Hollywood Out Of Its Political Depth On Oscar Night
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- The Academy Awards represent the annual celebration of the most 
formidable soft-power cultural force the world has ever known: Hollywood. If 
there's one thing that shouldn't be expected from Hollywood, it's depth -- 
particularly of the political kind. What we can expect instead is mostly 
pathetic pandering to the worst of emotivist "yay/boo" morality, masquerading as 
political insight.
Consider the winner in the Best Documentary category, "Citizenfour," about 
former NSA contractor turned defector Edward Snowden. Although it's possible 
that the Academy's choice was made on the nonpolitical merits of the film, this 
is Hollywood we're talking about. Do you think that it dawned on any of the 
Academy voters that one of the films nominated for Best Picture invalidates the 
entire rationale for Snowden's theft and leaking of top-secret U.S. 
intelligence?
While Snowden has been celebrated in Hollywood, it's scarcely been mentioned 
that the heroism of Alan Turing -- the real-life British codebreaker on whom the 
film "The Imitation Game" is based -- is significant in large part due to his 
dedication to keeping his mouth shut in the interests of national security. 
After Turing created what many consider to be the first modern computer to crack 
the Germans' Enigma cipher machine during World War II, he and his team kept 
quiet about it so that Allied forces could continue to fool their enemies into 
thinking that their compromised communications were still secure.
Turing didn't run off to a hostile nation when the war had ended and whine about 
his government's research activities at Bletchley Park, or their hypothetical 
potential for misuse. Moreover, given his conviction by the British government 
for "indecency" (homosexuality) and subsequent chemical castration, Turing had 
all the more reason to leverage his position. Contrast this with Snowden, whose 
moral stand ends with the idea of judicial accountability. He fled to Hong Kong 
with millions of pages of top-secret intelligence for which he couldn't possibly 
understand all the implications of publication.
Turing's actions have stood the moral test of time, not merely the emotional 
test of the moment. But in the Hollywood of the attention-deficit era, Snowden 
is indeed this minute's hero.
Hollywood's shallow political culture also extends to what's said onstage. For 
all the cheering of Best Supporting Actress winner Patricia Arquette's speech 
evoking the need for wage equality, has anyone bothered to ask her what she was 
talking about? Or is everyone happy just assuming and projecting? Hollywood went 
equally gaga over U.S. President Barack Obama during his 2008 campaign and his 
repeated chanting of "hope and change," which could mean whatever the 
celebrities wanted it to mean.
For all their excitement in response, presumably Meryl Streep and Jennifer Lopez 
knew what Arquette was referring to. Have they heard Arquette's story of being 
screwed out of equal pay? Because we sure didn't. Or have they been there 
themselves? Or were these multimillionaires just sympathizing with us little 
people? We'll never know, I suppose. Apparently a slogan is good enough.
Then consider Sean Penn's off-color "green card" remark while presenting the 
Best Picture award to his good friend, "Birdman" director and Mexican national 
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu. Social media and the press blew up over Penn's 
perceived lack of taste, with activists and celebrities offering their highly 
personal explanations for why his remarks were immoral, in true cultural 
emotivist style.
Penn would have been wise to heed the advice of Oscar Wilde, who once suggested 
that people should be free to do what they want as long as they don't do it in 
the streets and frighten the horses. Sean Penn scared the horses -- big time. 
Remarkably, no horses were startled when Penn was punching out paparazzi left 
and right or writing a vicious open hate letter to then-President George W. 
Bush. But this time, the masses were left to wonder why Penn didn't crack a joke 
about the green cards of the Brits or Aussies in the audience. As with 
Arquette's comments, there was a slight risk of political insight in Penn's 
flippant remark. Why didn't he humor us, if not torture us, with a little 
elaboration?
The escape hatch for Penn, Arquette and other celebs who trigger emotivist 
reactions is exactly what would be required to have seen the irony of honoring 
Snowden and Turing in the same show: depth. Explain your remarks or your joke, 
however off-color. Surely those words represent some deeper thoughts. And while 
some of us may still not agree with those thoughts, they'll at least have a shot 
at sparking a debate of substance.
COPYRIGHT 2015 RACHEL MARSDEN