[BB] Best by Best Game - The Continuation

rain Bard
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Post by rain Bard »

Picture: McCabe & Mrs. Miller
Director: Robert Altman, McCabe & Mrs. Miller
Actor: Warren Beatty, McCabe & Mrs. Miller
Actress: Julie Christie, McCabe & Mrs. Miller
Supporting Actor: Jean Duceppe, Mon Oncle Antoine
Supporting Actress: Linnea Heacock, Taking Off
Ensemble: Beware of a Holy Whore
Original Screenplay: Taking Off
Adapted Screenplay: McCabe & Mrs. Miller
Score: Walkabout
Song: "Spaces Between Spaces" The Last Movie (not certain this is the name of the song- I have plenty of replacement choices if that's an issue)
Editing: Carriage Trade
Cinematography: McCabe & Mrs. Miller
Art Direction: THX-1138
Costume Design: McCabe & Mrs. Miller
Makeup: Twitch of the Death Nerve
Sound: Taking Off
Sound Effects: THX-1138
Visual Effects: Quick Billy
Special Citation: to Ned Tanen, the studio executive who nurtured Universal's "Youth Division" that produced a remarkable array of offbeat, personal films in this year, including Taking Off, Two-Lane Blacktop, Minnie & Moskowitz, The Last Movie and The Hired Hand.




Edited By rain Bard on 1254574291
Cinemanolis
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Post by Cinemanolis »

Best Picture:
Murmur of the Heart

Best Director:
Louis Malle - Murmur of the Heart

Best Actor:
Peter Finch - Sunday, Bloody Sunday

Best Actress:
Glenda Jackson - Sunday, Bloody Sunday

Best Supporting Actor:
Alan Bates - The Go-Between

Best Supporting Actress:
Vanessa Redgrave - The Trojan Women

Best Ensemble:
TheTrojan Women

Best Original Screenplay:
Murmur of the Heart

Best Adapted Screenplay:
Death In Venice

Best Original Score:
The Go-Between

Best Original Song:
"Wild Horses" - Gimme Shelter

Best Editing:
A Clockwork Orange

Best Cinematography:
McCabe and Mrs. Miller

Best Art Direction:
McCabe and Mrs. Miller

Best Costume Design:
Death In Venice

Best Makeup:
The Devils

Best Sound:
A Clockwork Orange

Best Sound Effects:
The Devils

Best Visual Effects:
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory




Edited By Cinemanolis on 1254615706
Penelope
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Post by Penelope »

Best Picture:
Death in Venice

Best Director:
Luchino Visconti - Death in Venice

Best Actor:
Dirk Bogarde - Death in Venice

Best Actress:
Jane Fonda - Klute

Best Supporting Actor:
Tom Baker - Nicholas and Alexandra

Best Supporting Actress:
Cloris Leachman - The Last Picture Show

Best Ensemble:
Nicholas and Alexandra

Best Original Screenplay:
Harold and Maude

Best Adapted Screenplay:
Nicholas and Alexandra

Best Original Score:
Summer of '42

Best Original Song:
"Diamonds Are Forever" - Diamonds Are Forever

Best Editing:
Nicholas and Alexandra

Best Cinematography:
Death in Venice

Best Art Direction:
Nicholas and Alexandra

Best Costume Design:
Nicholas and Alexandra

Best Makeup:
Death in Venice

Best Sound:
Nicholas and Alexandra

Best Sound Effects:
The Andromeda Strain

Best Visual Effects:
Diamonds Are Forever

Special Citation:
To Franco Mannino, for his adaptation and scoring of Gustav Mahler's music in Death in Venice.

