The Blue Dahlia
Children of Paradise (Les Enfants du Paradis)
Notorious
Road to Utopia
The Seventh Veil (winner)
What’s Missing
This is another one of those years where it feels like a small number of films really belong in the nominations, and even then, Oscar didn't nominate all that well. Starting off, based on the five we've got, I wonder why Gilda didn't rate consideration. A bigger miss to me would be A Matter of Life and Death, a film that beautifully flips the script on Here Comes Mr. Jordan and makes it work. I also think that It's a Wonderful Life belongs here. It may not have gotten its just due in 1946, but it's certainly lived up to any expectations had for it since then.
Weeding through the Nominees
5. I’m very much in the minority in thinking that The Seventh Veil is nothing but problems, most of which come from the screenplay. This film is made up of ugly elements. It’s true that a compelling screenplay can be made from ugly social elements like misogyny and abuse, but this isn’t it. The fact that it’s laden with psychobabble doesn’t help, either. We’re forced to endure 36-year-old Anne Todd playing a 14-year-old, and to have the abuse and incest problems in the script solved through Freudian analysis. It hasn’t aged well at all.
4. The Blue Dahlia would be an interesting film if it didn’t commit what I think is one of the mortal sins of a movie, especially a noir: it punks the ending. It’s a gritty film, something I genuinely appreciate in most cases, but when it goes for an ending that it hasn’t really earned and that doesn’t really fit with the story, I feel let down. It also doesn’t help that Veronica Lake is terribly miscast in the film. I think it’s not a bad film, but the biggest issue it has is with the part of the film that was nominated for an Oscar.
3. I was completely surprised at how much I enjoyed Road to Utopia, it being my first Bing and Bob “Road” movie. It’s mostly fluff, which doesn’t work to its benefit here, but it’s also really good, funny, and entertaining fluff. It helps tremendously to have the always-likable Bing Crosby in a major role, but even with a lesser light, there’s a lot here that would still work. It’s clever, and that goes a long way. That it’s not really substantial is the biggest problem here, and while I like the movie and even the nomination, I can’t give it the win.
2. Hitchcock is often labelled as relying on twist endings, which isn’t entirely true. In fact, while many of his movies turn on a moment that happens late in the film, in most cases, that turn comes in full view of the audience and the tension is not about what happened, but how it will turn out. Notorious is a good example of this. This is a smart screenplay that doesn’t depend on gimmicks to work. Instead, it works purely on human nature and the personal demons that infect the various characters. It’s a solid nomination, and I might see it winning.
1. Children of Paradise is where I would put my vote were I to vote on the five movies that we are given. That this film was made in Paris during the Nazi occupation is amazing. That it was done with a number of Jewish crew members is staggering. That it’s a sweeping historical costume drama is completely beyond the pale. The fact that this movie even exists is amazing to me. That it was done this beautifully is a thing of wonder. But none of that speaks to the screenplay—but it’s the screenplay where all of this starts and why all of the rest of the film’s existence is so amazing.
My Choice
But, of course, I get to pick my winners from an open field on this blog, and in a completely open field, I’m moving outside of the five nominations. Either It’s a Wonderful Life or A Matter of Life and Death would be my choice here, and I think my pick between them might depend on my mood at the moment or a coin flip. Both deal beautifully with fantasy elements, weaving them into the real world in a seamless and wonderful way. Both should have been nominated, and either would be my choice.
Final Analysis