aggression and rage. His anguish intensifies after losing Black Widow, his best friend.     


Thor has the most visible changes as the result of his depression. Not only does he gain a massive amount of weight, but also loses all sense of self-worth. “The strongest Avenger” is the only one willing to face his insecurities and accept counseling, allowing him to ultimately come back stronger than ever. 


Then what’s the difference between Endgame and Joker


While Joker decides to lean into the despair and darkness, Endgame chooses to rise, picking its characters up from the jaws of defeat so they can reach new heights. I don't believe Endgame should be punished for coming out of the darkness. It should be celebrated as the direction we should all move toward.


Despite being a comic book movie packed to the brim with superheroes, at its core, this film represents the human experience. If that isn't an Oscar worthy story, then maybe the Oscars should reevaluate their criteria for storytelling.



If you like what you've read and you want more, then comment and share! Let me know what you'd like me to discuss, and which of the movies I've mentioned here you'd want me to review.


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