Oscars - Best Picture Milestones
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Year of Awards (No.) Production Company |
Best Picture Winner/Year and Director
Number of Awards/Nominations and Milestones |
Film Poster
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2010 (83rd)
Weinstein Company |
The King's Speech (2010)
d. Tom Hooper
Awards: 4
Nominations: 12
A
speech therapist helps insecure monarch King George VI control his stuttering.
- the Best Picture winner was just shy one award from
winning the Big Five; it won Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original
Screenplay (David Seidler), and Best Actor (Colin Firth), and was only
lacking a Best Actress nomination/win.
- it was the seventh film in Academy history to win three Guild prizes:
Directors, Producers, and Screen Actors. In six of those seven cases,
the film went on to win Best Picture. The only exception was Apollo
13 (1995) which was also lacking a Best Director nomination
- at the time, the most-recent biopic to
win Best Picture
- the MPAA had given The
King's Speech (2010) a restrictive 'R' rating for its abundant
profanity - basically, for its repeated use of the F-word, although
the British Ratings Board had given the film a much milder '12A'
rating, on appeal. As a result of the MPAA's firm decision to not
alter the original R rating, an alternate, sanitized or muted version
of the film (without the F-word profanity, replaced with the S-word)
was released by the Weinstein Company on 1,000 screens after the
Best Picture win, to expand its potential audience. The studio received
a waiver to immediately release the new version, and did not have
to wait 90 days from the time the R-rated version was pulled. The
short-lived PG-13 version grossed only $3.3 million, while the R-rated
version grossed $135.4 million.
- in the same year, Toy Story 3 (2010) became the
most-recent Best Picture nominee with a G rating, and it was
the only sequel to be nominated for Best Picture without any of its
predecessors being nominated
- it was one of the most successful independent British
films ever made, with a budget of $15 million and a worldwide gross
of $414.2 million
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2011 (84th)
Weinstein Company
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The Artist (2011)
d. Michel Hazanavicius
Awards: 5
Nominations: 10
Declining,
handsome silent film star George Valentin struggles with the coming
of the talkies.
- it was the second 'silent'
Best Picture winner in Oscar history, the first was Wings (1927).
[The soundtrack for The Artist was non-diegetic.]
- it was the first black and white film to win Best Picture
since Schindler's
List (1993) (although Spielberg's film contained a few spots
of color), and it was filmed in the older 4:3 aspect ratio; it remains
the most recent B/W film to win Best Picture
- it was the first silent (almost) to be nominated for
Best Picture since Ernst Lubitsch's The Patriot (1928/1929).
- with its Best Picture win, it went from the most Oscar-nominated
French film in history to being the first to win the top prize
- the Weinstein Company began another streak of Best Picture
nominees (with some wins), beginning in 2008: The Reader (2008),
Inglourious Basterds (2009), The King's Speech (2010), and The
Artist (2011).
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2012 (85th)
Warner Bros.
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Argo (2012)
d. Ben Affleck (un-nominated for Best Director)
Awards: 3
Nominations: 7
CIA
agents in the Middle East in the 1970s team up with filmmakers to
create a fake movie production to help free embassy workers (during
the Iran hostage crisis).
- the most-recent film to win Best Picture without being
nominated for Best Director - the last film to
win Best Picture without a
director nomination was Bruce Beresford's Driving Miss Daisy (1989),
and the previous victors before that were Wings (1927/28) and
Grand Hotel (1931/32), without nominations for their directors
William Wellman and Edmund Goulding respectively.
- a possible sympathy vote and backlash in support of
un-nominated director Ben Affleck may have had some impact and possibly
accounted for the Best Picture win.
- the last film to win Best Picture without winning
the Oscar for Best Director was Crash (2005).
- Argo won numerous awards
pre-Oscars, including AFI Movie of the Year, BAFTA's Best Film honors,
Cesar Award's Best Foreign Film, Critics Choice Best Picture, the Golden
Globes Best Motion Picture - Drama, and Producers Guild of America
Best Picture, among others.
