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Rebecca
Actor: James Stewart(The Philadelphia
Story)
Actress:Ginger Rogers(Kitty Foyle)
Supporting Actor: Walter Brennan (The Westerner)
Supporting Actress: Jane Darwell
(The Grapes of Wrath)
Director: John Ford (The Grapes of Wrath)
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The Grapes of Wrath
Actor: Henry Fonda(The Grapes of Wrath)
Actress:Katharine Hepburn(The Philadelphia Story)
Supporting Actor: Jack Oakie (The Great Dictator)
Supporting Actress: Jane Darwell
(The Grapes of Wrath)
Director: John Ford (The Grapes of Wrath)
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Alfred
Hitchcock's film of Rebecca is considered by some film historians
as a major turning point in the evolution of Hollywood, because
it signaled the end of the reign of the producer as the dominant
force on the making of a film and the beginning of the age of the
director. Rebecca is a memorable film that contained classic
Hitchcock touches, the usual sumptuous David O. Selznick production,
and some of the most awe-inspiring cinematography in the history
of film by George Barnes (winning the film its only other Oscar).
But Rebecca loses track in the second
half as it shifts the emphasis away from the travails of the second
Mrs. DeWinter (a magnificent performance by Joan Fontaine) and concentrates
on the far less engaging premise of what became of her predecessor.
It is hardly surprising that it was honored over most of the more
deserving nominees, because they were comedies: The Great Dictator,
The Philadelphia Story and the non-nominated His Girl Friday
and The Bank Dick never had a chance over the dramatic histrionics
of Rebecca.
But
it took all of Selznick's Oscar campaigning skills to wrestle the
Best Picture Prize over the far more deserving winner, John Ford's
devastating adaptation of The Grapes of Wrath. Steinbeck's
dust bowl drama came to gut wrenching life and pulled nary a false
note, even in the face of the censorial limitations of the period.
It features a remarkable cast with staggering performances by Jane
Darwell, John Carradine and the remarkable Henry Fonda, who gives
the finest performance by an actor in a year of memorable performances
in the role that he seemed born to play (and had to sign a seven
year contract with 20th Century Fox to secure it). The Grapes
of Wrath is unique in being a film that has its finger pressed
squarely on the sensibilities and concerns of its contemporary audience
without seeming at all dated when viewed today, because the material
was handled with such unusual skill, candor, and honesty.
|
James
Stewart is one of the greatest actors
in motion picture history, so it is frustrating that he won
his only Oscar for his weakest nominated performance in The
Philadelphia Story. It is generally thought that his Oscar
for The Philadelphia Story was awarded as a consolation
prize over his losing out the previous year for his vastly superior
work in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. Stewart turned
in his usual fine work in The Philadelphia Story, but
his performance was not on a par with the nominated work of
Henry Fonda in The Grapes of Wrath, Charles Chaplin in
The Great Dictator, Raymond Massey in Abe Lincoln
in Illinois, or Laurence Olivier in Rebecca, nor
of such overlooked accomplishments as Edward G. Robinson in
Dr. Erlich's Magic Bullet, Tyrone Power in The Mark
of Zorro, or Cary Grant in His Girl Friday. The Oscar
pantheon would not be complete without Stewart and had the Academy
waited, they might have given him a more deserving Oscar for
his classic turn in It's a Wonderful Life, his New York
Film Critics Award winning role in Anatomy of a Murder, or
his unnominated tour de force in Vertigo. |
The
Academy nominated five distinguished actors this year in Stewart,
Fonda, Chaplin, Laurence Olivier, and Raymond Massey. Fonda certainly
gave the outstanding performance among the nominees, with his strongest
opposition coming from Cary Grant in what was probably his
best performance, His Girl Friday. This remake of The Front
Page added a brilliant dimension to the Hecht/MacArthur comic
melodrama by switching the gender of ace newspaperman Hildy Johnson
(without bothering to change the character's name) and having him
played by the wonderful Rosalind Russell (another glaring omission);
the result being a crackerjack screwball romantic comedy that is led
in its frenetic pace by the driving force of Grant's newspaper publisher
Walter Burns. |
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How Green Was My Valley
Actor: Gary Cooper (Sergeant York)
Actress:Joan Fontaine(Suspicion)
Supporting Actor: Donald Crisp
(How Green Was My Valley)
Supporting Actress: Mary Astor(The Great Lie)
Director: John Ford (How Green Was My Valley)
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Citizen Kane
Actor: Gary Cooper (Sergeant York)
Actress:Barbara Stanwyck (Ball of Fire)
Supporting Actor: Sydney Greenstreet
(The Maltese Falcon)
Supporting Actress: Mary Astor(The Maltese Falcon)*
Director: Orson Welles(Citizen Kane)
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Whether
or not Citizen Kane is the greatest film ever made is a subject
of debate, but it was certainly the greatest film made in 1941 and
even the Academy knew it, anointing the masterpiece with nine nominations
including four for wunderkind Orson Welles. It never had a
chance in the Best Picture race because of factors that had nothing
to do with its qualities as a motion picture: it was a box office
flop made by an arrogant neophyte that infuriated one of the most
powerful men in Hollywood, newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst.
