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1929/30
1930/31
1931/32
1932/33
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
* Indicates that the film/performance was not nominated for an Academy Award in this category
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All Quiet on the Western Front
Actor: George Arliss (Disraeli)
Actress:Norma Shearer (The Divorcee)
Director: Lewis Milestone
(All Quiet on the Western Front)
|
All Quiet on the
Western Front
Actor: Ronald Colman (Bulldog Drummond)
Actress:Greta Garbo (Anna Christie)
Supporting Actor:Louis Wolheim
(All Quiet on the Western Front)*
Supporting Actress:Marie Dressler (Anna Christie)*
Director: Lewis Milestone
(All Quiet on the Western Front)
|
|
| |
All
Quiet on the Western Front is the first
true masterpiece made during the sound era, and any other choice for
the Best Picture Oscar (then or now) would be ridiculous. It is one
the of the few films of the 1930s that seems to gain power with the
passage of time, as the viewer realizes the horrors of war remain
the same regardless the advances in tactics or technology. It was
the first Best Picture produced by lowly Universal Studios, which
invested an unusually large amount of its assets into the production
(Universal head Carl Laemmle imported Broadway luminary George Abbott
to cowrite the screenplay and up-and-coming stage director George
Cukor to act as dialogue coach) which paid off dividends both in box
office returns and in prestige. In addition to the Oscar for Best
Picture, it won Lewis Milestone his second Best Director Oscar (after
winning the only Oscar ever given for Comedy Direction for Two
Arabian Knights in 1927/28); although the omission of acting nominations
for either Lew Ayres or especially Louis Wolheim (who also appeared
in Two Arabian Knights) for their unforgettable performances
seems a peculiar oversight. Wolheim was a wonderful character actor
whose brutish appearance belied an erudite intellect (he was a professor
of English at Yale before going into acting), rising to prominence
in the original Broadway production of Eugene O'Neill's The Hairy
Ape in 1922 and finding success in silent films (he almost certainly
would have been nominated for his intimidating supporting performance
as a gangland boss in the 1927/28 Best Picture nominee The Racket,
had that category been awarded at the time), but his sympathetic performance
as a kindly soldier in All Quiet On the Western Front represented
not only the highlight of his career, but one of the seminal performances
of the early talkie era. |
|
At
a time when cameras were shut up in boxes to prevent their sound
from being caught on the soundtrack (cameramen frequently fainted
from lack of oxygen) and action was static because microphones had
to be immobile, the film industry was desperately raiding Broadway
for actors who could speak and directors who were familiar with
the possibilities of the human voice. One of the first great emigrants
to Hollywood was director Rouben Mamoulian, who appeared
on the scene this year with his first film and showed everyone how
it should be done. Applause is an entertaining backstage
romp that was fluid and alive with action (compared to the stiff
and stodgy Broadway Melody) that failed to receive a single
nomination despite being hailed as a revolutionary advance in film's
use of sound. Mamoulian went on to direct a handful of glorious
films (Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde, Love Me Tonight, Queen Christina,
The Mark of Zorro), never winning a nomination despite the supremacy
of his craft. He was as a distinguished a stage director (Porgy
and Bess, Oklahoma!) as he was with film, but he never seemed
to get the recognition he deserved.
|
This strange period when Hollywood was first trying to find
its voice with actors who could speak resulted in the one of
the most unlikely movie stars: George
Arliss, who
played the role of Prime Minister
Benjamin Disraeli for years in Britain and America and made
a silent film of the play before giving his Oscar winning performance
in the 1930 film. Arliss was described as "the greatest
living actor" (most frequently by himself), but his stagy
style has not stood up well to repeated viewings. Many stage
actors of this period recreated Broadway successes on film with
performances that can still be enjoyed today (Alfred Lunt and
Lynn Fontanne in The Guardsman, Fredric March in The
Royal Family of Broadway, W. C. Fields in Poppy),
but Arliss' celebrated turn as Disraeli has more ham than an
Easter dinner and his signature vehicle, first staged in 1911,
is a remnant of a bygone age that would have us believe that
the legendary Prime Minister spent most of his time out-witting
foreign spies who infiltrated his home to uncover secret codes.
The film does have some entertaining moments, such as when Disraeli
feigns illness to deceive a female spy, but his performance
lacks the freshness and spontaneity of Ronald Colman in Bulldog
Drummond, Maurice Chevalier in The Love Parade, or
the unnominated Lew Ayres in All Quiet on the Western Front.
|
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Cimarron
Actor: Lionel Barrymore(A Free Soul)
Actress:Marie Dressler (Min and Bill)
Director: Norman Taurog (Skippy)
|
City Lights*
Actor: Edward G. Robinson(Little
Caesar)*
Actress:Marie Dressler(Min
and Bill)
Supporting Actor: Harry Myers (City Lights)*
Supporting Actress: Virginia Cherrill (City Lights)*
Director: Charles Chaplin (City Lights)*
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Cimarron
is a bloated, uninvolving epic that seems truly shocking today because
of the racist slant towards the film's one black character (a dim-witted
servant who is first seen sleeping in a chandelier). Indeed none
of the films nominated for Best Picture (with the possible exception
of The Front Page) are remembered at all today except for
their Oscar nominee status, compared to a slew of non-nominated
films that are constantly and enthusiastically revived: Little
Caesar, The Public Enemy, Dracula, The Dawn Patrol and The
Blue Angel. Towering above all of these memorable films is arguably
the greatest masterpiece by the greatest artist in the history of
motion pictures: Chaplin's City Lights. The failure of City
Lights to receive any nominations (despite its financial success
and critical acclaim) is usually attributed to Chaplin turning his
back on sound and continuing to make silent films years after the
industry had made the transition to talkies. But the selection of
the mediocre Cimarron and the omission of the breathtaking
City Lights indicates a pattern in Oscar voting that prevails
to this day: epic over simplicity, drama over comedy, safety over
risk.
