Let’s face it, the Oscar for “Best Picture” rarely goes to the actual best picture of any given year. Since the inception of the Academy Awards in 1928, there have been a number of doozies that walked away with the industry’s most prestigious award – some sub-par films, some average, some just not very good at all. In light of this thinking, I have compiled my own list – “The Top 10 Worst Best Picture Winners of All-Time”
Take a look at this past year, for instance. “The Hurt Locker” won the highest honor and I wouldn’t even put that in my Top 15 films of the year. However, it was sort of a weak year for great films and because of that, I excluded it from this list. I know everyone says “Ordinary People” (1980) and “Dances with Wolves” (1990) were undeserving of winning “Best Picture” – that “Raging Bull” (1980) and “Goodfellas” (two phenomenal films by Martin Scorsese) were the better films. This is probably true and I would agree with this sentiment. However, I could not include the films of Robert Redford and Kevin Costner on this particular Top 10 List because, quite frankly, I think they are both 4-star films in their own right. Is “Kramer vs. Kramer” (1979) a better film than Coppola’s masterpiece that is “Apocalypse Now”? I certainly don’t think so. However, “Kramer vs. Kramer” won and I love the movie, so this too is also omitted.
I desperately wanted to include “Titanic” (1997) on this list. It’s not a very good film and has not aged well at all (even though it’s only been 13 years). I find the film manipulative on many levels and the script is downright hokey and poor. However, I understand why it won and it was, at the time, a great cinematic achievement on a technical level. On top of this, there were not many other films that stood out in 1997, so sadly, I could not include the over-hyped “Titanic” on this prestigious list. I don’t think “A Beautiful Mind” (2001) is a very good movie at all. The guy-with-a-disease does make for great Oscar bait, but there wasn’t much to admire in this histrionic film. And really – there wasn’t much to pick from during that anemic year for films, so I couldn’t even include this either!
A “Best Picture” Oscar winner should be an instant classic. It should stand the test of time. It should be a film that, years and decades from its release, will be remembered and looked at as a testament to its time. Some “Best Picture” winners that encapsulate this tenet are: “Gone with the Wind” (1939), “The Godfather” films (1972, 1974), “Schindler’s List” (1993), “Unforgiven” (1991), “From Here to Eternity” (1953) and “On the Waterfront” (1954). In any case, look it over, tell me what you think – and enjoy!
I actually like this film, but given the other notable films of that year, I had to put this on the list. I mean, come on…who actually fell in love with this movie and can watch it over and over? It certainly has the looks of a “Best Picture” winner. It’s grand and epic in scope – Oscar loves that, I know. But with films like “Fargo,” “Secrets and Lies,” “Breaking the Waves,” “The People vs. Larry Flynt,” “Sling Blade,” (my personal #1 film for 1996) and “Big Night,” I sadly had to include this. Elaine Benes from “Seinfeld” had this film pegged – she was at least honest enough to admit her displeasure of this film – and was alienated by everyone (including her current boyfriend) for her candor.
There have been a number of musicals to win for “Best Picture” (“Oliver!,” “The Sound of Music,” “My Fair Lady”), but this is an average-at-best MGM musical that no one really remembers today. It’s overlong and there is hardly any dancing in the film, if any. The passage of time also shows “Touch of Evil,” “Vertigo,” “Mon Oncle,” “The Defiant Ones” and “A Night to Remember” as being much stronger films. I mean, really…what film class is breaking down and analyzing “Gigi” over classics by Orson Welles and Jacques Tati from that same year?
Another example of a good film that, for some reason, got away with the grand prize. I would think most people look at this movie and think how slow and boring this is. How engaging can a movie about running be to begin with? I know it’s considered by many to be a classic “sports” film, but, like golf and billiards, running is not a sport. I think Warren Beatty’s “Reds” was a masterpiece of a film. Also, released in 1981 and remembered with much greater fondness than the scintillating “Chariots of Fire” are “Raiders of the Lost Ark”, “On Golden Pond,” and the extraordinary “Das Boot.”