Kane was not an accurate depiction of Hearst's world, especially
in its libelous characterization of Heart's talented movie star girlfriend
Marion Davies as a no-talent wannabe opera singer. But it is unquestionably
a brilliant piece of filmmaking that was vastly superior to anything
else released that year, including the highly enjoyable albeit undeniably
sentimental winner How Green Was My Valley. In the Hindsight
Awards race, John Ford's idealized view of a Welsh mining town wouldn't
have even placed (that honor would have gone to John Huston's brilliant
remake of The Maltese Falcon), but it is a memorable movie
very much in the safe and tested Academy Award mold. |
The
Academy threw Citizen Kane a bone by anointing it with the
Best Original Screenplay Oscar, but the category that it should have
run away with was Best Black-and-White Cinematography. The failure
of Gregg Toland's celebrated deep focus photography to win
the award was attributed to the petty resentment towards Orson Welles,
an unfortunate omission that is indicative of the political infighting
that frequently accompanies the Academy Awards. In another year, Arthur
Miller's work on How Green Was My Valley would have been
a deserving winner; but in 1941 it was an embarrassing selection motivated
by studio politics. |
After
years of playing second string gangsters for Warner Bros., Humphrey
Bogart had one of the great breakout years in screen history
with his back-to-back performances in High Sierra and The
Maltese Falcon. He deserved a nomination for either role (and
indeed might have canceled himself out in the balloting with this
impressive one-two punch), but his Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon
was particularly deserving of recognition. This was acting in a
new vein: the cynical anti-hero who seemed to be the selfish antithesis
of the usual movie leading man. Most actors couldn't have gotten
away with it, but Bogart's unique charisma made the sleazy character
spellbinding.
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Mrs. Miniver
Actor: James Cagney (Yankee Doodle Dandy)
Actress:Greer Garson(Mrs. Miniver)
Supporting Actor: Van Heflin (Johnny Eager)
Supporting Actress: Teresa Wright(Mrs. Miniver)
Director: William Wyler (Mrs. Miniver)
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To Be or Not to Be*
Actor: James Cagney (Yankee Doodle Dandy)
Actress:Greer Garson(Mrs. Miniver)
Supporting Actor: Sig Ruman (To Be or Not to Be)*
Supporting Actress: Teresa Wright(Mrs. Miniver)
Director: Ernst Lubitsch (To Be or Not to Be)*
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It
is hard to fault the Academy for selecting MGM's smash-hit piece of
war propaganda, Mrs. Miniver, as Best Picture. It certainly
struck a chord with its contemporary audience who could relate to
the noble struggle of a family trying to carry on their lives in a
world torn apart by war. But when watching it today, the film seems
like it is being viewed through a time machine, and the well-heeled
and attractive Miniver family are much too idealized to carry any
true dramatic resonance. Conversely, 1942 audiences were too close
to the situation to appreciate Ernst Lubitsch's brilliant comedy of
a Polish theatre troupe giving the Nazis fits, To Be Or Not To
Be. Lines such as the famous exchange where a disguised Jack Benny
asks a Nazi officer what he thinks of Benny's abilities as a Shakespearean
actor and the officer responding "What he does to Shakespeare,
we are doing to Poland," struck 1942 audiences as being in very
bad taste, especially when the film was released shortly after the
tragic death of star Carole Lombard. Now that time has healed some
of the wounds opened by World War II, To Be or Not To Be can
be enjoyed as the brilliant satire it is, and Mrs. Miniver
can be written off as the deftly made although ultimately rose-colored
salve for the soul that it was. |
MGM
won a Special Oscar "for its achievement in representing the
American way of life in the production of the Andy Hardy series
of films." The Andy Hardy series was a cash cow for MGM
in the 1930s and early 1940s and Louis B. Mayer's personal pet project
about his own idea of the very narrow values the American Dream should
encompass (as embodied by Mickey Rooney, who in real life had to be
taken aside by Mayer and asked to stop posing for publicity photos
at race tracks), and totally forgotten today except as a dated period
piece. What the inscription should have read was "for its achievement
in representing MGM head Louis B. Mayer's unrealistic idealization
of American life, where people of color do not play a part in society
and where economic hardships are nonexistent." |
Ernst
Lubitsch was one of the greatest directors
in history (immortalized for giving his films a singular airy charm
that came to be known as "The Lubitsch Touch"), and one
of the few who was a success in the silents who made an even greater
mark in the talkies. Twice nominated for Best Director for The
Patriot (1928/29) and Heaven Can Wait (1943), Lubitsch
served as a mentor to the many expatriate German filmmakers who came
to Hollywood to escape the Nazis (notably Billy Wilder who received
his own first nomination for writing Lubitsch's 1939 classic Ninotchka).
