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Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Director 1976

Posted on the 27 January 2018 by Sjhoneywell
The Contenders:
Alan J. Pakula: All the President’s Men
Ingmar Bergman: Face to Face
Sidney Lumet: Network
John G. Avildsen: Rocky (winner)
Lina Wertmuller: Seven Beauties

What’s Missing

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Director 1976

It’s difficult for me to argue with some of the nominees here, but, as usual, there’s some work to do to come up with what should genuinely be considered the five best directorial performances for 1976. Work like John Carpenter’s in Assault on Precinct 13 and Brian De Palma’s for the admittedly overrated Carrier aren’t really snubs if I’m honest about it. The same can probably be said of Roman Polanski and The Tenant. There are potentially genre issues with John Schlesinger’s Marathon Man, and Clint Eastwood hadn’t “arrived” as a director in 1976, which caused The Outlaw Josey Wales to be ignored. With both Lina Wertmuller and Ingmar Bergman taking the “not in English” spot, we lose both Bernardo Bertolucci for 1900 and Jean-Charles Tacchella’s subtle take on Cousin Cousine. That leaves us with the massive snub of Martin Scorsese and Taxi Driver. Even if you don’t really like Taxi Driver, you have to admit that Scorsese belongs here.

Weeding through the Nominees

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Director 1976

5. Placing Bergman in last feels mildly criminal, but the truth is I wouldn’t have nominated him for Face to Face. I found this to be lesser Bergman, treading the same territory as both Through a Glass Darkly and Persona, and doing it with far less subtlety and nuance. There’s a lot of Bergman I really like, and some that I genuinely love, but Face to Face will never rise to the level of his other films for me. There’s less to talk about here, and for Bergman, that means there’s a hell of a lot less “here” here.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Director 1976

4. It’s hard not to like Rocky as a movie even if the general consensus is that it didn’t really deserve all of the acclaim it received. I do like the film a lot, and it’s mildly impressive how easy it is to forget that most of the great moments from the film happen in the last half hour or so. The truth, though, is that the big fight scene is in many ways the lowest and least-realistic part of the film. It’s the part everyone remembers fondly, but it’s also the part that I think should have lost Avildsen the Oscar. I’ll give him the run up the steps, though—that’s pretty great.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Director 1976

3. Lina Wertmuller made some interesting choices with Seven Beauties, and while I’m not sure I entirely agree with all of them, I respect and understand most of them. This is not an easy film to watch, but it’s not intended to be, and Wertmuller wants to rub our noses in our own complacency. My biggest issue here is both Wertmuller’s fault and part and parcel with her intent: I don’t really like the film that much and I didn’t enjoy watching it. I’m not supposed to. Like I said, I respect the choice; I’m just not sure I agree with it.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Director 1976

2. It’s easy to overlook Alan J. Pakula’s influence on All the President’s Men when it is otherwise filled with acclaimed actors and great performances, but Pakula does something here very well. The Watergate scandal was still relatively fresh in 1976, and Pakula manages to make it not merely interesting but suspenseful in a world where everyone knew the ultimate results. That takes skill and finesse, and Pakula was rightly recognized as delivering one of the great performances from the director’s chair for this year.

My Choice

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Director 1976

1. My love of Network has not been unmentioned on this blog in the past. While a great deal of the credit for its quality comes from the performances and the dynamite screenplay, Sidney Lumet deserves a great deal of the credit as well. Lumet manages to make Network both wildly insane and completely believable at the same time. It’s a controlled insanity that, by the end of the film, still makes perfect sense despite being light years from where we started. That’s Lumet’s influence and control, something for which he should have been awarded.

Final Analysis

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Director 1976

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