City
Lights may be (along with Birth of a Nation) one of the
greatest examples of true risk in motion picture history. A major
studio hadn't released a silent film in over two years, and the
making of the "Comedy Romance in Pantomime" proved to
be a nightmare that less persistent filmmakers might easily have
abandoned. It was in production for over three years with less than
half that time being devoted to the actual shooting as Chaplin dealt
with his creative blocks and the inexperience of ingénue
Virginia Cherrill, who walked off the film in a salary strike at
one point when the contract she originally agreed to proved to be
invalid. It was all worth it in the end, as City Lights proved
not only Chaplin's greatest box office success to that time, but
an unforgettable work of cinematic art that boasts one of the most
moving endings in movie history. Chaplin is nothing short of magic
in his penultimate appearance as the Little Tramp, and unforgettable
work is also provided by acting veteran Harry Myers as an eccentric
millionaire who is best friends with the tramp when he is drunk,
only to not have the slightest idea who he is when sober. But most
surprising of all is the heartbreaking performance of the neophyte
Cherrill, whose painstaking work with Chaplin (the shot where the
tramp first encounters the flower girl required 342 takes) resulted
in a brilliant characterization and while her moving performance
is far more a testament to Chaplin's ability to draw good work from
inexperienced actresses than anything else, the proof is in the
pudding and Cherrill's performance is the finest of an actress in
any Chaplin film until Paulette Goddard came along. Cherrill only
appeared in about a dozen more films after her success in City
Lights before retiring to a more fitting career as a socialite
(she was married to Cary Grant during her Hollywood period) with
her most memorable post-City Lights film being Charlie
Chan's Greatest Case. She did make a final appearance in the
magnificent 1983 documentary Unknown Chaplin, and had a such
an elegant and dignified presence that it's easy to see what Chaplin
saw in her in the first place.
|
While
the failure of City Lights to receive any nominations can be
explained away because of Chaplin's refusal to embrace sound, the
failure of Edward G. Robinson to be nominated for his spellbinding,
career-defining performance in Little Caesar seems inexplicable
(especially compared with the hammy scenery chewing of nominee Richard
Dix in Cimarron or winner Lionel Barrymore in A Free Soul).
The multifaceted Robinson was never nominated for an Academy Award
despite brilliant performances in Double Indemnity, Dr. Erlich's
Magic Bullet, Our Vines Have Tender Grapes and The Cincinnati
Kid; this is not only the year he should have been nominated,
but the year he should have won. |
1930/31
is perhaps the worst year in Oscar history for overlooking classic
films for the Best Picture award. In addition to the deserving The
Front Page and the undeserving Cimarron, the Academy nominated
three forgotten films for the award: Skippy (which is remembered
today only because it boasted the youngest Best Actor nominee in ten
year old Jackie Coogan and for serving as the name of a brand of peanut
butter), Trader Horn (which is remembered for star Edwina Booth
contracting sleeping sickness during its shooting in Africa and successfully
suing MGM), and the hoary melodrama East Lynne (which isn't
remembered for anything). With the wealth of memorable films released
in this voting period, the selection of the bloated, boring, and racist
Cimarron ranks as the worst choice for Best Picture
in Oscar history. |
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Grand Hotel
Actor: Wallace Beery (The
Champ) and
Fredric March (Dr. Jeckyll & Mr. Hyde)
Actress:Helen Hayes (The Sin of Madeline Claudet)
Director: Frank Borzage (Bad Girl)
|
Frankenstein*
Actor: Fredric March (Dr. Jeckyll
& Mr. Hyde)
Actress:Joan Crawford (Grand
Hotel)*
Supporting Actor: Boris Karloff (Frankenstein)*
Supporting Actress: Miriam Hopkins
(Dr. Jeckyll & Mr. Hyde)*
Director: Rouben Mamoulian(Dr. Jeckyll & Mr. Hyde)*
|
|
| |
|
Grand
Hotel was a bold move by MGM wunderkind
Irving G. Thalberg to put five of the studio's biggest stars into
a single picture. The result is a lavish melodrama that can still
be viewed with enjoyment today, despite its trivial storyline and
the uneven performances by its celebrated cast (Joan Crawford gives
perhaps the finest performance of her career, but Greta Garbo sleepwalks
through her turn as an antisocial ballerina and has very little
chemistry with love interest John Barrymore). Compare this piece
of fluff with a wildly entertaining film that deals with the Big
Issue of the consequences of when a man tries to play God: Frankenstein.
This film is sometimes written off even today as a mere monster
movie, but was so powerful in its time that it had to be edited
to avoid offending sensitive patrons (when the monster is finally
animated, Doctor Frankenstein can be seen screaming a line of dialogue
that was frustratingly erased from the film's soundtrack by nervous
censors. The line is "Now in the name of God, I know what it
feels like to be God!") Overlooked for recognition in
its day, Frankenstein was one of the few early sound films
to be listed by the American Film Institute as one of the 100 greatest
films ever made.