Lubitsch might have received additional recognition for Ninotchka,
The Big Parade, The Smiling Lieutenant or Trouble in Paradise,
but he should have taken the award home for his courageous mockery
of Hitler in To Be Or Not to Be. But the film cut too close
to the truth for its contemporary audience, and prophets and satirists
are not recognized in their own time. |
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Casablanca
Actor: Paul Lukas (Watch on the Rhine)
Actress:Jennifer Jones (The Song of Bernadette)
Supporting Actor: Charles Coburn
(The More, the Merrier)
Supporting Actress: Katina Paxnou
(For Whom the Bell Tolls)
Director: Michael Curtiz (Casablanca)
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Casablanca
Actor: Humphrey Bogart (Casablanca)
Actress:Jennifer Jones(The Song of Bernadette)
Supporting Actor: Claude Rains(Casablanca)
Supporting Actress: Katina Paxnou
(For Whom the Bell Tolls)
Director: Michael Curtiz (Casablanca)
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The
troubled shooting and on-the-spot rewriting of Casablanca
has been told and retold many times, but what many movie fans overlook
that it holds an unprecedented spot among Best Picture winners.
In our current thinking that a film must be released after Thanksgiving
to be fresh enough in the voters' minds to be a Best Picture contender,
it is surprising to discover that the Best Picture of 1943 was actually
released in New York in November of 1942 to mixed reviews and lackluster
business. The film opened in Los Angeles in January to coincide
with the peace talks taking place in Casablanca, and finally found
the audience that has been embracing it ever since. It hardly seems
a surprise that it made such an impact that the Academy chose to
honor it fourteen months after its initial release; Casablanca
is still going strong and finding legions of new fans in its sixtieth
year, when most World War II propaganda has been consigned to time
capsules or the History Channel. 1943 was a year when the Academy
definitely got it right.
There
were a wealth of superior nominated films in this movie year and
had Casablanca been out of the running, MGM's The Human
Comedy would have been the front runner for the award. But Casablanca
is such a sublime mixture of exotic locales, romance, adventure,
intrigue and even comedy that it seems to say "the movies"
more than any film ever created. It also has the most extraordinary
gathering of characters ever assembled in Rick Blaine, Elsa Lund,
Victor Laszlo, Captain Renault, Major Strasser, Signor Ferrari,
Ugarte, Sam, et al. depicted by the most unforgettable cast of actors
ever assembled. When lists of the greatest films ever made are drawn
up, Casablanca is invariably named in the top ten (being
represented as number two on the AFI list and number nine on IMDb).
Madbeast.com places it squarely as number one on the list.
|
Paul
Lukas first played his role of freedom fighter
Kurt Muller in Watch on the Rhine on the Broadway stage and
repeated the role in the film version of Lillian Hellman's play to
universal acclaim, winning the New York Film Critics Award as well
as the Oscar. But the choice now seems absurd. Not because Lukas wasn't
effective in the role, but that his turn in this now-forgotten bit
of hokum was selected over one of the most memorable and beloved marriages
of actor to role in screen history: Humphrey Bogart as Rick Blaine
in Casablanca. It is difficult to imagine a better example
of a performer transcending mundane material than Bogart's cynical,
world-weary Rick Blaine. Another actor in the role would have resulted
in a dull melodrama, but Bogart's presence turned Casablanca
into art. Lukas was excellent in Watch on the Rhine; but only
as good as any number of other actors who would have been cast in
the role. Bogart was unique. |
Eric
von Stroheim got his start in films as an
assistant to D.W. Griffith on Intolerance, and became a film
legend as a brilliant but erratic director of silent films (Greed,
The Merry Widow) and as an aristocratic and villainous actor in
the talkies (La Grande Illusion, The North Star). He finally
received an Oscar nomination in 1950 for his unforgettable Max von
Mayerling in Sunset Boulevard (and was so infuriated at being
placed in the Best Supporting Actor category that he considered suing
the Academy), but he should have been anointed as a Best Actor contender
for his complex depiction of Erwin Rommel in Five Graves to Cairo,
only the second film directed by Billy Wilder. |
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Going My Way
Actor: Bing Crosby (Going My Way)
Actress:Ingrid Bergman(Gaslight)
Supporting Actor: Barry Fitzgerald(Going My Way)
Supporting Actress: Ethel Barrymore
(None But the Lonely Heart)
Director: Leo McCarey (Going My Way)
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Double Indemnity
Actor: Eddie Bracken(The Miracle of Morgan's
Creek)*
Actress:Ingrid Bergman(Gaslight)
Supporting Actor: Barry Fitzgerald(Going My Way)
Supporting Actress: Ethel Barrymore
(None But the Lonely Heart)
Director: Alfred Hitchcock (Lifeboat)
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One
of a long string of smash hit Bing Crosby vehicles for Paramount,
Going My Way seemed like a change of pace for the singer in
his role of a gentle priest who is sent to take over a poor parish
over the objections of its longtime pastor played by Barry Fitzgerald.
