What the Nominees Were: E. T. the Extra Terrestrial, Gandhi, Missing, Tootsie, The Verdict
Other Movies That Should Have Been Considered: Sophie’s Choice, The World According to Garp and Victor/Victoria come to mind. Not much going on overseas (the various New Waves had all crested.)
What Should’ve Won and Did Win: Gandhi
How Hard Was the Decision: It was hard. All five of these movies are very good, and Gandhi has not aged perfectly. They cast an actor who was only half-Indian and had to put brown make-up on him, which is a major mark against the movie. (Ben Kingsley’s birth name was Krishna Bhanji, and he was from the same province as Gandhi, but he’s very fair-skinned without the makeup.) It was very tempting to give this Oscar to Tootsie, which is great, but ultimately not as momentous as Gandhi.
How Hard Was the Decision: It was hard. All five of these movies are very good, and Gandhi has not aged perfectly. They cast an actor who was only half-Indian and had to put brown make-up on him, which is a major mark against the movie. (Ben Kingsley’s birth name was Krishna Bhanji, and he was from the same province as Gandhi, but he’s very fair-skinned without the makeup.) It was very tempting to give this Oscar to Tootsie, which is great, but ultimately not as momentous as Gandhi.
Director: Richard Attenborough
Writer: John Briley
Stars: Ben Kingsley, Candice Bergen, Edward Fox, John Gielgud
Writer: John Briley
Stars: Ben Kingsley, Candice Bergen, Edward Fox, John Gielgud
The Story: Mohandas Gandhi gets thrown off a train in South Africa in 1893, so he becomes a civil disobedience leader, first in Africa and then back in India. Eventually he secures independence for his country, only to be assassinated by a fellow Hindu for being too conciliatory to the Muslim minority.
Any Other Nominations or Wins: It won Picture, Director, Actor, Original Screenplay, Art Direction, Cinematography, Costume Design, and Editing. It lost Makeup, Original Score and Sound.
How It Won: E.T. had already become the most successful movie ever made by the time the awards rolled around, and was considered a juggernaut, but bio-pics are famously Oscar-bait. Ultimately E.T. and Tootsie split the “popular movie” vote and Gandhi was able to squeak out a win with its “serious movie” vibes.
How It Won: E.T. had already become the most successful movie ever made by the time the awards rolled around, and was considered a juggernaut, but bio-pics are famously Oscar-bait. Ultimately E.T. and Tootsie split the “popular movie” vote and Gandhi was able to squeak out a win with its “serious movie” vibes.
Why It Won:
- Kingsley is miscast in that he has the wrong skintone, but his performance is incredible and he deservedly won Best Actor (even though Paul Newman for The Verdict was overdue to win). Actors love to play enigmatic characters, and Gandhi will frequent respond to serious questions with just a shrug and a change of the subject. Gandhi is forced to give a few speeches, but his devastating actions always speak louder.
- David Lean was still alive and making movies, but Attenborough had realized that Lean was never going to turn his eye to this particular subject, so it was up to him to make the best Lean movie that Lean never made. Ultimately, Attenborough lacks some of Lean’s cinematic artistry (who doesn’t?) but he matches his scope. Gandhi is the genuine revolutionary that T. E. Lawrence only imagined himself to be and this is the epic he deserves.
- Briley wrote very little else, but deserves his Oscar and a place in film history for this sensitively observed and stirring script. Gandhi is valorized but it’s also clear that he was such a martyr (sometimes needlessly) that he drove everyone around him crazy.
- This movie is three hours and eleven minutes long, but not a moment seems slow or wasted. I wouldn’t want it to be a moment shorter. Some subjects deserve this treatment. If we saw an achievement of this scale (the freeing and tragic partition of a country) play out in less time, we would feel cheated.
- Indian filmmakers were upset that the Indian government invested millions of dollars into this production, understandably insisting that this was an Indian story that should have been told by Indians, but no one can accuse Attenborough of favoring the British, who look terrible here. This is a movie about a great evil and Attenborough shows that unreservedly.
- It is to this movie’s enormous credit that it didn’t create one British person to be a nemesis that kept recurring throughout Gandhi’s long struggle. That’s not how life works and it would have been reprehensible to pretend it did. Instead he faces a steady procession of bureaucrats over many years, some more canny than others.























