- to date, it ties
Gigi (1958) for the Best Picture winner with the shortest
title of 4 letters.
- the film's title referred to the name of the fake
movie being filmed, and in Greek mythology, it was also the name of
the ship sailed by Jason and his Argonauts to retrieve the Golden Fleece.
- at the time of the awards, Argo was only the fourth highest-grossing
(domestic) film among the Best Picture nominees.
- in the same year, Silver Linings Playbook (2012) was the
most-recent Best Picture nominee to receive nominations in all four
of the acting categories
- in the same year, Amour (2012) was the most-recent
foreign language film to be nominated for Best Picture (French)
- in the same year, Life of Pi (2012) was the
most-recent Best Picture nominee with a PG rating.
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2013 (86th)
Fox Searchlight
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12 Years A Slave (2013)
d. Steve McQueen
Awards: 3
Nominations: 9
The
harrowing tale of freed black man/musician Solomon Northup
from Sarasota, NY who was kidnapped and sold into bondage
in the 1840s.
- it marked the first time a film directed by a black
filmmaker had won Best Picture, although McQueen did not win Best Director
- it was only the fifth highest-grossing film among
the nine Best Picture nominees at only $50 million (domestic revenue),
at the time of the awards
- only 20 other Best Picture winners in previous Oscars
history have claimed three or fewer Oscars (e.g., 12 with 3 Oscars,
5 with 2 Oscars, and 3 with only 1 Oscar). It matched the most recent
Best Pictures Argo (2012) and Crash (2005) with only
three total wins. Interestingly, all three films
won Best Picture without winning the Best Director Oscar.
- Gravity (2013) was the first film since Cabaret
(1972) (with eight wins) to win seven or more Oscars
and still not win Best Picture. Its director Alfonso Cuaron became
the first Mexican and Latino to win Best Director.
- this was the first major slavery film told from an
exclusively black point of view
- it lacked a major star (except perhaps Brad Pitt in
a minor role), was made by a black British director, and starred a
black British actor Chiwetel Ejiofor
- earlier, the film had swept up Best Picture accolades
from the PGA, Critics' Choice, Golden Globes, and BAFTA
- the film's Best Supporting Actress winner, Lupita Nyong'o,
became the ninth Best Supporting Actress contender to win an Oscar
for her film debut
- scriptwriter John Ridley became
the second African-American
writer to win the Oscar for Best (Adapted) Screenplay
- during the 2013 film season, there were four other
black-themed Oscar contenders including 42, Fruitvale
Station, (Lee Daniels') The Butler, and Mandela:
Long Walk to Freedom, but only 12 Years A Slave was rewarded
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2014 (87th)
Fox Searchlight
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Birdman (2014)
d. Alejandro González Iñárritu
Awards: 4
Nominations: 9
The
tale of a fading star questing for redemption - washed-up Hollywood actor
Riggan Thomson, who portrayed the costumed, comic-book superhero 'Birdman'
from decades earlier (his alter-ego), was attempting a Broadway
comeback to revive his career.
- The most recent comedy to win Best Picture.
- This marked
the first year since the academy expanded the Best Picture field in
2009 that every nominee won at least one Oscar.
- Birdman was the third film in four years
to win Best Picture with its story about show business (and backstage).
- Inarritu was the second consecutive Latino (Mexican)
director to win after Alfonso Cuaron last year for Gravity (2013).
- The Mexican director became the fifth consecutive
non-American to win Best Director, following Britisher Tom Hooper for
The King's Speech (2010), Frenchman Michel Hazanavicius for
The Artist (2011), Taiwanese-born Ang Lee for Life of Pi
(2012),
and fellow Mexican filmmaker Alfonso Cuaron for Gravity (2013).
- Inarritu won the Directors Guild Award, which has matched Oscar all
but seven times in the DGA's 67-year history.
- The film was a miraculous feat - it appeared to be comprised
of a single, seamless, unbroken shot.