In fact, the film (while still highly enjoyable), is a maudlin series
of episodes with Crosby displaying the same laid back performance
and easy singing style that he gave in all those Road movies
with Bob Hope (he didn't show his true dramatic chops until The
Country Girl ten years later). Going My Way's chief competition
at the time was thought to be Darryl F. Zanuck's ponderous biography
of Woodrow Wilson, but the most enduring film of 1944 is certainly
Billy Wilder's chilling tale of betrayal, Double Indemnity.
Billy Wilder's compelling film noir was nominated for seven
Oscars in 1944 (although not, surprisingly, for the stunning performances
of Fred MacMurray or Edward G. Robinson), walking away with a grand
total of zero statuettes. The whirligigs of time have raised that
number significantly. |
When
Leo McCarey won the Best Director Oscar for Going My Way,
Billy Wilder was said to have tripped him as he made his way to
the podium to accept the award. Wilder can be forgiven for the minor
act of assault since he (or fellow nominee Alfred Hitchcock for
Lifeboat) were more deserving of the award, but an even worse
choice was McCarey for Best Original Story for Going My Way.
It's not that Going My Way isn't an entertaining or well
written film (its win for Best Screenplay is undeserved compared
with Double Indemnity, Gaslight or Laura, but certainly
a creditable pick), but its loosely-strung series of episodes doesn't
constitute a story at all.
|
|
Preston
Sturges was nominated for Best Original Screenplay for both The
Miracle of Morgan's Creek and Hail the Conquering Hero,
losing the award twice to Lamarr Trotti's tedious script for Wilson.
Morgan's Creek was added to the National Film Registry in
2001, an honor that Wilson (or Best Picture Going My Way)
has yet to attain, a solid indication that Sturges' delightful comedy
about a ditzy small town girl in trouble (wonderfully played by
Betty Hutton) may not have been as highly regarded when it came
out, but it is a film for the ages. The Miracle of Morgan's Creek
was grossly unrewarded at the Oscars, deserving nominations for
Best Picture, Sturges as Best Director, Hutton as Best Actress,
William Demarest as Best Supporting Actor, and winning
the award for Eddie Bracken's manic yet touching performance
as the gentle soul who worships Hutton, displaying a depth and sensitivity
lacking in winner Bing Crosby's popular though undemanding turn
in Going My Way. The Academy loved Going My Way so
much that they not only gave the Oscar to Crosby but nominated Barry
Fitzgerald for Best Actor as well as voting him Best Supporting
Actor for the film, but it is Bracken (who was also excellent in
Hail the Conquering Hero) who displays the most humanity,
if you can stop laughing long enough to notice.
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The Lost Weekend
Actor: Ray Milland (The Lost Weekend)
Actress:Joan Crawford (Mildred Pierce)
Supporting Actor: James Dunne
(A Trees Grows in Brooklyn)
Supporting Actress: Anne Revere(National Velvet)
Director: Billy Wilder (The Lost Weekend)
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The Bells of St. Mary's
Actor: Boris Karloff (The Body Snatcher)*
Actress:Joan Bennett(Scarlett Street)*
Supporting Actor: Robert Mitchum
(The Story of G.I. Joe)
Supporting Actress: Anne Revere(National Velvet)
Director: Jean Renoir (The Southerner)
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The
Lost Weekend was Billy Wilder's indictment
of alcoholism, the first major feature film of the sound era to take
on the subject. It caused a sensation at the time, with the alcohol
industry going so far as to attempt to buy the negative from Paramount
to keep anyone from seeing it. But viewed today, The Lost Weekend
seems laughably simplistic, with its unrealistic happy ending tacked
on in order to pander to its audience (the famous scene of a DT-stricken
Ray Milland being terrorized by a single bat crawling out of an imaginary
hole in his bedroom wall is a howler when watched now). The best film
of this weak year was Leo McCarey and Bing Crosby's smash hit follow-up
to Going My Way, The Bells of St. Mary's. While no less sappy
or episodic than its predecessor, The Bells of St. Mary's was
equally entertaining; containing the usual Crosby charm and an endearing
performance by Ingrid Bergman as a kind, but no-nonsense nun. The
Crosby/Bergman pairing lacked the chemistry of Crosby and Fitzgerald
(who strangely appeared in only two other films together - the 1947
smash Welcome Stranger and the forgettable 1949 entry
Top O' the Morning), but this feel-good piece of hokum is more
memorable than any other film released this year. |
It's
hard to gather any enthusiasm (positive or negative) for any selection
made in this forgettable year, but the most lamentable choice is probably
Charles G. Booth's Oscar for Best Original Story for the cliché-ridden
The House on 92nd Street, a forgotten film about a double agent
for the FBI in a Nazi spy ring. A far superior choice would have been
Richard Flournoy and László Görög for the
frothy Joan Fontaine comedy The Affair of Susan; but given
the Academy's distaste towards froth or comedy, it's not surprising
that it was overlooked. |
Producer
Val Lewton produced a series of superb psychological horror films
in the mid-1940's, the best of which was The Body Snatcher,
loosely based on a tale by Robert Louis Stevenson. It boasted a superior
screenplay by Lewton and Philip MacDonald, and intense direction by
future Oscar winner Robert Wise; but what truly made the film stand
out was Boris Karloff's finest performance since Frankenstein.
