Category: Oscar Winner

The Times of Harvey Milk (1984)

I should probably rewatch Milk again. I had either forgotten or missed from that film that Harvey Milk’s assassination seemingly had nothing to do with his sexuality and was the result of a a political disagreement amongst former political allies. This documentary focuses tightly on Milk’s political career as short as it was and benefits from its interviews with people who knew and worked with Harvey. It is a dedicated artifact showing his devotion to his community, particularly its LGBT members, even to the point of using political stunts to get his message across.

Oscar Win: Best Documentary, Features

Innerspace (1987)

The concept behind this is rather clever. Dennis Quaid is a disgraced Navy pilot who signs up for an experimental miniaturization project. Due to some mishaps, he and his pod are injected into Martin Short. Unfortunately there is way too much plot devoted to rival organizations trying to steal the miniaturizing technology. Those bits and the chase scenes that ensue are really drawn out and slow. Otherwise, the interactions between Quaid and Short are fun and even manage to wrangle in some of Short’s generally annoying antics. I’m somewhat meh with Meg Ryan’s role as the girlfriend, but the effects are quite good even more than thirty years later.  SciFi

Oscar Win: Best Effects, Visual Effects

The Woman in Red (1984)

This is very much like a Blake Edwards film where the main character is a middle-aged married man who becomes obsessed with a younger, beautiful woman, caring less what that does to anyone else in his orbit. Fortunately this was directed by and stars Gene Wilder, so it’s a bit more light hearted and charming than one of Edwards’s films. It is also helped by an unforgettable Stevie Wonder soundtrack. Most of the women in the film are unfortunately one-dimensional objects. His wife could be a completely anonymous woman with as much characterization as she’s given and is humiliated with a completely random fondling by her daughter’s boyfriend. Like in the film 10, the object of obsession, played by Kelly Le Brock, becomes less appealing to the man when she is shown to be a real woman with her own sexual feelings and inclinations. The only woman who has much identity is Gilda Radner as a co-worker whom enacts revenge on Wilder after a series of misunderstandings. She’s adorable in the role, both in looks and acting. Wilder is joined by a trio of friends on his misadventures. There is one small bit where one friend played by Charles Grodin is revealed to be gay. It’s quickly waved away, but there is a short tender scene that seems somewhat forward thinking for the early 1980s.

Oscar Win: Best Music, Original Song

The Story of Louis Pasteur (1936)

A little hyperbolic to say, but this movie should be shown in all schools these days. While questionable in the actual portrayal of Louis Pasteur and the events of his life, it does illustrate the importance of science, being open to having preconceived notions challenged, and vaccinations. It’s hard to get passed the idea that washing hands and boiling instruments would be a questionable to the field of medicine. I’m glad I watched this so soon after Scarface because the comparison really shows Paul Muni’s skills as an actor.  Best Picture Nomination

Oscar Wins: Best Actor in a Leading Role; Best Writing, Original Story; Best Writing, Screenplay

Oscar Nomination: Best Picture

La Dolce Vita (1960)

Grappling with what to write about this, I recognize that I probably don’t understand the great majority of what the film is trying to say. Marcello Mastroianni is a journalist who is always searching for the next thing: the next big story, the next woman who excites him, the next thing that’ll bring him the best that life has to offer. Told in episodes that proceed over the course of some portion of time, he ages and progresses on this journey, using the males in his life as inspiration and caution. Every day with potential leads to an exciting, electric night that turns into the grey reality of morning. I love watching Mastroianni move, there’s a cool European smoothness, but also a bit of self-deprecation in the way he hunches his shoulders as if he’s hoping these things will just come to him. Anita Ekberg’s fountain scene is iconic for so many reasons, she exuberates with those best parts of life, fully engrossing in everything life has to offer.

