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1943 - Watch on the Rhine

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With baby number two due in about a month and a half, I'm trying to cram in as many movies as I can before spare time becomes even more scarce. So let's get straight to it. Here's a look at another 1943 film shortlisted for Best Picture... Watch on the Rhine Director : Herman Shumlin Screenplay : Dashiell Hammett (based on the play by Lillian Hellman) Starring : Bette Davis, Paul Lukas, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Lucile Watson, Beulah Bondi, George Coulouris, Donald Woods Academy Awards : 4 nominations 1 win, for Best Actor (Lukas) It seems somehow appropriate to follow up The Ox-Bow Incident with this picture. Both are confronting tales that deal with serious moral issues, albeit Watch on the Rhine leans more towards the political. Anti-Fascist activist Kurt Muller (Lukas) and his American wife Sara (Davis), arrive in Washington, D.C. with their three children after leaving a devolving Europe behind. They stay in Sara's wealthy family home with her mothe...

1943 - The Ox-Bow Incident

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Well, look at me. I'm posting again only a couple of weeks after the last one. The only explanation I can come up with is that this awards year is not full to the brim with three-hour epics ( I'm looking at you, 1956 ) so it's been a tad easier to find time to watch them. The majority of 1943's contenders are under two hours, and in fact, the following review is for the shortest of the bunch, clocking in at only 75 minutes! Here now is our next 1943 Best Picture hopeful... The Ox-Bow Incident Director : William A. Wellman Screenplay : Lamar Trotti (based on the novel by Walter Van Tilburg Clark) Starring : Henry Fonda, Dana Andrews, Mary Beth Hughes, Anthony Quinn, William Eythe, Harry Morgan, Jane Darwell, Matt Briggs, Harry Davenport, Frank Conroy, Marc Lawrence Academy Awards : 1 nomination 0 wins I usually like to avoid spoilers in my discussions of these films, but The Ox-Bow Incident is one of those pictures that is extremely difficult to talk a...

1943 - Heaven Can Wait

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Yes, I know. It's been ages since my last post ... again. So what's new? In that time, my episode of Maron has aired, I got cast in an Annette Bening movie , and Kat, Charlie and I spent three weeks in Australia, catching up with friends and family. Oh, and we have a new baby due in a couple of months! Which will likely destroy any chance of this project's pace speeding up. But enough of life. Let's get back to the movies. Here's the next of 1943's contenders for Best Picture... Heaven Can Wait Director : Ernst Lubitsch Screenplay : Samson Raphaelson (based on the play "Birthday" by Leslie Bush-Fekete) Starring : Gene Tierney, Don Ameche, Charles Coburn, Marjorie Main, Laird Cregar, Spring Byington, Allyn Joslyn, Eugene Pallette Academy Awards : 3 nominations 0 wins Upon his death, Henry Van Cleve (Ameche) decides to skip the Pearly Gates and head downstairs first, convinced that Hell is where he belongs. The Devil (Cregar), who see...

1943 - In Which We Serve

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For as long as I can remember, I've loved hearing behind-the-scenes stories about movie production, whether in books or documentaries or actual behind-the-scenes tours. So with delight, Kat and I joined a visiting friend recently to take the  Warner Bros. VIP Studio Tour  in nearby Burbank. The Warner Bros. lot has a lot of history and I always enjoy visiting backlots. There's just something about the fake buildings that fills me with a sense of awe and wonder. The tour also included a stop at the Warner Bros. Museum, which housed special exhibits of the Batman and Harry Potter franchises. But it was the tiny corner dedicated to Warner's past Best Picture winners that had me fascinated. Hint: this blog's current year of review resulted in a win for Warner Bros. so I have a little treat for you when I get to reviewing that picture. For now, let's have a look at a British entry in 1943's Best Picture race... In Which We Serve Director : Noël Coward and Da...

1943 - Madame Curie

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Well, I mentioned the possibility of having to change the next year of review and, indeed, circumstances now require that I do just that. My plan to see The Apartment at the TCM Classic Film Festival  was thwarted. It seems too many festival pass holders had the same idea so there was no room for any extras. Fortunately, the festival screens several movies at once, so Kat and I hopped over to one of the smaller venues instead to catch another Best Picture nominee from a different year. So, we'll come back to 1960 another time, but for now, we begin our review of the Academy's nominated films of 1943... Madame Curie Director : Mervyn LeRoy Screenplay : Paul Osborn and Paul H. Rameau (based on the book by Eve Curie) Starring : Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon, Henry Travers, Albert Bassermann, Robert Walker, C. Aubrey Smith, Dame May Whitty, Victor Francen, Elsa Bassermann, Reginald Owen, Van Johnson, Margaret O'Brien Academy Awards : 7 nominations 0 wins In la...

Best Picture of 1996

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In sharp contrast to the last year of review, this one has gone from first review to verdict in under two weeks. I haven't managed that in a very long time. I can't guarantee this will last, but let's continue to ride the wave, shall we? Here now are my thoughts on these five fine films. The nominees for Best Picture of 1996 are: The English Patient Fargo Jerry Maguire Secrets and Lies Shine Interestingly, four of these pictures are independent movies, produced outside of the studio system. That correlates well with the fact that many of them were helmed by writer/directors. I don't have official statistics at hand, but I suspect it's relatively unusual for 80% of the nominees to fit that category. Additionally, all five pictures feature some brilliant ensemble acting, so all in all, it's a tough bunch to separate. I genuinely liked each of these films so there's no sense in naming a least favourite. But in order to make my way to a most f...

1996 - Secrets and Lies

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After an early morning trip to the airport, Kat and Charlie are back home, with my in-laws in tow. As everyone attempts to recover from their jet lag - and at 13 months, Charlie doesn't know if it's day or night, the poor little guy - I managed to write up my thoughts on the last film of this year of review. Our final contender for the 1996 Best Picture prize is... Secrets and Lies Director : Mike Leigh Screenplay : Mike Leigh Starring : Timothy Spall, Brenda Blethyn, Phyllis Logan, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Claire Rushbrook Academy Awards : 5 nominations 0 wins After her adopted mother passes away, London optometrist Hortense Cumberbatch (Jean-Baptiste) - probably not related to Benedict - decides to track down her birth mother. As a black woman, she is understandably surprised to discover that her mother is Cynthia Purley (Blethyn), a white woman who, despite a good heart, has the smarts and social graces of a small puppy. Cynthia and Hortense slowly develop ...