Karloff was respected for his stage work (he gave legendary Broadway
performances as Jonathan Brewster in Arsenic and Old Lace and
as Captain Hook in Peter Pan, and received a Tony nomination
for The Lark) but failed to be taken seriously in Hollywood
because of the genre in which he worked, even after memorable "straight"
performances in The House of Rothchild and The Lost Patrol.
Regrettably, he was never nominated for an Oscar. |
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The Best Years of Our Lives
Actor: Fredric March(The Best Years of
Our Lives)
Actress:Olivia deHavilland(To Each His Own)
Supporting Actor: Harold Russell
(The Best Years of Our Lives)
Supporting Actress: Anne Baxter
(The Razor's Edge)
Director: William Wyler
(The Best Years of Our Lives)
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It's a Wonderful Life
Actor: Laurence Olivier(Henry V)
Actress:Celia Johnson(Brief Encounter)
Supporting Actor: Lionel Barrymore
(It's a Wonderful Life)*
Supporting Actress: Myrna Loy
(The Best Years of Our Lives)*
Director: Laurence Olivier(Henry V)*
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While
most film historians list 1939 as the greatest year in the history
of the movies, madbeast.com gives that title to 1946, with bona-fide
masterpieces It's a Wonderful Life, Henry V and The Yearling
up for Best Picture against winner The Best Years of Our Lives
(fifth nominee The Razor's Edge was just rounding out the
field), with major classics like Brief Encounter, The Killers,
Anna and the King of Siam, and Open City hot on their heels.
It's impossible to fault the Academy for selecting the moving and
timely The Best Years of Our Lives - one of the greatest movies
ever made - as its depiction of soldiers returning home from World
War II to an America trying to adjust to a new peacetime has its finger
on its contemporary America more accurately than any other Hollywood
film (with the possible exception of The Grapes of Wrath).
But that is both the glory and the irritation of the film: it is so
firmly rooted in the world and challenges of 1946 that it sometimes
feels like a relic from a time capsule when watched now. Compare this
with the timelessness of Frank Capra's beloved fable of a man reclaiming
his seemingly wasted life, It's a Wonderful Life. To be sure,
this idealized vision of small town life is "Capra Corn"
at its most saccharine; but if you were to scan most movie fans list
of favorite films, the tale of George Bailey and his guardian angel
would probably be listed more than any other. But 1946 was one of
those incredibly rare years when there were so many great films made
that it's really a coin toss to determine what was the "best"
among so many memorable achievements, and if you prefer The Best
Years of Our Lives (or Henry V, or Brief Encounter,
or any of the other miraculous works of art of this watershed year)
over our final choice, we can't really disagree with you. |

Director
William Wyler discovered double amputee Harold Russell while
watching a documentary chronicling the rehabilitation of a permanently
injured soldier during his research for The Best Years of Our Lives.
Wyler was so impressed with Russell that he decided to change a character
in the film from a spastic to a double amputee in order to cast the
war veteran. Russell responded with an earnest though awkward performance
which the Academy rewarded with a Special Oscar "for bringing
hope and courage to his fellow veterans." Russell clearly deserved
that award, but the Academy went overboard by also giving Russell
the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor, making him the only actor in
history to receive two Oscars for a single performance. One admires
Russell's courage in the film, but he was obviously an amateur among
professionals and it clear that he never would have been cast save
for his war injury (he did not act in another film until 1980). He
ran a nonprofit organization that specialized in finding jobs for
people with disabilities and wrote two autobiographies after his appearance
in The Best Years of Our Lives, and was forced to sell his
acting Oscar late in life because he needed money to pay his wifes
medical bills. He said nothing could induce him to sell the Honorary
Oscar though, because it would be disrespectful to his fellow veterans.
