Friday, May 15, 2020

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Adapted Screenplay 1968

The Contenders:

The Lion in Winter (winner)
The Odd Couple
Oliver!
Rachel, Rachel
Rosemary’s Baby

What’s Missing

This is a pretty good collection of nominations in the sense that I genuinely like the screenplays for three of these movies, and two I think are best-of-the-decade quality. There’s room for some interesting additions, though. I’m a little surprised that we aren’t seeing Charly here, even though it’s a film I wouldn’t nominate. Ice Station Zebra would have been a very interesting choice. While we are getting a little horror here in the nominations, I suppose Witchfinder General wasn’t classy enough. Science fiction was still a longshot nomination in the best of years, and while it’s a classic now, who knew in 1968 that Planet of the Apes would be as revered as it is? Oscar sometimes can’t resist the siren call of Shakespeare, so I’m a little surprised at no love for Zefferelli’s Romeo and Juliet. I’d love to see The Swimmer in the mix here. Finally, while I’m ultimately not surprised that Bullitt was ignored, I’m frustrated that it was.

Weeding through the Nominees

5. I am actually a little surprised that Oliver! didn’t win this despite my believe that it doesn’t belong anywhere near a nomination. I did win Best Picture, though, and it would have been a very safe choice. I suppose there’s nothing inherently wrong with it as a movie, except that it is safe, and the kid playing the title role is a complete non-entity. Truthfully, I’m going to be biased here in the best of circumstances. I’ve never been much of a fan of Charles Dickens, so an adaptation of Dickens has an uphill fight here.

4. Rachel, Rachel is a difficult film, and not one I would choose to revisit very often, if ever again. It contains a very good performance from Joanne Woodward, and at least some of that has to come from the screenplay. But does it really belong here? Ultimately, while it concerns the life of a 35-year-old woman, it is also a coming-of-age story, and in that respect, it hits a lot of clichés. It’s as if The 40-Year-Old Virgin was made decades earlier and made to be taken seriously. That’s an uphill fight, too.

3. I like The Odd Couple well enough, but I think it tends to suffer from what most Neil Simon plays and screenplays suffer from: it’s far too clever for its own good. No one in the world really talks like a Neil Simon character. That’s fine for science fiction or fantasy or horror, but not when your main characters are real people in the real world. No one is that snappy with a comeback, and very few people are as extreme as Oscar and Felix. Give me a little time to think about it, and I might switch this with Rachel, Rachel for fourth.

My Choices

2. The Lion in Winter won this Oscar, and I don’t want to be the person to take it away, regardless of the fact that it wouldn’t be my choice. This is a case where Oscar chose very, very well. I can’t really argue against Oscar’s choice here at all except to say that I would pick a different film. This is a tight and vicious little screenplay, one that is filled with anger and vitriol and the kind of dialogue that comes from years of contempt. In most years in the ‘60s, it would be my choice without any thought, and it’s damn close here. It’s a fine choice, but not my choice.

1. That goes to Rosemary’s Baby, a film so good that in one of Oscar’s least favorite genres and in a year where the old guard was clinging by its fingernails enough to reward Oliver! for Best Picture, it still managed to swing two nominations and a win for Ruth Gordon. Sure, Polanski’s direction helps this movie a great deal, but that direction depends on a screenplay that is perfectly paced and contains just enough mystery to make doubts plausible until the very end. More than fifty years later, it’s a stunner, and should have won.

Final Analysis

12 comments:

  1. My preference would run almost the same as yours and I'd kick out Oliver! and Rachel, Rachel for The Swimmer and Bullitt but we disagree mildly on the top two. I'd take everything you said about Lion in Winter and apply it to Rosemary's Baby while putting it in second and letting Lion keep its prize.

    Perhaps it's because I return to Lion much more than Rosemary though it's a fine picture. It's just not my kind of repeat viewing.

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    1. I don't hate your order, honestly. The Lion in Winter deserved to win as much as Rosemary's Baby did. I just prefer Rosemary, but either one is a great choice.

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  2. I would definitely give the Oscar to Rosemary's Baby but... where's 2001? That was based on a book which many people forget about while I would've also vouched for The Immortal Story by Orson Welles which was based on Karen Blixen's story.

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    1. 2001 was nominated for Best Original Screenplay. The movie actually came first--Clarke and Kubrick more or less wrote the film together and then Clarke adapted the book from their screenplay.

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    2. Oh. I see. I keep forgetting about that.

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    3. My method for coming up with potential snubs is to go to my Letterboxd page and open films from the year in question that I think might be worth looking at. For the record, I opened 2001 and checked it on IMDb.

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  3. When I compiled a list of best movies from the sixties Rosemary's baby was in top ten while Lion in Winter was not even in top 20. I think that says it all, even if this is a screenplay category.

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    1. Wow. Gotta say I think you've undervalued The Lion in Winter, but if we agreed on everything, one of us would be unnecessary.

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  4. I recently read Rosemary's Baby and then watched the movie (for the first time). What's interesting and unusual is how closely the screenplay sticks to the book. Apparently, as his first American screenplay, Polanski wasn't aware that adaptations could stray from the source material.

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    1. And to the benefit of all of is. It's a hell of an adaptation.

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  5. I totally agree with your rankings, but The Lion in Winter is one of my favorite movies to quote.
    "I know. You know I know. I know you know I know. We know Henry knows, and Henry knows we know it. We're a knowledgeable family."
    John:

    " by God, if I went up in flames there's not a living souls who'd pe e on me to put the fire out! "
    Richard: "Let's strike a flint and see."

    it is up there with Young Frankenstein.

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    1. It's a hell of a good movie. I don't dislike the win for it, even if it wasn't my choice.

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