Entertainment Magazine

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

Posted on the 20 August 2018 by Sjhoneywell
The Contenders:
Alice Adams
The Broadway Melody of 1936
Captain Blood
David Copperfield
The Informer
The Lives of a Bengal Lancer
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Les Miserables
Mutiny on the Bounty (winner)
Naughty Marietta
Ruggles of Red Gap
Top Hat

What’s Missing

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

When there are 12 nominees, especially when it’s this far in the past, finding some additional possible nominations is difficult at best. As much as I love the insanity of Mad Love, it probably doesn’t really belong here. I could say the exact same thing about A Night at the Opera. The 39 Steps is a dandy early Hitchcock film, one from before he was getting the sort of acclaim he would eventually receive. The biggest miss, of course, is The Bride of Frankenstein, which is exactly the sort of film that would never earn a nomination in 1935.

Weeding through the Nominees

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

12. I hated everything about Alice Adams. I had the exact opposite position the film wanted me to on every single character in the film. Everyone I was supposed to like was someone I disliked, and the film’s “villain” was clearly the nicest guy in the movie. I cannot imagine why or how this film was nominated for any awards at all, let alone the top Oscar. Our title character is little more than a veneer of pompous social conventions slapped over a base of someone who wants to be constantly told she is special.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

11. A Midsummer Night’s Dream is one of those Shakespearean plays that pretty much everybody knows. It’s a dandy story, filled with the sort of fanciful goofiness that Billy the Shake could give us when he was at his best. Unfortunately, for all of the good production qualities and moments that this offers, it’s terribly miscast and too damn long. By the time we get to the play within a play at the end, it’s already gone a good 15-20 minutes beyond its sell-by date. There are better Shakespeare films and better versions of thisthis play out there.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

10. It’s perhaps not fair of me to put Les Miserables as far down as 10th place, because I can’t say that this is a terrible version of this story. My issue with it is that I just don’t like the story itself. I’ve never felt that the story was that great. It makes a huge deal about pretty much nothing, and (I can’t believe it’s me saying this), this version doesn’t even have the benefit of the truly magnificent songs and production pieces that the later versions of this story have. I get the nomination, but I’m not a fan.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

9. If I could give an award for best casting (and really, there’s nothing stopping me), I’d give strong consideration to David Copperfield for 1935. The reason for this is specifically for the placement of the great W.C. Fields using his real voice and not a fake accent for Mr. Micawber. That’s damn brilliant, and the best thing about this film. Truthfully, I am probably penalizing this for the same reason I did Les Miserables. I’m not a fan of Dickens in general, and I’m not a fan of the story.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

8. Mutiny on the Bounty eventually came out on top in this contest, and, well, you can see my opinion of that here. I’m not letting it move above 8th place, putting it just above the bottom third of the nominations. Truthfully, there’s not a great deal here that is a serious problem for the story or the film. It might be that the film suffers from the presence of the great Charles Laughton, who casts such a huge shadow over the rest of the proceedings that everyone else falls into the background. It’s fine; it’s just not that great.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

7. Place me back in the time of 1935/1936 and give me a vote on these Oscars, and it’s entirely likely that The Informer would be moved higher in my estimation. The problem with this film isn’t anything specifically inherent in the film itself; it just hasn’t aged very well. Our title character is the sort of character that today works only in bad comedies—someone who says something incriminating about himself and then corrects himself, assuming that no one heard the first thing he said. I get that it’s better than I think it is, but it would have been a lot better 80 years ago.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

6. There’s additionally nothing specifically wrong with The Lives of a Bengal Lancer other than age. Produced today, this is a movie that would be loaded down with action sequences, and it’s action that is really needed here. It does quite a bit well, though, including a surprisingly touching scene regarding father trying desperately to connect with his son and not finding a clear way to do it. It’s well-written and well-acted throughout. The biggest issue is that this is a war film and there’s not enough action to really make it work.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

5. Probably the biggest shock in terms of placement is Naughty Marietta coming in all the way up to here, the top of the middle third. This is a Nelson Eddy/Jeanette MacDonald film with all of the operatic warbling that entails. And yes, it’s the music that is the worst part of the film for me. And yet, everything else here works. The light comedy is a great deal of fun, and I stand by what I have said in the past—MacDonald was a wonderful comedian and I wish she’d gotten more work like this.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

4. The Broadway Melody of 1936 is exactly the sort of musical sap party that I tend to dislike. And yet here we are. The biggest reason for this is the casting, which is almost staggering. Buddy Ebsen in a Mickey Mouse sweatshirt, Jack Benny, Robert Taylor, Una Merkel, and especially the incomparable Eleanor Powell, arguably the greatest dancer (male or female) to lace up a pair of shoes in a film. If this movie were complete pap (and it’s not far off), it would still rate high for the presence of her. She’s that great.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

3. Errol Flynn probably never got the sort of acceptance from the Academy that he really deserved, and Captain Blood is the sort of film that brings this to mind. This is how you did action films in 1935, and it might well be argued that without Captain Blood we wouldn’t have films like The Adventures of Robin Hood. While there seems to have always been the case that there’s been a fascination with pirates, I think it’s fair to say that at least some of that enthusiasm comes from here.

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

2. How strange is it that, in a year when there are three musicals nominated for Best Picture, I’ve put all three of them in the top five? Top Hat is a wonderful film in so many ways, primarily because of the twin presences of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. In truth, Top Hat is a big, dippy film that is ultimately a feel-good without a hell of a lot of substance, and it doesn’t matter in the slightest because this is a pure joy to watch. It’s a thing of beauty, and while the story is meaningless, it’s a hell of a lot of fun.


My Choice

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

1. Ultimately, my choice is Ruggles of Red Gap, a film that I would guess most of the readers of this blog have neither seen nor heard of. That’s a shame, because it could be argued that this film is the absolute height of the great career of Charles Laughton, who is clearly having a fantastic time in this. Ruggles is wildly entertaining all the way through, in no small part because Laughton is playing a truly comic character completely straight. Track this down and see it, if you can. It’s as good as anything from the era.

Final Analysis

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Picture 1935

Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog