[PO] Penelope's Elimination Game
That's correct; if a player passes--essentially keeping the winner--then that category/year is marked out, and the next player uses the next category/year (as stipulated by the previous player).OscarGuy wrote:I passed, but you don't get to re-do my assigned category. You get to do the one I assigned to you. At least I think that's how it works.
"...it is the weak who are cruel, and...gentleness is only to be expected from the strong." - Leo Reston
"Cruelty might be very human, and it might be cultural, but it's not acceptable." - Jodie Foster
"Cruelty might be very human, and it might be cultural, but it's not acceptable." - Jodie Foster
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- Emeritus
- Posts: 3650
- Joined: Thu Jan 02, 2003 3:57 pm
- Location: Illinois
Regarding passing: you could say, "I pass and Apocalypse Now remains the winner." But, remember, once you've used 3 passes, you MUST select a different winner.
I was initially going to say all the categories from every year, but a) I realize many people haven't seen the early winners/nominees and b) may not have seen some of the more obscure nominees even in recent decades.
So, let's keep the years limited to 1944 to the present (the beginning of the 5 slotted Best Picture category) and limit the categories to the following:
Picture
Director
Actor
Actress
Supporting Actor
Supporting Actress
Adapted Screenplay
Original Screenplay
Cinematography
Original Score
Original Song
Edited By Penelope on 1196453996
I was initially going to say all the categories from every year, but a) I realize many people haven't seen the early winners/nominees and b) may not have seen some of the more obscure nominees even in recent decades.
So, let's keep the years limited to 1944 to the present (the beginning of the 5 slotted Best Picture category) and limit the categories to the following:
Picture
Director
Actor
Actress
Supporting Actor
Supporting Actress
Adapted Screenplay
Original Screenplay
Cinematography
Original Score
Original Song
Edited By Penelope on 1196453996
"...it is the weak who are cruel, and...gentleness is only to be expected from the strong." - Leo Reston
"Cruelty might be very human, and it might be cultural, but it's not acceptable." - Jodie Foster
"Cruelty might be very human, and it might be cultural, but it's not acceptable." - Jodie Foster
-
- Emeritus
- Posts: 3650
- Joined: Thu Jan 02, 2003 3:57 pm
- Location: Illinois
- OscarGuy
- Site Admin
- Posts: 13668
- Joined: Wed Jan 01, 2003 12:22 am
- Location: Springfield, MO
- Contact:
How do you want to handle passing? I've only seen 2 of the 5 nominated films and I haven't seen 1941 in years...but I certainly wouldn't give the award to the other film I'd seen: Kramer vs. Kramer...so, if we can't pass, then I'll leave it be...
Oh and which categories are we limiting this to?
So, I'll pass to Zahveed Best Actress 1992.
65th Oscars
Edited By OscarGuy on 1196453424
Oh and which categories are we limiting this to?
So, I'll pass to Zahveed Best Actress 1992.
65th Oscars
Edited By OscarGuy on 1196453424
Wesley Lovell
"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both." - Benjamin Franklin
"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both." - Benjamin Franklin
Ok, here's the current tally as of 2/18/08:
Cinematography '32/'33: Reunion in Vienna eliminates A Farewell to Arms
Adapted Screenplay '35: The Lives of a Bengal Lancer eliminates The Informer
Supporting Actress '36: Alice Brady eliminates Gale Sondargaard
Director ’37: Gregory LaCava eliminates Leo McCarey
Actress '37: Greta Garbo eliminates Luise Rainer
Picture ’39: The Wizard of Oz eliminates Gone with the Wind