Oscar Win: Best Costume Design, Black-and-White

Oscar Nominations: Best Director; Best Writing, Story and Screenplay – Written Directly for the Screen; Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White

Bullitt (1968)

I’m slowly starting to warm to Steve McQueen as an actor. I’m not sure I’m on board with his reputation for being so cool, but he does bring a bit of effortless but grizzled with a bit of underlying troubledness to his characters. Here he is the titular character, a San Francisco cop tasked with guarding a Chicago mobster who is scheduled to be a witness at a Senate hearing. After the mobster is killed while in custody, Bullitt tries to keep the case open longer so he can gather more evidence about the guy and his intentions. The film is probably best known for its San Francisco car chase scene, which is indeed fabulous, but it is also a neat crime mystery in its own right, set up well to potentially have sequels with the same character.

Oscar Winner: Best Film Editing

Oscar Nominee: Best Sound

Mon Oncle (1958)

While I didn’t find this quite as delightful as PlayTime or Trafic, there are still some wonderful visuals in this Tati outing. Monsieur Hulot’s nephew prefers spending time with his playful uncle rather than with his upwardly mobile parents in their ultra modern home. The house provides plenty of gags: a fish fountain that’s only turned on for the right kind of guests, large round upstairs windows that look like eyes, uncomfortable furniture constantly needing to be moved to the various zones, and garden paths that follow no logical direction. The film isn’t just stuck in the modern either, there is plenty to be experience in Hulot’s unimproved neighborhood and at the plastics factory where his sister’s husband gets him a job. I actually watched both the English and German versions of the film and discovered that the dialogue falls to the wayside when you don’t have to pay attention to subtitles and the film becomes just visual. It results in two very different experiences.

Oscar Win: Best Foreign Language Film

Cleopatra (1963)

It’s no surprise that this brought on the end of the Golden Age of Hollywood. Everything about it is overblown: the sets, the cast, the costumes, the run-time, everything. With two parts split between Cleopatra’s relationships with Julius Caesar and Mark Antony, the story just goes on and on. Edited down to an hour or two shorter and it might have held my attention better. Elizabeth Taylor is truly a beautiful woman, but she was terribly miscast in the role of Cleopatra. She lacks gravitas, cunningness, and sexiness. There’s at least the feeling of building an alliance between Taylor and Rex Harrison’s Caesar; the relationship between Richard Burton’s Mark Antony is lackluster. There must have been some love flames between them in production, but they are not seen on screen. Obviously there was no expense sparred in the visuals. Cleopatra’s arrival in Rome is a live-action version of Aladdin’s Prince Ali scene. Despite that money spent in costumes (there is one ridiculous scene where without hesitation Taylor changes between three different outfits and Burton between two), many of Taylor’s look like the same exact style just in an array of candy colors. But I did love the sets. They are lavish and beautiful, truly sights to behold. There are so many little details to be seen: wigs, clothing racks, and umpteen baths. It’s also great to see the various cast in smaller roles: Hume Cronyn, Roddy McDowell, Martin Landau and even Carroll O’Connor as a Senator.  Best Picture Nomination

Oscar Wins: Best Cinematography, Color; Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Color; Best Costume Design, Color; Best Effects, Special Visual Effects

Oscar Nominations: Best Picture; Best Actor in a Leading Role; Best Sound; Best Film Editing; Best Music, Score – Substantially Original

Naughty Marietta (1935)

Jeannette MacDonald is certainly a talented singer, but her voice isn’t of a type that appeals to me. In this film, she’s a European princess who, in order to avoid an arranged marriage, flees on a ship of casquette girls to America. There she meets pirates, gypsies, and a mercenary played by Nelson Eddy whom she falls in love with. The majority of the story is rather yawn-worthy and the songs just feel thrown in to show off MacDonald and Eddy’s voices, offering little flow with the story itself.  Best Picture Nomination

Oscar Winner: Best Sound, Recording

Oscar Nomination: Best Picture

Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt (1989)

Telling the story of the NAMES Project Memorial Quilt, this film focuses on the stories of 5 individuals featured on the quilt, told through recollections by family and loved ones. I’ve seen exhibits of the Quilt and witnessed people seeing their loved one’s panel for the first time. It’s a powerful and emotional experience, as is watching this documentary. It doesn’t hide from its duty to provide the history, the negligence, and the awfulness that occurred during the early days of the epidemic, but it remains dedicated to showing the real humans living and dying with this horrible disease.

Oscar Win: Best Documentary, Features

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