London,
Dec 27 : WGA's list of screenplays eligible to be nominated for Oscars
will not include Quentin Tarantino's "Django Unchained," as Hitfix first
reported.
Tarantino, who won the Best Original Screenplay Oscar in 1995
for "Pulp Fiction," was expected to be one of the surest bets for a repeat
nomination for "Django," even getting a nomination for Best Screenplay from the
Golden Globes. Only slightly less surprising was the omission of "Les
Miserables" in the Best Adapted category. When reached for comment, a WGA
representative said this was due to both scripts being written outside union
regulations.
Considering that neither film has yet been released—they
both bow on Christmas Day—the only indication of either's awards prospects (to
say nothing of box office) has been advance reviews, which are mixed for both.
For Tarantino, a favorite of critics his entire career, this is perhaps more
worrisome than it is for "Les Miz." With its giant built-in audience of its
prior incarnation onstage ensuring large audience turnout, and its literary
pedigree dating back to Victor Hugo's novel of the same name, that film is on
safer ground than Django. Tarantino's now-legendary affinity for violent and
transgressive content may be a harder sell for Christmas audiences than the
big-budget musical, however secretly dark it may actually be.
Being ruled
ineligible for Best Original Screenplay consideration is certainly an ominous
sign for "Django"'s awards hopes. Tarantino and The Weinstein Company can only
hope that the film is a hit with audiences.
Ends
SA/EN
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» ‘Django,’ ‘Les Miz’ deemed ineligible for top screenplay award
‘Django,’ ‘Les Miz’ deemed ineligible for top screenplay award
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