Actress '40: Joan Fontaine eliminates Ginger Rogers
Picture '41: Citizen Kane eliminates How Green Was My Valley
Actress '41: Greer Garson eliminates Joan Fontaine
Supporting Actress ’42: Agnes Moorhead eliminates Teresa Wright
Picture ’43: Casablanca remains the winner
Adapted Screenplay '44: Laura eliminates Going My Way
Picture ’45: Spellbound eliminates The Lost Weekend
Director ’46: William Wyler remains the winner
Actress ’47: Joan Crawford eliminates Loretta Young
Director '48: Laurence Olivier eliminates John Huston
Director '49: William Wyler eliminates Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Actress ’50: Bette Davis eliminates Judy Holliday
Supporting Actress ’50: Celeste Holm eliminates Josephine Hull
Black & White Cinematography ’50: All About Eve eliminates The Third Man
Director '51: Elia Kazan eliminates George Stevens
Actress ’51: Katharine Hepburn eliminates Vivien Leigh
Supporting Actress ’51: Kim Hunter remains the winner
Director '52: John Ford remains the winner
Actor '53: Montgomery Clift eliminates William Holden
Director '54: Alfred Hitchcock eliminates Elia Kazan
Actor ’54: James Mason eliminates Marlon Brando
Actress '54: Dorothy Dandridge eliminates Grace Kelly
Screenplay '54: Rear Window eliminates The Country Girl
Original Song '54: "The Man That Got Away" eliminates "Three Coins in the Fountain"
Picture '55: Marty remains the winner
Actor '55: James Dean eliminates Ernest Borgnine
Actress '55: Katharine Hepburn eliminates Anna Magnani
Picture '56: Giant eliminates Around the World in 80 Days
Adapted Screenplay ’56: Friendly Persuasion eliminates Around the World in 80 Days
Actress ’57: Lana Turner eliminates Joanne Woodward
Supporting Actor '57: Sessue Hayakawa eliminates Red Buttons
Picture '58: The Defiant Ones eliminates Gigi
Actress '58: Susan Hayward remains the winner
Original Screenplay '59: The 400 Blows eliminates Pillow Talk
Director ’60: Alfred Hitchcock eliminates Billy Wilder
Supporting Actor ’60: Sal Mineo eliminates Peter Ustinov
Actor '61: Paul Newman eliminates Maximilian Schell
Actress '61: Audrey Hepburn eliminates Sophia Loren
Actor ’62: Gregory Peck remains the winner
Actress '62: Lee Remick eliminates Anne Bancroft
B&W Cinematography '62: Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? eliminates The Longest Day
Director '63: Federico Fellini eliminates Tony Richardson
Original Screenplay '63: 8 1/2 eliminates How the West was Won
Picture '64: Dr. Strangelove eliminates My Fair Lady
Actor '64: Peter Sellers eliminates Rex Harrison
Original Song '64: "Hush...Hush Sweet Charlotte" eliminates "Chim-chim-cheree"
Actor '65: Oskar Werner eliminates Lee Marvin
Actress '65: Samantha Eggar eliminates Julie Christie
Actress ’66: Ida Kaminska eliminates Elizabeth Taylor
Picture ’67: The Graduate eliminates In the Heat of the Night
Supporting Actor '67: Gene Hackman eliminates George Kennedy
Adapted Screenplay ’67: The Graduate eliminates In the Heat of the Night
Director ’68: Gillo Pontecorvo eliminates Carol Reed
Actor '68: Peter O'Toole eliminates Cliff Robertson
Supporting Actress ’68: Ruth Gordon remains the winner
Original Song ’68: “Star!” eliminates “The Windmills of My Mind”
Actor '69: Jon Voight eliminates John Wayne
Supporting Actress ’69: Goldie Hawn remains the winner
Director '70: Robert Altman eliminates Franklin J. Schaffner
Actor '70: Melvyn Douglas eliminates George C. Scott
Original Score ’70: Patton eliminates Love Story
Picture '71: The Last Picture Show eliminates The French Connection
Actress '71: Julie Christie eliminates Jane Fonda
Cinematography ’71: The Last Picture Show eliminates Fiddler on the Roof
Director '72: Francis Ford Coppola eliminates Bob Fosse
