|
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
* Indicates that the film/performance was not nominated for an Academy Award in this category
|
|
 |
All
About Eve
Actor: José Ferrer(Cyrano
de Bergerac)
Actress: Judy Holliday(Born Yesterday)
Supporting Actor:George Sanders(All About Eve)
Supporting Actress: Josephine Hull(Harvey)
Director: Joseph L. Mankiewitz (All About Eve)
|
Sunset
Boulevard
Actor: José
Ferrer(Cyrano de Bergerac)
Actress: Bette Davis(All About Eve)
Supporting Actor:Erich von Stroheim
(Sunset Boulevard)
Supporting Actress: Josephine Hull(Harvey)
Director: Billy Wilder (Sunset Boulevard)
|
|
| |
1950
was one of those frustrating years where a number of classic films
were released, any one of which would have been Best Picture had it
been released the year before. Born Yesterday, The Gunfighter,
Father of the Bride, The Asphalt Jungle, and the British-made
The Third Man were all superior to anything Hollywood came
out with in 1949. But in 1950, the race went down to two enduring
masterpieces: All About Eve and Sunset Boulevard.
Both films boasted brilliant casts (especially
in the Best Supporting Actor category, where George Sanders' Oscar
winning turn as an urbane drama critic and Erich von Stroheim's
classic
performance as a mysterious butler create unforgettable characterizations)
and wonderfully inventive screenplays that make having to select
a "best" between these two wonderfully entertaining and
enduring films a painful chore.
But the staff
of the Hindsight Awards doesn't shy away from such dirty work,
and the film that passes test of time far more successfully
is Sunset Boulevard. This may be in part because All
About Eve seems
more dated because it gives a contemporary view of a Broadway that
is now a bygone era, whereas Sunset Boulevard is looking
back on a world that was already dead when the film was made. Over
time the self-consciously witty dialogue of All About Eve's self-absorbed
characters become more and more
annoying, whereas the timeless Sunset Boulevard becomes fresher
with each new viewing. Wilder
brilliantly cast Gloria Swanson as the fallen idol Norma Desmond
(after Mary Pickford, Pola Negri and Mae West turned it down) because
he knew that more current actresses couldn't capture the style of
the silent era with the authenticity of someone who had been active
in it. Swanson responded with an extraordinary, unique performance
that is really unlike any other in the history of film (it is unfortunate
that she did her greatest work in such a competitive year for female
performances).
|
|
The
Best Foreign Film Oscar was still an honorary award in 1950, and
the Academy Board of Governors chose René Clément's
The Walls of Malapaga for the honor, a forgotten
film about a murderer on the run seeking treatment for a toothache.
1950 was a weak year for foreign films released in the United States,
with Ways of Love receiving the New York Film Critics citation
and the Oscar-winning documentary The Titan - The Story of Michelangelo
being named Best Foreign Film by the National Board of Review. In
the end, the most remembered foreign film released in the US in
1950 was Jean Renoir's overrated The Rules of the Game, which
probably deserved on the basis of Renoir's direction if nothing
else. With memories of The Bicycle Thief behind us and the
anticipation of the brilliant Rashomon coming up in 1951,
it's probably best just to forget about the 1950 Best Foreign Film
Oscar and move on to more interesting subjects.
|
The
Academy chose a magnificent performance as Best Actor in 1950, José
Ferrer heroically repeating his Broadway success as Cyrano de Bergerac
despite an underfunded production budget and an incompetent supporting
cast. Ferrer had the bad fortune to be called to testify before the
McCarthy hearings after receiving the nomination, but took the opportunity
to ballyhoo his patriotism and deservedly won the Oscar. But most
of the best male performances of 1950 weren't nominated for the award:
Marlon Brando in The Men, Gregory Peck in The Gunfighter,
Alec Guinness in Kind Hearts and Coronets and Joseph Cotten
in The Third Man all delivered superb performance that were
overlooked in a highly competitive year. The best of these was Clifton
Webb's delightful turn as an efficiency expert with twelve children
in Cheaper By the Dozen. Webb was nominated for memorable performances
in Laura, The Razor's Edge and Sitting Pretty, but this
was the year he should have won. Webb created an indelible impression
as the stern, but loving patriarch that will never be equaled (the
crude film of the same title with Steve Martin was a remake in name
only). A sequel named Belles on Their Toes was attempted in
1952, but it didn't stand a chance because Webb's character died in
the original. |
Return
to top
1920s
1930s
1940s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
madbeast.com home
e-mail
madbeast.com
|
|
 |
An
American in Paris
Actor: Humphrey Bogart(The
African Queen)
Actress: Vivian Leigh (A Streetcar Named Desire)
Supporting Actor:Karl Malden
(A Streetcar Named Desire)
Supporting Actress: Kim Hunter
(A
Streetcar Named Desire)
Director: George Stevens (A Place in the Sun)
|
A
Streetcar Named Desire
Actor: Marlon
Brando (A Streetcar Named Desire)
Actress: Vivian Leigh (A Streetcar Named Desire)
Supporting Actor:Karl Malden
(A Streetcar Named Desire)
Supporting
Actress: Kim Hunter
(A
Streetcar Named Desire)
Director: Elia Kazan (A
Streetcar Named Desire)
|
|
| |
|
Our
memories of the 1950s are best displayed in TV sitcoms of the period
like Leave It to Beaver, Make Room for Daddy and Father
Knows Best. They represented a well-ordered world of easy answers
and self-assured authority figures who had everything under control.