That special award was one of the more insightful selections in Oscar
history. The acting trophy is another story. |
|
With so many great cinematic achievements to choose
from, it's inevitable that a few would slip through the cracks. The
never-nominated Myrna Loy delivered the finest performance of her
brilliant career as Fredric March's wife trying to adjust to The
Best Years of Our Lives. Lionel Barrymore was overlooked for his
most memorable performance as the evil Mr. Potter in It's a Wonderful
Life. But the greatest single achievement of 1946 was Laurence
Olivier's inspired performance and direction of Shakespeare's
Henry V. Prior to Olivier, Shakespeare was infrequently attempted
on film and on the rare occasions that it was (Romeo & Juliet,
A Midsummer Night's Dream or the disastrous Taming of the Shrew
with Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford), the result was usually
an insipid travesty that relied more on pageantry and star-casting
than on Shakespeare's poetry. The first film that seemed to indicate
the plays could be presented cinematically was Paul Czinner's 1937
film of As You Like It, which featured Olivier as Orlando.
But it took Olivier's wildly imaginative Henry V, which
effortlessly takes the narrative back-and-forth between an imagined
performance at Shakespeare's Globe Playhouse and the historical period
of Henry's reign, to show the world that Shakespeare was every bit
the writer that the geniuses who cranked out the screenplays for the
Bowery Boys films or Deanna Durbin musicals were. Yet despite his
success as a director, Olivier failed to make the cut in the nominations,
receiving nods only for his performance and production. Olivier certainly
should have been the hands-down winner of the Best Actor prize (he
won Best Actor from both the New York Film Critics and the National
Board of Review), but the Academy effectively took him out the running
by presenting him with a Special Award "for his outstanding achievement
as actor, producer and director in bringing Henry V to the
screen," an honor that Olivier bitterly resented because he felt
it was merely a tactical move to take his English-produced masterpiece
out of competition against Hollywood product. Olivier did finally
win competitive Oscars two years later for his comparatively inferior
film of Hamlet (and received his only Best Director nomination
in the process), but Henry V represented not only the high
water mark of his film career, but of the production of a Shakespearean
work on screen, and should have been recognized as the outstanding
directorial achievement that it was.
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Gentleman's Agreement
Actor: Ronald Colman (A Double Life)
Actress:Loretta Young(The Farmer's Daughter)
Supporting Actor:Edmund Gwenn
(Miracle on 34th Street)
Supporting Actress: Celeste Holm
(Gentleman's Agreement)
Director: Elia Kazan (Gentleman's Agreement)
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Miracle on 34th Street
Actor: William Powell(Life with Father)
Actress:Irene Dunne(Life with Father)*
Supporting Actor:Edmund Gwenn
(Miracle on 34th Street)
Supporting Actress: Celeste Holm
(Gentleman's Agreement)
Director: George Cukor (A Double Life)
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Darryl F. Zanuck felt that he was robbed of the Best Picture Oscar
for Wilson, his excruciatingly self-important drone of a
film that pretended to be a tribute to the the twenty-eighth President
but was really just a monument to Zanuck's ego. When Zanuck failed
to win the top prize for what he considered his finest achievement,
he went back to the well of pretension and came up with Gentleman's
Agreement, which told the story of a gentile writer posing as
a Jew in order to experience anti-Semitism first hand; starting
a much imitated (Glory, Tootsie, Dances With Wolves) Hollywood
trend of pretending to tell the story of an oppressed group, but
doing it from the point of view of a white male. Some effective
films were made using this device, but at times it is hard to get
past the hypocrisy of the enterprise. If the story were about a
Jew writing about anti-Semitism played by, say, Everett Sloan, the
film would have opened and disappeared without notice. But because
it is WASP-ish Gregory Peck suffering the indignities, contemporary
audiences didn't mind sensing outrage at the treatment he received.
Zanuck finally won the award he coveted,and when he took the podium
to accept it, he used the occasion to comment that he was still
bitter that Wilson hadn't won the Best Picture Oscar three
years before.
Zanuck
should have had to keep waiting to vent his frustrations over Wilson,
because a much more memorable and unpretentious film was a far more
deserving winner of the award. Miracle on 34th Street, the
beloved classic of a department store Santa who may be the real
thing, is so familiar that it does have the air of a chestnut roasting
on an open fire after too many viewings over a lifetime of Decembers.
But watched with fresh eyes, it is a revelation to appreciate not
only how charming and clever the story is, but how laugh-out-loud
funny the Oscar winning screenplay by George Seaton is. With the
Academy's well-documented distaste for comedy, it is a telling indication
of the film's quality that it won two Oscars for writing (for Best
Screenplay as well as for the original story by Valentine Davies)
and for the touching and hilarious performance by Edmund Gwenn as
Kris Kringle (matched every step of the way by Maureen O'Hara, John
Payne and Natalie Wood).
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The
Academy nominated four enduring masterpieces for Best Original Screenplay
in 1947: Body and Soul, A Double Life, Monsieur Verdoux and
Shoeshine. Honoring any of these films would have done credit
to the awards, but the script they selected to receive the trophy
is a stunning puzzlement indeed: The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer.
