Sports Movies and the Oscar “shutout”
During the Academy’s tenure, only 14 of 479 (less than 3%) nominees for Best Picture – arguably its most vaunted, certainly its most remembered and discussed if not always most acclaimed category – have been sports-related movies despite the inherent drama in stories like that of Jim Braddock (Cinderella Man (2005)), which failed to earn a BP nomination. One can only speculate whether The Champ (1931) – one of eight nominees for the top award that year, Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941) and even The Pride of the Yankees (1942) would have been nominated if the Academy had limited the category to 5 nominees, as it did from 1944 through 2008.
But a more interesting question might be: which sports movies “woulda, coulda, shoulda” been contenders if there had been 10 Best Picture nominees in their respective years?
Boxing: The Champ (1931), Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941), From Here to Eternity (1953), Rocky (1976), Raging Bull (1980), Million Dollar Baby (2004) Football: Heaven Can Wait (1978), Jerry Maguire (1996), The Blind Side (2009) Baseball: The Pride of the Yankees (1942), Field of Dreams (1989) Cycling: Breaking Away (1979) Horse Racing: Seabiscuit (2003) Pool: The Hustler (1961) – this was on the WSJ’s list (I didn’t know pool was considered a sport!) Running/Track: Chariots of Fire (1981) As you can see, my definition of “sports-related” is that a sport is integral to the story, e.g. Jack Lemmon’s character using a tennis racquet to strain spaghetti for Shirley MacLaine’s doesn’t qualify The Apartment (1960), however Prewitt’s refusal to box for his army unit is a key element in From Here to Eternity’s plot. One could also argue that the sport of swimming (and even sailing too) is an important part of the Oscar winning Ordinary People (1980).
Horse Racing National Velvet (1944), which was subsequently added to the National Film Registry; it received five Oscar nominations – winning two, including for Anne Revere (Supporting Actress), just two years after the change from 10 to 5 The Black Stallion (1979), also added to the National Film Registry, it won a Special Achievement Award and received two other nominations, including one for Mickey Rooney, Supporting Actor
Baseball Damn Yankees! (1958), which received a nomination for Best Music, Score The Natural (1984), was nominated in four other categories and included Glenn Close’s third consecutive Supporting Actress nomination Bull Durham (1988), which received a Best Writing, Original Screenplay nomination
Hoosiers (1986), added to the National Film Registry; it received two nominations, including one for Dennis Hopper (Supporting Actor)
Boxing Body and Soul (1947), won for Best Editing; earned a Best Actor nomination for John Garfield and its Original Screenplay Champion (1949), won for Best Editing; earned a Best Actor nomination for Kirk Douglas and a Supporting Actor nomination for Arthur Kennedy, another for its Screenplay to go with two others The Set-Up (1949), a highly regarded drama featuring Robert Ryan, likely hurt by the presence of the more mainstream Champion (1949), but did win two awards at the Cannes Film Festival, one of which was for its director Robert Wise
Cinderella Man (2005), Ron Howard’s Braddock bio featuring Russell Crowe and Renée Zellweger received three nominations, including one for Supporting Actor Paul Giamatti Before anyone comments that I could have included City for Conquest (1940) or Gentleman Jim (1942), two of my favorite boxing movies, they should realize that both were released in years that there were 10 Best Picture nominees and that neither was nominated in any category. Pool The Color of Money (1986), Paul Newman finally won his Best Actor Oscar, plus three other nominations Rugby This Sporting Life (1963), included Best Actor and Best Actress nominations for Richard Harris and Rachel Roberts Tennis Strangers on a Train (1951), Hitchcock’s thriller was nominated in the B&W cinematography category
Wrestling The Wrestler (2008), which earned Mickey Rourke (Best Actor) and Marisa Tomei (Supporting Actress) nominations
Honorary mentions: Football’s Remember the Titans (2000) and Olympic Hockey’s Miracle (2004) – how does this movie’s editing not get nominated?, because both stories transcend sport