Boris
Karloff's iconic performance as the monster in Frankenstein
failed to make the cut in the nominations in an era when
only three Best Actor nominees were honored and the supporting
awards were not yet given. While it's true that Karloff may
have been overlooked because of the perception that he appeared
in a genre film and that a good deal of his performance was
achieved by makeup, this didn't hurt winner Fredric March
who faced the same prejudices for his superb performance as
Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde. Most likely Karloff was overlooked
because he was an unknown whose film was made for a minor
studio (Universal) and his monster was really a supporting
role (Karloff was forth-billed in the cast, although that
didn't stop the Academy from nominating Frank Morgan for Best
Actor in a supporting role for The Affairs of Cellini in
1934), whereas March (who deserved the Oscar for his brilliant
performance) was an up-and-coming star with one Oscar nomination
already to his credit (for The Royal Family of Broadway)
whose film was made for a major studio (Paramount). But Karloff's
performance continues to make the greatest impact today, and
seems especially impressive compared with the less-than-compelling
work of the later actors to take on the role for Universal
(Lon Chaney, Jr., Glenn Strange and especially Bela Lugosi;
whose wooden performance as the monster in Frankenstein
Meets The Wolf Man makes one shudder to realize that he
was originally offered the role before Karloff in the original).
The Academy looked down its nose at monster movies and to
expect them to include both March and Karloff is probably
asking too much, but the indelible image of Karloff was certainly
worthy of a nomination.
|
Frank
Borzage received his second Academy
Award for Best Director for Bad Girl (the first was for
Seventh Heaven in 1927/28). Bad Girl was a strangely
titled (there was no bad girl in it) piece of hack work that
was recognized more for Borzage's position as one of the Hollywood
Social Elite than for artistic merit. Far more deserving of
recognition were the nominated work of King Vidor for The
Champ and Josef von Sternberg for Shanghai Express
and the non-nominated work of Edmund Goulding for Grand Hotel,
James Whale for Frankenstein or Rouben Mamoulian for
Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde, but since they lacked Borzage's
social connections, all they had going for themselves was raw
talent - a commodity not always valued by the Academy. The film
itself is a forgettable little nonentity about the compromises
and misunderstandings faced by a young couple (played by a hammy
James Dunn and a wooden Sally Eilers) during the bumpy first
years of their marriage. Borzage's movie career dated back to
1912 and he adored implausible, melodramatic material about
young married life (Seventh Heaven followed a similar
path of showing the early stages of a young couple's marriage,
to even more dubiously melodramatic effect, although it had
the advantage of the charming Janet Gaynor and the dashing Charles
Ferrell in the leads) with simplistic conflicts (Eilers is thrown
out of her Simon Legree-like brother's apartment under the slightest
suspicion of improper behavior) and some rather crude attempts
at humor (after Eilers gives birth to the couple's first child,
a nurse inexplicably presents numerous other babies to the new
mother who assumes them to be hers, only to be told that they
are the children of other women in the ward). It is the type
of material that D.W. Griffith could do alchemy with, but Borzage
was no D.W. Griffith and his award-winning films now gather
dust as forgotten museum pieces. |
Grand
Hotel is the only film to win the Best Picture Oscar that
wasn't nominated in any other categories, a classification that
seems absurd because the film had so many outstanding aspects
to it. Edmund Goulding did a remarkable job in directing so
many high caliber, high ego names in the cast, and got particularly
remarkable performances from Joan Crawford and Lionel Barrymore.
William Drake did a superb job of crafting a screenplay from
Vicki Baum's potentially episodic novel. But the most unique
aspect of the film may have been Cedric Gibbons' opulent
art deco set, one of the most formidable achievements in art
direction of the era. The Academy only named three nominees
in this period and those that they did honor -Richard Day for
Arrowsmith, Lazare Meerson for À nous la liberté
(the first foreign language film to receive a nomination)
and winner Gordon Wiles for Transatlantic - were all
fine choices for recognition. But Gibbons' work on Grand
Hotel is such a striking and original achievement that its
omission seems glaring today. |
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Cavalcade
Actor: Charles Laughton (The Private
Life of Henry VIII)
Actress:Katharine Hepburn (Morning
Glory)
Director: Frank Lloyd (Cavalcade)
|
King Kong*
Actor: Paul Muni (I Am a Fugitive
from a Chain Gang)
Actress:Mae West (She Done Him Wrong)*
Supporting Actor:
Stuart Erwin (International House)*
Supporting Actress: Joan Bennett (Little Women)*
Director: Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack (King Kong)
|
|
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|
1932/33
is perhaps the most puzzling year in Oscar history, not only
because a totally forgotten film was once again awarded the
Best Picture Oscar, but because one of the most original,
memorable and influential films ever made failed to receive
a single nomination. The lack of Oscar recognition awarded
to King Kong is usually attributed to the fact that
it was released by the minor RKO Radio studios. But RKO Radio
had a Best Picture nominee that year in Little Women,
so that argument seems unconvincing. Not only that, but the
episodic and unappealing Cavalcade was by far the weakest
film nominated that year, being pitted against such classics
as Forty-Second Street, The Private Life of Henry VIII,
Little Women, She Done Him Wrong, and the non-nominated
Duck Soup,Trouble in Paradise and Dinner At Eight.