In reality, the US of the 1950s was at one of its most intensive
pressure points, with the paranoia of McCarthyism and the constant
threat of nuclear war looming over everyone's head. In such troubled
times, people wanted to believe in easy answers and welcomed the
seeming simplicity of a repressed life. In such a world, the torrid
sexuality of A Streetcar Named Desire was a disquieting revelation.
Dismissed by many as smut (critic George Jean Nathan dubbed it Glands
Menagerie after playwright Tennessee Williams' earlier play
The Glass Menagerie), most discerning audiences immediately
recognized it as the intense work of art that it was. Even the oppressive
Hollywood censors of 1951 couldn't rob it of its white-hot effectiveness.
And with the groundbreaking work of the brilliant Marlon Brando
as Stanley Kowalski, everyone knew that A Streetcar Named Desire
was not only the best film of the year, but it opened the door
to a new honesty about sexuality that could only be hinted at in
the past.
All that is
immaterial when selecting the Academy Awards. Like Citizen Kane
before it, Streetcar couldn't be named Best Picture because
of things that had nothing to do with its qualities as a motion
picture. In such troubled times, a conservative institution like
the Academy could no more give an agitator like Tennessee Williams
the Oscar than a Hollywood studio could give a blacklisted writer
screen credit. And in a decade when films like Rebel Without
a Cause, The Blackboard Jungle and Salt of the Earth were
forcing us to reconsider the individual's place in society, the
Academy was giving Oscars to escapist drivel like Around the
World in 80 Days and Gigi.
Its
easy to understand why a film like An American in Paris was
selected as Best Picture in 1951. Considered a major upset when
it won the award (which was expected to go to George Stevens' flawed
and depressing tragedy A Place in the Sun), An American
in Paris was actually very much in the Academy Award vein: an
impressive though ultimately unchallenging big budget film made
by high pedigree talent that the main thing anyone remembers for
is winning the Academy Award. An American in Paris manages
to be both pretentious (through its overly stylized ballets that
are far less entertaining than what Kelly did in the `40s) and trivial
(through its almost nonexistent story, where Kelly and Leslie Caron
display no chemistry at all and one doesn't care in the slightest
if they get together at the end or not) at the same time. Nobody
really thought An American in Paris was the best film made
in 1951, but at least no one was made to feel uncomfortable at its
selection.
|
|
The
Academy loved Tom & Jerry, giving the animated cat and mouse
seven Oscars for Best Cartoon. Their streak continued in 1951, with
producer Fred Quimby winning for Two Mouseketeers.
But Tom & Jerry's popularity has diminished over the years,
while the affection for Warner Bros.' stable of Looney Tunes characters
grows ever stronger, making one wonder why the series didn't fair
better in the Oscar voting. The most conspicuous victim of the Oscar's
disregard of Looney Tunes cartoons was the great Bugs Bunny, who
received a single Oscar for Best Cartoon for 1959's Knighty-Knight
Bugs. The Wascully Wabbit appeared in The Faired Haired Hare,
Rabbit Every Monday and Rabbit Fire in 1951, but failed
once again to receive a nomination.
|
Many
writers turned to science fiction in the 1950s, feeling that their
serious messages could be more palatably served if blunted by the
artifice of space ships and ray guns. Two of the first to take this
step were Harry Bates (story) and Edmund H. North (screenplay) for
the classic The Day The Earth Stood Still. The film,
with its message we must live peacefully or be destroyed as a danger
to other planets, was not taken seriously enough to receive nominations
because of its genre, but it is a far more artistic and frequently
revived film than Best Picture nominees Decision Before Dawn
or Quo Vadis. |
Return
to top
1920s
1930s
1940s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
madbeast.com home
e-mail
madbeast.com
|
|
 |
The
Greatest Show on Earth
Actor: Gary Cooper(High
Noon)
Actress: Shirley Booth(Come Back, Little Sheba)
Supporting Actor:Anthony Quinn (Viva Zapata)
Supporting Actress: Gloria Grahame
(The Bad and the Beautiful)
Director: John Ford (The Quiet Man)
|
Singin'
in the Rain*
Actor: Gary Cooper(High
Noon)
Actress: Shirley Booth(Come Back, Little Sheba)
Supporting Actor:Donald O'Connor
(Singin' in the Rain)*
Supporting Actress: Edith
Evans
(The Importance of Being Earnest)*
Director: Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen
(Singin' in the Rain)*
|
|
| |
|
The
biggest box office hit of 1952 was This is Cinerama, a travelogue
that showed off the new widescreen, three-camera process of Cinerama.
