
For whatever reason, the writers of last night's events seemed to think that everyone's favorite part of an awards show is the part where two mismatched presenters ramble through poorly-scripted banter and make painful attempts to appear charming and flirtatious. Because, with few exceptions, the entire show was one piece of awkward banter after another. The whole show reeked of older writers attempting to appeal to younger viewers, with little-to-no idea how to do that. Because if there is anything that young kids love, it's being pandered or condescended to. No, awkward references to smart-phone aps, Auto-Tunes, Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, and 'the Internet' are not going to appear hip/cool to the young kids. And bringing Halle Berry onstage to memorialize Lena Horne is only to make it that much more noticeable that not a single minority was nominated for a major award last night. And spoiling the finales of several nominated films (True Grit, Toy Story 3, The King's Speech) doesn't inspire viewers to check those films out later. You want to try appealing to the young kids, first of all, try not leaving Corey Haim off your 'In Memoriam' tribute. Second of all, and this gets me back to my original point, try giving the kids an entertaining show with jokes that were actually clever and rewarded those who actually followed the movie business with any amount of verve.

These two would-be hosts were chosen as hosts because someone at the top thought they represented 'exciting new stars', never-mind that both of them have been in the industry for ten years. But they are first-and-foremost actors, trained to perform characters and dialogue that was written by someone else on a film set. And not every actor can be an Oscar host. As was painfully evident, not everyone can be Billy Crystal. And in the realm of sketch comedy or improvisation, there is a world of difference between Christopher Walken and Robert De Niro. Anne Hathaway and James Franco trusted their writers to provide them a life raft as they dove headfirst into the water. Little did they realize, until it was too late, that they were diving into an empty pool. In the end, Franco and Hathaway were victims of a misguided strategy that genuinely believed that bringing aboard two bright and vivacious young movie stars would be entertainment in-and-of-itself. Hathaway certainly won a good-sportsmanship award. Franco probably has material for another documentary or short play or PhD thesis or interpretive dance. But the only people laughing last night were David Letterman and Ricky Gervais.
Scott Mendelson