Based on Noël Coward's monumental stage pageant, Cavalcade
does contain some interesting sequences (the scenes depicting
the bombing of London during World War I are very exciting),
but they are few and few between in a rambling extravaganza
that lacks relatable characters or a compelling storyline.
There's a reason some films are remembered and others are
not. Screen Cavalcade, and you'll realize why it's
forgotten.
The
original version of King Kong seems likely to never
be forgotten, even in the face of many imitators that include
two complete remakes: John Guillermin's ghastly 1976 version
which was nominated for two Oscars and won a Special Achievement
Award, and Peter Jackson's far more creditable - though undeniably
overlong - 2005 attempt which won three statuettes. The virtues
that set apart the 1933 original from its various pretenders
are many, but one of the most overlooked highlights of the
film is Robert Armstrong's wooden, humorless, and absolutely
spot-on correct characterization of ultra-macho filmmaker
Carl Denham. The character Denham is based on Kong's
co-director Merion C. Cooper, who was a decorated military
man that escaped from a Soviet prisoner of war camp before
starting his film career as the producer of the type of roughhewn
nature films that Denham specializes in (Cooper's second film,
Chang, was a pseudo-documentary about a family of elephants
that was nominated for the Artistic Quality of Production
award at the first Oscar ceremony). Though a woefully limited
actor, Armstrong brings exactly the right note of uncompromising
masculinity to the film that later interpreters - a composite
of a milquetoast Charles Grodin and a bland Jeff Bridges in
1976, and a boyish, roly-poly Jack Black in 2005 - completely
miss the mark on. Armstrong was an awful actor whose only
memorable films were Kong, the sequel Son of Kong
and the Kong rip-off Mighty Joe Young, but he
was perfectly cast as Carl Denham and brings a rugged quality
to the role that it's hard to imagine many other actors being
equal to.
|
In
1930/31, the Academy nominated Trader Horn
for Best Picture, a film that is best known for its star contracting
sleeping sickness. In 1932/33, they gave the Best Picture Award to
a film that is so boring that it could cause sleeping sickness.
Based on a play by Noel Coward, Cavalcade is the saga of two
families, the Marryots and the Bridges, the former upper class and
the latter their servants, from the end of the 19th Century up to
1933. While the narrative of the film takes place over forty years,
watching it seems to take up almost as much time. Ask any movie fan
to name their favorite films, and King Kong, Duck Soup, and
Forty-second Street will likely appear on the list. Ask any
movie fan if they thought Cavalcade was the best film of 1933,
and their most likely reply would be "What's Cavalcade?"
With the wealth of superior films eligible for Best Picture, the choice
of Cavalcade must rank second only to Cimarron
as the worst selection for Best Picture in Academy Award history. |
When
Will Rogers announced the Best Director winner, he said simply "Come
up and get it, Frank!" Nominee Frank Capra thought that Rogers
meant him, and was almost to the podium when he realized that the
winner was actually Frank Lloyd for Cavalcade. Capra was forced
to make his way back to his seat in abject humiliation, but one can
understand his confusion as Lloyd's ponderous direction of the forgotten
Calvacade is one of the worst selections in Oscar history.
There were a myriad of overlooked accomplishments in 1932/33: the
career defining performance of Mae West in She Done Him Wrong,
the manic screenplay of Duck Soup, and the elegant production
of Dinner at Eight all leap immediately to mind. But the groundbreaking
effect of King Kong makes its shutout the biggest mystery in
Oscar history. The two individuals most deserving of recognition were
directors Ernest B. Schoedsack and Merian C. Cooper, whose
work was light years beyond winner Frank Lloyd for Cavalcade
or even nominees Frank Capra (Lady for A Day) and George Cukor
(Little Women), whose place on the honor roll is well deserved. |
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It
Happened One Night
Best
Actor: Clark Gable(It Happened One Night)
Best Actress:Claudette Colbert(It Happened One Night)
Director Frank Capra (It Happened One Night)
|
It
Happened One Night
Actor: John Barrymore (Twentieth
Century)*
Actress:Bette Davis(Of Human Bondage)*
Supporting Actor: Frank Morgan (Affairs of Cellini)
Supporting Actress: Zasu Pitts
(Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch)*
Director Frank Capra (It Happened One Night)
|
|
The
Academy behaved very uncharacteristically in 1934, eschewing its
usual Best Picture preference for epic drama by selecting a modest
comedy made by the B-List Columbia Studios. But for once they got
it right, since the groundbreaking screwball comedy It Happened
One Night was not only a major influence on screen comedy for
the next ten years, but it is as enjoyable to modern audiences as
to its original patrons. 1934 was a strong year for Hollywood, with
evergreen classics like The Thin Man, The Gay Divorcee, and
the unnominated Twentieth Century, It's a Gift and Sons
of the Desert enchanting audiences as much today as when they
premiered. But even this heady group doesn't quite equal the magic
of It Happened One Night, whose storied creation seems like
the stuff of Hollywood fantasy in itself (Gable's casting in the role
that catapulted him into superstardom was originally meant as a punishment
to the actor, who had the audacity to ask for more money; and Frank
Capra's unprecedented dominance at the Oscars came only a year after
humiliating himself by mounting the podium to accept the Best Director
Oscar for Lady for a Day, not realizing that the winner was
actually Frank Lloyd). But as delightful as It Happened One Night
was, its Oscar success seems an aberration in Academy history (nominees
Cleopatra or The Barretts of Wimpole Street are more
along the usual preference for Best Picture), but this was a rare
occasion where the Best Picture was the most entertaining one as well. |
There
weren't any sore thumbs in the 1934 awards, but the selection of Clark
Gable as Best Actor was clearly a case of style over substance.
