Back in October, I wrote a post
responding to a
New York Times article which stated "Welcome to the pop Oscars." It
fussed over the
Wall-E, Iron Man, and a little known film called
The Dark Knight, and said that big box office is threatening to dominate the Academy Awards. I now have in my virtual hand the list of the
2009 Oscar Nominees and I now ask the
New York Times: What on earth were you worried about?
The Dark Knight did not receive a nomination for Best Picture OR Best Director, and although Heath Ledger did get his nod for Best Supporting Actor, the rest of the film's nominations were for the most part in the less media friendly technical categories, such as sound-mixing and editing.
Wall-E, which the
NYT feared was going to encroach on Best Picture territory, was kept firmly in its place in the B

est Animated Feature Category. The rest of the acting, directing, and Best Picture fare went for the most part to the traditional end-of-the-year releases, such as
Frost-Nixon and Golden Globe favorite
Slumdog Millionaire. The only "pop-ish" nominee I could find apart from Heath Ledger's much deserved acknowledgement was Robert Downey Jr.'s Best Supporting Actor nomination for
Tropic Thunder (Though I haven't seen the film, I've heard high praise for his performance).
Another analysis from across the web: Tom O'Neil of Gold Derby at the
Los Angeles Times writes
an article of some of the suprising snubs in the nominee list. He, too, was surprised by
The Dark Knight's lack of appearence among the top two categories, but perhaps more suprised by the fact that Kate Winslet was only nominated once. Brad Brevet at Rope of Silicon is
more satisfied with the nominations and makes some interesting predictions about who will win Best Picture based on who was nominated in other categories. Brevet is concerned, however, that
Dark Knight lackluster showing in the top categories puts Heath Ledger's chances for a win on shakier ground. Over at Slash Film, David Chen is much more
outraged with the results of the nominations. Interesting side note:, a common thread running through these articles is a suprise that Bruce Springsteen's song "The Wrestler" did not get a Best Original Song nomination. Last but not least,
In Contention, which makes its living doing Oscar predictions, is completely dismayed with the nomination list, especially
Dark Knight's abandoment, and the raising up of
The Reader, which they see as a flash in the pan that will be forgotten in a few years.
And what of Brook Barnes who, together with co-worker Michael Cieply, was the harbringer of doom-and-gloom by announcing the coming of the "pop Oscars?" They are
quietly parsing the nominee list, expressing how wonderful it is that the Oscars "have the power to catapult a niche film into the mainstream and rewrite Hollywood's pecking order." And what of
Tropic Thunder's acting nomination? No mention.
Wall-E's confinement to Best Animated Feature? Not a word about the category at all. And of
The Dark Knight's snubs and Ledger's nomination? Very little to say at all. In fact, in the entire 1017-word article, this is the only mention of the Caped Crusader's film: "Christopher Nolan failed to gain attention for his direction of
The Dark Knight." Thirteen words to sum up that perhaps the
New York Times read the pulse of Hollywood wrong when they eyed
The Dark Knight with such apprehension as a comic film that would dare tread on the Holy Ground of the Academy Awards.
To be fair, most pundits--including the humble writer here at the post--thought
The Dark Knight was a lock for at least Best Director, if not Best Picture. But as I predicted here last year, the Academy voters aren't going to change their ways anytime soon. For now, the Oscars will remain the domain of the loftier December releases that often provoke the daring statement when mentioned to a member of the common public: "I've never heard of it."