The “I Shoulda Won” Best Picture Oscar Quiz

Buy Oscar Academy Award While we anticipate the winners of this year’s Academy Awards, it is a good time to look back on the history of the Oscars.  This quiz will test your knowledge of some of the most controversial years.

There are several years where a general consensus has challenged the Academy’s choice, for example many wonder how Dances With Wolves beat Goodfellas for 1990 Best Picture or how Crash beat Brokeback Mountain for 2004 Best Picture. But those are not the only years where many criticized the Best Picture award.

See how well you remember those controversial choices. Answer these ten questions about which film won the Best Picture these years, where in retrospect, many believe another film should have taken home the gold statue.

1. Which 1999 film won the Best Picture Oscar?






2. Which of these 2002 films won the Best Picture Oscar?





3. Which 1996 film won the Best Picture Oscar?





4. Which of these 1939 films won the Best Picture Oscar?






5. Which one of these 1941 films won the Best Picture Oscar?





6. Which one of these 1994 movies won the Oscar for Best Picture?





7. Which one of these 1962 films won the Best Picture Oscar?






8. Which one of these 2004 films won the Best Picture Oscar?






9. Which of these 1967 films won the Oscar for Best Picture?






10. Which of these 1980 films won the Best Picture Oscar?








How did you do? Which year do you think the Academy was most wrong in its Best Picture choice? Who will win this year? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Elizabeth Taylor RIP

    Elizabeth Taylor National VelvetElizabeth Taylor passed away today at the age of 79. Her first movie I saw when I was a child was National Velvet, which is probably the first movie that many kids saw with her and is one of the great “horse” movies. One of the last movies I saw with her in it was Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, which features one of her best acting performances. In her later life, she did some of her greatest work for humanitarian causes such as Aids research, an issue she embraced before many others did.

    Although she was known for her glamor and beauty, one of her greatest roles played against those strengths, as seen in this scene from Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? with Richard Burton. She gives a frightening performance that won her a second acting Oscar.

    She won her other acting Oscar for Butterfield 8. Also, at the 1993 Academy Awards, she received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award.

    Although she will probably be more remembered for the above movies, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and Cleopatra for different reasons, one movie that should not be overlooked is Giant, where she starred with Rock Hudson, James Dean, and young Dennis Hopper. While far from a perfect movie, there is a lot to love in the messy epic.

    Although a CNN anchor just tried to describe Elizabeth Taylor as her day’s “Angelina Jolie,” it is not a very good comparison. For better or worse, stars were different back then. Either way, it is great that we still have her work to enjoy. Rest in peace.

    What is your favorite Elizabeth Taylor movie or scene? Leave a comment.

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    The King’s Speech Wins Best Picture

    Another Academy Awards show is over, ending minutes ago. The top six awards were:

    King's Speech

    Best Picture: The King’s Speech
    Best Director: Tom Hooper, The King’s Speech
    Best Actress: Natalie Portman, Black Swan
    Best Actor: Colin Firth, The King’s Speech
    Best Supporting Actress: Melissa Leo, The Fighter
    Best Supporting Actor: Christian Bale, The Fighter

    You may find a full list of winners and nominees at the website for The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Regarding the Oscar Predictions from the critics posted on Chimesfreedom a few days ago, only two got all of the top six awards correct: Jeff Johnson at Popdose and The Best Picture Project. Congratulations!

    As for the show itself, several of your favorite newspapers and news sources will have articles about it tomorrow, but Entertainment Weekly already has something up. Overall, there were few surprises with the awards but the show had its moments, like Randy Newman’s acceptance speech and an appearance by Kirk Douglas. I liked that Steven Spielberg introduced the Best Picture nominees by reminding everyone of some of the great movies of the past that did not win the award (“Citizen Kane. . . Raging Bull!”). To paraphrase Director Peter Jackson, movies should not be made for winning the Oscars, they should be made for the audience. And now the awards are over and we can get back to focusing on the films.

    What did you think of the 2011 Academy Awards telecast? What did you think of the hosts? Leave a comment.

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    2011 Oscar Predictions Roundup

    Most commentators agree on predictions for the top awards at tomorrow night’s 2011 Academy Awards presentations. According to them, the Oscar goes to:

    Academy Award, Oscar

    Best Picture: The King’s Speech (with The Social Network in second);
    Best Director: David Fincher for The Social Network, with Tom Hooper a close second for The King’s Speech;
    Best Actress: Natalie Portman from Black Swan (with Annette Bening from The Kids Are All Right in second);
    Best Actor: Colin Firth from The King’s Speech (with Jesse Eisenberg from The Social Network a distant second);
    Best Supporting Actress: Melissa Leo for The Fighter, with Hailee Steinfeld for True Grit a close second.
    Best Supporting Actor: Christian Bale for The Fighter, with Geoffrey Rush for The King’s Speech a close second.