Gable was an appealing personality who gave a virtually identical
performance in all his films. He had wittier lines to say in It
Happened One Night, but he didn't really do anything different
in it than he did in Boom Town or San Francisco. Ironically,
he delivered more interesting performances in films like A Free
Soul and Manhattan Melodrama, playing the tough guy roles
he specialized in before rising to superstardom, and it's interesting
to consider what his career would have been like if he'd made films
for the grittier Warner Bros. studio instead of the MGM glamour factory.
Gable did get a chance to show off his dramatic chops in his magnificent
final (unnominated) performance in The Misfits. |
Bette
Davis' failure to be nominated for Of Human Bondage was such
a scandal that the Academy allowed write-in votes to put her back
in the running. But in the Hindsight Awards race, the scandal should
have been over the omission of John Barrymore, who was never
nominated for an Academy Award, claiming that "they're afraid
that I'll show up drunk if I win - and I just might!" He might
have been nominated for any number of performances, but the one that
seems like the biggest oversight was his hilarious work as the desperate
producer in the screwball comedy Twentieth Century. The nominees
that year were Gable (who won because of the popularity of It Happened
One Night - and his own), Frank Morgan in The Affairs of Cellini
(who would have won Best Supporting Actor if that award had been introduced
two years earlier, and was only narrowly defeated by Gable for the
Best Actor award) and William Powell for The Thin Man. All
were reasonable selections, but Barrymore's work was a tour-de-force
that outdid all of them. |
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Mutiny on the Bounty
Actor: Victor McLaglen (The Informer)
Actress:Bette Davis (Dangerous)
Director: John Ford (The Informer)
|
Top Hat
Actor:Charles Laughton (Mutiny on
the Bounty)
Actress:Katharine Hepburn (Alice Adams)
Supporting Actor: W. C. Fields David Copperfield)*
Supporting Actress: Florence Eldridge
(Les Miserables)*
Director: John Ford (The Informer)
|
|
| |
Mutiny
on the Bounty is a rip-snorting adventure
film and the second Irving Thalberg production to win Best Picture.
Strangely, it did not win an award in any other category; although
it is the only film to receive three nominations for Best Actor: for
Clark Gable, Franchot Tone (who would have been up for Best Supporting
Actor if that award had been introduced a year earlier) and New York
Film Critics Award winner Charles Laughton. The movie is carried by
Laughton's definitive Captain Bligh, but the story unfolds in a very
one sided manner that lacks dramatic power (the tale of the mutiny
was told with much more drama in 1984's The Bounty, ironically
the only version of the three films of the story not to be nominated
for Best Picture). Mutiny on the Bounty's biggest threat to
the Oscar was John Ford's The Informer, which won Best Director,
Best Actor for Victor McLaglen, and Best Screenplay (which Dudley
Nichols turned down in protest of the Academy's labor organizing activities);
but three films of the era stand out as supreme cinematic achievements:
the hilarious horror send-up The Bride of Frankenstein (featuring
stunning performances by Boris Karloff and Ernest Thesiger), the Marx
Bros. masterpiece A Night at the Opera, and the seminal teaming
of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, Top Hat.Of the three, Top
Hat was the only film to receive a Best Picture nomination (The
Bride of Frankenstein was nominated for its sound recording),
and that delightful entertainment is as enjoyable today as when it
came out. To be sure, the film is a throwback to Broadway musicals
of the 1920s before people like Richard Rogers, Oscar Hammerstein
II and Jerome Kern figured out that songs could advance a show's story
rather than merely serve as an entertaining diversion from it. But
Top Hat is an example of this type of entertainment at its
most sublime due to the Astaire-Rogers chemistry, the magnificent
dancing of Astaire, a superb song score by Irving Berlin, a delightful
bon bon of a screenplay by Allan Scott and Dwight Taylor, and wonderful
supporting performances by Helen Broderick and Edward Everett Horton.
They don't just not make `em like this anymore - they never
made `em like this! |
The
first of three Oscars for Dance Direction were given out this year,
and the Academy mistakenly awarded Dave Gould for the "I've
Got a Feeling You're Fooling" number from The Broadway Melody
of 1936 instead of the rightful winner Hermes Pan for the "Piccolino"
from Top Hat. Pan's athletic and sophisticated choreography
for Top Hat continues to dazzle to this day, and should have
left the other nominees in the dust.
