What the Nominees Were: Coal Miner’s Daughter, The Elephant Man, Ordinary People, Raging Bull, Tess
Other Movies That Should Have Been Considered: John Sayles arrived on the scene with Return of the Secaucus Seven. Louis Malle’s Atlantic City was great. Sam Fuller finally made his autobiographical magnum opus The Big Red One. Stanley Kubrick delivered The Shining. And of course we had one of the all-time great sequels: The Empire Strikes Back
What Did Win: Ordinary People
How It’s Aged: It’s a beautiful, tender, heartbreaking movie about survivor’s guilt, suicidal ideation and therapy. But…
How It’s Aged: It’s a beautiful, tender, heartbreaking movie about survivor’s guilt, suicidal ideation and therapy. But…
What Should’ve Won: The Shining
How Hard Was the Decision: This should have been an easy decision. This is one of those years where everybody knows what should have won: Raging Bull. So I just rewatched that movie …and I just don’t like it very much. It’s beautifully shot and De Niro certainly puts the work on screen, but the problem is that I don’t find Jake LaMotta to be a very compelling character. He keeps beating the crap out of his brother and wife not out of some great tragic flaw, but merely because he’s a dumb brute. He’s not a raging bull, because bulls have dignity. He’s a raging louse. So that left me with a very hard decision? Stick with Ordinary People? (I feel bad I haven’t upheld a decision in a while.) Go for The Big Red One? And what about Empire?? That’s certainly my favorite movie of the year, after all. But Empire is also a mess in some ways. I decided that the closest thing to a perfect movie was The Shining.
How Hard Was the Decision: This should have been an easy decision. This is one of those years where everybody knows what should have won: Raging Bull. So I just rewatched that movie …and I just don’t like it very much. It’s beautifully shot and De Niro certainly puts the work on screen, but the problem is that I don’t find Jake LaMotta to be a very compelling character. He keeps beating the crap out of his brother and wife not out of some great tragic flaw, but merely because he’s a dumb brute. He’s not a raging bull, because bulls have dignity. He’s a raging louse. So that left me with a very hard decision? Stick with Ordinary People? (I feel bad I haven’t upheld a decision in a while.) Go for The Big Red One? And what about Empire?? That’s certainly my favorite movie of the year, after all. But Empire is also a mess in some ways. I decided that the closest thing to a perfect movie was The Shining.
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Writers: Kubrick and Diane Johnson
Stars: Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Scatman Crothers and Danny Lloyd
Writers: Kubrick and Diane Johnson
Stars: Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Scatman Crothers and Danny Lloyd
The Story: Frustrated novelist Jack Torrance takes a job as a winter caretaker of Colorado resort, along with his wife and psychic son. Ghosts (or is it all in his head?) torment him until he decides (like his predecessor) to chop up his family with an ax. Can they survive?
Any Nominations or Wins: None! But it did get Razzie nominations (an award for the worst films and performances of the year) for Duvall and Kubrick’s directing!
Why It Didn’t Win: So obviously, this was a movie that was pretty despised upon its original release, it’s only gradually that it’s come to be recognized as perhaps the greatest horror movie ever made. Nicholson and Kubrick were Academy darlings, but this movie inspired nothing but loathing from the Academy and general public at the time.
Why It Didn’t Win: So obviously, this was a movie that was pretty despised upon its original release, it’s only gradually that it’s come to be recognized as perhaps the greatest horror movie ever made. Nicholson and Kubrick were Academy darlings, but this movie inspired nothing but loathing from the Academy and general public at the time.
Why It Should Have Won:
- I’ve skipped over some great horror movies, so why this one? Because it’s the scariest damn movie I’ve ever seen. It was the first movie I ever watched on laserdisc, at the home of a family friend, in a home theater system where I was sitting right next to the sub-woofer, which kept rattling my bones with the ominous Bela Bartok music on the soundtrack. By the time the movie ended, I was completely freaked out and frazzled, and had to rewatch Who Framed Roger Rabbit? to calm myself down. I’m still terrified of it to this day. The twins!
- Given the fact that I denied Oscars to One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Taxi Driver and Raging Bull, you might think that I just don’t like anti-heroes, but I love them if they hit a certain sweet spot. Nicholson is absolutely captivating here as a weak man who gives in to his dark side with too little resistance. Unlike LaMotta, I find him utterly compelling.
- But this is actually a fascinating movie, in that the role of hero is passed like a baton. First it’s Jack, as he makes a half-hearted attempt to better his life, then he gives up and it becomes Danny, investigating the secrets of the hotel, then he is traumatized, so then it’s Jack again, picking up the investigation, but he succumbs to the temptations of the ghosts, so then it’s Wendy who picks up the baton until she gets shut down, then it’s Scatman Crother’s character Halloran who comes to the rescue, but he gets killed, and finally it’s the no-longer-catatonic Danny who must step up and resolve the story once and for all. The movie gets extra points for making this bizarre structure work (and we don’t even notice how bizarre it is as we watch.)
- I absolutely love the scene where Jack spills his drink on his shirt and goes to the bathroom to clean it off. An obsequious man in a tux is there to dab at the stain with a towel. Jack angrily grabs the towel to do it himself, saying “Mr. Grady, you were the caretaker here. You chopped [your family] up to bits, and then you blew your brains out.” Grady only smiles mildly and says, “I’m sorry to differ with you sir, but you are the caretaker, you’ve always been the caretaker. I should know sir, I’ve always been here.” Someone, after all, has to remove a lot of stains in this place. This is a classic example of a seemingly-innocuous exchange of an object that actually encapsulates the meaning of the scene. Jack thinks he’ll get a rise out of Grady by grabbing the towel away, but Grady only smiles: the towel has been passed on to his successor, in every sense. By grabbing it, Jack has admitted he will take up Grady’s (multiple) roles.
- Are any of the crazed conspiracy theories in the documentary feature Room 237 accurate? For instance, was Kubrick encoding evidence that he had faked the moon landings throughout the film? Surely not, but it can’t be denied that he was enjoying packing the movie with complicated imagery open to many interpretations. He famously drove the cast crazy with his bizarre perfectionism, but the result is a movie dense with many meanings.
- One thing I’ve been trying to do with these posts is highlight the forgotten female creators who have been essential to making the male-led movies. In this case, it’s not often acknowledged that Kubrick co-wrote the movie with novelist Diane Johnson. Kubrick had a hard time deciding whether to adapt King’s novel or Johnson’s own horror novel “The Shadow Knows”, so he decided to split the difference and hire one to adapt the other. Johnson (who would later go on to write the novel “Le Divorce”, which was turned into a Merchant-Ivory film) brings a sensitive eye to how marriages turn sour.

















































