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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Lower numbers

David Germain Associated Press

By the numbers, the Academy Awards are roughly 50 percent less relevant than they have been the past five years.

While all five films nominated for the Best Picture Oscar have managed respectable ticket sales, they collectively have been seen by fewer moviegoers than any batch of best-picture nominees in 20 years.

For the first time since the 1997 “Titanic” juggernaut, no blockbuster is in the mix, and it’s the first time in 15 years without at least one $100 million hit among the best-picture contenders going into the Oscars.

By Sunday, a week before the Oscars, the domestic gross should total about $315 million for “The Aviator,” “Million Dollar Baby,” “Ray,” “Sideways” and “Finding Neverland.”

A year ago, best-picture candidates had grossed $696 million a week before the Oscars.

This year’s five nominees have sold about 51 million tickets, down by half or more from each of the previous five years.

That’s the lowest number since the 1984 awards, when “Amadeus” won best picture. “Amadeus” and its rivals – “Places in the Heart,” “The Killing Fields,” “A Passage to India” and “A Soldier’s Story” – had been seen by about 41 million people.

This is not just an exercise in pointless arithmetic. Executives at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences know from experience that a hugely popular film leading the best-picture race helps attract viewers for the Oscar telecast, whose ratings have been in a funk the past five years.

“Eyeballs staring at the movie screen translates to eyeballs staring at the TV screen,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations.

“People like to have a vested interest in what they’re watching. When ‘Titanic’ does $1.8 billion in worldwide box office, you’ve got a lot of people out there with a vested interest.”

The Oscars drew their biggest audience ever when “Titanic” won the 1997 best-picture prize. Going into Oscar night, “Titanic” had grossed nearly a half-billion dollars on its way to a $600 million domestic haul and $1.8 billion worldwide payday.

A year ago, the largest audience in four years tuned in to see the academy crown $377 million sensation “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” as best picture.

Edging toward $90 million, “The Aviator” leads this year’s roster, followed by “Ray,” which topped out at about $75 million and is now on home video. “Million Dollar Baby,” “Sideways” and “Finding Neverland” are in the $45 million to $55 million range.

The big hits of 2004 included “Shrek 2,” “Spider-Man 2” and “The Incredibles,” but they were lighter flicks that never drew much best-picture buzz. And liberal-minded Hollywood did not give serious best-picture consideration to the religious blockbuster “The Passion of the Christ.”

The feature-animation competition arguably could be called the real best-picture competition for mainstream movie fans.

At $436 million, “Shrek 2” far outgrossed the entire best-picture lineup combined. Add in “The Incredibles” ($259 million) and “Shark Tale” ($160 million), and the three animated nominees did more than 2 1/2 times the business of the five best-picture contestants.

The Oscars, though, are not necessarily a place for popular sentiment, often singling out small films such as this year’s “Vera Drake” or “Being Julia” for key nominations.

When a major commercial hit such as “Titanic” or “Return of the King” does triumph, it’s because critical and popular appeal happen to coalesce.

“If you look at the movies this time, they’re not the big special-effects type of movies that usually gross those type of numbers,” said Mike Rudnitsky, head of distribution for Miramax, which released “The Aviator” and “Finding Neverland.”

“They’re intelligent scripts with tremendous performances,” he said. “No matter what the box office, it’s the quality of the films when it comes to the Oscars.”