|
The
Marx Bros. films were never nominated for Academy Awards (save for
a single nomination for Dance Direction for the disturbingly racist
"All God's Children Got Rhythm" number from 1937's A
Day At the Races). It's understandable that the brothers never
received nominations as performers (since they always played the same
characters in a manner which is not acting that the Academy Awards
were designed for), but their film's inventive and unique screenplays
were certainly deserving of recognition.This was never truer than
in the case of A Night at the Opera, penned by distinguished
playwrights George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind (Pulitzer Prize winners
for Of Thee I Sing). The Academy traditionally thumbs its nose
at broad comedy, but A Night at the Opera was head and shoulders
the finest screenplay of 1935, and should not only have been nominated,
it should have won. |
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The Great Ziegfeld
Actor: Paul Muni
(The Story of Louis Pasteur)
Actress:Luise Rainer (The
Great Ziegfeld)
Supporting Actor: Walter Brennan(Come and Get It)
Supporting Actress: Gale Sondergaard
(Anthony Adverse)
Director: Frank Capra (Mr. Deeds Goes to Town)
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Mr. Deeds Goes To Town
Actor: Charles Chaplin(Modern Times)*
Actress:Carole Lombard (My Man Godfrey)
Supporting Actor: Paul Robeson (Show Boat)*
Supporting Actress:Paulette Goddard
(Modern Times)*
Director: Frank Capra (Mr. Deeds Goes to Town)
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The
Academy awarded Frank Capra Best Director Oscars for It Happened
One Night (1934), Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936) and You
Can't Take It With You (1938), as well as anointing the first
and third films as Best Picture of the Year. This is ironic, since
the most memorable film by far is the one that they didn't select
for the award, Mr. Deeds Goes to Town. Capra's tale of small-town
rube Longfellow Deeds' whose life is nearly ruined when he inherits
a fortune was Capra's masterpiece (even moreso than the better-remembered
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington and It's a Wonderful Life)
and won the Best Picture award from the New York Film Critics and
the National Board of Review. It remains as touching and amusing
today, even with attempts to water it down by a short-lived television
sitcom with the same title and a crude remake with Adam Sandler
failing to fill the very large shoes left by Gary Cooper at his
funniest and most sincere as the tuba-playing millionaire who finds
only scorn in the big city until he meets what he thinks is a kindred
spirit in the wonderful Jean Arthur. Mr. Deeds faced stiff
competition as the finest film of the year from My Man Godfrey
(which was nominated for Actor, Actress, Supporting Actor, Supporting
Actress, Director and Screenplay, but not Best Picture - its place
in that category was taken by Libeled Lady, which was not
nominated for anything else) and Chaplin's Modern Times (which
received a total of zero nominations).
But
this was an era when the Academy wasn't all that interested in quality
for its top prize. With the wealth of comic masterpieces to choose
from, the Academy blew it once again by selecting MGM's behemoth
of a musical tribute to legendary showman Florenz Ziegfeld, The
Great Ziegfeld; a dull, poorly acted (especially by Oscar winner
Luise Rainer) film that would have sank into oblivion were it not
for its Oscar success. But since this was a period where Oscar selections
were primarily dictated by studio politics, a big studio superproduction
always carried an edge with the voters.
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Luise
Rainer won the first of her back-to-back
Academy Awards for her wooden performance as Florenz Ziegfeld's first
wife Anna Held in The Great Ziegfeld before returning to the
anonymity that she was better suited for. To be fair, the ultra-slick
MGM was probably the worst place for the unpretentious Rainer to call
home, and her career might have faired better at a less mainstream
studio not so obsessed with Hollywood glamour. But it is doubtful
that a limited talent like Rainer would have received such praise
for a brief period without the power of Leo the Lion behind her, and
her Oscar for The Great Ziegfeld remains a curious selection
that seems even more puzzling when it is compared with the nominated
(and far superior) performance of Carole Lombard in My Man Godfrey.
Lombard never won an Oscar, and My Man Godfrey was the performance
she never won it for. Rainer received a second Oscar the following
year for her more effective (though somewhat monotonous) performance
in The Good Earth. The casting of the Viennese Rainer as a
Chinese peasant would result in protests today, but audiences were
impressed enough by such miscasting in 1937 to award it with Academy
Awards. Rainier would later blame the subsequent decline in her career
on the double-Oscar win, but the fact of the matter is that she was
a very mediocre actress who was absurdly overpraised for a brief period
of time. |
The
Academy had a final opportunity to honor the silent artistry of Charles
Chaplin in 1936 for his final appearance as the tramp in Modern
Times, the last silent film to be released by a major studio (with
the exception of Mel Brooks' novelty comedy Silent Movie).
Since Chaplin once again snubbed sound, the Academy apparently felt
at ease to snub Chaplin (Modern Times did not receive a single
nomination). Chaplin only won one Oscar in a competitive category,
for Best Dramatic Score for Limelight in 1972 (the film was
eligible for Oscars twenty years after it was made because it had
not been released in Los Angeles prior to that). It was hardly a selection
based on sentimentality though, as Chaplin was almost as distinguished
a composer as he was a filmmaker. This was never so apparent as with
the haunting and powerful score of Modern Times, which includes
the classic song "Smile." Modern Times deserved numerous
nominations, but its failure to be honored for its score is truly
a mystery today. |
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The Life of Emile Zola
Actor: Spencer Tracy(Captains Courageous
)
Actress:Luise Rainer (The Good Earth)
Supporting Actor: Joseph Schildkraut
(The Life of Emile Zola)
Supporting Actress: Alice Brady(In Old Chicago)
Director: Leo McCarey (The Awful Truth)
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Snow White and the Seven Dwarves*
Actor: Cary Grant(The
Awful Truth)*
Actress:Greta Garbo (Camille)
Supporting Actor: Roland Young (Topper)
Supporting Actress: Margaret Dumont
(A Day at the Races)*
Director: Fritz Lang (You Only Live Once)*
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The
Life of Emile Zola was one in a series of
somewhat pretentious biographical films that Warner Bros. made to
suit the histrionic abilities of their prestigious star "Mr."
