As you know the way that I have set this challenge out is by Oscar
Ceremony rather than by decade so the first ten films that I will
encounter at the 1940 ceremony were actually released in 1939. But I've
done it this way because of the way the first five ceremonies
concentrated on films over two years. So here's a ceremony by ceremony
breakdown of the decade that I've wrapped up.
Ceremony 1: 1929
Winner: Wings
Nominees I've Watched: Seventh Heaven and The Racket
Did the Right Film Win: Yes
The
first year only three films were nominated and luckily I've been able
to watch all three. While I didn't think much of The Racket, Seventh
Heaven was a fairly good film however it felt a little disjointed and
overall Wings had the better structure so it was the right choice to win
the first Best Picture award.
Ceremony 2: 1930 (I)
Winner: The Broadway Melody
Nominees I've Watched: Alibi, Hollywood Revue of 1929 and In Old Arizona
Not Available: The Patriot
Did The Right Film Win: Probably
The
first of two ceremonies from 1930 and the first winner in sound. The
Broadway Melody was by far the film that had the best structure however
both Alibi and In Old Arizona played around with more filmic techniques.
But overall I think Broadway Melody has stood the test of time out of
the four I've watched. Meanwhile I will never get to see the fifth film -
The Patriot as there is no full print of the film.
Ceremony 3: 1930 (II)
Winner: All Quiet on The Western Front
Nominees I've Watched: The Big House, Disraeli, The Divorcee, The Love Parade
Did The Right Film Win: Yes
After
the advent of sound the films at the third ceremony started to draw on
controversial themes such as what prison life was like - The Big House
and the break-up of marriages - The Divorcee. We also had biopics and
Maurice Chevalier musicals but that year's eventual winner still stands
up as one of the greatest war films of all time.
Ceremony 4: 1931
Winner: Cimarron
Nominees I've Watched: The Front Page Skippy and Trader Horn
Not Available: East Lynne
Did The Right Film: Yes
As
you've just read my review of Cimarron then you know there's not much
choice in the way of an alternate winner. East Lynne is the other film that would be in contention but saying that I
still think at the time with its epic backdrops and relevant themes -
Cimarron would've been a hard film to beat.
Ceremony 5: 1932
Winner: Grand Hotel
Nominees: Arrowsmith, Bad Girl, The Champ, Five Star Final, One Hour With You, Shanghai Express, The Smiling Lieutenant
Did the Right Film Win: Yes
The
year that the number of nominees went up from five to eight. Although I
did enjoy the realistic nature of Bad Girl, the father/son relationship
in The Champ and the plotting of Shanghai Express, Grand Hotel was able
to do it on a bigger scale and had some top notch performances to boot.
Ceremony 6: 1934
Winner: Cavalcade
Nominees: 42nd Street, A Farewell to Arms, I Am A Fugitive From a
Chain Gang, Lady for A Day, Little Women, The Private Life of Henry VIII,She Done Him Wrong, Smilin' Through, State Fair
Did The Right Film Win: Yes
Oscar
took a year off and returned with two more nominees with the total
going up to ten. Again two films stand out for me - I am A Fugitive and
42nd Street were both favourites of mine but the multi-layered narrative
and historical accuracy of Cavalcade marked it out as an original piece
of film-making and deserved of a best picture prize.
Ceremony 7: 1935
Winner: It Happened One Night
Nominees
I've Watched: The Barretts of Wimpole Street, Cleopatra, The Gay Divorcee, Here Comes The Navy, The
House of Rothschild, Imitation of Life, One Night of Love, The Thin Man, Viva Villa
Not Available: Flirtation Walk, The White Parade
Did the Right Film win: Yes
For
those of you who can count 1935 gave us twelve nominees which was just a
little bit silly as films such as the fluffy Gay Divorcee and offensive
Here Comes the Navy made the cut. Claudette Colbert was in three of the
films and although I really enjoyed Imitation of Life I will concede
that It Happened One Night was the best overall.
Ceremony 8: 1936
Winner: Mutiny on The Bounty
Nominees: Alice Adams, The Broadway Melody of 1936, Captain Blood, David Copperfield, The
Informer, The Lives of a Bengal Lancer, Les Miserables, A Midsummers
Nights Dream, Naughty Marietta, Ruggles of Red Gap and Top Hat
Did the Right Film Win: Yes
Sticking
with twelve nominees again saw a lot of musical and comic nonsense and
some long sprawling epics make the cut. Mutiny on The Bounty wasn't a
perfect picture but it was the best from this group of nominees
Ceremony 9: 1937
Winner: The Great Ziegfeld
Nominees: Anthony Adverse, Dodsworth, Libelled Lady, Mr Deeds Goes to Town, Romeo
and Juliet, San Francisco, The Story of Louis Pasteur, A Tale of Two
Cities and Three Smart Girls
Did The Right Film Win: No
Back
to ten nominees we still have a couple of non-starters but a lot more
strong contenders. Now that we're getting towards the end of the decade
film making has become more elaborate as is seen in the adaptation of
Romeo and Juliet and the disaster movie San Francisco as well as that
year's winner The Great Ziegfeld. However I feel that Ziegfeld was too
long and basically just a vaudeville stage show on the big screen. I
think in terms of film-making both San Francisco and Dodsworth did it
better and told a better story so, in my mind, one of those two films
should've won.
Ceremony 10: 1938
Winner: The Life of Emile Zola
Nominees: The Awful Truth, Captain Courageous, Dead End, The Good Earth, In Old
Chicago, Lost Horizon, One Hundred Men and A Girl, Stage Door and A Star
is Born
Did The Right Film Win: Yes
I
wasn't sure about The Life of Emile Zola in terms of sustaining the
narrative over the length of time the film was on screen. But it was a
poor year in terms of nominees and only Stage Door and A Star is Born
were on the same level but neither of those had the level of gravitas
that Emile Zola had.
Ceremony 11: 1939
Winner: You Can't Take It With You
Nominees: The Adventures of Robin Hood, Alexander's Ragtime Band, Boys Town, The Citadel, Four Daughters,
La Grande Illusion, Jezebel, Pygmalion and Test Pilot
Did The Right Film Win: No
As
much as I enjoyed Frank Capra's second screwball comedy to win the Best
Picture award I feel it didn't deserve Best Picture as much as two of
the other films on the list. First of all The Adventures of Robin Hood
which was the first film out of the ones I've watched that really knew
what to do with the use of Technicolor and was a very good
swashbuckler. While La Grande Illusion was just a fantastically made
piece of gripping film and one of Renoir's finest. When you've got two
films that have defined the history of cinema a comedy about a rich and
poor family doesn't really seem that important.
So it's goodbye to the 1930s next up we delve into the ceremonies that took place in the 1940s which honoured films released between 1939 and 1948.
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