Actor ’72: Paul Winfield eliminates Marlon Brando
Supporting Actor '72: Al Pacino eliminates Joel Grey
Supporting Actress '72: Shelley Winters eliminates Eileen Heckart
Picture '73: Cries and Whispers eliminates The Sting
Film Editing ’73: American Graffiti eliminates The Sting
Best Picture '74: The Towering Inferno eliminates The Godfather Part II
Actor '74: Jack Nicholson eliminates Art Carney
Supporting Actress '74: Madeline Kahn eliminates Ingrid Bergman
Director ’75: Robert Altman eliminates Milos Forman
Actress '75: Isabelle Adjani eliminates Louise Fletcher
Supporting Actress '75: Lily Tomlin eliminates Lee Grant
Cinematography '75: Barry Lyndon remains the winner
Picture ’76: All the President’s Men eliminates Rocky
Supporting Actress ’76: Piper Laurie eliminates Beatrice Straight
Picture '77: Annie Hall remains the winner
Director ’77: Steven Spielberg eliminates Woody Allen
Supporting Actor ’77: Jason Robards remains the winner
Supporting Actress ’77: Tuesday Weld eliminates Vanessa Redgrave
Original Score '77: Star Wars remains the winner
Actress '78: Ingrid Bergman eliminates Jane Fonda
Original Screenplay ’78: Autumn Sonata eliminates Coming Home
Picture ’79: All That Jazz eliminates Kramer vs. Kramer
Cinematography ’79: Apocalypse Now remains the winner
Director ’80: David Lynch eliminates Robert Redford
Actor ’80: John Hurt eliminates Robert DeNiro
Supporting Actress ’80: Eileen Brennan eliminates Mary Steenburgen
Adapted Screenplay ’80: The Elephant Man eliminates Ordinary People
Original Score '80: The Elephant Man eliminates Fame
Original Screenplay '81: Atlantic City eliminates Chariots of Fire
Original Score '81: Raiders of the Lost Ark eliminates Chariots of Fire
Picture ’82: E.T. eliminates Gandhi
Actor '82: Jack Lemmon eliminates Ben Kingsley
Original Score ’82: Poltergeist eliminates E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial
Director ’83: Ingmar Bergman eliminates James L. Brooks
Supporting Actor '83: Sam Shepard eliminates Jack Nicholson
Supporting Actress '83: Linda Hunt remains the winner
Actress '84: Judy Davis eliminates Sally Field
Supporting Actor ’84: Haing S. Ngor remains the winner
Supporting Actress '84: Lindsay Crouse eliminates Peggy Ashcroft
Original Song ’84: “Ghostbusters” eliminates “I Just Called to Say I Love You”
Picture '85: Kiss of the Spider Woman eliminates Out of Africa
Original Screenplay ’85: The Official Story eliminates Witness
Original Screenplay '86: My Beautiful Laundrette eliminates Hannah and Her Sisters
Original Score '86: Hoosiers eliminates 'Round Midnight
Director '87: Norman Jewison eliminates Bernardo Bertolucci
Actor '87: Marcello Mastroianni eliminates Michael Douglas
Supporting Actor ’87: Albert Brooks eliminates Sean Connery
Original Screenplay ’87: Radio Days eliminates Moonstruck
Director ’88: Martin Scorsese eliminates Bernardo Bertolucci
Actor '88: Max von Sydow eliminates Dustin Hoffman
Supporting Actress ’88: Geena Davis remains the winner
Original Song ’88: “Let the River Run” remains the winner
Director ’89: Woody Allen eliminates Oliver Stone
Actor ’89: Morgan Freeman eliminates Daniel Day Lewis
Supporting Actress '89: Dianne Wiest eliminates Brenda Fricker
Original Screenplay '89: Do the Right Thing eliminates Dead Poets Society
Actress ’90: Meryl Streep eliminates Kathy Bates
Director '90: Stephen Frears eliminates Kevin Costner
Original Screenplay ’90: Avalon eliminates Ghost
Picture '91: JFK eliminates The Silence of the Lambs
Original Song '91: "Be Our Guest" eliminates "Beauty and the Beast"
Picture ’92: The Crying Game eliminates Unforgiven
Actor ’92: Stephen Rea eliminates Al Pacino
Actress ’92: Susan Sarandon eliminates Emma Thompson
Cinematography ’92: Unforgiven eliminates A River Runs Through It