Run, Forrest, run! For 15 minutes of film, just run! I know, I know, it’s a modern, American classic, right? You laughed, you cried, it had great music and Tom Hanks was amazing. Whatever. I did like it though. It was hard not to like. The visual effects of putting Forrest next to a whole slew of notable 20th century figures was cool (but really, how many times could you do it?) and the love story at the core of the movie is sweet and touching. But 1994 was actually a great year for film. I couldn’t even put this movie in my Top 15 with other great achievements like: “The Shawshank Redemption,” “Quiz Show,” “Il Postino,” “Hoop Dreams,” the masterful “Natural Born Killers,” Krzysztof’s “Red” and yes, even “Pulp Fiction” which is over-rated in its own right, but still, a better choice than this schmaltzy, calculating, and poorly edited film. For Academy voters, this was the easy, safe pick for that year. Yeah, Forrest…keep running!
The year of the “Long Overdue” award masking as “Best Picture” and “Best Director” respectively. I love Martin Scorsese and am a huge fan of so many of his films, but this had no business winning the top two awards of the night, let alone have the honor of being nominated. If any film actually stood out that year, Scorsese would have gone home empty-handed once again. But alas, no such film existed. Here, the thinking was, “Well, he’s made some brilliant films in the past, but because there was stiff competition those years, he just never won the big one. Let’s give him his Oscar now.” Nicholson is over-the-top (shocker), Wahlberg (who I actually like) was a disaster and really, it doesn’t even measure up to the original 2002 film “Infernal Affairs.” The Departed was up again Babel, Little Miss Sunshine (which should have won in JFrater’s opinion), The Queen, and Letters from Iwo Jima.
The movie is downright dull and overlong. There’s no way around it. It made for a boring play and here it is a boring and stilted British movie. The film follows a pair of British aristocrats over the span of three decades and the turbulent times in which they live (1899-1933). There have been some terrific British films over the years. This is not one of them. If I wanted to see how World War I, the death of Queen Victoria, & the sinking of the Titanic affected society, I could watch a special on the History channel and be more entertained. Some excellent films that were snubbed in lieu of this snoozefest were: “King Kong,” “I am A Fugitive From A Chain Gang,” “Little Women” and “She Done Him Wrong” (yes, even at 66 minutes…it leaves much more of an impact than the siesta that is “Cavalcade”).
I am not sure how this film beat out a film that changed the face of motion pictures as we know it (“Citizen Kane”), but it did. I’m not one of those people who think that “Citizen Kane” is the end-all-and-be-all, but come on…it changed the way we view and create cinema. John Ford was a terrific filmmaker, but this is another lackluster, tedious film whose only claim to fame is that it bested Orson Welles’ magnum opus. The movie centers on the sorrowful lives of coal miners and is better suited for viewing in a college class on sociology or labor relations than as a piece of entertainment. Other worthy films that were released this year besides “Citizen Kane”: “Suspicion,” “The Maltese Falcon,” “Little Foxes,” and yes, even Disney’s “Dumbo” is the greater work.
This is a sweet film with some very touching moments. Morgan Freeman is outstanding here as is Jessica Tandy (who won a “Best Actress” Oscar here). But “Best Picture”? Do you really look back to 1989 and think back on this as being the year’s Best Picture?! If you are saying, “Yes” as you read this now, I’m calling you a liar. The film’s director wasn’t even recognized as a “Best Director” nominee. This was a year where voters wanted to feel good about themselves by selecting a movie that (haphazardly) shows the evils of racism. On that level, I felt the film to be a bit insulting, to be honest. It treats its viewers like idiots, thinking we had no idea how poorly blacks were treated in the South in 1948 and that yes, racism is bad. Thank you. It ranks so high on the list for these reasons and because it indefensibly beat out such grand triumphs of film such as: “Cinema Paradiso,” “Dead Poet’s Society,” “Born on the 4th of July,” “Crimes and Misdemeanors” and “Sex, Lies and Videotape.”
On any list like this one, this film you will most surely find. For all of its impressive locations and cast of actors, this is another long (3+ hours), tedious, uninteresting film. It is outdated, to be sure, with no sense of adventure or wonder to it at all (unlike the Jules Verne story that it is based on). Watch it now – tell me it doesn’t feel like you’re watching some homemade travel videos – or even those archaic educational videos you used to watch in the 6th grade. How this won “Best Picture,” I have no idea – but with cameos by more than 40 of Hollywood’s stars at the time, my thinking is that there were so many people associated with this film in one way or another, that enough votes went its way. “The Searchers,” “The Ten Commandments, “Giant” and “Anastasia” would have been much more admirable picks – all films that when we watch them today, over 50 years later, still entertain and engage us.
