A comprehensive listing of the winners in all categories for thirteen major film awards, including the Oscars, Golden Globe, New York Film Critics Circle, Los Angeles Film Critics, and many other awards, from 1922 to 2003, featuring a detailed list of more than six thousand winners, along with a host of facts and trivia, scandals, controversies, surprises, and more than two hundred photographs. Original.
"This expanded and updated edition is the only official history of the Academy Awards and includes the titanic achievements of the 1997 Awards. 70 Years of the Oscar opens with...
This book lists the outstanding and notable films and acting of each year (and most of the time they're easy to spot), and also lists all the winners and nominees from each Academy Awards show, so we can all have a good laugh.
Reel Winners is the definitive guide to the inside scoop on movie awards.
A fascinating history of motion pictures through the lens of the Academy Awards, Best Pick provides a decade-by-decade look at the Oscars by examining the Best Picture winners, highest-grossing films, and biggest misses alongside a ...
The Golden Turkey Awards: Nominees and Winners, the Worst Achievements in Hollywood History
This was the year of instant classics like "12 Years a Slave," "Gravity," "Frozen," and "Captain Phillips." Each movie gets reviews and graded in this book (even the short films)!
But finding information about her father is so difficult that even her uncle Teardrop (John Hawkes) is reluctant to help (though it should be pointed out that he seems to be feared a bit himself). The story unravels at an unusual pace, ...
Copyright © Universal Studios Title: Bridesmaids Director: Paul Feig Starring: Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Rose Byrne, Melissa McCarthy, Wendi McLendon-Covey, Ellie Kemper, Chris O'Dowd, Jill Clayburgh Aspect Ratio: 1.85.1 Studio: ...
Redford helps make this movie a real nail-biter though because of his powerful performance. As mentioned before there is almost no dialog in the film, but Redford more than makes up for that by being a dominant presence.
The book shows how the Oscars are a litmus test, ultimately reflecting what degree our society has truly embraced diversity within the hallowed confines of our sacred imaginations"--