its phenomenal success sent a clear message to Hollywood; that
in order to combat the coming of television, the greatest weapon
at its disposal was size. Films didn't have to be good in order
to succeed. They had to be big. The
Academy chose not to honor the best film of 1952, but the biggest:
Cecil B. DeMille's gargantuan tribute to life under the big top,
The Greatest Show on Earth. Frequently derided as the worst
film to win the Best Picture award, DeMille's Oscar winner is a
tired soap opera that rises above its hackneyed material only by
virtue of its size. But in 1952, size is exactly what movie audiences
wanted, so it is difficult to fault the Academy for selecting it
any more than it is difficult to fault them for voting for The
Broadway Melody in 1928/29. Had a more objective panel been
voting for the award, the Oscar probably would have gone to High
Noon. But there was a backlash against that film because its
Oscar nominated screenwriter Carl Foreman was under investigation
by the McCarthy committee; so right-thinking Academy members naturally
assumed that it had some underlying Red sentimentalities even though
it starred All American Gary Cooper. Fortunately for the security
of the United States, Foreman was eventually blacklisted; although
he (and fellow blacklistee Michael Wilson) did later win an Oscar
for The Bridge on the River Kwai, using the novel's original
author, Pierre Boulle, as a front.
With
all this going on, it is a shame that the film universally
regarded as the year's best slipped through the cracks. Singin'
in the Rain was selected by the American Film Institute
as the 10th best film ever made and is frequently named as
the definitive movie musical. It was appreciated in its own
time as well, winning the award from the Writers Guild as
Best Written American Musical and a nomination from the Directors
Guild for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures
for Stanley Donen and Gene Kelly. But it didn't get much respect
from the Academy in the year that it came out, receiving a
paltry two Oscar nominations (for Best Supporting Actress
for Jean Hagen and Best Scoring of a Musical Picture). The
most likely explanation of the snub is that the Academy didn't
want to honor another Gene Kelly musical so soon after giving
An American in Paris the top prize. Another example
of a film not being named Best Picture for reasons that had
nothing to do with its artistic quality.
|
|
Singin'
in the Rain's Oscar for Best Scoring of a Musical Picture
was won by With a Song in My Heart, a melodramatic
biopic of singer Jane Froman who is left without the use of her
legs following a plane crash during a USO tour during World War
II. Perennial Oscar winner Alfred Newman did his usually craftsmanlike
job arranging Froman's now-dated catalogue of songs, but it doesn't
compare to the freshness and hummability of Lennie Hayton's work
on Singin' in the Rain.
|
Donald
O'Connor never made a tremendous impact in films, being best known
for starring in the Francis, the Talk Mule series. In fact,
if he not appeared in Singin' in the Rain, no one would know
how ill-used this spectacular talent was. That he was overlooked for
the Best Supporting Actor Oscar he clearly deserved for his awe-inspiring
work in it was indicative of the state of O'Connor's career: no one
ever seemed to appreciate just how talented he was. In a more perfect
world, he might have been placed on the same level as Fred Astaire
and Gene Kelly. The loss is ours. |
Return
to top
1920s
1930s
1940s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
madbeast.com home
e-mail
madbeast.com
|
|
 |
From
Here to Eternity
Actor: William Holden(Stalag
17)
Actress: Audrey Hepburn(Roman Holiday)
Supporting Actor:Frank Sinatra
(From Here to Eternity)
Supporting Actress: Donna Reed
(From Here to Eternity)
Director: Fred Zinnemann (From Here to Eternity)
|
Roman
Holiday
Actor: Montgomery Clift
(From Here to Eternity)
Actress: Audrey Hepburn(Roman Holiday)
Supporting Actor:Frank Sinatra
(From Here to Eternity)
Supporting Actress: Donna
Reed
(From Here to Eternity)
Director: William Wyler (Roman Holiday)
|
|
| |
Fred
Zinnemann's film of James Jones' best-selling novel From
Here to Eternity was the perfect film to select for Best
Picture in 1953: A well-acted drama that created controversy
for its steamy
sex scenes (without being too controversial or too sexy).
It is an enjoyably elaborate soap opera,
with wonderfully memorable performances by Burt Lancaster, Deborah
Kerr,
Donna Reed, Frank Sinatra and particularly Montgomery Clift as
the tortured Private Robert E. Lee Pruitt, that tied the record
for the most Oscar wins with eight and won many of the other year-end
awards
as well, including those from the New York Film Critics and the
BAFTAs. But there is no question that movie standards of the day
toned down
the torrid
sexuality of
the novel considerably, and there are lapses in the logic of the
story (Clift's devotion to the army after being horribly mistreated
during
his service makes no sense at all).
By
contrast, a film where logic and raw sexuality are transcended by
effervescent romance is William Wyler's delightful Roman Holiday,
which introduced a fresh new talent named Audrey Hepburn to the
screen (not counting the few minor parts she had already played
in some European films, including a nonspeaking role the Ealing
Studios 1952 classic The Lavender Hill Mob), who won the
role only after original director Frank Capra (who would have made
it with Elizabeth Taylor and Cary Grant) allowed his option to pass
on it. Fresh is exactly the word for Roman Holiday: a breathtaking
romantic comedy that makes one believe in love. It's a rare thing
when the Academy gives its top prize to a romantic comedy, and with
Serious Drama like From Here to Eternity, Shane and The
Robe in the running, it never had a chance. But Roman Holiday
has a singular evergreen quality about it: despite spawning more
derivitive imitations than perhaps any film ever made, it is as
affecting, charming and amusing now as the day it premiered. The
next time it's playing on television on a rainy afternoon, check
it out and see if you don't wind up falling a little in love yourself.
