Oscar season starts with a game of musical chairs

Actors George Clooney and Sandra Bullock attend the premiere of “Gravity” at the AMC Lincoln Square Theaters on Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2013 in New York. AP FILE PHOTO

NEW YORK—The first act of the Oscar season is playing out like an episode of “Survivor.” Several anticipated films planned to be released in the heart of awards season have picked up stakes and moved to 2014. Changes often happen in the highly contentious fall movie season, but rarely has there been an exodus like this.

Most recently, George Clooney’s World War II drama, “The Monuments Men,” previously scheduled for Dec. 18, was moved by Sony to early next year, after the end-of-year eligibility cutoff.

Earlier postponed was Bennett Miller’s brother drama, “Foxcatcher,” with Channing Tatum and Steve Carell; “Grace of Monaco,” starring Nicole Kidman as Grace Kelly and James Grey’s “The Immigrant,” starring Joaquin Phoenix and Marion Cotillard.

Martin Scorsese’s “The Wolf of Wall Street” is also up in the air, widely expected to move from a long-planned November release to Christmas. Scorsese is racing to edit his ambitious Wall Street epic, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, in time for release this year. Paramount announced that its spy franchise film, “Jack Ryan,” is moving from Dec. 25 to Jan. 17.

So, why the game of musical chairs? The holiday season is a packed one, so the margins for capturing box-office and awards momentum are thin. And three Oscar favorites have already firmly established themselves: Steve McQueen’s hugely acclaimed slavery epic, “12 Years a Slave”; the global box-office juggernaut and technical marvel, “Gravity,” and the Tom Hanks Somali pirate docudrama, “Captain Phillips.”

For now, the favorite is “12 Years a Slave,” which picked up a leading three nominations from the Gotham Independent Film Awards.

Landmark

Based on the account of Solomon Northup (played by Chewitel Ejiofor), the film bears the weight of being a landmark—a movie that depicts American slavery more faithfully than it ever has been before.

“It’s going to go on its own journey, and we’ll see where that ends up,” says Ejiofor. “The important thing is that people should see it if there’s hyper buzz about it. This is a deeply involved story about a man who had a profound experience.

“I was deeply moved by his experience, and I feel like, outside of anything else, that should be given its place and its own room.”

“Gravity” has been a different kind of sensation, leading the box office for three consecutive weeks, in addition to nearly universal raves from critics. Alfonso Cuaron’s film and “12 Years a Slave” are currently the consensus top two Oscar contenders, according to a recent “Gurus o’ Gold” poll of 15 Oscar prognosticators and film writers at MovieCityNews.com.

But, the reasons for the release date changes have less to do with the seeming lock on awards than with the individual challenges of each film.

Clooney has said that the extensive visual effects for “The Monuments Men” needed time for completion. Sony Pictures said that “Foxcatcher” also needed more time to finish. “The Immigrant,” premiered at the Cannes film festival in May. “Grace of Monaco” is moving to March, Harvey Weinstein has said, because “it’s just not ready.”

A move to early next year, as “The Monuments Men” is doing, signals a lack of faith in awards attention. While the holiday season is the one of the most prestigious and lucrative times of the year to release a film, the early winter months are typically considered the doldrums of the moviegoing year.

But, it also means much more room at the box office. In late December, “The Monuments Men” would have had to compete with “The Wolf of Wall Street,” Ben Stiller’s “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty,” “August: Osage County,” “Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues,” and the 3D action film “47 Ronin.” AP

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