Picture ’93: The Piano eliminates Schindler’s List
Actor '94: Paul Newman eliminates Tom Hanks
Picture '94: Quiz Show eliminates Forrest Gump
Original Screenplay ’94: Red eliminates Pulp Fiction
Original Score '94: Little Women eliminates The Lion King
Director ’95: Tim Robbins eliminates Mel Gibson
Actor ’95: Sean Penn eliminates Nicolas Cage
Picture '96: Fargo eliminates The English Patient
Actor '96: Woody Harrelson eliminates Geoffrey Rush
Actress ’96: Emily Watson eliminates Frances McDormand
Original Screenplay ’96: Lone Star eliminates Fargo
Actor '97: Robert Duvall eliminates Jack Nicholson
Actress '97: Julie Christie eliminates Helen Hunt
Adapted Screenplay '97: The Sweet Hereafter eliminates L.A. Confidential
Cinematography ’97: L.A. Confidential eliminates Titanic
Director '98: Terence Malick eliminates Steven Spielberg
Actor ’98: Edward Norton eliminates Roberto Benigni
Supporting Actor '98: Robert Duvall eliminates James Coburn
Adapted Screenplay ’98: The Thin Red Line eliminates Gods and Monsters
Original Score '98: The Thin Red Line eliminates Life is Beautiful
Picture '99: American Beauty remains the winner
Actor ’99: Richard Farnsworth eliminates Kevin Spacey
Actress '99: Julianne Moore eliminates the Agent of Satan
Supporting Actress ’99: Toni Collette eliminates Angelina Jolie
Adapted Screenplay ’99: Election eliminates The Cider House Rules
Original Screenplay '99: The Sixth Sense eliminates American Beauty
Cinematography '99: The End of the Affair eliminates American Beauty
Original Score ’99: Angela’s Ashes eliminates The Red Violin
Actor '00: Javier Bardem eliminates Russell Crowe
Film Editing: Traffic remains the winner
Picture ’01: Gosford Park eliminates A Beautiful Mind
Director ’01: Peter Jackson eliminates Ron Howard
Adapted Screenplay '01: Ghost World eliminates A Beautiful Mind
Original Score ’01: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone eliminates LOTR: Fellowship
Picture '02: The Pianist eliminates Chicago
Actress '02: Renée Zelleweger eliminates Nicole Kidman
Cinematography ’02: Far From Heaven eliminates Road to Perdition
Supporting Actor ’03: Tim Robbins remains the winner
Supporting Actress '03: Shoreh Aghdashloo eliminates Renée Zellweger
Original Screenplay ’03: Lost in Translation remains the winner
Picture '04: Million Dollar Baby remains the winner
Actor '04: Clint Eastwood eliminates Jamie Foxx
Actress '04: The Glorious and Great Goddess Known to Mere Mortals as Kate Winslet annihilates the Agent of Satan
Supporting Actor '04: Morgan Freeman remains the winner
Picture '05: Brokeback Mountain eliminates Crash
Director '05: Steven Spielberg eliminates Ang Lee
Actor '05: Heath Ledger eliminates Philip Seymour Hoffman
Cinematography ’05: The New World eliminates Memoirs of a Geisha
Original Score '05: Brokeback Mountain remains the winner
Supporting Actress ’06: Rinko Kikuchi eliminates Jennifer Hudson
Adapted Screenplay '06: Children of Men eliminates The Departed
Editing '06: Children of Men eliminates The Departed
Years not used: 1927-28 to 1931-32; 1934; 1938.
And the current line-up:
Sabin (1 Pass: Film Editing '00)
Flipp (1 Pass: Original Song ’88)
Italiano (1 Pass: Supporting Actress '83)
Penelope (2 Passes: Supporting Actress ’68; Cinematography ’78)
Cinemanolis (1 Pass: Picture '99)
rudeboy (1 Pass: Director ’52)
Harry Goldfarb
Original BJ (2 Passes: Supporting Actor ’03, Picture '77)
FilmFan720 (1 Pass: Picture '55)
OscarGuy (1 Pass: Cinematography ’79)
MovieWes
Zahveed (2 Passes: Supporting Actress ’88; Original Score ’05)
dws1982 (2 Pass: Director ’46, Picture '04)
Akash (1 Pass: Supporting Actress ’69)*Temporarily out of the game
