Sorry, Apple doesn’t deserve any credit for ‘CODA’s Academy Awards

The creative arts have long had a troubled relationship with money. Somewhere along the line, you have to suck up to somebody with a checkbook, whether it’s the local banking dynasty or a bunch of Patreon subscribers. Most artists don’t have the power to tell their backers, as Ben Affleck does in “Shakespeare In Love,” “You may remain, as long as you remain silent. Pay attention, and you will see how genius creates a legend.”

Affleck’s financier timidly refers to himself as “the money,” but such reticence is rare in real life. Most patrons of the arts use the exercise to publicize themselves, promote their favorite causes, or artwash their past. If they didn’t stand to benefit, why would they cough up the cash in the first place? For disinterested love of the arts? Get out of here.

This brings us to Apple, whose angle when it comes to financing film-making seems more straightforward: It provides the funds for movies and TV shows to be made, then in return gets to distribute them exclusively via its subscription-based TV+ streaming service. In-house Apple Studios has a ton of shows and movies planned, but only a handful have been released (“The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey” is the most notable) and none of them have been up for awards yet. As it stands, Apple pays money in order to earn money. And the better the movies and shows are, the more people subscribe and the more money it makes, so the company should be incentivized to keep out of the way and leave the experts to do their work to the best of their ability. This all sounds fine.

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CODA is the first film distributed by a streaming service to win Best Picture at the Oscars.

IDG

Of course, it isn’t quite that simple. As well as a strategic business move, Apple’s investment in TV and film is a prestige play: just like the Medicis, the company knows that putting itself close to art is an effective way to burnish its brand. (Okay, the Medicis might not have put it in those words. But they would have understood.) Apple depends on being perceived as a hip cultural force. Backing an Oscar-winning film is an excellent way to sell more phones.

Which is why I’ve been growing mildly irritated–only mildly, not enough to get up and slap someone–by the number of references to “CODA” being the first Academy Award for Best Picture victory for a streaming service, namely Apple TV+. (And not just by third parties. Apple has issued a hugely self-congratulatory press release which claims that “Apple tonight made history” and refers to itself as “the first streaming service honored with Best Picture at the Academy Awards.”) As pure corporate news, I suppose that factoid is somewhat interesting. As a question of artistic credit, which is what the Oscars are supposed to be about, it’s way off.

It’s a little different with “Ted Lasso.” While that award-winning show isn’t an Apple Studios production either, Apple TV+ gave the show life with a full series order back in October 2019 based on a pilot written by Jason Sudeikis and Bill Lawrence. And according to Variety, the show had been in the works at Apple TV+ for more than a year before it was green-lit, so Apple clearly played a major role in the finished product.

More obviously, Apple had nothing to do with making “CODA,” only with distributing it. The film was complete long before Tim Cook came along with his wheelbarrow of money; Apple bought the rights two days after its world premiere at the 2021 Sundance Festival. So the idea that Apple should get any credit whatsoever on an artistic level is preposterous. It bought a movie from one group of people and then sold it to another. For this project at least, Apple acted as a film reseller, not a film-maker.

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“Ted Lasso” isn’t a homegrown Apple Studios production, but Apple had more of a part of its development.

Apple

But there’s a deeper issue here, which is that the financial backing of a film needs as far as possible to be kept separate from the artistic decisions made while making it. And the more involved the money gets with those decisions, the more compromised the result will be. If a backer provides the money and keeps in the background–like Tom Wilkinson’s moneylender, after Ben Affleck has finished shouting at him–then they do not deserve to be credited beyond the appropriate thanks for their support. If a backer sticks their oar in and pushes decisions in one direction or another because of commercial factors, conversely, they do deserve to be credited as part of the creative team but their inclusion there is to the shame and detriment of all involved.

Apple’s TV+ project is an exciting one that is beginning to find its feet. (“Severance” is absolutely superb, and you should definitely watch that.) But by taking the credit for “CODA”‘s Oscar triumph–which was historic in respects wholly unrelated to streaming technology–Apple stole the attention from its rightful place and highlighted its own depressingly corporate attitude to the arts.

Films don’t exist to promote tech companies. And you’re not Shakespeare, you’re the money.

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