For months now, audiences have been watching the riveting 12 Years a Slave with palpitating hearts and seething emotions at America’s shame, and applauding warmly at the triumph of Solomon Northup.
A gifted musician and a free black man Northup was kidnapped from the North and sold into slavery in the South in the 19th century.
This week, the film triumphed at the Oscars too, winning the Best Film award over other critically acclaimed and far more successful films such as Gravity and American Hustle.
In a way, survival was the theme for three major award winners this year.
12 Years a Slave is more than an ode to survival; it is a film about hoping to live in dignity and with human rights.
The space thriller Gravity, which won for Best Director, is also a survival drama.
And Dallas Buyers Club, the small budget ($7 million) film which fetched an Oscar for best actor for Matthew McConaughey and best supporting actor for Jared Leto, is also in a way a survival drama.
McConaughey plays Ron Woodroof, a real life homophobic, rodeo-loving Texan who gets AIDS and becomes an unlikely saviour for gay patients and drug addicts.
Woodroof fought the US government during the early AIDS epidemic of the 1980s to provide patients with medicines he imported from foreign countries, ignoring the Federal Drug Administration ban on much of this medicine.
In one of the best received speeches, the 44-year-old a McConaughey, who got his first Oscar in a Hollywood career of some two decades, said: “First off, I want to thank God, because that's who I look up to... He's graced my life with opportunities that I know are not of my hand or any other human hand. He has shown me that it's a scientific fact that gratitude reciprocates.”
Leto, who plays a transgender woman dying of AIDS, also received his first Oscar. He talked about those who have died of AIDS and been persecuted for their sexual orientation. He also mentioned the people of Venezuela and Ukraine, countries in turmoil.
Dallas Buyers Club which is at the end of its run in America, where it has made about $25 million, is yet to open in many countries. The Oscar win will surely boost its box-office.
As in the past decade, the big Oscar winners this year started their awards journey at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.
The long lines at the press screenings followed by strong cheering by audiences at public screenings created big Oscar nomination buzz for 12 Years as well as Gravity.
On the other hand, the much talked about Mandela biopic Long Walk to Freedom did not ignite much passion, either among the critics or the general public. The film is ending its North American run with a paltry $10 million.
12 years grossed $50 million in North America and $90 million worldwide. The three Oscar wins could mean an addition of at least $20 million to the kitty. It won for Best Supporting Actress (Lupita Nyong’o), and Best
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