Okri (3 Passes: Supporting ’77; Picture ’43, Actress '58)
Eric (1 Pass: Original Screenplay ’03)
Bog (2 Passes: Actor ’62; Cinematography ’75)
RainBard (2 Passes: Supporting Actor ’84; Original Score ’77)
Edited By Penelope on 1203390307
Cinematography '32/'33: Reunion in Vienna eliminates A Farewell to Arms
Adapted Screenplay '35: The Lives of a Bengal Lancer eliminates The Informer
Supporting Actress '36: Alice Brady eliminates Gale Sondargaard
Director ’37: Gregory LaCava eliminates Leo McCarey
Actress '37: Greta Garbo eliminates Luise Rainer
Picture ’39: The Wizard of Oz eliminates Gone with the Wind
Actress '40: Joan Fontaine eliminates Ginger Rogers
Picture '41: Citizen Kane eliminates How Green Was My Valley
Actress '41: Greer Garson eliminates Joan Fontaine
Supporting Actress ’42: Agnes Moorhead eliminates Teresa Wright
Picture ’43: Casablanca remains the winner
Adapted Screenplay '44: Laura eliminates Going My Way
Picture ’45: Spellbound eliminates The Lost Weekend
Director ’46: William Wyler remains the winner
Actress ’47: Joan Crawford eliminates Loretta Young
Director '48: Laurence Olivier eliminates John Huston
Director '49: William Wyler eliminates Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Actress ’50: Bette Davis eliminates Judy Holliday
Supporting Actress ’50: Celeste Holm eliminates Josephine Hull
Black & White Cinematography ’50: All About Eve eliminates The Third Man
Director '51: Elia Kazan eliminates George Stevens
Actress ’51: Katharine Hepburn eliminates Vivien Leigh
Supporting Actress ’51: Kim Hunter remains the winner
Director '52: John Ford remains the winner
Actor '53: Montgomery Clift eliminates William Holden
Director '54: Alfred Hitchcock eliminates Elia Kazan
Actor ’54: James Mason eliminates Marlon Brando
Actress '54: Dorothy Dandridge eliminates Grace Kelly
Screenplay '54: Rear Window eliminates The Country Girl
Original Song '54: "The Man That Got Away" eliminates "Three Coins in the Fountain"
Picture '55: Marty remains the winner
Actor '55: James Dean eliminates Ernest Borgnine
Actress '55: Katharine Hepburn eliminates Anna Magnani
Picture '56: Giant eliminates Around the World in 80 Days
Adapted Screenplay ’56: Friendly Persuasion eliminates Around the World in 80 Days
Actress ’57: Lana Turner eliminates Joanne Woodward
Supporting Actor '57: Sessue Hayakawa eliminates Red Buttons
Picture '58: The Defiant Ones eliminates Gigi
Actress '58: Susan Hayward remains the winner
Original Screenplay '59: The 400 Blows eliminates Pillow Talk
Director ’60: Alfred Hitchcock eliminates Billy Wilder
Supporting Actor ’60: Sal Mineo eliminates Peter Ustinov
Actor '61: Paul Newman eliminates Maximilian Schell
Actress '61: Audrey Hepburn eliminates Sophia Loren
Actor ’62: Gregory Peck remains the winner
Actress '62: Lee Remick eliminates Anne Bancroft
B&W Cinematography '62: Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? eliminates The Longest Day
Director '63: Federico Fellini eliminates Tony Richardson
Original Screenplay '63: 8 1/2 eliminates How the West was Won
Picture '64: Dr. Strangelove eliminates My Fair Lady
Actor '64: Peter Sellers eliminates Rex Harrison
Original Song '64: "Hush...Hush Sweet Charlotte" eliminates "Chim-chim-cheree"
Actor '65: Oskar Werner eliminates Lee Marvin
Actress '65: Samantha Eggar eliminates Julie Christie
Actress ’66: Ida Kaminska eliminates Elizabeth Taylor
Picture ’67: The Graduate eliminates In the Heat of the Night
Supporting Actor '67: Gene Hackman eliminates George Kennedy
Adapted Screenplay ’67: The Graduate eliminates In the Heat of the Night
Director ’68: Gillo Pontecorvo eliminates Carol Reed
Actor '68: Peter O'Toole eliminates Cliff Robertson
Supporting Actress ’68: Ruth Gordon remains the winner