|
|
When
the Academy was deciding who should win the Best Color Costume Design
Oscar, they looked at all of the nominees with the same criterium
they always use: give the award to the film that isn't set in the
20th century. As a result, they selected The Robe,
a maudlin spectacle about a Roman tribune present at the crucifixion
who wins Christ's robe in a game of dice. A smash hit in its day
because it introduced Cinemascope to the screen, The Robe
is a very run-of-the mill epic whose unexceptional costumes were
outclassed by nominees The Band Wagon, Call Me Madam and
How to Marry a Millionaire. Of course all of those films
were set in the present, so they never had a chance.
|
When
Marlon Brando was shooting Julius Caesar, he went to fellow
cast member John Gielgud for help with the Shakespearean text.
Brando's performance as Marc Antony so impressed the Academy that
he received his third consecutive Best Actor nomination, but the performance
in the film that is most memorable is Gielgud's Cassius. The great
Shakespearean actor had virtually turned his back on film throughout
his career (including turning down the title role in MGM's 1936 production
of Romeo & Juliet), but when director Joseph L. Mankiewitz
approached him about playing Cassius in his screen version of Julius
Caesar (which Gielgud had played triumphantly at Stratford in
1950), Gielgud couldn't turn him down and delivered one of the great
Shakespearean performances on film (equaled only by Olivier's Henry
V and Richard III, and Ian McKellen's brilliantly fascist Richard
III). James Mason is a powerful and memorable Brutus in the film and
was worthy of a nomination himself (he was named Best Actor by the
National Board of Review in a busy year, winning the award for his
performances in The Desert Rats, Face to Face and The Man
Between as well as Julius Caesar), but the Academy was
so impressed with Brando's conversion from mumbler to orator that
they gave him the nomination, even though his Marc Antony is really
a supporting role. Gielgud is the one who continues to impress audiences. |
Return
to top
1920s
1930s
1940s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
madbeast.com home
e-mail
madbeast.com
|
|
 |
On
the Waterfront
Actor: Marlon Brando(On
the Waterfront)
Actress: Grace Kelly(The Country Girl)
Supporting Actor:Edmond O'Brien
(The Barefoot Contessa)
Supporting Actress: Eva Marie Saint
(On the Waterfront)
Director: Elia Kazan (On the Waterfront)
|
On
the Waterfront
Actor: Marlon Brando(On
the Waterfront)
Actress: Judy Garland (A Star is Born)
Supporting Actor:Lee J. Cobb
(On the Waterfront)
Supporting Actress: Eva Marie Saint
(On the Waterfront
Director:
Elia Kazan (On the Waterfront)
|
|
| |
On
the Waterfront placed number 8 on the AFI's list of the
hundred greatest American films on the twentieth century. No
other films from
this year made the list, although the omission of Seven Brides
for Seven Brothers does seem like a peculiar oversight. But
even with this nitpicking, it is clear that Elia Kazan's drama
about corruption
on the docks was far-and-away the finest film of the year, and it's
a relief that even the Academy recognized it, giving On the
Waterfront
a then-record eight Oscars (tying it with Gone With the Wind
and From Here to Eternity for the most statuettes to date).
Not all of those awards were no-brainers Seven Brides certainly
should have given it a run for its money for the editing award),
but
Elia Kazan's direction and the performances of Marlon Brando and
Eva Marie Saint were without peer. And while Edmond O'Brien undeservedly
won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his tiresome performance
as a press agent in The Barefoot Contessa, it didn't hurt his cause
that three nominated performances from On
the Waterfront canceled
each other out. (A film receiving three acting nominations in
one
category had only been accomplished once before, for Mutiny on
the Bounty, and would only be equaled thrice more, for Tom
Jones and the first two installments of The Godfather). |
|
Grace
Kelly
was everywhere in 1954, appearing in Green Fire, Rear Window,
Dial M for Murder and in her Oscar winning performance as a
dowdy housewife henpecking her actor husband back to the top in
The Country Girl. The Academy was itching to give the glamorous
Kelly the Oscar; but she was totally miscast as the frumpy housewife
(Uta Hagen won a Tony Award for playing the role in the Broadway
production), and attempts to dress her down for the part have the
same effect as the "ugly" girl in all those teenage sex
comedies that is played by a Playboy model wearing thick eyeglasses.
The award clearly should have gone to Judy Garland in A Star
is Born, but by that time Kelly was Paramount's hottest female
property and Garland was Hollywood outcast without a P.R. department
to call her own.
