Why No Direction Home isn't nominated for an Oscar
Initial presentation on TV disqualifies films for Oscar consideration. That happened to something recently that I really admired -- I think it was Van Sant's Elephant, shown on HBO before its delayed theatrical showings began -- leading to the injustice of its not even being considered. After many protests some of the Academy's Byzantine rules for documentaries were changed, but last year Control Room, The Corporation, Dig!, The Five Obstructions, Guerrilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst, Los Angeles Plays Itself, Metallica: Some Kind of Monster, Tarnation and Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession were not qualified for consideration. I learned all this from
LA Weekly online of December 31, 2004 , where writer Scott Foundas also says
Quote:
There are. . . .abundant regulations governing which films are eligible for a documentary Oscar in the first place. While both narratives and documentaries seeking Oscar eligibility must first play qualifying runs of at least seven consecutive days in at least one Los Angeles cinema, where documentaries are concerned that represents but the first step on the long and winding road toward hoped-for Oscar gold. As detailed in the Academy’s official rulebook (available in both pamphlet form and as a download on the Academy’s Web site), having cleared that initial hurdle, documentaries must then either open in theaters in four additional U.S. cities or, failing that, be withheld from television broadcast, anywhere in the world, until the day the Oscar nominations are announced. If a film is Oscar-nominated, it must be withheld from television for an additional nine months following the announcement. As for those films that do roll out to other cities, they too are prohibited from television airings, but only for a comparatively lenient nine months from the date of their first theatrical exhibition.
You can read the Academy's current documentary Oscar qualification hurdles here.