What the Nominees Were: Coming Home, The Deer Hunter, Heaven Can Wait, Midnight Express, An Unmarried Woman
Other Movies That Should Have Been Considered: How did Days of Heaven not get a nomination?? Blue Collar would have been an interesting choice.
What Did Win: The Deer Hunter
How It’s Aged: The scenes in America are very well done, but the movie’s portrayal of the people of Vietnam is certainly problematic. A great cast, put to good use, but ultimately a bit of a tonal mish-mash. Not a movie I ever intend to rewatch. The thing this movie does the best, a certain lyrical quality, is done much better by…
How It’s Aged: The scenes in America are very well done, but the movie’s portrayal of the people of Vietnam is certainly problematic. A great cast, put to good use, but ultimately a bit of a tonal mish-mash. Not a movie I ever intend to rewatch. The thing this movie does the best, a certain lyrical quality, is done much better by…
What Should’ve Won: Days of Heaven
How Hard Was the Decision: A fairly easy choice. Coming Home and An Unmarried Woman are both excellent films, but Days of Heaven is one of the all-time greats.
Director: Terrence Malick
Writer: Terrence Malick
Stars: Richard Gere, Brooke Adams, Sam Shepard, Linda Manz
Writer: Terrence Malick
Stars: Richard Gere, Brooke Adams, Sam Shepard, Linda Manz
The Story: After accidentally killing his foreman in a fight at a steel plant, a young man named Bill goes on the run with his little sister Linda and a girlfriend named Abby, who he pretends is also his sister. Picking wheat on a Texas farm, a supposedly-dying farmer falls in love with Abby, so Bill encourages her to marry him and inherit the farm. Soon, a love triangle develops, that ends tragically for most people involved.
Any Nominations or Wins: It deservedly won for NĂ©stor Almendros’s (and Haskell Wexler’s) Cinematography, but lost for Sound, Costume Design and Ennio Morricone’s haunting score.
Why It Didn’t Win: The movie was a box-office bomb, which didn’t help, but The Deer Hunter didn’t light the world on fire either. Ultimately, to fail to even give this a Picture nomination is a baffling choice.
Why It Didn’t Win: The movie was a box-office bomb, which didn’t help, but The Deer Hunter didn’t light the world on fire either. Ultimately, to fail to even give this a Picture nomination is a baffling choice.
Why It Should Have Won:
- I first discovered this movie through the wonderful documentary Visions of Light, where they make a convincing case that it’s the best looking movie ever made. Almendros (and Wexler who took over after Almendros had to leave to shoot another movie) shot a lot of the movie at magic hour, just after the sun has gone down but before night has fallen (but Almendros would complain that it was actually “magic 15 minutes.”) On the Criterion commentary track, they talk about how only Malick understood what images you could capture with the film using no lights, more than Almendros, more than Wexler (who was convinced that many of the scenes he was shooting would end up blank) even more than the Kodak corporation, who made the film stock. The result is the lushest, most hypnotic movie ever made.
- Over the course of the two-year editing process, Malick gradually decided to cut out most of the dialogue (we never know what the opening fight in the steel mill is about, for instance). At one point, Bill asks Abby, “Do you love him?” As a screenwriter, what’s the best response you can write to that? Well, you can write all day, but the best reply is nothing, which says it all, and that’s what’s left in the movie.
- Malick found 15-year old Manz living nearly homeless in a laundromat with an abusive mom and quickly realized she was a brilliantly instinctive actress. Even better, they realized she was a writer. Gere says on the DVD: “she was such a, kind of a unique eccentric wild animal of a teenager that some extraordinary jewels came out of her.”
- So instead of dialogue, they decided a year into the editing to add an improvised voiceover by Manz. (Malick knew he could make it work because he’d done something similar on his earlier film Badlands.) Sometimes they would watch a scene and have her sum it up in her inimitable way, or they would tell her the story of The Book of Revelation one night and have her try to remember it the next day, and sometimes she would just say bizarre non-sequiturs (“I been thinking what to do with my future. I could be a mud doctor, checking out the earth, underneath.”) They recorded her for 10 hours and then cut 15 minutes of it into the movie. It’s the best voiceover in the history of cinema, as far as I’m concerned.
- Joining in the commentary is casting director Dianne Crittenden, who offers excellent insights. It would be fascinating to see the film with the original intended cast for the men, John Travolta and Tommy Lee Jones, before that casting fell through.
- Some of the majestic shots were made using old-fashioned movie magic: In order to get a stunning shot of a swarm of locusts rising out of a wheat field, they had helicopter drop maple tree seeds and all of the actors acting in reverse, then ran the film backwards.



















































