Musicals were on the downswing in 1968 but two of them, William Wylerโs film of Funny Girl and Carol Reedโs film of Oliver! , which was a surprise winner for both Best Picture and Best Director, were among Oscarโs five nominees for Best Picture. Joining them in the first Oscar race of the decade were Anthony Harveyโs The Lion in Winter, which had been the expected winner, Franco Zeffirelliโs Romeo & Juliet, and Paul Newmanโs Rachel, Rachel. Non-nominees included Roman Polanskiโs Rosemaryโs Baby, Stanley Kubrickโs 2001: A Space Odyssey, and Luis Bunuelโs Belle de Jour.
Oscarโs 1969 lineup included Costa-Gavrasโ Z, the first foreign language film nominated for Best Picture since Jean Renoirโs Grand Illusion 31 years earlier. Also in the running were George Roy Hillโs Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, the anticipated winner, two surprise nominees, Charles Jarrotโs Anne of the Thousand Days and Gene Kellyโs Hello, Dolly! , and Best Director John Schlesingerโs Midnight Cowboy, the surprise winner. Among the ignored were Sydney Pollackโs They Shoot Horses, Donโt They?, Richard Attenboroughโs Oh! What a Lovely War , and Luchino Viscontiโs The Damned.
Oscarโs 1970 Best Picture winner was Best Director Franklin J. Schaffnerโs Patton which won over Bob Rafelsonโs Five Easy Pieces, Robert Altmanโs M*A*S*H, George Seatonโs Airport, and Arthur Hillerโs Love Story. David Leanโs Ryanโs Daughter, Ken Russellโs Women in Love, and Arthur Pennโs Little Big Man were snubbed.
Oscarโs 1971 Best Picture Oscar award went to Best Director William Friedkinโs The French Connection over Stanley Kubrickโs A Clockwork Orange, Peter Bogdanovichโs The Last Picture Show, Norman Jewisonโs Fiddler on the Roof, and Franklin J. Schaffnerโs Nicholas and Alexandra. Among the missing were John Schlesingerโs Sunday Bloody Sunday, Joseph Loseyโs The Go-Between, and Bernardo Bertolucciโs The Conformist.
Oscarโs 1972 Best Picture was Francis Ford Coppolaโs The Godfather but Best Director went to Bob Fosse whose Cabaret won 8 Oscars to Godfatherโs 3. Also nominated were John Boormanโs Deliverance, Jan Troellโs The Emigrants, and Martin Rittโs Sounder. Left out in the cold were Peter H. Huntโs 1776, Luis Bunuelโs The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, and Joseph L. Mankiewiczโs Sleuth.
Oscarโs 1973โs Best Picture and Best Director prizes went to George Roy Hillโs The Sting over William Friedkinโs The Exorcist, Ingmar Bergmanโs Cries and Whispers, George Lucasโ American Graffiti, and Melvin Frankโs A Touch of Class. Not nominated were John Hancockโs Bang the Drum Slowly, Lindsay Andersonโs O Lucky Man!, and Peter Bogdanovichโs Paper Moon.
Oscarโs 1974 Best Picture was Best Director Francis Ford Coppolaโs The Godfahter Part II over Roman Polanskiโs Chinatown, Bob Fosseโs Lenny, John Guillerminโs The Towering Inferno, and Coppolaโs The Conversation. Sidney Lumetโs Murder on the Orient Express, Martin Scorseseโs Alice Doesnโt Live Here Anymore, and Joseph Sargentโs The Taking of Pelham One Two Three were among those not nominated.
Oscarโs 1975 Best Picture was Best Director Milos Formanโs One Flew Over the Cuckooโs Nest over Robert Altmanโs Nashville, Stanley Kubrickโs Barry Lyndon, Sidney Lumetโs Dog Day Afternoon, and Steven Spielbergโs Jaws. Among that failed to be nominated were Hal Ashbyโs Shampoo, Francois Truffautโs The Story of Adele H. , and Sydney Pollackโs Three Days of the Condor.