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2015 (88th)
Open Road Films
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Spotlight (2015)
d. Tom McCarthy
Awards: 2
Nominations: 6
Based
on the true story of the The Boston Globe's inquiry into
local allegations of child abuse in the Catholic church.
- The ensemble film won only two Oscars (Best Picture
and Best Original Screenplay), in the same year that
Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) won six Oscars.
- The last film to win Best Picture and just one other
Oscar was director Cecil B. DeMille's The Greatest Show on
Earth (1952).
- It was the second lowest domestic-grossing film
ever to win Best Picture (at $39.1 million at the time of the award),
compared to $17 million for The
Hurt Locker (2009); ultimately, its domestic gross was about $45
million
- Spotlight won over the more widely-predicted
favorite The
Revenant, which won Best Director for
Alejandro Iñárritu. It
was the third time in four years that Best Picture and Best Director
were split between different films.
- The consecutive string of non-Americans (6) winning
Best Director now stretched from 2010 to 2015.
- It was the second digitally-captured movie to win the
Oscar for Best Picture, after last year's Birdman (2014).
- Although a number of journalism-themed films in Oscar
history have received lots of nominations, including Best Picture (e.g, Network
(1976), All the President's Men (1976), The Killing Fields (1984),
Broadcast News (1987), and Good Night, and Good Luck. (2005)), Gentleman's
Agreement (1947) was the last journalism-related film
to win Best Picture.
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2016 (89th)
A24/Plan B Entertainment
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Moonlight (2016)
d. Barry Jenkins
Awards: 3
Nominations: 8
A
coming-of-age dramatic tale (the director's second film) told in three
chapters - about black youth Chiron (a young gay black man) living in
a crime-infested rough area of Miami with a crack-addicted mother.
- Its director Barry Jenkins became
the 4th black helmsmen to be nominated in the category, and the first African-American
to direct a Best Picture-winning film.
- The film's other two Oscars included Best Supporting
Actor (for Mahershala Ali - he became the
first Muslim to win an Oscar), and Best Adapted Screenplay (for
its director Barry Jenkins, from a story by Tarell Alvin McCraney).
- It was the first prominent LGBTQ film to win the Oscar
for Best Picture. [Note: LGBTQ = lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender,
and queer (and/or questioning) individuals/identities.]
- It became the first Best Picture winner without a single white cast
member.
- With a production budget of only $4 million (the least
expensive film to ever win Best Picture), it was released by independent
distributor A24 and had support from Brad Pitt’s
Plan B Entertainment. It was ranked as the
# 101st film of the year at the time of the awards, with eventually
only $27.9 million (domestic) (one of the lowest grossing
Best Picture winners ever).
- Before the film was nominated for Best Picture, its
domestic gross was only $15.9 million - it added $6.4 million
(almost 23% of its total gross of $27.9 million) as a result of its
Oscar nomination.
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2017 (90th)
Fox Searchlight
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The Shape of Water (2017)
d. Guillermo del Toro
Awards: 4
Nominations: 13
A
whimsical fantasy set in the early 1960s about the romance between
a mute, forlorn cleaning woman (Sally Hawkins) and a misunderstood,
imprisoned amphibious mutant man-monster (actor-mime Doug Jones) in
a secret Cold War lab outside Baltimore.
- The film's 13 nominations put it into rare company -
it was the tenth film in Oscar history to earn 13 nominations. In the
entire history of the Oscars, only three films have scored 14 nominations:
All About Eve (1950), Titanic (1997) and La
La Land (2016).
- From 2013 to 2017, Mexican film-makers (Guillermo
del Toro, Alejandro Inarritu, and Alfonso Cuaron) have won Oscars for Best
Director in four of the five years. Del Toro became the third Mexican-born
filmmaker to win the award.
- It was the highest-grossing (domestic) Best Picture
winner in five years, at $57.4 million at the time of the award.
