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Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Adapted Screenplay 1995

Posted on the 08 June 2020 by Sjhoneywell
The Contenders:
Apollo 13
Babe
Leaving Las Vegas
Il Postino
Sense and Sensibility (winner)

What’s Missing

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Adapted Screenplay 1995

The nominations for Best Adapted Screenplay for 1995 are a mixed bag of virtual guaranteed nominations along with some surprises. There are some places where I think the Academy fell short, of course, since that’s par for the course. I’m a little surprised at the lack of nomination for The Bridges of Madison County, which seems like it should be right up Oscar’s alley. Twelve Monkeys, being science fiction and a Terry Gilliam film is more easily understood as a snub. The same could be said of a comedy actioner like Get Shorty, despite how entertaining it is. I genuinely like the remake of Sabrina, and while it might be a hard case to make, I do want to mention it. Based at least on its reputation, Casino feels like a miss. The biggest miss, though, is Dead Man Walking, which would seem to tick every one of Oscar’s boxes, and yet here we are.

Weeding through the Nominees

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Adapted Screenplay 1995

5. It’s perhaps a shock to see a film as acclaimed as Leaving Las Vegas sitting at the bottom of the list. It’s a genuinely great film and genuinely one where the performances are about as good as you’re going to find. The issue that puts Leaving Las Vegas on the bottom of the list for me is that there really isn’t a great deal of plot here. Since it also contains a vicious and brutal rape scene near the end of the film, it has another reason to drop to the bottom of the list. Good as it is, it’s the one I’d most readily lose for different nominations.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Adapted Screenplay 1995

4. Il Postino is a very small film, and one that I rather liked. But it’s also a film where the story behind it is more compelling than the actual film. There’s a great deal to like about Il Postino, but almost everything I like about it is something other than the screenplay. It’s a gorgeous film, for instance, and there’s a particular tragic beauty to the performance of Massimo Troisi. While I think it deserves a lot of praise, it’s perhaps a bit too simple and straightforward for me to take it too seriously here.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Adapted Screenplay 1995

3. Babe is a very sweet little movie and impossible to dislike, but I have a genuinely difficult time seeing it as a terribly serious contender. The problem isn’t so much with Babe, but with what we tend to expect from Oscar films. Babe is sweet, and dare I say it, innocent. It’s impossible to dislike the film and while it would easy to be a bit jaded by it, anyone who approaches it honestly and without any particular preconception will find it a true delight. I’m actually quite pleased it was nominated.

My Choices

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Adapted Screenplay 1995

2. No one could have been more surprised at how much I enjoyed Sense and Sensibility than I was. I expected a slog through a drippy romance and walked out the other side a true believer in the story, the characters, and perhaps even Jane Austen. Rather than young women alternatively pining for and being angry with men, this is a story of sisters and their relationship with each other. Anyone giving this the win will get only minor disagreement from me. It’s not my choice, but it’s a solid winner, and Oscar should be rightly proud and justified in choosing it.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Adapted Screenplay 1995

1. As should be very little surprise for anyone who has read my Oscar posts for 1995, I’m giving this to Apollo 13, which is absolutely my favorite movie form 1995. The reason for this is a simple one: I knew the outcome of the story before I went into the film and I was still very much invested in everything that happened. It’s not easy to do that—to stick very much to the real story. Sure, there was some license, but surprisingly little. Apollo 13 is a film about what can truly be achieved when things are at their worst. It’s not just a great film, it’s the definition of inspiration.

Final Analysis

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Adapted Screenplay 1995

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