Sidney Sheldon produced an amusing script for this entertaining Cary
Grant/Myna Loy comedy, but to say it surpasses the best work of Charles
Chaplin or Abraham Polonsky makes one wonder what the Academy was
smoking when they were voting for the awards. |
1947
was the first year that the Academy awarded the Best Foreign
Film award, with Vittorio De Sica's Shoeshine deservedly
being anointed a Special Oscar for the honor (it would not become
a competitive category until 1956) as well as a nomination for
its screenplay. But completely overlooked in the nominations
was La Belle et la bête,
French director Jean Cocteau's lyrically beautiful version of
Beauty and the Beast, one of the
most remarkably original films ever made.
Had the categories been given awards in 1947, the surrealist
masterpiece certainly should have won Oscars for Antonio Castillo
and Marcel Escoffier's lavish costume design and especially
Best Makeup for Hagop Arakelian's magnificent conception of
the Beast's lion head. But those categories weren't instituted
until 1948 and 1981 respectively, so those wonderful achievements
were overlooked for recognition. But La Belle
et la bête also deserved nominations for Christian
Bérard's surreal art direction, Henri Alékan's
haunting cinematography and Cocteau's sublime vision as director,
categories that were all in effect at the time. |
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Hamlet
Actor: Laurence Olivier (Hamlet)
Actress:Jane Wyman(Johnny Belinda)
Supporting Actor:Walter Huston
(Treasure of the Sierra Madre)
Supporting Actress: Claire Trevor(Key Largo)
Director: John Huston(Treasure of the Sierra Madre)
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Treasure of the Sierra Madre
Actor:Humphrey Bogart
(Treasure of the Sierra Madre)*
Actress:Barbara Stanwyck(Sorry, Wrong Number)
Supporting Actor:Walter Huston
(Treasure of the Sierra Madre)
Supporting Actress: Claire Trevor (Key Largo)
Director: John Huston(Treasure of the Sierra Madre)
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Laurence
Olivier followed up his magnificent film of Henry V with
Hamlet, and was immediately anointed as the greatest interpreter
of Shakespeare's work in film history. That, he surely was (based
on Henry V and his wonderful 1956 film of Richard III);
but Hamlet was never Olivier's role and his 1937 stage performance
was universally panned by critics. By 1948 he was impervious to
criticism, so no one dared point out that the film, while a decided
improvement over Hollywood's earlier attempts to film the Bard's
work, is a badly butchered and only tolerably performed adaptation
of Shakespeare's play. Olivier and text editor Alan Dent cut the
script to the bone, eliminating not only the character of Fortinbras
(who is a common casualty of the editor's pen), but Rosencrantz
and Guildestern (who are indispensable to depicting a complete version
of the story). Olivier said that he was not initially keen to make
a film of Hamlet (he would have preferred Macbeth,
but Orson Welles was making a film of that play at the same time
which would have reached theatres first) and when he did decide
to do it, claimed that he would have preferred to cast another actor
in the lead but was unable to find a suitable performer who would
play the role according to his interpretation (when he did direct
another actor in the part, Peter O'Toole in the premiere production
of the National Theatre, the result was a notable disappointment).
It is unfortunate that Olivier was unable to cast someone else as
Hamlet, as he is frankly wooden in the role for which he received
such acclaim at the time, and the rest of the cast (with the exception
of Jean Simmons as a memorable Ophelia) are forgettable in their
various generic characterizations. The resulting film is only a
mildly engrossing collection of the play's most famous scenes; Hamlet's
Greatest Hits, salvaged only by a truly magnificent rendering
of the duel in Act V.
Far
more memorable and entertaining was John Huston's immortal film
of what greed can do to the human soul,Treasure of the Sierra
Madre. The Academy appeared to think so too in the end, giving
Huston Best Director over Olivier (despite the fact that Olivier's
real achievement was as a director more than anything else), and
awarding Treasure the Oscars for best Screenplay and Best
Supporting Actor for Walter Huston's immortal performance as a grizzled
prospector. It is somewhat surprising that Hamlet won the
Best Picture Oscar because there was a backlash against the success
of British films in Hollywood, to the point of the major studios
pulling out their financial backing of the awards that year. But
the garment most closely associated with the Oscars isn't black
tie and floor-length evening gowns as much as it the Emperor's New
Clothes, and Hamlet is decked to the nines.
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1948
was the first year the Oscar was awarded for costume design, with
the awards going predictably to elaborately produced period pieces.
