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Oscar winners no one expected: mothers everywhere

Oscar winners dispensed morsels of wisdom in their thank-you speeches Sunday night. 'Listen to your mother' was the advice of Best Director Tom Hooper, who won for the 'The King's Speech.'

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Danny Moloshok/Reuters
British actor Colin Firth (L) holds his Oscar he won for best actor for his role in "The King's Speech" as he arrives with his wife Livia Giuggioli at the 2011 Vanity Fair Oscar party in West Hollywood, California February 27.
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Danny Moloshok/Reuters
British director Tom Hooper holds his Oscar for best director for his film "The King's Speech" as he arrives at the 2011 Vanity Fair Oscar party in West Hollywood, California February 27.

The 83rd Annual Academy Awards were chock full of little morsels of life wisdom from the winners鈥 speeches. The evening was also a roadmap of where the business of both broadcast TV and the movies are headed.

Sunday's awards ceremony seemed to have an informal theme of 鈥渕others' night鈥 鈥 beginning with the two young hosts' shout out to their mother and grandmother in the audience and topped off by director Tom Hooper鈥檚 thank-you remarks, laughs pop culture pundit Robert Thompson of Syracuse University in New York. More than a few moms no doubt nudged their teenagers as they heard the director of the winning film, 鈥淭he King鈥檚 Speech,鈥 thank his mom and drop this bit of Hollywood wisdom: 鈥淟isten to your mother.鈥 His mom is the one who discovered the script at a staged play reading and phoned her son to say, 鈥淚鈥檝e found your next movie.鈥

ABC also took up valuable air time to affirm the importance of the Academy Awards to broadcast television, announcing it had signed with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for another nine years of Oscar telecasts. This underscores the importance of live events to broadcast television, says Mr. Thompson, noting the lesson that network TV executives took from the unprecedented audience 鈥 111 million 鈥 that gathered for this month's Super Bowl.

Moreover, the awards broadcast itself is becoming more of a portal to online Oscars content, 鈥渨ith a decided focus on the youth audience,鈥 he says. A number of youth-targeted strategies were evident this year, from the tag-team hosts Anne Hathaway and James Franco to the Web-based backstage access and premium content. (Viewers could pay $5 for up-close celebrity sighting images from 11 360-degree cameras posted throughout the event.)

As for the eagle-eyed moms, mainstream moviemaking could take some direction from them, perhaps prodding studio executives to finance a few more high-minded films, says Howard Suber, professor emeritus, Producers Program at UCLA School of Theater, Film, and Television.

Mr. Suber, author of 鈥淭he Power of Film,鈥 sees in the films of the past year a growing split between what the 6,000 or so Academy voters want people to think they love and what they actually do in their day jobs. 鈥淭hey vote their conscience,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut they make films to pay mortgages and buy their fancy cars.鈥

Mainstream studios are abandoning ordinary characters, to whom everyday people can relate, in favor of cartoon figures that will play well with audiences around the world, says Mr. Suber. With only a few exceptions, he notes, the top-nominated films were all turned down by the major studios. He points to the money factor. A survey released last week by the Motion Picture Association of America shows the American film industry is making movies with more of an eye for foreign audiences than domestic. According to the survey, nearly two-thirds of the $31 billion global box office receipts come from foreign audiences. 鈥淣ot all that long ago, that figure was more like fifty-fifty,鈥 says Suber.

But small films 鈥 such as last year鈥檚 鈥Hurt Locker鈥 and the previous year鈥檚 鈥Slum Dog Millionaire,鈥 as well as this year鈥檚 鈥淭he King鈥檚 Speech鈥 鈥 continue to receive recognition, and that is encouraging to some filmmakers. Audiences are finding these movies and liking them, says filmmaker Jason Hewitt, founder of Films in Motion in Baton Rouge, La. He sees more opportunities for stories based on real people in true-life situations, noting that four of the 10 Best Picture nominations were based on actual events and people.

鈥淎s times get hard,鈥 he says, 鈥減eople want some authenticity, and that鈥檚 what these films are giving them.鈥

Producer Charles Bernstein suggests that the even distribution among a variety of genres is a healthy sign. Three of the biggest vote-getters 鈥 鈥淭he King鈥檚 Speech,鈥 鈥The Social Network,鈥 and 鈥Inception鈥 鈥 represent important genres: the traditional history biopic, the youth-targeted hipster, and the special-effects-driven action flick.

鈥淭his says to me that Hollywood recognizes the need for all these types of movies and wants to reward the ones that are well done,鈥 he adds by phone from the Kodak Theater after the ceremony.

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