----------------------------Original message---------------------------- In response to William Brooks's message: Yes, I did notice that people of color seemed to be absent (once again) from the awards (did you check out the assembled celebs?--same thing there). That's why the canonization of Forest Gump seemed so insidiously significant. I'm referring to Gump as a film about the innocence of the White Man (i.e. Gump as the unknowing participant in "making history"; Gump as the uncomprehending bystander of "civil rights"; Gump as the desexualized savior of fallen women). For me, then, the enshrinement of Gump goes hand in hand with the invisibility you point out; it's even more creepy if you realize how Gump was introduced: as a film about humanity, good old-fashioned values, the triumph of good over evil and corruption. Gayle Wald