Variety has a small piece on the metacritic and Rottentomato scores of the
best picture nominees): *http://tinyurl.com/y9nyh3j

*With the expanded pool of 10 nominees there was concern by some it would
water down the quality. The average metacritic score of the 10 is 80, which
seems pretty good. The Variety article does not give the average scores for
previous years, so it was hard to tell if this was good or bad, which drove
me to metacritic itself, which surprisingly had a long (and pretty good)
article on predicting the Best Picture winning from metacritic scores and
lots of other variables (this must have inspired the Variety piece, but
there was no mention of it).

http://features.metacritic.com/features/2010/the-oscars-how-to-predict-the-best-picture-winner/

The average score for all nominated films the last 10 years is 80 - which is
the same as this year. There have only been three years in the last decade
when the average was more than 82 (2008 (year of "No Country For Old Men")
2007 (year of "The Departed) and 2004 (year of "Lord of the Rings"). It is
true that "The Blind Side" with 53 is the lowest rated film to get nominated
in the last 10 years (only one other in the 50s got nominated, last year - I
can't figure out which that was from the article) but no film has ever won
(in the decade) with scores less than 60 (lowest was Gladiator at 64). I
also note from examining the data that no winning film has ever had a score
more than 12 points lower than the average of the nominees of that year,
which means that both Blind Side (53) and Inglourious Basterds (69) probably
won't win (I can't imagine I will much like Blind Side, but I loved Basterds
- too bad). The real impact of going to 10 nominees probably was to get a
film like The Blind Side" nominated (Avatar would have been nominated even
with 5) - which, if it gets them more viewers without diluting the overall
quality of the nominees, or risk such a bad film winning, is probably not so
bad.

The article looks at a number of other variables (and no, the Golden Globes
are not very good at picking the Oscar winner, but the Critics Choice awards
is). Overall box office not very good predictor, but there is a tendency to
give the Oscar to one of the 2 top grossing films among the nominees.

Their conclusion was (admitted by them) the same one they had before they
looked at the numbers, and the same pretty much everyone else has had - the
Oscar will go to either Avatar or The Hurt Locker, with the edge to Avatar
(I guess on the basis that the Academy will never be able to resist not
giving the Oscar to such a huge hit that also has the cover of good critical
notices). Hurt Locker (which got the nod from the accurate Critics Choice)
has its best chance in the huge and notorious anti-sci-fi bias of the
Academy, but I think they are right that box office will trump that. I liked
both films, but The Hurt Locker is so much the better film that I will be
rooting for it, even though I would not bet on it. I just saw Up in the Air
yesterday, and really liked that too - I would have hard time picking
between Basterds and Up in the Air for second best picture, with Avatar #4
(though I still have not seen Up or An Education among the other films
likely to be my cup of tea (I am going to have to get drunk before seeing
Precious and The Blind Side - luckily I think the latter will qualify as a
Valentines Flick for my wife, so I can kill two birds with that stone).

Most interesting to me is that a Metacritic Score of 80 seems to be a
perfect index of the middle brow film the Oscars like to recognize. I like
having a number to represent an abstract dimension.


P.S. The other thing that one gets from this article is confirmation of just
what an anomaly "Crash"'s  win was in 2006. It was the lowest rated film to
be nominated (the only time the nominated film with the lowest metacritic
score won in the decade), and at 69 was the second lowest rated film to win
(after Gladiator's 64). Brokeback Mountain had better boxoffice, swept all
of the critics awards, was better rated by critics and users (general
public) on metacritic alike. It was the most unlikely film to win in that
ten year period (for me I might put Gladiator as a somewhat less deserving
winner, but not a more surprising winner). All of this supports the notion
that the liberal hypocrites in the Academy were looking for an excuse not to
give it to the gay film. That, or two thirds of the voters had either
screwed, or wanted to screw (literally or otherwise) someone in Crash.

-- 
TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
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