Is 12 Years a Slave the literal truth? Did Captain Phillips put his crew at risk? Does Gravity defy the laws of physics? And is Philomena anti-Catholic?
When such questions surface almost simultaneously, it's a sign the Oscars dirty tricks season is in full swing.
With the campaigning period for next week's awards extended by two weeks because of the Winter Olympics, and with rules on contacting Oscars voters tightened, the dark arts of award-winning are being deployed to full effect in what's been called the nastiest race yet.
Amid the sniping, directors have been heckled, lawsuits have been filed and stars have been out in force defending their movies.
Perhaps hardest hit has been The Wolf of Wall Street, which has been fending off a mini-avalanche of bad publicity. Around the time members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences were deciding which films should be nominated last month, a video of Leonardo DiCaprio surfaced on the internet. In it he offers effusive praise for Jordan Belfort, the convicted swindler he plays, who is now a motivational speaker.