To Norman Lear and CBS, for developing and producing the classic American television series All in the Family.
"...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
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Post by Big Magilla »

Moving on - Penelope is up.
Cinemanolis
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Post by Cinemanolis »

Two films from the 1972 oscar race are also eligle here
The Emigrants
Murmur of the Heart
Penelope
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Post by Penelope »

Thanks, Magilla.
"...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
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Post by Big Magilla »

Penelope wrote:Looks to me like the following Oscar nominated films are *not* eligible for 1971 (unless somebody has different information:

Sometimes a Great Notion
The Go-Between
The Conformist
The Garden of the Finzi-Continis
Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion
When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth
Tchaikovsky
The Sorrow and the Pity
Ra
Dodesukaden
The Policeman
Imdb. information on Sometimes a Great Notion is in error. The film opened in L.A. in December, 1971 and went wide release in February, 1972.

Same thing with The Go-Between which did not open until well into 1971 in either England or the U.S. after it was shown at Cannes.

The Sorrow and the Pity was a 1969 release in West Germany.

I'm not sure about the documentary rules. Ra (aka The Ra Expeditions) would be eligible if it had been shown theatrically in 1971 but I can't find any evidence of that.

The others were all 1970 releases in their countries of origin and are indeed ineligible.
Penelope
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Post by Penelope »

Looks to me like the following Oscar nominated films are *not* eligible for 1971 (unless somebody has different information:

Sometimes a Great Notion
The Go-Between
The Conformist
The Garden of the Finzi-Continis
Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion
When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth
Tchaikovsky
The Sorrow and the Pity
Ra
Dodesukaden
The Policeman
"...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
Reza
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Post by Reza »

OscarGuy wrote:omg. I thought I saw Dianne Wiest on the list, so I didn't cite her for Parenthood. I so would have had I not thought she was already included.

And how did Do the Right Thing make it in for Visual Effects? I mean Sound Editing is a bit of a stretch, though something I can understand, but Visual Effects?
Sorry my mistake. Wiest was included. Have made the correction.
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OscarGuy
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Post by OscarGuy »

omg. I thought I saw Dianne Wiest on the list, so I didn't cite her for Parenthood. I so would have had I not thought she was already included.

And how did Do the Right Thing make it in for Visual Effects? I mean Sound Editing is a bit of a stretch, though something I can understand, but Visual Effects?




Edited By OscarGuy on 1254342840
Wesley Lovell
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Reza
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Post by Reza »

Actual nominees..Field of Dreams, Kenneth Branagh and Marlon Brandodid not make the grade with the voters on the Board.

Also some of the other ''Left-Overs'' from 1989:


Best Picture
Casualties of War
Dead Calm
Drugstore Cowboy
Enemies, A Love Story
Field of Dreams
Glory
Island
Jesus of Montreal
The Killer
Life and Nothing But
Monsieur Hire
Nocturne Indien
The Rainbow
Scandal
Too Beautiful For You
When Harry Met Sally

Best Actor
Woody Allen, Crimes and Misdemeanors
Jean-Hughes Anglade, Nocturne Indien
Lothaire Bluteau, Jesus of Montreal
Kenneth Branagh, Henry V
Nicolas Cage, Vampires Kiss
Gerard Depardieu, Too Beautiful For You
Matt Dillon, Drugstore Cowboy
Michael Douglas, The War of the Roses
Colin Firth, Apartment Zero
John Hargreaves, Emerald City
Chris Haywood, Island
Raul Julia, Romero
Jack Lemmon, Dad
Steve Martin, Parenthood
Marcello Mastroianni, What Time Is It?
Paul Newman, Blaze
Philippe Noiret, Life and Nothing But
Al Pacino, Sea of Love
Sean Penn, Casualties of War
Randy Quaid, Parents
Massimo Troisi, What Time Is It?
Lambert Wilson, Hiver 54
Chow Yun-Fat, The Killer

Best Actress
Sabine Azema, Life and Nothing But
Josiane Balasko, Too Beautiful For You
Emmanuelle Beart, Les enfants du desordre
Sandrine Bonnaire, Monsieur Hire
Carole Bouquet, Too Beautiful For You
Judy Davis, Georgia
Sammi Davis, The Rainbow
Colleen Dewhurst, Termini Station
Nicole Kidman, Dead Calm
Kelly Lynch, Drugstore Cowboy
Irene Pappas, Island
Annabella Sciorra, True Love
Liv Ullmann, The Rose Garden