Paul Muni (as he was frequently billed). Emile Zola is a film
very much in the Oscar mold: a Serious film about a Serious subject
made by high pedigree talent. Zola was a fine film for its
day, but it was a safe and predictable choice for Best Picture and
a film that is virtually forgotten today. Far better choices were
Frank Capra's memorable film of the James Hilton novel Lost Horizon
or the Laurel & Hardy classic Way Out West; but by far
the most memorable, courageous and influential film of 1937 was Snow
White and the Seven Dwarves. Walt Disney completely dominated
the animation business when he decided to risk everything on a brand
new art form: the feature length cartoon. Failure might have meant
the end of his studio, but Snow White's success was so overwhelming
that it began a series of films that are among the most memorable
and beloved in the history of film. The Academy honored Snow White
with a Special Oscar for Disney as well as a nomination for its score
(although not, strangely, for Best Song for the perennial Whistle
While You Work). You may argue that it's not fair for an animated
film to win the Best Picture Award and you may be right, but if one
looks at the films released in 1937 and asks which made the biggest
impact not only for that year but in terms of its importance in the
evolution of film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarves stands
head and shoulders above all its rivals. |
The
extras branch of the Screen Actors Guild were permitted to vote for
some awards in this era, and they created a major controversy when
it was decreed that they swayed the Best Song Award to the hackneyed
crowd-pleaser "Sweet Leilani" from the Bing Crosby
musical Waikiki Wedding in favor of the superior and more sophisticated
"They Can't Take That Away From Me" by George and Ira Gershwin.
Nebraskan composer Harry Owens composed the songs for only a handful
of films (winning his dubious Oscar on his only nomination) before
returning to his true calling as the front man for the Hawaiian-influenced
big band Harry Owens and His Royal Hawaiians, which popularized the
hapa haole style of Hawaiian music. |
The
Academy's disregard of comedy has been well documented, and no one
seems to have be affected by it as much as Cary Grant. Grant
was twice nominated for his dramatic performances for Penny Serenade
in 1941 and None But the Lonely Heart in 1944, both excellent
performances that were worthy of recognition. But Grant was always
overlooked for the sophisticated comedies on which his reputation
was based. The Academy's patronizing attitude towards Grant's true
calling was never as apparent as it was in 1937, when his delightful
comedy The Awful Truth was not only nominated for Best Picture,
Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor and Best Screenplay; but it won
for Leo McCarey the first of his two Best Director Oscars. With the
high regard the Academy held The Awful Truth in, Grant's snub
in the Best Actor race seems all the more puzzling. |
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You Can't Take It With You
Actor: Spencer Tracy (Boys
Town)
Actress:Bette Davis (Jezebel)
Supporting Actor: Walter Brennan (Kentucky)
Supporting Actress: Fay Bainter (Jezebel)
Director: Frank Capra (You Can't Take It With You)
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The Adventures of Robin Hood
Actor: James Cagney(Angels With Dirty
Faces)
Actress:Bette Davis (Jezebel)
Supporting Actor: Mickey Rooney (Boys Town)*
Supporting Actress: Fay Bainter (Jezebel)
Director: Michael Curtiz and Willian Keighley
(The Adventures of Robin Hood)*
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You
Can't Take It With You was the biggest hit
of the 1936 theatre season, winning the Pulitzer Prize for authors
George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart. But when it was adapted to the screen
two years later, it was billed as Frank Capra's You Can't
Take It With You. Screenwriter Robert Ryskind made a game try
at opening up the play for the screen, expanding the secondary roles
of the young lovers in the play to leads in the film (wonderfully
played by Jean Arthur and particularly the young James Stewart, who
provide the most memorable performances in the film), but as a result
the Kaufman/Hart laughfest is whittled into a moderately charming
romantic comedy/drama and not the biting satire that it was in the
original Broadway production and as a mainstay of summer stock theatres
in the decades since. Capra was one of the only comedy filmmakers
the Academy took seriously in the 1930s (along with Leo McCarey),
and after deservedly anointing him as Best Director in 1934 and 1936,
they got carried away by giving him a hat trick for his frustratingly
stagebound comedy in a surprise decision. The film that was expected
to win was the delightfully exciting and cinematic The Adventures
of Robin Hood, still one of the most adventurous and enjoyable
films ever made and the seminal teaming of actor Errol Flynn and director
Michael Curtiz (who strangely received two nominations in the Best
Director category this year, but not for this, his finest venture
into the adventure genre - possibly because he took over from William
Keighley early in the filming and shared credit with Keighley in the
final film). Viewed today, it seems inconceivable that Robin Hood
didn't sweep the Oscars. |
With
the extras still having the strongest voice in the Oscar race, anyone
who could sway their vote had an unfair advantage in the balloting.
This was never so true as it was with Walter Brennan, who was
beloved by the extras because he started out as one. This resulted
in his winning the Best Supporting Actor Oscar in 1936, 1938 and 1940.