- The R-rated feature (with sexual
content, graphic nudity, violence and language) was the sixth consecutive Best
Picture winner with this rating, beginning with Argo (2012).
- The film deliberately paid homage to the sci-fi-horror classic The
Creature From the Black Lagoon (1954).
- It was only the second movie with a credited
female screenwriter (Vanessa Taylor with co-writer Guillermo del Toro)
to win Best Picture since World War II. [Note: The first film was The
Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) - co-written
by two female screenwriters: Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens.]
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2018 (91st)
Universal
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Green Book (2018)
d. Peter Farrelly
Awards: 3
Nominations: 5
A
road-trip tour through the Jim-Crow American South in 1962 was taken
by erudite, African-American classical pianist Dr. Don Shirley (Mahershala
Ali) and his racist, vulgar, bigoted working class, New York City-born
chauffeur-driver Tony 'Lip' Vallelonga (Viggo Mortensen) in a teal
Cadillac, to attend a concert tour.
- the film's title was a reference to a guidebook that
listed Southern restaurants, hotels and gas stations that would serve
black people in the 60s
- the controversial, inter-racial buddy dramedy and road-trip
film was hotly-debated and faced considerable backlash over its antiquated
depiction of race relations; it was called a retread of other 'White
Savior' films such as Best Picture winner Driving
Miss Daisy (1989) (also with a chauffeur-driver character) and The
Help (2011)
- the main criticisms
were that it was simplistic and saccharine, and only served
as a feel-good race film; it was odd to have the main character portrayed
as a bigoted white racist in
a film about discrimination against black people; some called it a
rebuke to this year's Oscar push for greater diversity
- Don Shirley's
family claimed that the film's account (co-written in
part by Tony's son, Nick Vallelonga) was filled with inaccuracies (they called it "a
symphony of lies"), and that they were not contacted until after
the film was made
- director Peter Farrelly was un-nominated
as Best Director - this marked only the fifth time in Oscar's
history that the director of the top film was not nominated for Best
Director (previous occurrences were in 1927/28, 1931/32, 1989, and
2012)
- at the time of its Best Picture nomination, its domestic
revenue was only $42.4 million; it added another $27.1 million to
its take, so by the time of the Oscar awards presentation, it still
had a very low total of only $69.6 million
- Mahershala Ali's second Best Supporting Actor Oscar
win for his performance made him the second African-American
actor to win two Oscars for acting, joining Denzel Washington, and
he became the first black actor to repeat a win in the same category
- for the second time since the
Academy expanded the Best Picture lineup in 2009, every single Best
Picture nominee (eight films) took home at least one Oscar - this feat
first occurred in 2014.
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2019 (92nd)
Neon
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Parasite (2019, S. Korea)
d. Bong Joon Ho
Awards: 4
Nominations: 6
A
psychological thriller, twisting drama and dark comedy about class struggle
and social inequality.
- The winner of four major awards: Best International
Feature Film, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Picture.
- Bong Joon Ho became the 8th director to have accomplished
the 'hat trick' of triple Oscar wins for Producing, Directing, and
Writing in
a single year. He was only the second Asian director
ever to win an Oscar, following two-time champ Ang Lee (for Brokeback
Mountain (2005) and Life of Pi (2012))
- To date, it was one of only 12
films that won Best Picture without receiving
a single acting nomination.
- It was the first non-English language film to ever
win the top honor.
- It was only the 10th foreign-language film to be nominated
for Best Picture.
- It was the first nomination and win in the category
of Best International Feature Film (previously known as Best Foreign-Language
Film) for a South Korean film. Only three East Asian nations
have ever won this Oscar: Japan (4 wins, in 1951, 1954, 1955 and 2008),
Taiwan (1 win for Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000)), and now South Korea.
- It won the Palme d’Or at Cannes, the first Korean
film to do so.
- the Best Original Screenplay Oscar awarded to the
film was the first writing win for an entirely Foreign-Language film since Talk
to Her (2002, Sp.), and it was the first time
Asian writers had ever won an Oscar.
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