    Anything outside these picks will be a big surprise, but surprises are always possible. The contested areas with close two-horse races are Best Director, Best Supporting Actress, and Best Supporting Actor Categories.

    For a random sampling of predictions and other Oscar news around the Internet:

    – For the three contested slots of Director/Supporting Actress/Supporting Actor, Roger Ebert opts for the non-Fighter leaders and is in the Hooper/Steinfeld/Rush category. While agreeing with the consensus on the other picks, he notes that if he were voting for Best Picture, he would opt for The Social Network even as he predicts The King’s Speech to win.

    – Roger Ebert’s former TV co-host Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times goes a different route, opting for the Fincher/Leo/Bale combination. Also, he is one of the few who are still predicting The Social Network as the Best Picture, although he hedges his bets by saying it might be safer to go with The King’s Speech.

    Melenia Ryzik at The New York Times liked The Fighter and is in the Fincher/Leo/Bale category. Moviephone also liked The Fighter‘s supporting nominees and is in the Fincher/Leo/Bale category, as is Rick’s Predictions at Awards Wiz.

    Peter Hartlaub at the San Francisco Chronicle agrees, going with Fincher/Leo/Bale, although he thinks The Social Network will upset The King’s Speech.

    – Gregory Ellwood at the HitFlix Blog bravely predicts a Fighter split with the Supporting Acting awards going to Steinfeld and Bale.

    – Jeff Johnson over at Popdose also mixes it up a little bit, going with a Hooper/Leo/Bale combination, and The Best Picture Project agrees.

    – Five critics at The Guardian UK differ among themselves, but with most saying the contested three categories will go to Fincher, Bale and . . . the country’s own Helena Bonham Carter for Best Supporting Actress (The King’s Speech)! Three of the five also pick The Social Network as Best Picture.

    – For another take on the Ocars, Oscar the Grouch from Sesame Street makes his predictions (Best Actor: “Colin Filth”).

    Cinematical has some interesting Oscar statistics. Did you know that the movie with the highest number of Oscars while winning 100% of nominated categories was The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) with 11 wins out of 11 nominations?

    – For a trip down memory lane, Salon has a slide show of past Oscar Moments Everyone Should See.

    Among other big categories, the sure things seem to be Toy Story 3 for Best Animated Feature and The Social Network for Best Adapted Screenplay. The Best Documentary category seems to be a battle between Exit Through the Gift Shop and Inside Job. See Chimesfreedom’s previous post on an industry’s campaign against another Best Documentary nominee, Gasland.

    Conclusion on the Big Awards? It is always tricky to predict the winners because you are not selecting the “Best” but who you think others will say is the “Best.” So Chimesfreedom will leave the predictions to others (but see related posts below for thoughts on some of the contenders). From our random sampling, it will be a big surprise if The King’s Speech does not get Best Picture or if Natalie Portman does not get Best Actress or if Colin Firth does not get Best Actor. The difference in the close races will depend on whether or not the voters completely loved The King’s Speech and how much they liked The Fighter, as The Fighter lovers are going for Fincher/Leo/Bale while The King’s Speech lovers opt for Hopper/Steinfeld/Rush.

    But if predictions were always right, we would not need the awards show. So our prediction is simply that somewhere along the line, there will be a surprise or two.

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    What are your thoughts on the predictions? Who do you think will win? Who should win? Leave a comment.

    Oscar Roundup

    The 2011 Academy Award nominations were just announced. The King’s Speech received the most nominations, with twelve, followed by True Grit, with ten. The Social Network had eight nominations. It is not surprising that those three received the most nominations, as the battle for Best Picture is most likely between The Social Network and The King’s Speech.

    The ten movies nominated for Best Picture are:

    127 Hours
    Black Swan
    The Fighter
    Inception
    The Kids Are All Right
    The King’s Speech
    The Social Network
    Toy Story 3
    True Grit
    Winter’s Bone

    Oscar Academy AwardThe Academy switched to having ten Best Picture nominations instead of five last year. Under the old format, which five would have been nominated? The King’s Speech, The Social Network, and True Grit would have been nominated for sure. The other two probably would have been The Fighter and Black Swan (based on the hype about the movie), but one could replace Black Swan with The Kids Are All Right (or even Toy Story 3 or Winter’s Bone).

    For some news about the nominations, here are some links:

    The full list of nominations is here (link no longer available).

    Entertainment Weekly has a list of the five biggest surprises of the nominations.

    NPR also discusses the few surprises in the nominations.

    Zap2It also discusses the surprises, such as that there was no Best Director nomination for Christopher Nolan’s work on Inception.

    The Week has a pre-nomination article about five important facts to know about the nomination process.

    For those concerned about money, the San Francisco Chronicle has the dollars for the top nominees (link no longer available).

    Play the Slate Oscar winners prediction game here.

    Which 2010 movies were your favorites? Were you surprised by the nominations? Leave a comment.