This one was a travesty. I’ll start by saying that I did see it on Broadway years ago and loved it. It was great, sexy entertainment filled with wonderful choreography. And unlike some Broadway musicals that made successful transitions to the world of film, this just plays as silly entertainment geared to the “Glee” demographic. It plays more like the failed musical adaptations such as “Rent” and “Phantom of the Opera” than it does the ones which actually encapsulate the essence of what made the musicals great in the first place (like “West Side Story” or “An American in Paris”). The songs are great, sure – it’s a great musical. But when you leave it to a Hollywood cast who are there for box-office power and not their singing chops (John C. Reilly, Renee Zellweger, Richard Gere), the songs fall flat. It was a weak year for good movies, but no one is ever going to look back at 2002 and think, “Oh, ‘Chicago’ was the best movie that year!” “Chicago” isn’t a good movie that beat out the more deserving…it is a poor, glitz-over-substance film that beat out the more deserving. Those films would be: “Adaptation,” “Talk to Her,” “Gangs of New York,” “Frida” and “The Pianist.”
Reprinted with the permission of Peter Eramo Jr.






























I disagree 100% with Forrest Gump. Not one of those other films mentioned had the epic, multi-dimensional thematic subtext Forrest Gump had. Shawshank Redemption comes closest to beating it out. But if you honestly think Forrest Gump didn't deserve best picture that year, you know nothing of film. Period.
And if you honestly truly believe Natural Born Killers was a better movie than Forrest Gump, you're an easily amused schmuck. NBK had the potential to be an amazing film, and in certain ways it was, but Oliver Stone doesn't have a subtle bone in his body.
Alright, Quiz Show too. Genius film
this was a terribly uninteresting list
What about Annie Hall beating Star Wars?
Woody Allen is without a doubt the most overrated PERSON (not just director, person in general) in the history of hollywood.
I was furious to see forrest gump on this list as it's one of my favourite movies. However, I read your reasons and I must say you're quite right.. Shawshank Redemption edges forrest gump in my faves
I could yammer on and on and on about your post striking a familiar nerve, but since you handily revealed that the emperor as appeared several times in public, wearing no clothes, I'll do you the honor of keeping it brief.
You were spot on. The Departed was an embarrassing make-up call for the slight in 1990, and an obvious and unforgivable one at that. And "The English Patient"? Both "Fargo" and "Slingblade" have became valuable hunks of quotable popular culture, whereas no one has ever, EVER quoted "The English Patient." Not even by accident.
But what about 1998, bro? "Shakespeare In Love" over "Affliction," "The Thin Red Line," Peter Weir's "The Truman Show," Vincent Gallo's masterpiece "Buffalo '66," Wes Anderson's "Rushmore, and Aronofsky's "Pi"? What the hell happened in '96? Even the Coen brothers' "The Big Lebowski" has become far more iconic than most of the nominees put together. Christ, everyone knows that "Shakespeare In Love" is little more than a film reel with ***** smeared on it. It's easily in my top three worst. But what the hell does the Academy know anyway?
Now I'm not saying I don't agree with your other picks. But if you're hanging around 1996 to stick it to the thoroughly forgettable "The English Patient," you're certainly within striking range of that gawd awful Shakespeare crap.
You are beyond stupid. Please do not share your opinion anymore. You obviously oversimplify everything and watch movies like a 6 year old does.
geez whats your problem ?
I think everyone is getting their knickers in a twist over the Oscar choices when it seems clear the choices over the years aren't really about what's truly 'Great' but more about appeasing both private and public sentiment for 'hard-hitting' truths, historical 'fictions', political temperament, schmaltz and/or Who's-Hot-and-Who's-Not. Now and then a classic gets through, but I'd say, overall, narrow-sightedness is a big part of the determining factor.
The Departed was mediocre at best.
you are correct in most of your *****ysis. however, english patient should be higher on this list, first because it was terrible, and second because it was up against 2 of the best movies in the last 30 years in sling blade and fargo.
I liked your list…until #1. You lose all credibility with it. Okay, if you insist on not liking “Chicago,” I can’t stop you. But to actually think it’s a worst Best Picture choice than the other 9 — as well as some others you didn’t include, or some of the ones you mentioned in your intro. Well, how do I put this? You’re just wrong. wrong wrong wrong. I’m guessing you are an occasional at most consumer of musicals, and non-musical fans are bad judges of musicals. Any musicals, because they come in with a huge prejudice. I enjoy musicals on both stage and screen and have had enough conversations with people who don’t like musicals to know this to be true.