Other worthy and/or nominated sports-related movies: Auto Racing Cars (2006) – which could have been like this year’s Up (2009) – nominated for Best Picture , but was instead nominated in the Animated Feature of the Year category
The Stratton Story (1949) – won a writing Oscar It Happens Every Spring (1949) – earned a writing nomination Bang the Drum Slowly (1973) – for which Vincent Gardenia earned a Supporting Actor nomination The Bad News Bears (1976) A League of Their Own (1992) The Rookie (2002) Bowling The Big Lebowski (1998) Boxing The Harder They Fall (1956) – received a nomination for its cinematography Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962) The Hurricane (1999) – for which Denzel Washington received a Best Actor nomination Ali (2001) – which earned Will Smith a Best Actor nomination and Jon Voight a Supporting Actor nomination
The Longest Yard (1974) – received a Best Editing nomination, but comedies are also rarely nominated for Best Picture Rudy (1993) The Express (2008) Golf Caddyshack (1980) Hockey Slap Shot (1977) Karate The Karate Kid (1984) – which earned Pat Morita a Supporting Actor nomination Tennis Match Point (2005) – Woody Allen received a writing nomination
Lest we forget: Pat and Mike (1952) – although that year featured several other essentials that didn’t receive a Best Picture nomination: 5 Fingers, The Bad and the Beautiful, Come Back, Little Sheba, and Singin’ in the Rain; The Great Race (1965), and The Endless Summer (1966) … and one could make a case for Trader Horn (1931), big game hunting, or even possibly The Sting (1973). 3 Responses Sports Movies and the Oscar “shutout”
You didn’t mention that “Breaking Away” did win an Oscar for best original screenplay Brilliant post. My favorite ever film is Million Dollar Baby. Its amazing to see how many sport movies which could have been nominated were not nominated for any oscars. Leave a Reply |
Archives
Featured Sites
Popular terms
3-D
Action Films
Actors
Actors' Endorsements
Actresses
animal stars
Animation
Anime
Anthology Films
Autobiography
Avant-Garde
Aviation
Awards
B-movies
Beer in Film
Behind the Scenes
Best of the Year lists
Biography
Biopics
Blu-Ray
Books on Film
Boxing films
British Cinema
Canadian Cinema
Character Actors
Chicago Film History
Cinematography
Classic Films
College Life on Film
Comedy
Comic Book Movies
Crime
Czech Film
Dance on Film
Digital Cinema
Directors
Disaster Films
Documentary
Drama
DVD
Early Talkies
Editing
Educational Films
European Influence on American Cinema
Experimental
Exploitation
Fairy Tales on Film
Faith or Christian-based Films
Family Films
Fan Edits
Film Composers
Film Criticism
film festivals
Film History in Florida
Film Noir
Film Scholars
Film titles
Filmmaking Techniques
Films of the 1980s
Food in Film
Foreign Film
French Film
Gangster films
Genre
Genre spoofs
Guest Programmers
HD & Blu-Ray
Holiday Movies
Hollywood history
Hollywood lifestyles
Horror
Horror Movies
Icons
independent film
Italian Film
Japanese Film
Korean Film
Leadership
Literary Adaptations
Martial Arts
Melodramas
Method Acting
Mexican Cinema
Moguls
Monster Movies
Movie Books
Movie Costumes
Movie locations
Movie lovers
Movie Magazines
Movie Reviewers
Movie settings
Movie Stars
Movies about movies
Music in Film
Musicals
New Releases
Outdoor Cinema
Paranoid Thrillers
Parenting on film
Pirate movies
Polish film industry
political thrillers
Politics in Film
Pornography
Pre-Code
Producers
Race in American Film
Remakes
Revenge
Road Movies
Romance
Romantic Comedies
Russian Film Industry
Satire
Scandals
Science Fiction
Screenwriters
Semi-documentaries
Serials
Short Films
Silent Film
silent films
Social Problem Film
Spaghetti Westerns
Sports
Sports on Film
Stereotypes
Straight-to-DVD
Studio Politics
Stunts and stuntmen
Suspense thriller
Swashbucklers
TCM Classic Film Festival
Tearjerkers
Television
The British in Hollywood
The Germans in Hollywood
The Hungarians in Hollywood
The Irish in Hollywood
The Russians in Hollywood
Theaters
Thriller
Trains in movies
Underground Cinema
VOD
War film
Westerns
Women in the Film Industry
Women's Weepies |
The phrase “inspirational sports movie” makes me break out in hives, so I’d probably argue that Oscar has devoted too much attention to sports movies! You left out the one sports film I truly love, NORTH DALLAS FORTY, simply one of the best films of the 1970s, and one of the few movies that considers the business of pro sports.