As the world yawns again at the prospect of tonight's glittering back-slapping marathon, The Oscars, it is worth taking a little look at some of the notable errors of judgement the Academy have made over the years.
Remarkably, right from the outset the award for Best Picture has been given to some surprising nominees, with films that are (in hindsight) much more warmly remembered missing out. Indeed the very first award in 1927 was given to a movie called Wings, while the masterpiece Metropolis (with its Oscar-like robot) missed out.
My top five movies that should have been "Best Picture" but weren't:
- Citizen Kane (1941). A film that features regularly in polls of "best movie of all time", the Orson Welles masterpiece was overlooked in favour of How Green Was My Valley - ewww...
- 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). Another all-time great in the history of cinematography, embarrassingly Mr Kubrick was sidelined in favour of none other than Oliver!. That must rank as one of the daftest choices of the lot - for although Lionel Bart's musical extravaganza is indeed a fab film, it pales in comparison.
- Some Like It Hot (1959). The iconic Billy Wilder film, a house favourite here at Dolores Delargo Towers and beloved of many millions of people, was not even nominated for Best Picture. Ben Hur won.
- Star Wars (1977). Another shock decision by the Oscars jury was the choice of Woody Allen's Annie Hall over the original (and best) of the multi-billion-dollar movie series.
- The Graduate (1967). Miss Bancroft's finest hour lost out to In the Heat of the Night. Two great films; I know which I prefer!
In 1939, the most famous year in Oscars history for contending classic films, several all-time favourites were up against each other. Movies such as The Wizard of Oz, Dark Victory, Goodbye Mr Chips, Mr Smith Goes to Washington, Wuthering Heights, Ninotchka, Of Mice and Men and Stagecoach were all in the contest. Personal favourite The Women wasn't even nominated. Inevitably, the (in my opinion very over-rated) Gone With The Wind was the eventual winner.
More recently, who would have thought that Apocalypse Now would have lost out to Kramer vs Kramer in 1979? Or The Killing Fields as runner-up to Amadeus in 1984? The Shawshank Redemption lost to Forrest Gump in 1994; and in 2005 Brokeback Mountain was controversially beaten by Crash (for gawd's sake!).
Oscars trivia:
- The model for the Oscar statuette was a naked Mexican named Emilio Fernández, who had a platonic relationship with fellow Mexican and big Hollywood star Dolores del Río.
- The three movies that won the most Oscars were Lord of the Rings: Return of the King (2003), Titanic (1997) and Ben Hur (1959). All three movies won 11 statuettes. (Second place is held by West Side Story which won ten Oscars in 1962.)
- Walt Disney was the biggest winner in Oscars history. He walked away with 26 Academy Awards over his lifetime, and received 64 Oscar nominations in total.
The Oscars on Filmsite
Offical Oscars 2011 website
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