Best Supporting Actor
Roland Blanche, Too Beautiful For You
Hart Bochner, Apartment Zero
Marlon Brando, A Dry White Season
Steve Buscemi, Mystery Train
Scott Coffey, Shag
Sean Connery, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
Morgan Freeman, Glory
Peter Gallagher, sex, lies and videotape
Ed Harris, Jacknife
Chris Haywood, Emerald City
Tom Hulce, Parenthood
James Earl Jones, Field of Dreams
Ray Liotta, Field of Dreams
Ray McAnally, My Left Foot
Rick Moranis, Parenthood
Max Perlich, Drugstore Cowboy
Francois Perrot, Life and Nothing But
Armin Mueller Stahl, Music Box
Billy Zane, Dead Calm

Best Supporting Actress
Bridget Fonda, Scandal
Bridget Fonda, Strapless
Heather Graham, Drugstore Cowboy
Jerry Hall, Batman
Anjelica Huston, Crimes and Misdemeanors
Julie Kavner, New York Stories
Nicole Kidman, Emerald City
Mae Questel, New York Stories
Mary Woronov, Scenes from the Class Struggle in Beverly Hills

Best Director
Denys Arcand, Jesus of Montreal
Bertrand Blier, Too Beautiful For You
James Cameron, The Abyss
Michael Caton-Jones, Scandal
Alain Corneau, Nocturne Indien
Paul Cox, Island
Brian De Palma, Casualties of War
Martin Donovan, Apartment Zero
Jim Jarmusch, Mystery Train
Patrice Leconte, Monsieur Hire
Paul Mazursky, Enemies, A Love Story
Phillip Noyce, Dead Calm
Rob Reiner, When Harry Met Sally
Phil Alden Robinson, Field of Dreams
Ken Russell, The Rainbow
Bertrand Tavernier, Life and Nothing But
John Woo, The Killer




Edited By Reza on 1254344398
Big Magilla
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Post by Big Magilla »

The tallies are up for 1989.

Do the Right Thing leads with 17 mentions, followed by Driving Miss Daisy with 13; Born on the Fourth of July and Glory with 12 each; Batman and The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover with 11 each; Heathers and The Abyss with 10 each; My Left Foot with 9; Crimes and Misdemeanors, Dead Poets Society, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Mystery Train, sex, lies, and videotape and The Fabulous Baker Boys with 8 each; Casualties of War, Henry V and The Little Mermaid with 7 each; My Twentieth Century, Romero and Steel Magnolias with 6 each and An Unremarkable Life, Dead Calm, License to Kill, Say Anything, The War of the Roses, Valmont and When Harry Met Sally... with 5 each.

In all there wer 297 votes cast for 67 films.
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Post by Sabin »

I'm important.

Best Picture - Say Anything...
Best Director - Steve Kloves, The Fabulous Baker Boys
Best Actor - Morgan Freeman, Driving Miss Daisy
Best Supporting Actor - John Mahoney, Say Anything...
...yeah, that's it. What's next?
"How's the despair?"
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Post by OscarGuy »

I'm posting the next year, but Sabin can still finish his turn.

The new year is 1971. Hustler will start when Sabin is done.
Wesley Lovell
"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both." - Benjamin Franklin
rain Bard
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Post by rain Bard »

Picture: Sweetie
Director: Ildikó Enyedi, My Twentieth Century
Actor: Rentaro Mikuni, Rikyu
Ensemble: Why Has Bodhi-Dharma Left For the East
Original Score: Kiki's Delivery Service
Original Song: "On Our Own" Ghostbusters II
Cinematography: Mystery Train
Art Direction: My Twentieth Century
Costume Design: My Twentieth Century
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