Hamlet deservedly took home the award for black and white film,
but the award for color surprisingly went to the sackcloth and armor
Dorothy Jeakins and Karinska pulled out of the RKO Radio costume warehouse
for the tedious Joan of Arc over the Viennese finery
Edith Head and Gile Stele designed for The Emperor Waltz. Head
later admitted that she was stunned by the snub. Producer Walter Wanger
wanted Joan of Arc to be the crowning glory of his career even
after its lackluster reception, and when the film failed to receive
nominations for Best Picture and Best Director Wanger embarrassed
himself by throwing such a public tantrum over the imagined snub that
the Academy gave him an Honorary award for producing it, not unlike
giving an unruly two year old a lollipop to make it shut up. |
Humphrey
Bogart gave his greatest performance as Fred C. Dobbs, an honest
man destroyed by greed in Treasure of the Sierra Madre. The
Academy chose to overlook Bogart's brilliant work so that they could
nominate Dan Dailey for Best Actor as an alcoholic Vaudevillian in
the Betty Grable musical When My Baby Smiles at Me. Anyone
who looks to the Oscars as the final word on what constitutes superior
artistry in film is welcome to try to explain this bizarre behavior
any time they want to. |
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All the King's Men
Actor: Broderick Crawford(All the King's
Men)
Actress: Olivia de Havilland(The Heiress)
Supporting Actor:Dean Jagger(Twelve O'Clock High)
Supporting Actress: Mercedes McCambridge
(All the King's Men)
Director: Joseph L. Mankiewitz
(A Letter to Three Wives)
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The Bicycle Thief*
Actor: Kirk Douglas(Champion)
Actress: Olivia de Havilland(The Heiress)
Supporting Actor:Ralph Richardson(The Heiress)
Supporting Actress: Margaret Rutherford
(Passport to Pimlico)*
Director: Vittorio De Sica (The Bicycle Thief)*
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The
Academy has nominated only seven foreign language films for the
Best Picture Oscar: La Grande Illusion (1938), Z (1969),
The Emigrants (1972), Cries and Whispers (1973), Il
Postino/The Postman (1995), Life is Beautiful (1998),
and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000). All were good
selections (with the exception of the offensive and atrociously
acted Life is Beautiful), but the chance of a foreign language
film actually winning the award is as likely as a Libertarian winning
the White House. But during the late forties, the finest films were
being produced in Europe, and even Hollywood recognized it; creating
the Best Foreign Film Oscar in 1947 and handing out a trickle of
nominations to non-American films. In 1949, the American film industry
was on the offensive from invasion not only from foreign films,
but from the coming onslaught of an even bigger menace: television.
The idea that Hollywood would give its top prize to anything that
wasn't home grown was unthinkable.
It's unfortunate that this nationalistic sentiment
was so prevalent at the time, because the most memorable film of
1949 didn't come from Hollywood, but from Italian director Vittorio
De Sica. The Bicycle Thief, with its story of a man in a
desperate hunt to retrieve the stolen bicycle that is vital to his
livelihood, is frequently listed second to Citizen Kane as
the greatest film ever made.
The
film the Academy chose for Best Picture is surprisingly weak: All
the King's Men, Robert Rossen's adaptation of Robert Penn Warren's
Pulitzer Prize novel based upon the reign of Louisiana governor
Huey Long, is an annoyingly one-note affair featuring a typically
bombastic Broderick Crawford as a bombastic politician who is so
transparently corrupt that he might as well be twirling a cape and
tying virginal young girls to railroad tracks. There were a wealth
of superior films from among the nominees (A Letter to Three
Wives, Battleground, The Heiress) and the non-nominees (On
the Town, The Fallen Idol, White Heat). But nothing Hollywood
created in 1949 was on a par with De Sica's masterpiece, and it
would have been a bold statement for the Academy to recognize that.
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The
concept of "Best Actor" usually falls into two distinct
groups: performers of great skill who submerge themselves so deeply
into a role that actor and character become one (Robert DeNiro in
Raging Bull, John Barrymore in Twentieth Century), and
movie stars of limited range who are fortunate to be cast in a role
that shows off their strengths more effectively than usual (Clark
Gable in It Happened One Night, John Wayne in True Grit).
Broderick Crawford definitely falls into the latter category,
having the good fortune of being cast in two great roles that showed
off his overbearing, blustery schtick (Willie Stark in All the
King's Men and Harry Brock in Born Yesterday) before falling
back into the comparative anonymity of Highway Patrol. Crawford
was brilliantly cast in All the King's Men, but because an
actor is well cast does not mean that they are delivering a great
performance. He did have the good timing (like Sylvestor Stallone
in Rocky) of giving his award-winning performance at a point
in his career where no one knew he wasn't capable of doing anything
else. |
The
failure of The Bicycle Thief to receive nominations for
Best Picture or Best Director can hardly be described as an oversight
in view of the Academy's fiercely nationalistic sentiments of
the time. But Hollywood had a bona fide star who delivered one
of his greatest performances in this year, only to be overlooked
for a nomination. James Cagney made a return to the gangster
film genre in White Heat, and delivered one of his most
famous performances in the complex role of a sadistic mobster
with a mother complex. That the Academy would nominate the limited
Crawford or the third-billed Richard Todd for the tearjerker The
Hasty Heart over this screen legend in one of his greatest
roles continues to be a head-scratcher.
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