Films aiming to win best picture at Oscars must be diverse

9 September 2020, 13:25

Films aiming to win Best Picture must be diverse in future
Films aiming to win Best Picture must be diverse in future. Picture: PA

Films hoping to win best picture at the Oscars will soon have to meet strict diversity guidelines, the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences has announced.

The new rules will require studios to boost diversity both in front and behind the camera, as well as in executive roles.

The Academy, which oversees the Oscars, has attracted strong criticism for a lack of diversity among its winners and nominees, and in recent years has broadened its membership in a bid to fix the problem.

For the 2022 and 2023 ceremonies, a confidential "Academy inclusion standards form" will be required to be considered for the top prize, however meeting the "inclusion thresholds" will not be required for best picture eligibility until 2024.

All other categories will keep their current eligibility requirements, the Academy said.

In the newly revealed guidelines, Standard A is titled "on-screen representation, themes and narratives" and to qualify a film must meet one of three criteria.

They include having at least one "lead or significant support actor" from an "underrepresented racial or ethnic group".

The second criteria is called "general ensemble cast" and requires at least 30% of all actors in secondary and more minor roles to be from two "underrepresented groups", listed by the Academy as women, racial or ethnic groups, LGBTQ+ or disabled people.

The third relates to the "main storyline/subject matter," which requires the film to be "centred on an underrepresented group(s)".

Standard B, titled "creative leadership and project team", is focused on behind-the-camera roles, including directors, editors and hairstylists, asking they be made up of diverse workers.

It requires at least 30% of the film's crew to be made up of underrepresented groups.

Standard C is titled "industry access and opportunities" and is concerned with improving diversity among apprentices and interns.

And Standard D, titled "audience development", requires the studio or film company to have "multiple in-house senior executives" from "underrepresented groups" on their "marketing, publicity, and/or distribution teams".

The new standards are designed to "encourage equitable representation on and off screen in order to better reflect the diversity of the movie-going audience," according to the Academy.

Academy president David Rubin and Academy chief executive Dawn Hudson said: "The aperture must widen to reflect our diverse global population in both the creation of motion pictures and in the audiences who connect with them. The Academy is committed to playing a vital role in helping make this a reality.

"We believe these inclusion standards will be a catalyst for long-lasting, essential change in our industry."

Marc Samuelson, chair of the Bafta Film Committee, said: "We are delighted that the Academy has today announced its new representation and inclusion standards.

"Bafta introduced very similar standards in conjunction with the BFI (British Film Institute) for the outstanding British film and outstanding British debut categories in 2016 and we continue to review and expand these standards every year.

"We look forward to continuing our work with... industry bodies to introduce universal diversity standards adopted in all Bafta's film awards' categories by 2024."

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Breaking
Breaking News

California wildfire rips through Los Angeles leaving locals trapped and thousands fleeing for their lives

A court artist drawing of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, centre, and co-defendant Walid Bin Attash in court

Biden administration asks court to block 9/11 plea deals

The Tesla Cybertruck involved in an explosion outside the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas being examined

Man who exploded Tesla truck outside Trump hotel used generative AI, police say

President-elect Donald Trump speaking into a microphone with US flags in background

Trump refuses to rule out military force to take over Greenland and Panama Canal

Jimmy Carter's flag-draped coffin is carried by a military team

Former US president Jimmy Carter’s coffin arrives in Washington

Defendant Josef Fritzl, center, is escorted to the fourth day of his trial in the provincial courthouse in St. Poelten, Austria, Thursday, March 19, 2009.

Incest monster Josef Fritzl demands a house ‘with a basement’ if he wins bid for freedom

A man mourns over the bodies of two members of Abeid family who were killed in the Israeli bombardment in Maghazi, central Gaza Strip, at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah

Israel’s military launches wave of raids across occupied West Bank

Trump says US 'needs Greenland for national security purposes’ - as he vows to rename Gulf of Mexico 'Gulf of America'

Trump says US 'needs Greenland for national security purposes’ - as he vows to rename Gulf of Mexico 'Gulf of America'

Folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary

Peter Yarrow of folk music trio Peter, Paul and Mary dies at 86

Jean-Marie Le Pen speaking in the Place des Pyramides in Paris

Key dates in the life of Jean-Marie Le Pen and rise of the far-right in France

Donald Trump Jr, centre, in Nuuk, Greenland

Donald Trump Jr lands in Greenland after father said US should own territory

Heavy smoke from a brush fire in California seen from a motorway

Warning of ‘life-threatening’ winds and high fire risk for Southern California

Donald Trump

Appeals court rejects Trump’s latest attempt to delay hush money sentencing

A JetBlue Airways Airbus A320-232 takes off from the Tampa International Airport in Tampa, Florida

Two bodies found in landing gear of JetBlue plane at US airport

Sebastian Zapeta, right, and a lawyer in court in New York

Man pleads not guilty to burning woman to death on New York City subway train

Donald Trump

Trump tries again to get Friday’s hush money sentencing called off