I agree with most of the list but not Gigi! I love musicals and I love this one. It has great acting, humor, songs and is a joy to watch!
Hmm… Chariots of Fire was an excellent film in my opinion. The fact that some might consider it long isn’t really a problem with the film so much as a problem with the Humming Bird audience that television has bred. I enjoy it thoroughly when a director or writer disregards those with attention deficit disorder and creates a film or book that drags its feet a little bit. Thank god this audience wasn’t around Gone With the Wind was filmed or Moby Dick was written.
Apparently, those who hate motion pictures come out of their caves this time of year to trash best picture winners…if you don’t like movies or don’t have the attention span of a carrot, stick to cartoons!
All but The Departed i agree with
Not being a troll here but IMHO if you did not live during the time the movie was made your opinion about that movie is null and void.
Our lives and culture affect so much of what goes into and comes out of a film. Movies like “how green was my valley” might have touched on something like the depression that we really have no concept of. You can’t judge them based on technical merit, acting, etc… Alone.
What were the people whtching it dealing with. How did it make them feel?
Jus sayin….
Thanks
7 of these film absolutely deserve their spot a best picture. you need to to study film a little more.
How about Titanic… the most overrated film ever. It beat out L.A. Confidential(which should have won) while Boogie Nights wasn’t even nominated.
Oh, and The Departed deserved it over the garbage that it went up against it, but both Pan’s Labrynth and Children of Men are better films while in 1996 you neglected to mention Trainspotting.
Bull. Driving Miss Daisy is a good film.
well done. thoroughly enjoyed reading your prose.
Shawshank Redemption is IMDB’s highest rated film, obviously the “Academy” missed the boat on that one.
What kind of Oscar loving idiot would forget the greatest show on earth beating singin’ in the rain
the disney remake of .80 days was much better i couldn’t even make it thru the first 5 minutes of the original PE YU!!!
the academy almost never makes the right choice when i herd that toy story 3 DIDN’T win best picture i just wanted to kill those fu!#%^*%$#@!**&^$^$#!@@#!!!@$$%%%!*@&#^$%%!^&*^#@!##*% idiots!!
3 words THE KINGS SPEECH
Chicago is one of my favourite films of all time. Definitely doesn’t deserve to be #1 on this list. Agree with forrest gump though, shawshank is an amazing movie!
Um, hurt locker was awsome, I don’t know what you’re smoking. I hate lists like this because everyone has their opinion, so who are YOU to decide what movies didn’t deservive an oscar?
Some I don’t agree with (i.e Forest Gump and The English Patient, I feel that they where the better films of that year.)
But! Your number 1 spot is dead on! Gangs of New York should have won!
Very good list.
Note: If Avatar would have won over the Hurt Locker then it should (could) have been the number one spot instead.
Running isn’t a sport? what?
What about Shakespeare in Love???????? That film had no sho for best picture against Saving Private Ryan and somehow it won. WTF???????????????????
Dances with Wolves over Goodfellas was utter nonsense
I loved Forrest gump and it purposely put him next to so many famous people and give him an unreal amount of good fortune to show that even though he was slow he remained true and uncorrupted while all his friends did drugs or became alcholics
Couldn’t disagree more with some of these. I love Titanic, Chicago and Gigi. LOVE THEM. Forrest Gump I can take it or leave it. I love these films, and the only two I knew that had won best picture were Chicago and Titanic. Now I haven’t seen the stage Chicago, but I love the film. I also thought that John C. Reiley did a good job with the song. I really enjoyed that it wasn’t stupid like his other films. I’m glad this is just your opinion and not truth, because I thought these films were great! I own them all and enjoy them very much!
I’m going to have to strongly disagree with your inclusion of “The Departed” on this list, sir. I love that movie and I think it deserved to win Best Picture.
However, I might be slightly biased being an Irish Bostonian myself.
BTW, I can’t believe they finally caught Whitey Bulger! Lol, oh well, he had a good run.
I would also like to mention Crash winning over Brokeback Mountain.
