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50 Great Movies That Were Not Nominated For Any Oscars

null“Groundhog Day” (1993)
Like a metaphysical Frank Capra, Harold Ramis’ masterpiece “Groundhog Day” is about as close as we get to a perfect latter-day comedy (or at least it’d be perfect if someone else was in the Andie MacDowell role). Despite good reviews and strong box office, the film was entirely ignored by awards bodies: partly, one imagines, due to its early-year February release date, and partly due to the Academy’s general aversion to comedy.

“Harold And Maude” (1971)
Hal Ashby was already an Oscar winner (for editing “In The Heat Of The Night”) by the time he became a director, which perhaps explains why the Academy took a little while to cotton on to his brilliance. Most of his 1970s classics like “The Last Detail,” “Shampoo” and “Coming Home” received multiple nominations (the latter getting Ashby his only directing nod), but arguably his finest film, quirky young-guy/older-lady romance “Harold & Maude,” received nothing (the film was admittedly greeted with puzzlement at the time by many critics).

“Heat” (1995)
You’d think Al Pacino and Robert De Niro working on the same film for the second time in their careers (and face-to-face for the very first time) would get some award traction, right? How about Michael Mann working at the apex of his powers? “Heat” is to L.A. crime films what “Citizen Kane” is to films period, but, hey, 1995 was a crazy year in film. Mel Gibson was beloved, and Nicolas Cage was an Oscar winning actor. Nope, see, we tried, but that still doesn’t explain this absurd lapse.

“His Girl Friday” (1940)
Remember when we said that “Bringing Up Baby” was the greatest screwball comedy ever? “His Girl Friday,” a gender-swapped adaptation of stage classic “The Front Page” starring Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell, also from director Howard Hawks, is right up there too. But like ‘Baby,’ the film was completely ignored by Oscar voters: something that became a running theme for the director, who despite being one of classic Hollywood’s finest, was only ever nominated once, for “Sergeant York” in 1942.

“The Innocents” (1961)
Again, horror is never a big pull for the Academy, but you’d think that Jack Clayton’s “The Innocents” — an adaptation of Henry James’ “The Turn Of The Screw,” with a screenplay by Truman Capote, and starring six-time Oscar nominee Deborah Kerr — might have been an exception. But despite some stellar reviews (Truffaut called it “the best English film after Hitchcock went to America”), two BAFTA nods and the National Board of Review prize for Best Director, Oscar neglected to give a single nomination to one of the greatest ghost stories ever.

null“In The Mood For Love” (2000)
Wong Kar-Wai’s tender, sensual romance “In The Mood For Love” is often called one of the very best films of the 2000s: indeed, it was ranked the highest of any film from that decade in the most recent Sight & Sound poll. But it proved a little too artsy for the Academy, who gave the Best Foreign Language Film prize that year to “Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon,” leaving Wong’s film without a single nomination (indeed, none of his films got attention from the Oscars until two nominations last year for “The Grandmaster”).

“Johnny Guitar” (1954)
Despite, or perhaps because of it being the most purely American of genres, the Academy have generally looked down on Westerns. Only three films in the genre (“Cimarron,” “Dances With Wolves” and “Unforgiven”) have ever won Best Picture. As such, it shouldn’t be surprising that Nicholas Ray’s “Johnny Guitar,” the Joan Crawford-starring weird, offbeat, feminist entry in the chronicle of America’s frontier, was totally excluded from the Oscars that year (though the film was badly reviewed at the time, only gaining in critical standing over time).

“Kind Hearts And Coronets” (1948)
Comedy is notoriously resistant to traveling, which is perhaps why, aside from some mild success for “The Lavender Hill Mob” and “The Ladykillers,” the classic comedies by Ealing Studios never made much of a splash at the Oscars. The biggest casualty was the pitch-black and brilliant “Kind Hearts & Coronets,” about a man’s bid to ascend to the aristocracy by murdering multilple members of the same family, all played by Alec Guinness. Perhaps the film itself being passed over would be excusable, but that Guinness wasn’t nominated is a giant injustice.

“King Kong” (1933)
As 2017’s “Kong: Skull Island” indicates, giant ape King Kong is one of cinema’s most enduring creations, but his first outing, in Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack’s 1933 film, came up empty with the Oscars. One would like to put it down to the film being a pure genre picture, but both the inferior 1976 remake, and Peter Jackson’s slightly less inferior 2005 version, received more Academy recognition (though admittedly a visual effects category didn’t exist until 1938).