|
The
Academy frequently gives out Special Awards to make up for past injustices,
and they had quite a bit of housekeeping to do in 1954. Choreographer
Michael Kidd was awarded a Special Oscar in 1996 for his career achievement
in films, despite the fact that he'd only worked on ten movies. The
Special Oscar was actually for Kidd's phenomenal work on Seven
Brides for Seven Brothers. The following year, an even bigger
oversight was rectified when director Stanley Donen received
a Special Oscar as well. Donen's career output was much greater than
Kidd's (he should have been the co-winner of the Best Director Oscar
along with Gene Kelly for 1952's Singin' in the Rain), but
he was always overlooked in the Best Director race. This snub was
never more apparent than in 1954, when Seven Brides for Seven Brothers
was nominated for five Oscars including Best Picture, but not Donen
for Best Director. When Donen finally won his Special Oscar, he gave
one of the greatest and most memorable acceptance speeches in the
award's history. The Academy must have kicked themselves for waiting
so long. |
Return
to top
1920s
1930s
1940s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
madbeast.com home
e-mail
madbeast.com
|
|
 |
Marty
Actor: Ernest Borgnine(Marty)
Actress: Anna Magnani(The Rose Tattoo)
Supporting Actor:Jack Lemmon(Mister Roberts)
Supporting Actress: Jo Van Fleet(East of Eden)
Director: Delbert Mann (Marty)
|
Mister
Roberts
Actor: James Dean(Rebel
Without a Cause)*
Actress: Susan Hayward (I'll Cry Tomorrow)
Supporting Actor:Jack Lemmon(Mister Roberts)
Supporting
Actress: JO Van Fleet(East of Eden)
Director: Charles Laughton (Night of the Hunter)*
|
|
| |
|
At
first glance, the Academy's selection of the modest, low-budget
Marty was their way of apologizing for naming the behemoth
The Greatest Show on Earth as Best Picture in 1952. But Marty
was a revelation in 1955, winning all of the major film awards handed
out that year and universal acclaim for the performance of Ernest
Borgnine in the title role of a butcher who spends his free time
hanging around with his buddies asking the eternal question "Whattayoo
wanna do tonight?" Prior to Marty, Borgnine was best
known as a villain in films like From Here to Eternity and
Bad Day at Black Rock, but his sensitive performance won
him a brief period of stardom in somber dramas like The Catered
Affair and The Rabbit Trap before returning to his true calling
in supporting roles in films like The Dirty Dozen and The
Poseidon Adventure. But for all the sensation Borgnine created
as Marty Piletti, it's difficult to understand what the fuss was
about. Based on Paddy Chaevsky's 1952 teleplay, the film frankly
looks like a TV show and Ernest Borgnine's bland performance as
a bland butcher now comes off as, well, bland.
Although
generally regarded as a weak movie year, there were numerous
films
released in 1955 that are now considered infinitely superior to
Marty. A Rebel Without a Cause is usually pointed
to as the most influential film of the year, but its influence
seems
to come more from James Dean's landmark performance than from the
film as a whole. And Charles Laughton's Night of the Hunter
is much beloved by film students, but the movie that everyone else
loves seems to be Mister Roberts. Despite its problematic
filming (director John Ford was fired after punching Henry Fonda
in the jaw, and many of the scenes Ford shot were redone by the
play's Broadway director Joshua Logan, who harshly criticized
the
finished product), it's a delightful retelling of the stage play.
Even the Academy enjoyed it, giving a rare Best Picture nomination
to the comedy, although they were sparse in any other recognition,
nominating it only for Best Sound and Best Supporting Actor (deserved
winner Jack Lemmon) in other categories. The charming wartime film
warranted nominations for Fonda in the title role and for its
clever
screenplay as well, but the Academy had to be careful in how much
praise it handed out to the comedy. After all, if something is
funny,
it can't be artistic too; right?
|
|
1955 was chock-full
of questionable selections for the Oscar. Marty over Mister
Roberts as Best Picture? Delbert Mann over Charles Laughton
as Best Director? Miyamoto Musashi as Best Foreign Film over
Les Diaboliques? But for giving an award to someone over
vastly superior competition, it's hard to top Ernest Borgnine's
Best Actor Oscar for Marty. Borgnine was honored for
a performance which straddled a fine line between being earnest
and being merely maudlin, and while it certainly had its engaging
aspects does not hold a candle to the now-legendary performance
of James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause (who, strangely, was
nominated for his less popular performance in East Of Eden),
as well as superior work from fellow nominees Spencer Tracy in Bad
Day at Black Rock, Frank Sinatra in The Man With the Golden
Arm and James Cagney in Love Me or Leave Me. Far
more impressive performances given by non-nominated actors like
Henry Fonda in Mister Roberts, Robert Mitchum in Night
of the Hunter, and Tom Ewell in The Seven Year Itch as
well. After his Oscar win, Borgnine settled into a busy, though
unremarkable career as a character actor best known for the sitcom
McHale's Navy. His Academy Award for Best Actor is one of
the greatest aberrations in Oscar history.