While i agree that chariots of fire is a boring movie, i must disagree with your opinion on running. it may be boring to watch, but running is indeed a sport. the amount of physical training, dieting, and downright discipline that runners have to put into it, makes it, not only a sport, but a sport on par with football and basketball.
If I were you, I would drop Forrest Gump, which I think either that or The Shawshank deserved it. (one of the toughest years for the Academy i bet besides 1976) and i would place Shakespeare in Love… Saving Private Ryan was robbed i think and even the media agreed..
***** in a tub? That doesn’t work!
OK, just so you know, I have seen every film nominated for, and every film that won the Oscar for best picture. I cannot say I loved every film that won, but I have only ever argued against one win, that of Tom Jones.
Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but what frustrates me is that when hundreds of opinions come together and one film emerges victor, everone whose opinion was diferent complains that the winner is just plain wrong. Hurt Locker not on your top 15 for the year? Fine. But it was for a majoity of members of an academy devoted to awarding motion picture art and science.
With that in mind, no one has any right to diss Titanics win. The effort, time, energy, and heart put forth by the filmmakers is on the level of those who create masterpieces in sculpture, paintings, and scientific breakthroughs.
I can allow someone with no recollection or comprehention of bohemian poetic styles of love to call Titanic “sappy” or roll their eyes at it. That’s fine. I remember being twitterpated and I remember appreciating love stories and sappy romantic music because of it. But I cannot allow anyone the think that Titanic does not deserve the highest award for motion picture ART AND SCIENCE when the entire film is saturated by some of the hardest work, the steadiest of hands, and a masterful vision that has only graced the silver screen a few dozen times. No, it’s not my favourite, in fact, it’s not on my top 50 favourite list, but it is more deserving of the Oscar for best picture that most of them. Watch it again. Turn your scenses back on! Pay attention. See it. Hear it. Feel it. The film is a prime example of Oscar worthiness.
the big problem I see with this list: its opinion based, YOU wouldndt give the best-picture academy award to certain movies. I for example cant allready agree with your introduction “Hurt Locker” Desverd ts Oscar especialy over other nominee “avatar” titanic hardly deserved any and so on and so on. although i can agree with you that there are a lot of times where the awrd went to the worng movie (same goes for other categories).
ps excuse my grammar, englsich is not my first language
pps. cant agree with you on forrest gump, just sayin’ (but again perosnal opinion)
Soory but I only like 2 CHICAGO [2002] 2 IS GIGI [1958] BUT I do like one of these mini pictures here. I just LOVE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! LOVE!!!! DOES IT LOOK WILD AND DANGEROUS?
This is all very subjective and purely based on personal taste. I think it’s pretty difficult to make a list like this, because it can never be universal. I especially disagree with your choice of Chicago. That was a superb movie. And who says a Best Picture can’t be entertaining?
And you actually liked the broadway show better than the movie? God. I saw it a couple of years ago and it was AWFUL. This is one case where the movie was just LEAGUES ahead of the show on which it was based. But that’s my personal opinion. And if I had made this list, Chicago would not be on it.
Chicago is “geared to the “Glee” demographic” yet Glee was released a decade later and the the Glee demographic never would have existed if Chicago had not helped create a resurgence of musicals for the 2000s. Another lame, thoughtless Listverse list.
The more you know.
I disagree strongly with at least 50% of this list! Forrest Gump, Chicago, The English Patient and Driving Miss Daisy are all AMAZING examples of cinematic achievement. Also, the fact that you wanted to put Titanic on the list is just ridiculous!
You have the nerve to almost add Titanic. If that’s not a great film, then what is?
forrest gump is the best and completely deserved it
How could you forget DeMille’s “The Greatest Show on Earth,” which, in every aspect from direction to writing to acting was painfully awful without a single redeeming moment.
I found Forrest Gump to be morally objectionable. If one is against the war, one dies of AIDS. God favors Forrest by causing a storm that somehow gets him an enormous shrimp harvest – it doesn’t seem to care about the other fishermen whose lives are ruined. Of course, if one wants to get one’s boy through school, all that one has to do is prostitute oneself- hey, she was only a Southern woman, right?
I can’t believe Gladiator wasn’t on this list.
