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- RANKED: The 10 worst movies to win the best picture Oscar - and what should have won
RANKED: The 10 worst movies to win the best picture Oscar - and what should have won
10. "Around the World in 80 Days" (1956)
SHOULD HAVE WON: "The Ten Commandments"
Cecil B. DeMille's final directing effort still holds strong today. With its all-star cast, particularly the incredible performance by Charlton Heston as Moses (he didn't even get an Oscar nomination for the role), and its remarkable effects for that era, it's a movie that should have been recognized with the top prize.
9. "Ordinary People" (1980)
The late 1970s and early 1980s were when the melodrama was at its zenith in movie theaters, and "Ordinary People" came around at the perfect time. The film didn't just win best picture — it also achieved best director for Robert Redford and best actor for Timothy Hutton. Granted, the film has explosive performances in it, but there needs to be more than great acting to win best picture.
SHOULD HAVE WON: "Raging Bull"
What might be Martin Scorsese's masterpiece, this look inside the madness of middleweight boxer Jake LaMotta had an incredible performance from Robert De Niro. Beyond that, the cinematography, the deranged writing of Paul Schrader, and the editing of Thelma Schoonmaker (which marked the first time she and Scorsese worked together; she's done his films ever since) were so on the mark, it's baffling how the Academy didn't get it.
8. "Titanic" (1997)
James Cameron's love story on the doomed ship was a box-office sensation that made Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet superstars. But a best picture winner? It's one of the rare times that the Academy went with what the mass audience liked, but we feel there was a more deserving winner ...
SHOULD HAVE WON: "L.A. Confidential"
Curtis Hanson's adaptation of James Ellroy's pulp novel of crooked cops in the City of Angels is one of the best modern-day noirs ever made. And with actors Kevin Spacey, Russell Crowe, and Guy Pearce owning their roles in an ensemble, the movie is a gripping drama with a lot more suspense than "Titanic" had.
7. "The King's Speech" (2010)
Colin Firth (who won an Oscar for his performance) and Geoffrey Rush are great in the movie, but there really isn't much else to go crazy about in this look at King George VI's (Firth) public-speaking woes.
SHOULD HAVE WON: "The Social Network"
In a perfect example of the age bias of the Academy, more members could relate with a movie set in the late 1930s than with the birth of Facebook. David Fincher's dramatization of the rise of Mark Zuckerberg is a movie looking at the now and most likely went over the heads of the older voters.
6. "Chicago" (2002)
The movie musical suddenly became hot again in the early 2000s, with "Chicago" winning six Oscars, including best picture. But honestly, unless you happen to be obsessed with musicals, have you even thought about this movie in the past decade?
SHOULD HAVE WON: "The Pianist"
What should have won the prize was Roman Polanski's unflinching look at a Jewish musician's struggle to survive the Warsaw Ghetto in World War II. Polanski himself received an Oscar (despite his personal troubles), as did lead actor Adrien Brody, but the voters went with something more upbeat than this moving work in the final round.
5. "Argo" (2012)
Ben Affleck stars in and directs this true story of the rescue of six Americans in Tehran in the 1980s through the creation of a fake Hollywood production. An easy-to-understand storyline for Oscar voters, the movie is at best an average drama with below-average production value.
SHOULD HAVE WON: "Zero Dark Thirty"
The true story that the Academy should have recognized is Kathryn Bigelow's look at how Osama bin Laden was tracked down. Yes, you can take issue with both films' portrayal of real events, but comparing the two, this one is just made on another level.
4. "Dances with Wolves" (1990)
Kevin Costner directs and stars in this look at a solider on a remote Western Civil War outpost who befriends Native Americans. Though it initially received positive reviews, many in the Native American community began highlighting its inaccuracies about their culture. Also, there's one film that was up for the prize that many felt was more deserving.
SHOULD HAVE WON: "Goodfellas"
Scorsese was snubbed once more with "Goodfellas." One of his more popular films, this one was thought to be what would finally get not just a best picture win for a Scorsese film but a best director honor for the legend. But it was Costner's night.
3. "Crash" (2005)
This ensemble about the intertwined lives of Los Angeles citizens has some interesting history to it, as it's one of the few best picture winners to not be nominated for a Golden Globe. Critics were certainly split on the film. Some have called it the worst movie of the early 2000s, while Roger Ebert regarded it as the best film of 2005. But the win's backlash may have also had to do with how voters felt about another nominee.
SHOULD HAVE WON: "Brokeback Mountain"
Some believe that it was the voter's discomfort with the subject matter in "Brokeback Mountain," which looked at the secret love affair between two cowboys (Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger), that gave the win to "Crash." It's hard to think they would give director Ang Lee the best director Oscar if that were the case. Whatever it was, not getting the best picture win hasn't made this film any less great.
2. "How Green Was My Valley" (1941)
Directed by John Ford, this story of a coal-mining family at the turn of the century seems to have the pedigree for Oscar love. But then you see the other film that was nominated ...
SHOULD HAVE WON: "Citizen Kane"
Regarded as one of the greatest films of all time, if not the greatest, and a hit when it opened, Orson Welles' portrait of a newspaper tycoon broke all the rules and proved Welles a genius — and he wasn't even in his 30s yet. The only problem was he based the movie on William Randolph Hearst, who was still alive and didn't like the movie one bit. And Hearst had a lot of Hollywood friends.
1. "Shakespeare in Love" (1998)
This fictitious tale of how a young William Shakespeare created "Romeo & Juliet" is fun for a Friday-night watch, but to put it in the category of best picture winner now seems absurd. Well, it won. And you won't believe the movie it beat.
SHOULD HAVE WON: "Saving Private Ryan"
That's right. Steven Spielberg's riveting look at the horrors of World War II is a movie that will go down in history as one of the greatest war movies ever made, but it didn't get Oscar's biggest prize. Still, it's likely you've thought about images in "Saving Private Ryan" about a dozen more times than you have "Shakespeare in Love," and at the end of the day that's better than any statue.
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