|
|
The
only person to win the Best Director Oscar for the only film he
directed was Jerome Robbins for West Side Story. If justice
had been served, Charles Laughton would have been added to
that list for his solo attempt at directing, the suspenseful Night
of the Hunter. Virtually unnoticed when it came out, Laughton's
tale of good versus evil was a director's showcase of cinematic
tricks that is now recognized as a classic. The film benefited from
sterling performances from Robert Mitchum, Lillian Gish and Shelley
Winters, a tense screenplay by James Agee, and atmospheric cinematography
by Stanley Cortez, but the bulk of its success must be attributed
to Laughton's direction. Laughton never attended the Oscars when
he was nominated as an actor and it's doubtful that his omission
in the Best Director race caused him to break his stride, but the
shutout of Night of the Hunter for any recognition at the
1955 Academy Awards does seem puzzling today.
|
Return
to top
1920s
1930s
1940s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
madbeast.com home
e-mail
madbeast.com
|
|
 |
Around
the World in 80 Days
Actor: Yul Brynner (The
King and I)
Actress: Ingrid Bergman(Anastasia)
Supporting Actor:Anthony Quinn (Lust for Life)
Supporting Actress: Dorothy Malone
(Written on the Wind)
Director: George Stevens (Giant)
|
The
Searchers*
Actor: John Wayne(The
Searchers)*
Actress: Judy Holliday (The Solid Gold Cadillac)*
Supporting Actor:Richard Basehart(Moby Dick)*
Supporting Actress: Dorothy
Malone
(Written on the Wind)
Director: John Ford (The Searchers)*
|
|
| |
|
After
selecting two small-scale films for the Best Picture Oscar
in 1954 and 1955, the Academy went back to the "bigger
is better" line of thinking, selecting the widescreen
extravaganza Around the World in 80 Days. It was a
popular choice that received most of the other year-end awards
as well, although now the film seems like little more than
an overlong travelogue without any real entertainment value
or dramatic resonance. The other nominees were the epic soap
opera Giant, the enjoyably outlandish Biblical super-productionThe
Ten Commandments, the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical
The King and I, and William Wyler's gentle drama about
a Quaker family, Friendly Persuasion. The latter blew
the lid off the award when blacklisted writer Michael Wilson
was nominated, violating the new Academy rule that prevented
accused Reds of receiving nominations so that the official
Academy roles listed the film as being nominated, but decreeing
that "writer Michael Wilson was ineligible under Academy
bylaws." Wilson didn't receive credit on another motion
picture screenplay for ten years, although he did win an Oscar
for the script of The Bridge on the River Kwai (with
co-writer Carl Foreman) in 1957 using Pierre Boulle, the writer
of the original novel, as a front.
The
Academy might have saved themselves some trouble by nominating some
vastly superior films that weren't so steeped in controversy. Akira
Kurasawa's The Seven Samurai was the finest film released
in the US, but it never had a chance for the Best Picture Oscar
(it would still be another thirteen years before the Academy broke
the precedent it had set with a nomination for a foreign film with
La Grande Illusion), although it did receive nominations
for black and white art direction and costume design. The other
great masterpiece of 1956 was John Ford's The Searchers,
which strangely did not receive a single nomination despite its
spectacular cinematography and the greatest performance of John
Wayne's career. Overlooked in its own time, The Searchers is
now considered one of the greatest films in the history of the cinema.
|
|
Producer
Mike Todd tried to give humorist S.J. Perelman the sole credit for
writing the screenplay to Around the World in 80 Days,
feeling that it would give the enterprise more prestige. The Writer's
Guild intervened, and co-writers James Poe and John Farrow were
not only given screen credit, but the three shared the Oscar for
Best Adapted Screenplay. In fact, Around the World in 80 Days'
tedious screenplay is the worst thing about it; an endless series
of dull episodes that don't make up any real dramatic structure.
Far superior adaptations were supplied by Michael Wilson for Friendly
Persuasion, but he was ruled ineligible for the award because
of a new Oscar bylaw that ruled anyone who "had admitted Communist
Party membership and has not renounced that membership, if he has
refused to testify before a Congressional Committee or if he has
refused to respond to a subpoena from such committee" ineligible;
and from Frank S. Nugent for The Searchers, Ray Bradbury
and John Huston for Moby Dick, Æneas MacKenzie, Jesse
L. Lasky Jr., Jack Gariss and Fredric M. Frank for The Ten Commandments,
Philip Yordan for The Harder They Fall, and Abe Burrows for
The Solid Gold Cadillac; none of which was even nominated.
|
When
John Wayne finally won the Best Actor Oscar for True Grit
in 1969, it was more in recognition for the culmination of his career
than for anything spectacularly different he did with the role of
Rooster Cogburn. Wayne was a strong but fairly limited actor who gave
the same durable one-dimensional performance in all his films. The
outstanding exception to this was his multi-layered tour de force
as the racist and bitter Ethan Edwards in The Searchers. Wayne's
masterful performance was revelation in John Ford's powerful western,
and his failure to be nominated for the Best Actor Oscar for this
compelling performance is one of the greatest oversights in the history
of the Academy Awards. |
Return
to top
1920s
1930s
1940s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
madbeast.com home
e-mail
madbeast.com
|
|
 |
The
Bridge on the River Kwai
Actor: Alec Guinness(The
Bridge on the River Kwai)
Actress: Joanne Woodward(The Three Faces of Eve)
Supporting Actor:Red Buttons(Sayonara)
Supporting Actress: Miyoshi Umeki (Sayonara)
Director: David Lean (The Bridge on the River Kwai)
|
The
Bridge on the River Kwai
Actor: Alec Guinness(The
Bridge on the River Kwai)
Actress: Joanne Woodward(The Three Faces of Eve)
Supporting Actor:Sessue
Hayakawa
(The Bridge on the River Kwai)
Supporting Actress: Elsa Lanchester
(Witness for the Prosecution)
Director:
David Lean (The Bridge on the River Kwai)
|
|
| |
|
The
Bridge on the River Kwai was so overwhelmingly the selection
as best film of the year in 1957 by the people who handed out year-end
awards that films would proudly advertise when they came in as runner-up
in the voting, and it is a clear winner in the Hindsight Awards
as well. David Lean's drama based on Pierre Boulle's novel featured
a brilliant cast and a marvelous screenplay by Michael Wilson and
Carl Foreman (who used Boulle as a front after being blacklisted
by Joseph McCarthy) and remains today as the definitive prisoner
of war film ever made. It also had a marvelous cast in William Holden,
Jack Hawkins, and a star-making turn by Alec Guinness as the leader
of the prisoners who becomes more obsessed with completing the bridge
than his Japanese captors, which won every year-end film award despite
the fact that he was only the third choice for the role after Noël
Coward and Charles Laughton. The Bridge on the River Kwai
was named Best Picture by the National Board of Review, the BAFTAs,
the Golden Globes, the New York Film Critics, and won seven Oscars,
including Best Pictures.