Original Song ’68: “Star!” eliminates “The Windmills of My Mind”
Actor '69: Jon Voight eliminates John Wayne
Supporting Actress ’69: Goldie Hawn remains the winner
Director '70: Robert Altman eliminates Franklin J. Schaffner
Actor '70: Melvyn Douglas eliminates George C. Scott
Original Score ’70: Patton eliminates Love Story
Picture '71: The Last Picture Show eliminates The French Connection
Actress '71: Julie Christie eliminates Jane Fonda
Cinematography ’71: The Last Picture Show eliminates Fiddler on the Roof
Director '72: Francis Ford Coppola eliminates Bob Fosse
Actor ’72: Paul Winfield eliminates Marlon Brando
Supporting Actor '72: Al Pacino eliminates Joel Grey
Supporting Actress '72: Shelley Winters eliminates Eileen Heckart
Picture '73: Cries and Whispers eliminates The Sting
Film Editing ’73: American Graffiti eliminates The Sting
Best Picture '74: The Towering Inferno eliminates The Godfather Part II
Actor '74: Jack Nicholson eliminates Art Carney
Supporting Actress '74: Madeline Kahn eliminates Ingrid Bergman
Director ’75: Robert Altman eliminates Milos Forman
Actress '75: Isabelle Adjani eliminates Louise Fletcher
Supporting Actress '75: Lily Tomlin eliminates Lee Grant
Cinematography '75: Barry Lyndon remains the winner
Picture ’76: All the President’s Men eliminates Rocky
Supporting Actress ’76: Piper Laurie eliminates Beatrice Straight
Picture '77: Annie Hall remains the winner
Director ’77: Steven Spielberg eliminates Woody Allen
Supporting Actor ’77: Jason Robards remains the winner
Supporting Actress ’77: Tuesday Weld eliminates Vanessa Redgrave
Original Score '77: Star Wars remains the winner
Actress '78: Ingrid Bergman eliminates Jane Fonda
Original Screenplay ’78: Autumn Sonata eliminates Coming Home
Picture ’79: All That Jazz eliminates Kramer vs. Kramer
Cinematography ’79: Apocalypse Now remains the winner
Director ’80: David Lynch eliminates Robert Redford
Actor ’80: John Hurt eliminates Robert DeNiro
Supporting Actress ’80: Eileen Brennan eliminates Mary Steenburgen
Adapted Screenplay ’80: The Elephant Man eliminates Ordinary People
Original Score '80: The Elephant Man eliminates Fame
Original Screenplay '81: Atlantic City eliminates Chariots of Fire
Original Score '81: Raiders of the Lost Ark eliminates Chariots of Fire
Picture ’82: E.T. eliminates Gandhi
Actor '82: Jack Lemmon eliminates Ben Kingsley
Original Score ’82: Poltergeist eliminates E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial
Director ’83: Ingmar Bergman eliminates James L. Brooks
Supporting Actor '83: Sam Shepard eliminates Jack Nicholson
Supporting Actress '83: Linda Hunt remains the winner
Actress '84: Judy Davis eliminates Sally Field
Supporting Actor ’84: Haing S. Ngor remains the winner
Supporting Actress '84: Lindsay Crouse eliminates Peggy Ashcroft
Original Song ’84: “Ghostbusters” eliminates “I Just Called to Say I Love You”
Picture '85: Kiss of the Spider Woman eliminates Out of Africa
Original Screenplay ’85: The Official Story eliminates Witness
Original Screenplay '86: My Beautiful Laundrette eliminates Hannah and Her Sisters
Original Score '86: Hoosiers eliminates 'Round Midnight
Director '87: Norman Jewison eliminates Bernardo Bertolucci
Actor '87: Marcello Mastroianni eliminates Michael Douglas
Supporting Actor ’87: Albert Brooks eliminates Sean Connery
Original Screenplay ’87: Radio Days eliminates Moonstruck
Director ’88: Martin Scorsese eliminates Bernardo Bertolucci
Actor '88: Max von Sydow eliminates Dustin Hoffman
Supporting Actress ’88: Geena Davis remains the winner
Original Song ’88: “Let the River Run” remains the winner
Director ’89: Woody Allen eliminates Oliver Stone
Actor ’89: Morgan Freeman eliminates Daniel Day Lewis