Honestly, I feel you don’t have any idea what you’re talking about. When creating a list such as this, you do not *****yze a film in terms of how well it has aged or is it now a classic, you have to *****yze the time period. For instance, you look at How Green was My Valley which won over Citizen Kane. *****yzing the historical situation, we understand why Citizen Kane lost, but we still see that at that time, it was known to be the greater film. So in this instance, you are correct. Why this is not number 1, well that’s a problem on your list. Second, you also seem to choose films out of pure enjoyment, rather than cinematic majesty. You must take into account directing, acting, technical aspects, screen writing, editing, the film score, and so much more to determine the best picture of the year. If a certain film reigns greater overall in these categories then it becomes best picture (or at least it should). Dancing With Wolves is better directed than Good Fellas with no inconsistencies. Both are great films and Good Fellas may be better, TODAY. But Dancing With Wolves is made better, so at least I’m happy your enjoyment factor didn’t place that on the list, though contemplating it proves your idiocy once more. Third, placing Forrest Gump on here honestly invalidates your entire list because Forrest Gump is one of the most cleverly written, well directed, well acted pieces of cinema in the history of cinema. And simply because you don’t like it doesn’t change that fact. Fourth, you then you forget to put on Crash. Brokeback Mountain won more best picture awards than Schindler’s List and Titanic combined. But you probably enjoyed Crash a little more, correct? Fifth, there is no way to know if a film is an instant classic, only time will tell if a film becomes a classic. I thought Slum Dog Millionaire was an instant classic, but it seems to have faded over the past few years. That doesn’t make it a less well built film. In the end, 1,500 people choose these films and you one man tries to invalidate it all. Sure they messed up a couple of times (Crash and How Green Was My Valley) and there are actors and actresses, directors and screenwriters who may not deserve their award, but in the end, they’re paid to this decision. I wouldn’t want them doing my job and so I won’t for one minute try to do their’s unless there is great agreement. Reading these post, I see little agreement with your list.
Pulp Fiction was one of the most influential movies of all time. It should have won. How many recent Academy Award winning film actually created a new cinematic sub-genre?
I stopped reading the rest when I read this line: “but, like golf and billiards, running is not a sport”. You’re not credible enough. Sorry
this is the only time i do not think you know what you are talking about at all
Forrest Gump is my favourite movie of all-time!
I was re-reading this list and got a wonderful laugh out of this line about Driving Miss Daisy, the Best Picture winner for 1989: “This was a year where voters wanted to feel good about themselves by selecting a movie that (haphazardly) shows the evils of racism.”
How true. An insightful comment about mainstream America’s 1989 obsession with and guilt over its past racism; and its irrational reaction to its inability to deal honestly with it.
What brings a chuckle today is how sharply and even more broadly relevant the comment remains. Because 20 years later that same irrational attitude about race and the unchanged inability to deal honestly with it led something over half of American voters to elect an incontrovertibly unqualified President solely because he was black. Americans voted for a man for no other reason than they wanted to claim they had a “post-racial attitude.”
One can only hope the country can survive such a foolish, self-destructive attitude to learn from our mistake.
I agree with many on this list, but not quite all. I think they got “Chicago” right, and I also think they got “Chariots of Fire” right.
Also, I think there were two reasons why Reds lost: it was a “pro-Communist” movie during the Reagan years, and, as Estelle Parsons put it, “the Academy hates Warren Beatty.” I mean, Beatty has won only once in 14 nominations. Not a good track record.
DEPARTED IS A MASTERPIECE. ABSOLUTELY DESERVED THE BEST PICTURE AWARD. PERIOD.
The idea of “DRIVING MISS DAISY” winning Best Picture of 1989 becomes even more absurd when you consider the fact that Spike Lee’s DO THE RIGHT THING also came out that year, and had much more passionate, intelligent things to say about race relations in America than DRIVING MISS DAISY.
hey! Forrest Gump was a great movie.
hi number eight chariots of fire you said running is not a sport.guess what? it is a sport and a very common sport as well. also, the titanic and forrest gump rock so stop hating on them.
Lists are purely opinion so should get respected as such, would like to add personal opinion myself on a couple of cases
Agree totally with the strong objections to Shakespeare in love, the result of a fortune in concentrated, last minute promotion to the small target audience that is the academy membership. IT BEAT Private Ryan !!!!!!!
Braveheart was a good film but I have to object to on the grounds of the totally, absolutely, BS history it portrayed. Some variance is acceptable in a historical film but this was way beyond that, even for the nutter Gibson.
Shakespeare in Love over Saving Private Ryan was a disgrace