With
such an open-and-shut case for the Best Picture, it seems appropriate
to analyze the other nominees, which were Peyton Place, Sayonara,
12 Angry Men, and Witness for the Prosecution. Of these
four, only the powerful 12 Angry Men (although dated by virtue
of its all-white all-male jury) and Billy Wilder's delightful adaptation
of Agatha Christie's Witness for the Prosecution still pack
enough punch to warrant a nomination. Were the finalists announced
today, the final two spots would be taken by Elia Kazan's indictment
of the entertainment industry A Face in the Crowd (featuring
an anti-Mayberry characterization from the underrated Andy Griffith)
and Alexander Mackendrick's exposé of the public relations
industry, The Sweet Smell of Success.
|
George
Wells won the Best Original Screenplay Oscar for his trifling
script for Designing Woman, beating out the work of Federico
Fellini, Ennio Flaiano and Tullio Pinelli (nominated for Vitelloni
but not for Nights of Cabiria) and the non-nominated
Ingmar Bergman for The Seventh Seal. The Oscars were becoming
more generous in honoring foreign films with nominations, but not
with awards. Both Fellini (who holds the record for most writing
nominations without ever winning) and Bergman were nominated several
time for their screenplays, but the Academy could never bring themselves
to hand them an Oscar for anything but Best Foreign Film.
|
In
1992, What's Opera, Doc? was chosen by the Library of
Congress' National Film Preservation Board as one of 25 "culturally,
historically or aesthetically significant films" to add to the
National Film Registry, and it is frequently named as the sum total
of many people's education on classical music. This landmark cartoon
failed to even be nominated for Best Short Subject (Cartoon), the
winner being the delightful, but inferior Sylvester short Birds
Anonymous. Edward Seltzer produced both films, so at least the
Academy awarded the right person that year, but the overlooked
Bugs Bunny would have to wait another year before collecting his first
(and only) Academy Award, for Knighty-Knight, Bugs. |
Return
to top
1920s
1930s
1940s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
madbeast.com home
e-mail
madbeast.com
|
|
 |
Gigi
Actor: David Niven (Separate
Tables)
Actress: Susan Hayward(I Want to Live!)
Supporting Actor:Burl Ives(The Big Country)
Supporting Actress: Wendy Hiller (Separate Tables)
Director: Vincente Minnelli (Gigi)
|
Vertigo*
Actor: Spencer
Tracy (The Old Man and the Sea)
Actress: Rosalind Russell(Auntie Mame)
Supporting Actor: Burl
Ives(Cat on a Hot Tin Roof)*
Supporting Actress: Hermione Gingold (Gigi)*
Director: Alfred Hitchcock (Vertigo)*
|
|
| |
|
MGM
commisioned the lavish film musical Gigi from the creative
team that crafted the most popular stage musical of the 1950s, My
Fair Lady. The result was another suptuous Pygmalion story of
a young woman who balks at being forced to fit into a mold in order
to make her way in polite society. The film was a smash hit and
won a record number of Academy Awards in 1958 (9 - a record that
would stand for exactly one year), and its easy to see why. Elaborately
produced with high pedigree talent, it excelled in all the areas
that the Oscars recognize. But as skillfully made as it is, viewing
the film does leave one with a somewhat empty feeling; sort of like
receiving an impeccably wrapped gift that contains a present you
don't find terribly interesting. A better choice for Best Picture
among the nominees would have been Stanley Kramer's powerful though
heavy-handed plea for racial equality The Defiant Ones or
Richard Brooks' sanitized film of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,
featuring a brilliant supporting performance by Burl Ives as Big
Daddy that was mistakenly classified in the Best Actor category
so that it didn't get the recognition it deserved (the Academy made
it up to Ives by naming him Best Supporting Actor for playing a
similar role in The Big Country).