Brennan was a wonderful character actor who appeared memorably in
many classic films, but all three of his Oscars were considered major
upsets that were swayed by the extras in the voting. Had a more objective
panel been voting, Brennan probably wouldn't have won any Oscars,
and his 1938 award for Kentucky would be the first to go. |
Spencer
Tracy became the first actor to win back-to-back Best Actor Oscars
for his bland performance as Father Flanagan in MGM's smash hit Boy's
Town. But the performance of the film came from the show business
machine Mickey Rooney, who caught the public's eye in Captains
Courageous and A Family Affair in 1937 and would go on
to become a superstar in everything from musicals like Babes in
Arms to sentimental dramas like The Human Comedy, as well
as his most famous role as Andy Hardy in the studio's spectacularly
popular series of the 1930s and 1940s. At the height of his talents,
Rooney was one of the most versatile actors who ever lived and his
magnificent performance as a young hoodlum who evolves into a straight
arrow continues to pack an emotional wallop in an otherwise dated
and manipulative film. |
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Gone With the Wind
Actor: Robert Donat (Goodbye, Mr. Chips)
Actress:Vivian Leigh(Gone With the Wind)
Supporting Actor: Thomas Mitchell (Stagecoach)
Supporting Actress: Hattie McDaniel
(Gone With the Wind)
Director: Victor Fleming (Gone With the Wind)
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Gone With the Wind
Actor: James Stewart (Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington)
Actress:Vivien Leigh(Gone With the Wind)
Supporting Actor: Bert Lahr(The Wizard of Oz)*
Supporting Actress: Olivia deHavilland
(Gone With the Wind)
Director: Victor Fleming (Gone With the Wind)
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1939
is generally regarded as the greatest year in film history, with such
memorable classics as Stagecoach, Ninotchka, Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington, and Goodbye Mr.Chips up for the Oscar for Best
Picture. Any one of them would have been a creditable choice in any
other year, but in the Hindsight race the choice boils down to the
Academy's selection of Gone With the Wind and the perennial
The Wizard of Oz. The latter is perhaps the most beloved film
ever made, but our impression of it is usually formed in childhood
where its simple story and black-and-white values are far more palatable
than the far more complex and adult Gone With the Wind. Despite
its melodramatic second half and patronizing attitude towards its
black characters, GWTW is at its heart a character study of
the enthralling Scarlett O'Hara, a personality that evolves more in
the course of the story than almost any character in film history
(with the possible exception of Charles Foster Kane). Bolstered by
sumptuous production values and stellar acting (particularly
by Vivien Leigh and Olivia deHavilland, who performed alchemy by turning
the cartoonishly cloying character of Melanie in the novel into a
relatable human being in the film) Gone With the Wind is as
impressive now as ever, even when compared with the products of today's
technical advances and sky-high budgets. Even if Gone With the
Wind isn't your favorite film of 1939, no film come close to working
on so many levels as the saga of Scarlett O'Hara.
With
such a wide-open field, it's not surprising that other
films had strong supporters in the awards races. David Selznick's
magnum opus won the last Gold Medal ever presented
by Photoplay Magazine (which had been giving the award since
1920), but The New York Film Critics chose Wuthering Heights
as their Best Picture while the National Board of Review came
up with the left-field choice of Confessions of a Nazi
Spy. The New York critics were especially embattled,
as their top award voting was a tug-of-war between GWTW
and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington with the Gotham
scribes finally selecting Wuthering Heights
in a compromise. There was no such uncertainty in the Oscar
race, with Gone With the Wind receiving a then-record
13 nominations. Selznick expressed shock that Gable didn't
win the Best Actor Award (even though that contest was really
between James Stewart and ultimate winner Robert Donat), but
the only real question was whether Victor Fleming would win
the Best Director Award. Fleming had taken over the assignment
from George Cukor at Gable's request and would ultimately
be replaced by Sam Wood after his health broke down during
shooting did a phenomenal job with the complex script, but
the film was largely viewed as Selznick's achievement and
the award was expected to go to New York Film Critics Award
winner John Ford for Stagecoach. But the Academy
finally decided that Gone With the Wind wasn't strictly
a one-man achievement, and Fleming won one of the eight Oscars
awarded to the film.
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With
awards going to such classics as GWTW, The Wizard of Oz, Goodbye
Mr. Chips, Wuthering Heights and Mr. Smith Goes To
Washington,
the selection of the forgotten The Rains Came for Special
Effects seems out of place. The flood sequences were impressive,
but
hardly etched as deeply in
the memory as
the burning of Atlanta or the Wicked Witch of the West's flying monkeys.
The adaptation of
Louis Bromfield's novel failed to make its costs back at the box office
due to the mounting expenses of staging the flood and earthquake
sequences in an otherwise interminable story which ironically depended
on its expensive flood scenes to keep it afloat. |
There
were a myriad of unrewarded performances
by actors in supporting roles in 1939: John Barrymore in Midnight,
Lon Chaney, Jr. in Of Mice and Men, Nigel Bruce in The
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, and John Carradine in Stagecoach
were snubbed
in favor of lesser work
by Harry Carey, Brian Aherne and Brian Donlevy. And while the
Academy showed a great deal of taste in presenting The Wizard of
Oz with six nominations (including Best Picture) and two awards
(for Best Song and Best Original Score) considering that in its initial
release it was a commercial flop,
the single most entertaining aspect of the film was overlooked:
the unforgettable performance of Bert Lahr as the Cowardly
Lion. Lahr's broad style was more suited to the musical stage than
to film (he won a Tony Award for his performance in Foxy),
and he appeared in only
eight more minor feature films, but his performance in The Wizard
of Oz won him immortality as one of the most memorable and beloved
characterizations in the history of the movies. |
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