“Kiss Me Deadly” (1955)
Film noir was another genre that never really clicked with the Academy, and Robert Aldrich’s killer nuclear-paranoia-fuelled Mike Hammer mystery “Kiss Me Deadly” was just one example. Despite great reviews, the film was seemingly deemed to be too much of a B-movie to warrant any nominations, particularly after it came in for criticism by the Kefauver Committee into organized crime. History had the last laugh though, with the film being selected for the Library Of Congress in 1999 (something yet to happen for most of that year’s Best Picture nominees, including “Mister Roberts” and “Love Is A Many-Splendored Thing”).

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27 COMMENTS

  1. Paths of Glory was 1957, not 1958. It lost to Bridge on the River Kwai, not Gigi. Also I would not call Match Point a "middling affair" from Allen as it\’s one of his best. This is still a fantastic list though.

  2. Technically, Bicycle Thieves wasn\’t nominated for an Oscar but was given an honorary one some years later. (Probably the Academy\’s indirect apology for having not seen it in the first place.) Also, Diabolique didn\’t win either. I\’ve never seen the films that beat Bicycle Thieves or Diabolique but I have my doubts they were better…

  3. Thank you for puting in What\’s Up Doc? which is my nymber one film of all time. And also in my top5 is Local Hero. But how can you miss out on "Glory" another of my top 5. And the greatest most emotional war movie of all time. An absolute travestry. As for your other\’s mentioned meh!

  4. Jeff Wilder:
    – Almost Famous was nominated for four oscars and won best original screenplay.
    – Mulholland Drive was nominated for best director as was Blue Velvet.
    – Magnolia was nominated for three oscars.
    – Seven was nominated for one oscar.
    – Boogie Nights was nominated for three oscars…

  5. Comedies! Even YOU don\’t give them enough credit. Bowfinger. ANYTHING by Monty Python. Bedazzled. Airplane. Planes, Trains and Automobiles. Shaun of the Dead. The Jerk.

  6. Do The Right Thing and Boogie Nights are two that never got an Oscar nod but should have. As should have Malcolm X (the Academy seems to have a Spike Lee problem), Blue Velvet, Raising Arizona, Seven, Dark City, Fight Club, Magnolia, Almost Famous, Mulholland Drive and that\’s just for recent years. Mickey Rourke should have gotten a nod for best actor for Sin City. And that doesn\’t count the numerous foreign films overlooked.

  7. i always thought \’Perfume the story of a murderer\’ should\’ve gotten the best adopted screen play award.. but nobody talks about it.. makes me sad

  8. What other Woody Allen film are you confusing \’Match Point\’ with? Far from "middling fare." I do agree that \’Stradust Memories\’ is a very good Woody movie.

  9. I disagree. I think the Oscars do a decent job at cutting through the junk that Hollywood puts out and they generally choose movies that are well done. You can\’t please everyone. Stanley Kubrick is my favorite director of all time but it doesn\’t surprise me that The Shining wasn\’t nominated. It\’s a tremendous work of art but it also pushed the limits of what was considered acceptable at that time. True artists push boundaries, so much sometimes that it polarizes the public. Freaks in 1932 was a complete flop and some of the most extreme content ever shown on a movie screen. Just because we consider it a classic now 80 years later doesn\’t mean the Oscars overlooked one that should have been nominated in the context of the time period they were in.

  10. this is a fantastic list, one that will seriously lengthen my Netflix queue (if Netflix deigns to offer many of these). But "The Searchers"??? It is a terrible movie, with predictable, wooden performance by John Wayne ( who is incapable of acting), a story that just drags on and on, and no redeeming subtleties. I don\’t understand why so many people put it on their "top" lists, it\’s a lousy movie.

  11. "It’s borderline unthinkable to imagine a romantic comedy up for Best Picture now"

    Midnight in Paris was nominated for a best picture Oscar in 2012.

  12. When you think of the legitimacy of the Oscars, just remember this. Alfred Hitchcock, yes Alfred Hitchcock, never won a competitive Oscar. Neither did Cary Grant (and gary cooper won several to the academy\’s eternal shame). Charlie Chaplin won only one and that is for Best Score for Limelight, not best actor, best director, best screenplay. My point. The Oscars have no legitimacy.

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