But
the most enduring film of 1958 came from the Master of Suspense
Alfred Hitchcock: Vertigo. Hitchcock was never taken seriously
enough to win the Best Director Oscar (his Rebecca was named
Best Picture of 1940, but the Best Director Oscar went to John Ford
for The Grapes of Wrath), but his films of the 1950s (Strangers
on a Train, Rear Window, North by Northwest) are among the most
memorable of the decade. Vertigo, the mind-numbing tale of
a San Francisco detective suffering from acrophobia who becomes
obsessed with the object of his investigation, topped them all,
featuring one of James Stewart's finest performances and the best
work of Kim Novak's career. It was, regrettably, the final collaboration
of Hitchcock and Stewart when the director unfairly blamed his star
for the film's poor box office showing and refused to work with
him again.
|
|
When
the great English actress Wendy Hiller won the Best Supporting
Actress Oscar for her forgettable performance in Separate
Tables, she said "All you could see was the back of my
head. Unless they give some award for acting with one's back to
the camera, I don't see how I could have won." Indeed, the
distinguished Hiller (who gave memorable Oscar nominated performances
in Pygmalion and A Man for All Seasons) made minimal
impact in the film, and it is a mystery that she was nominated for
the award, much less won it.
|
Alfred
Hitchcock was nominated for the Best Director Oscar five times
(Rebecca, Lifeboat, Spellbound, Rear Window, and Psycho),
never winning in spite of his singular style that makes many classify
him as one of the great directors in history. Overlooked in its initial
release (it received a solitary nomination for Best Sound),Vertigo
is now regarded as one of the most complex and suspenseful films in
the Hitchcock canon. It wouldn't be long before Hitchcock started
to believe all the nonsense the auteurists started saying about
him and his work took a downward turn, but with Vertigo he
was still at his unpretentious best, and deserved the Best Director
Oscar that had always been denied him. |
Return
to top
1920s
1930s
1940s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
madbeast.com home
e-mail
madbeast.com
|
|
 |
Ben
Hur
Actor: Charlton Heston(Ben
Hur)
Actress: Simone Signoret (Room at the Top)
Supporting Actor:Hugh Griffith(Ben Hur)
Supporting Actress: Shelley Winters
(The Diary of Anne Frank)
Director: William Wyler (Ben Hur)
|
Ben
Hur
Actor: James Stewart(Anatomy
of a Murder)
Actress: Marilyn Monroe (Some Like It Hot)*
Supporting Actor:Joseph N. Welch
(Anatomy of a Murder)*
Supporting Actress: Shelley Winters
(The Diary of Anne Frank)
Director:
William Wyler (Ben Hur)
|
|
| |
|
Ben
Hur won more Academy Awards than any other film and although
its record total has since been equaled by Titanic
and The Lord of the Rings, the Return of the King,
its stranglehold on the movie prizes in 1959 is understandable
- it's just so big a presentation that it just seems
like the best the year had to offer. With its cast of thousands
and epic production values, it is as dazzling now as when
it first premiered despite such curious casting choices as
Welshman Hugh Griffith as an Arab and ulta-WASP Charlton Heston
as Judah Ben Hur (whose most famous roles as Ben Hur and Moses
depict the two most non-Jewish Jews in cinema history), both
of whom won Academy Awards for performances that can be charitably
described as self-indulgently theatrical. But what Ben
Hur lacks in subtle humanity, it makes up for in spectacle,
with its celebrated chariot race being justifiably canonized
as one of the most exciting action sequences ever filmed.
It can be argued that The Diary of Anne Frank or Anatomy
of a Murder carry more dramatic punch or that Some
Like It Hot or the unnominated North by Northwest are
more entertaining, but few films are as impressive for the
shear spectacle of their presentation as Ben Hur. Anyone
who has seen the film only on television might yawn at the
choice; but seen on the big screen, Ben Hur continues
to impress.
|
|
The
Academy got carried away with their adulation of Ben Hur
in 1959, giving it some awards that it clearly didn't deserve. The
most obvious of these is the Best Actor Oscar to Charlton Heston
for his typically hammy performance of the title role. Far superior
work was given by fellow nominees James Stewart in Anatomy of
a Murder, Jack Lemmon in Some Like It Hot, Paul Muni
in The Last Angry Man and Laurence Harvey in Room at the
Top, as well as the non-nominated Tony Curtis in Some Like
It Hot, Cary Grant in North by Northwest, Victor Sjöström
in Wild Strawberries, or John Wayne in Rio Bravo.
Heston was always enjoyable to watch, but his self-indulgent posing
was never "acting" in the Academy Award manner.
|
Marilyn
Monroe was never taken seriously as an actress, despite memorable
performances in Bus Stop,The Misfits and The Seven Year
Itch which were all worthy of Best Actress nominations. Her greatest
performance, however, was as the sexy but vulnerable Sugar Kane Kowalczyk
in Billy Wilder's Some Like It Hot, which was nominated for
Best Actor, Director, Screenplay, Art Direction and won for Costume
Design, but was not nominated for Best Picture or Best Actress.
Monroe's behavior on the set was becoming more and more self-indulgent
(she frequently didn't show up for shooting and when she did, she
was hours late) and she was difficult to get along with (she sometimes
required as many as forty takes to complete a shot, and costar Tony
Curtis said that "kissing her was like kissing Hitler"),
but Wilder had only praise for her work."Anyone can remember
her lines," he said, "but it takes a great artist to come
on the set and not know her lines and give the performance she did." |
Return
to top
1920s
1930s
1940s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
madbeast.com home
e-mail
madbeast.com
|