John Maddenโs Shakespeare in Love surprisingly won Best Picture of 1998 over Best Director Steven Spielbergโs Saving Private Ryan. Also nominated were Terrence Malickโs The Thin Red Line, Roberto Benigniโs Life Is Beautiful and Shekhar Kapurโs Elizabeth. Not nominated were Bill Condonโs Gods and Monsters, Walter Sallesโ Central Station, and Kirk Jonesโ Waking Ned Devine.
Best Director Sam Mendesโ American Beauty took the 1999 Best Picture Oscar over M. Night Shyamalanโs The Sixth Sense, Michael Mannโs The Insider, Frank Darabontโs The Green Mile, and Lasse Hallstromโs The Cider House Rules . Among the remarkable films that were ignored were Anthony Minghellaโs The Talented Mr. Ripley, Neil Jordanโs The End of the Affair, and Spike Jonzeโs Being John Malkovich.
Oscarโs 2000 Best Picture winner was Ridley Scottโs Gladiator which won over Best Director Steven Soderberghโs Traffic as well as Soderberghโs Erin Brockovich, Ang Leeโs Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, and Lasse Hallstromโs Chocolat. Stephen Daldryโs Billy Elliot, Curtis Hansonโs Wonder Boys, and Edward Yangโs Yi Yi were among those that were left out in the cold.
For 2001, Oscar gave its Best picture and Director awards to Ron Howardโs A Beautiful Mind over Robert Altmanโs Gosford Park, Todd Fieldโs In the Bedroom, Peter Jacksonโs The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, and Baz Luhrmannโs Moulin Rouge!. Among the missing were David Lynchโs Mulholland Drive, Christopher Nolanโs Memento, and Steven Spielbergโs A.I.: Artificial Intelligence.
Oscarโs 2002 Best Picture went to Rob Marshallโs Chicago over Best Director Roman Polanskiโs The Pianist, Stephen Daldryโs The Hours, Martin Scorseseโs Gangs of New York, and Peter Jacksonโs The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers. Egregiously ignored were Todd Haynesโ Far from Heaven, Alexander Payneโs About Schmidt, and Steven Spielbergโs Catch Me If You Can.
For 2003, Oscar chose Best Director Peter Jacksonโs The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King for Best Picture over Clint Eastwoodโs Mystic River, Sophia Coppolaโs Lost in Translation, Peter Weirโs Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, and Gary Rossโ Seabiscuit. Among the nonnominated were Jim Sheridanโs In America, Tom McCarthyโs The Station Agent, and Fernando Meirellesโ City of God.
Oscarโs 2004 Best Picture and Best Director prizes went to Clint Eastwoodโs Million Dollar Baby over Martin Scorseseโs The Aviator, Marc Fosterโs Finding Neverland, Taylor Hackfordโs Ray, and Alexander Payneโs Sideways. Bill Condonโs Kinsey, Terry Georgeโs Hotel Rwanda, and Mike Leighโs Vera Drake are among the films that went unnominated.
Oscarโs 2005 Best Picture went to Paul Haggisโ Crash over Best Director Ang Leeโs Brokeback Mountain, Bennett Millerโs Capote, George Clooneyโs Good Night, and Good Luck, and Steven Spielbergโs Munich. Among those that failed to be nominated were David Cronenbergโs A History of Violence, Fernando Meirellesโ The Constant Gardener , and Noah Baumbachโs The Squid and the Whale.
Oscarโs 2006 Best Picture and Best Director awards went to Martin Scorseseโs The Departed over Clint Eastwoodโs Letters from Iwo Jima, Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Farisโ Little Miss Sunshine, Stephen Frearsโ The Queen, and Alejandro Gonzalez Inarrituโs Babel. Not Nominated were Alfonso Cuaronโs Children of Men, Guillermo del Toroโ Panโs Labyrinth, and Florian Henckel von Donnersmarckโs The Lives of Others.
Oscar closed out the decade with its 2007 awards going to Best Directors Joel and Ethan Coen for their Best Picture winner, No Country for Old Men over Paul Thomas Andersonโs There Will Be Blood, Joe Wrightโs Atonement, Jason Reitmanโs Juno, and Tony Gilroyโs Michael Clayton. David Cronenbergโs Eastern Promises, Sean Pennโs Into the Wild, and Sarah Polleyโs Away from Her failed to make the cut.
FILMS THE ACADEMY SHOULD HAVE NOMINATED BUT DIDNโT
GODS AND MONSTERS, directed by Bill Condon (1998)
Condonโs film of 1930s director James Whale at the height of his career in Hollywood and in his waning days in the 1950s is a masterpiece of storytelling, one of only three films to win an Oscar for Adapted Screenplay without being nominated for Best Picture. The others were The Bad and the Beautiful and Sling Blade. Ian McKellen was nominated for Best Actor his brilliant portrayal of Whale, as was Lynn Redgrave for Best Supporting Actress as his housekeeper. Brendan Fraser received awards recognition from various critics but not from the Academy for his portrayal of Whaleโs gardener and sometimes model.
THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY, directed by Antony Minghella (1999)
The second screen adaptation of Patricia Highsmithโs novel was written by director Minghella directly from the source, not as a remake of Renรฉ Clรฉmentโs 1960 film, Purple Noon in which Alain Delon and Maurice Ronet had the roles played here by Matt Damon and Jude Law as the con man and the wealthy man whose identity he steals after murdering him. The film was nominated for five Oscars for Minghella for his screenplay, Law for Best Supporting Actor, Art Direction, Costume Design, and Score. The strong supporting cast includes Gwyneth Paltrow, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Cate Blanchett, Jack Davenport, and Philip Baker Hall.
FAR FROM HEAVEN, directed by Todd Haynes (2002)
Awards season started off strongly for Haynesโ tribute to Douglas Sirkโs 1956 film, All That Heaven Allows, winning New York Film Critics awards for Best Film, Director, Cinematography, Supporting Actor (Dennis Quaid in the Rock Hudson role), and Supporting Actress (Patricia Clarkson in the Agnes Moorehead role). It was Oscar nominated it for Best Actress (Julianne Moore in the Jane Wyman role), Screenplay (Haynes), Cinematography, and Score. Moore lost the New York Film Critics award to Diane Lane in Unfaithful and the Oscar to Nicole Kidman in The Hours.
A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE, directed by David Cronenberg (2005)
Cronenberg, who is not a fan of films made from comics, was unaware that the film was taken from a graphic novel until he signed on to direct. Voted the top film of 2005 by a Village Voice poll, the film received widespread critical acclaim for the performances of Viggo Mortensen as the small-town diner owner who may or may not be a former big city hitman, Maria Bello as his wife, Ashton Holmes as their teenage son, and Ed Harris as the principal villain were all highly acclaimed, but it was William Hurt in a ten-minute role as another mobster who received the filmโs only Oscar nod for acting. John Olson was also nominated for his adapted screenplay.
CHILDREN OF MEN, directed by Alfonso Cuaron (2006)
Cuaron received two of his ten Oscar nominations for his writing and editing of this film version of P.D. Jamesโ dystopian novel set in 2021. Although better known for Gravity and Roma for which he won his four Oscars to date, this is the multi-talented Cuaronโs finest film bar none. Although not a mystery in the traditional way that Jamesโ other novels are, there are plenty puzzles to be investigated and resolved here, including the ending that depends on your close listening as well as looking to figure it all out. The film features great performances from Clive Owen, Michael Caine, Julianne Moore, and others.
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