Oscarโs 1976 Best Picture and Best Director awards went to John G. Avildsenโs Rocky in an upset over Alan J. Pakulaโs All the Presidents Men, Hal Ashbyโs Bound for Glory, Sidney Lumetโs Network, and Martin Scorseseโs Taxi Driver. Not Nominated were John Schlesingerโs Marathon Man, Brian De Palmaโs Carrie, and Richard Donnerโs The Omen.
Oscarโs 1977 Best Picture and Best Director awards went to Woody Allenโs Annie Hall over George Lucasโ Star Wars, Fred Zinnemannโs Julia, and two from Herbert Ross, The Goodbye Girl and The Turning Point. Richard Brooksโ Looking for Mr. Goodbar, John Badhamโs Saturday Night Fever, and Sidney Lumetโs Equus were overlooked.
FILMS THE ACADEMY SHOULD HAVE NOMINATED BUT DIDNโT
ROSEMARYโS BABY, directed by Roman Polanski (1968)
Ira Levinโs bestselling novel was faithfully filmed by Polanski with Mia Farrow as the New Yorker impregnated by the devil. John Cassavetes was her actor husband, Ruth Gordon and Sidney Blackmer the devilโs disciples next door, Ralph Bellamy the devilโs doctor and Maurice Evans Farrowโs elderly friend. Exteriors were shot at New Yorkโs famous Dakota building at the corner of 72nd St. and Central Park West whose tenants included Lauren Bacall, Leonard Bernstein, Robert Ryan, Boris Karloff, and later, John Lennon, Farrow herself lived across the street from the building. Gordon won an Oscar but Farrow, like Polanski and the film itself was snubbed.
THEY SHOOT HORSES, DONโ THEY?, directed by Sydney Pollack (1969)
The film version of Horace McCoyโs novel of a grueling, inhumane dance marathon was nominated for 9 Oscars but failed to be nominated for Best Picture. Jane Fonda was the odds-on favorite to win Best Actress for her portrayal of a suicidal contestant but lost to Maggie Smith in
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. Gig Young won for his nasty master of ceremonies in a close race with Jack Nicolson in Easy River. Michael Sarrazin, Oscar nominated Susannah York, Red Buttons, Bonnie Bedlia, and Bruce Dern are among Fondaโs competitors in the dance contest.
SUNDAY BLOODY SUNDAY, directed by John Schlesinger (1971)
On the heels of her Oscar winning performance in Women in Love, Jackson earned her second nomination under the direction of Midnight Cowboy Oscar winner Shlesinger. She was at her best playing a frustrated office worker who knowingly shares her bisexual young lover (Murray Head) with a homosexual doctor (Peter Finch). The Oscar nominated performances of Jackson and Finch showcase both actors at their best with fine supporting work from Head, Peggy Ashcroft as Jacksonโs mother, Vivian Pickles s her friend, and amusingly, silent screen and early talkie actress Bessie Love as her answering service lady.
MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS, directed by Sidney Lumet (1974)
Prior to this highly successful version of Agatha Christieโs classic mystery, only 1945โs And Then There Were None and 1957โs Witness for the Prosecution among her many works were critically and commercially successful. Albert Finneyโs Oscar nominated portrayal of Christieโs sleuth, Hercule Poirot, was one of the actorโs best performances, as was Ingrid Bergmanโs Oscar-winning portrayal of one of the murder suspects, a timid missionary. Also giving strong performances were Lauren Bacall, Wendy Hiller, Rachel Roberts, John Gielgud, Vanessa Redgrave, Sean Connery, Jacqueline Bisset, Michael York and more.
LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR, directed by Richard Brooks (1977)
Judith Rossnerโs bestselling novel was based on a real-life New York City murder. The city was itself a major character in the novel, so much so that the filmโs biggest obstacle was abandoning filming in cost-prohibitive New York and substituting a fictional city that was an amalgam of San Francisco and Los Angeles. Diane Keaton gave her greatest performance in this film the year that she won an Oscar for Annie Hall instead. Only Tuesday Weld as Keatonโs sister was nominated for this. Richard Kiley as Keaton and Weldโs father, and Richard Gere, Tom Berenger, and William Atherton as her various lovers also give fine perforamnces.
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