skip to nav

Film fans and Academy are worlds apart

This year's crop of Oscar-nominated films are all the things that delight film critics; dark, inventive, challenging and unusually brutal. One thing they aren't, however, is popular. Out of the 10 highest grossing films of 2007, only the Pixar animated comedy Ratatouille appears on any of the shortlists for the major Oscars.

To put the problem in perspective, last year's best picture winner, The Departed, took more than $100m at the box office before the Oscar nominations were even announced. This year, in the same three months between release and nomination, the Coen Brothers' gore-soaked No Country for Old Men (right) - up for best picture and best director at the Oscars on February 24 - made less than half of that, only $44m.

The American film critic Roger Ebert can give There Will be Blood

No Country for Old Men

The upcoming Oscars could be won by a box-office dud, reports Joseph Mackertich

as many thumbs-ups as he likes - but cinema-goers just don't want to go and see it. To date Paul Thomas Anderson's oil epic, starring Daniel Day-Lewis in a role that could hardly have received more ecstatic acclaim (including the Bafta award for best actor), has grossed just over $37m internationally since it opened on Boxing Day. Compare that with this year's obligatory 'charming indie hit' Juno which was released on Christmas Day and has already grossed more than $142m worldwide

Not even Brad Pitt could convince punters to sit down and watch The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, which has taken a paltry $14m since its release in September, despite good reviews.

So what's going on? There was a time when the Oscars were won by brilliantly made and hugely popular films such as Lawrence of Arabia

Also in Features

Sign up for our email bulletins