Academy Award

The Academy Awards (often better known as Oscars) are the most prominentwybitny, znaczący film award in the United States. The Awards are granted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, a professional honorary organization which as of 2003 had a voting membership of 5816. Actors (with a membership of 1311) make up the largest voting block. The most recent awards were the 76th Academy Awards.

Academy Awards are nicknamed "Oscars", which is also the nickname of the statuette (the name is said to have been born when Academy librarian Margaret Herrick saw the statuette on a table and said: "It looks just like my uncle Oscar!"). The awards were first given at a banquet in the Blossom Room of the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel on May 16, 1929 but there was little suspenseniepewność, napięcie since the winners of the awards had already been announced three months earlier on February 18. To qualify, a film had to open in Los Angeles during the twelve months ending on July 31 of the preceding year. The 1934 and later awards have all been based on openings in the previous calendar year. The 1932-33 awards were based on a 17-month qualifying period. The "opened in Los Angeles" clauseklauzula allowed Charlie Chaplin to win his only voted Oscar for Limelight"Światła rampy" (tytuł filmu) which was made in 1952, but did not open until 1972 (rules have subsequentlypóźniej changed to disallowodrzucić, nie uznać awards for films more than two years old).

The awards night itself is an elaboratewyszukany extravaganza, with the invited guests walking up the red carpet in the creations of the most prominentwybitny, znaczący fashion designers (who usually loanpożyczać them to the stars to gain publicity). The awards ceremony is televised around the world.

The judging process and criteria for the awards themselves is the subject of much discussion. The Academy includes a preponderanceprzewaga of, as Charles Taylor, film critic for salon.com describes it, "elderly and (aesthetically) conservative" members. Certain genreskategorie of film, such as historical epicsepopeje (and specifically ones about World War II), seem to appeal to the voters. There is also a wide belief that awards are given for "political" reasons -- for instance, rewarding an artist whose career has included many good works but has not thus far received an Academy Award. Less subjectivelysubiektywnie, it is clear that movie studios spend large amounts of money on campaigns to get their films Oscars—Miramax being the most widely-discussed (and arguablyprawdopodobnie successful) studio at this at present. Such influence is nothing new -- it is widely believed that the early media mogulmagnat William Randolph Hearst ran a campaign to ensure that Citizen Kane, a film regarded by many as the greatest of all time -- did not receive Oscars (it received only one, despite nominations in nine categories).

Academy Award rules are reviewed annually.

Url źródłowy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academy_Award

Słowniczek

prominent
 

wybitny, znaczący

suspense
 

niepewność, napięcie

clause
 

klauzula

Limelight
 

"Światła rampy" (tytuł filmu)

subsequently
 

później

disallow
 

odrzucić, nie uznać

elaborate
 

wyszukany

loan
 

pożyczać

preponderance
 

przewaga

genres
 

kategorie

epics
 

epopeje

subjectively
 

subiektywnie

arguably
 

prawdopodobnie

mogul
 

magnat