Supporting Actress '89: Dianne Wiest eliminates Brenda Fricker
Original Screenplay '89: Do the Right Thing eliminates Dead Poets Society
Actress ’90: Meryl Streep eliminates Kathy Bates
Director '90: Stephen Frears eliminates Kevin Costner
Original Screenplay ’90: Avalon eliminates Ghost
Picture '91: JFK eliminates The Silence of the Lambs
Original Song '91: "Be Our Guest" eliminates "Beauty and the Beast"
Picture ’92: The Crying Game eliminates Unforgiven
Actor ’92: Stephen Rea eliminates Al Pacino
Actress ’92: Susan Sarandon eliminates Emma Thompson
Cinematography ’92: Unforgiven eliminates A River Runs Through It
Picture ’93: The Piano eliminates Schindler’s List
Actor '94: Paul Newman eliminates Tom Hanks
Picture '94: Quiz Show eliminates Forrest Gump
Original Screenplay ’94: Red eliminates Pulp Fiction
Original Score '94: Little Women eliminates The Lion King
Director ’95: Tim Robbins eliminates Mel Gibson
Actor ’95: Sean Penn eliminates Nicolas Cage
Picture '96: Fargo eliminates The English Patient
Actor '96: Woody Harrelson eliminates Geoffrey Rush
Actress ’96: Emily Watson eliminates Frances McDormand
Original Screenplay ’96: Lone Star eliminates Fargo
Actor '97: Robert Duvall eliminates Jack Nicholson
Actress '97: Julie Christie eliminates Helen Hunt
Adapted Screenplay '97: The Sweet Hereafter eliminates L.A. Confidential
Cinematography ’97: L.A. Confidential eliminates Titanic
Director '98: Terence Malick eliminates Steven Spielberg
Actor ’98: Edward Norton eliminates Roberto Benigni
Supporting Actor '98: Robert Duvall eliminates James Coburn
Adapted Screenplay ’98: The Thin Red Line eliminates Gods and Monsters
Original Score '98: The Thin Red Line eliminates Life is Beautiful
Picture '99: American Beauty remains the winner
Actor ’99: Richard Farnsworth eliminates Kevin Spacey
Actress '99: Julianne Moore eliminates the Agent of Satan
Supporting Actress ’99: Toni Collette eliminates Angelina Jolie
Adapted Screenplay ’99: Election eliminates The Cider House Rules
Original Screenplay '99: The Sixth Sense eliminates American Beauty
Cinematography '99: The End of the Affair eliminates American Beauty
Original Score ’99: Angela’s Ashes eliminates The Red Violin
Actor '00: Javier Bardem eliminates Russell Crowe
Film Editing: Traffic remains the winner
Picture ’01: Gosford Park eliminates A Beautiful Mind
Director ’01: Peter Jackson eliminates Ron Howard
Adapted Screenplay '01: Ghost World eliminates A Beautiful Mind
Original Score ’01: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone eliminates LOTR: Fellowship
Picture '02: The Pianist eliminates Chicago
Actress '02: Renée Zelleweger eliminates Nicole Kidman
Cinematography ’02: Far From Heaven eliminates Road to Perdition
Supporting Actor ’03: Tim Robbins remains the winner
Supporting Actress '03: Shoreh Aghdashloo eliminates Renée Zellweger
Original Screenplay ’03: Lost in Translation remains the winner
Picture '04: Million Dollar Baby remains the winner
Actor '04: Clint Eastwood eliminates Jamie Foxx
Actress '04: The Glorious and Great Goddess Known to Mere Mortals as Kate Winslet annihilates the Agent of Satan
Supporting Actor '04: Morgan Freeman remains the winner
Picture '05: Brokeback Mountain eliminates Crash
Director '05: Steven Spielberg eliminates Ang Lee
Actor '05: Heath Ledger eliminates Philip Seymour Hoffman
Cinematography ’05: The New World eliminates Memoirs of a Geisha
Original Score '05: Brokeback Mountain remains the winner
Supporting Actress ’06: Rinko Kikuchi eliminates Jennifer Hudson
Adapted Screenplay '06: Children of Men eliminates The Departed
Editing '06: Children of Men eliminates The Departed
Years not used: 1927-28 to 1931-32; 1934; 1938.
And the current line-up:
Sabin (1 Pass: Film Editing '00)
Flipp (1 Pass: Original Song ’88)
Italiano (1 Pass: Supporting Actress '83)
Penelope (2 Passes: Supporting Actress ’68; Cinematography ’78)
Cinemanolis (1 Pass: Picture '99)
rudeboy (1 Pass: Director ’52)
Harry Goldfarb
Original BJ (2 Passes: Supporting Actor ’03, Picture '77)
FilmFan720 (1 Pass: Picture '55)
OscarGuy (1 Pass: Cinematography ’79)
MovieWes
Zahveed (2 Passes: Supporting Actress ’88; Original Score ’05)
dws1982 (2 Pass: Director ’46, Picture '04)
Akash (1 Pass: Supporting Actress ’69)*Temporarily out of the game
Okri (3 Passes: Supporting ’77; Picture ’43, Actress '58)
Eric (1 Pass: Original Screenplay ’03)
Bog (2 Passes: Actor ’62; Cinematography ’75)
RainBard (2 Passes: Supporting Actor ’84; Original Score ’77)
Edited By Penelope on 1203390307
"...it is the weak who are cruel, and...gentleness is only to be expected from the strong." - Leo Reston
"Cruelty might be very human, and it might be cultural, but it's not acceptable." - Jodie Foster
"Cruelty might be very human, and it might be cultural, but it's not acceptable." - Jodie Foster
- OscarGuy
- Site Admin
- Posts: 13668
- Joined: Wed Jan 01, 2003 12:22 am
- Location: Springfield, MO
- Contact:
I think Penelope should start the ball rolling to show you how it's done.
Penelope, your category is Best Supporting Actor 1987 (year used is the year of the film's release, not the year of the Oscar telecast).
For your ease of reference, here's a link to the list of 1987 nominees:
60th Academy Awards for 1987
p.s. I selected that year completely randomly...
Edited By OscarGuy on 1196449067
Penelope, your category is Best Supporting Actor 1987 (year used is the year of the film's release, not the year of the Oscar telecast).
For your ease of reference, here's a link to the list of 1987 nominees:
60th Academy Awards for 1987
p.s. I selected that year completely randomly...
Edited By OscarGuy on 1196449067
Wesley Lovell
"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both." - Benjamin Franklin
"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both." - Benjamin Franklin
- OscarGuy
- Site Admin
- Posts: 13668
- Joined: Wed Jan 01, 2003 12:22 am
- Location: Springfield, MO
- Contact:
Because I thought it had merit and was lost in the shuffle of the other thread, here's his idea again for discussion and possible implementation.
Here's how The Oscar Elimination Game could work:
The first player, say, me, selects an Oscar category from a particular year (any year that I choose) and replaces the winner with one of the other nominees; then that category from that year is out of contention; I assign the category/year for the next player, who eliminates the winner and replaces that person (or persons) with one of the other nominees; and so on, until all categories/years are changed.
For example, say I choose Best Actress 2004: I eliminate Hilary Swank and replace her with Kate Winslet; then that category for that year is out of contention; the next player is Damien, and I select Best Supporting Actress 1995 for him to eliminate the winner; he eliminates Mira Sorvino and replaces her with Kate Winslet, and so that category for that year is out of play; the next player is Italiano and Damien selects Best Actress 2006 for him to eliminate the winner; Italiano eliminates Helen Mirren and replaces her with Kate Winslet; etc., etc.
Obviously, there will be categories where we don't want to eliminate the winner, so each player has 3 passes--the winner remains the winner and that category/year is out of contention; but, once those three passes are used, the player must eliminate the winner and select a choice from one of the other nominees; thus, if you must eliminate Casablanca, then, sorry, you must.
Thoughts? Suggestions?
Here's how The Oscar Elimination Game could work:
The first player, say, me, selects an Oscar category from a particular year (any year that I choose) and replaces the winner with one of the other nominees; then that category from that year is out of contention; I assign the category/year for the next player, who eliminates the winner and replaces that person (or persons) with one of the other nominees; and so on, until all categories/years are changed.
For example, say I choose Best Actress 2004: I eliminate Hilary Swank and replace her with Kate Winslet; then that category for that year is out of contention; the next player is Damien, and I select Best Supporting Actress 1995 for him to eliminate the winner; he eliminates Mira Sorvino and replaces her with Kate Winslet, and so that category for that year is out of play; the next player is Italiano and Damien selects Best Actress 2006 for him to eliminate the winner; Italiano eliminates Helen Mirren and replaces her with Kate Winslet; etc., etc.
Obviously, there will be categories where we don't want to eliminate the winner, so each player has 3 passes--the winner remains the winner and that category/year is out of contention; but, once those three passes are used, the player must eliminate the winner and select a choice from one of the other nominees; thus, if you must eliminate Casablanca, then, sorry, you must.
Thoughts? Suggestions?
Wesley Lovell
"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both." - Benjamin Franklin
"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both." - Benjamin Franklin