Re-picking Best Picture winners from 1985 to today

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February 12, 2018
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Re-picking Best Picture winners from 1985 to today

While "there's no accounting for taste" is a clich茅 for a reason, when it comes to the Academy voters, there has been a lot of taste accounting done. But as film critic Mick LaSalle explained , some of the conventional wisdom around Best Picture prognosticating (epics, war movies, historical dramas, etc.) has changed since the voting process was tweaked in 2009. Before that point, there were five nominees, and the film that got the most votes (which could've been as low as 21%) would win鈥攏ow there can be as many as 10 nominees and voters rank the films from first to last. Before 2009, big dumb movies that employed a lot of people tended to win (Best Picture is voted on by directors and actors, but also set designers, CGI people, etc.). Since 2009, smaller films have done much better, partly because people have strategically voted against front-runners, leading to several upsets (Argo over Lincoln, Spotlight over The Revenant, and Moonlight over La La Land).

But, even as voters have begun to move toward smaller, more transgressive films (and away from big boring "Oscar" films like Dances with Wolves), they still manage to get it wrong about as much as they get it right. So, we at 麻豆原创 decided to do some taste accounting of our own, and to join in on the best part of Oscar season: making the case for who really should have won. By using a 麻豆原创 Score that incorporates IMDb ratings and Rotten Tomatoes, we have re-picked the Best Picture for every Academy Awards since 1985. Each year's real winner is the film with the highest score among the nominees (ties are broken by total number of IMDb votes). So let's go grab Little Gold Men from the La La Lands of years past and hand them to the films that really should have won the biggest award of them all...  

1985 - Amadeus

Actual winner: Amadeus

Repicked Winner: Amadeus (麻豆原创 Score: 89.00; IMDb rating: 8.3; Tomatometer: 95%)

Other nominees: The Killing Fields (86.00), Places in the Heart (84.50), A Soldier's Story (80.50), A Passage to India (79.50)

Hollywood鈥檚 1984 was an absolute beast when it came to blockbuster hits. The year in movies gave us The Karate Kid, Ghostbusters, Beverly Hills Cop, The Terminator, Gremlins, an Indiana Jones and Splash (the original fish-love epic). It also gave us a wonderful, informative, wildly fun epic about Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Tom Hulce) and his rival, Antonio Salieri (F. Murray Abraham). This year, Hollywood was winning at the box office, and the Academy was spot on at its awards show too.  

1986 - Witness

Actual winner: Out of Africa

Repicked winner: Witness (麻豆原创 Score: 83.00; IMDb rating: 7.4; Tomatometer: 92%)

Other nominees: The Color Purple (83.00), Kiss of the Spider Woman (81.00), Prizzi's Honor (78.00), Out of Africa (64.50)

This is where things start to get tricky with re-picking awards. By no means, all other factors aside, should Out of Africa, a mess of a colonial love story starring Robert Redford and Meryl Streep, have won Best Picture at the 1986 Academy Awards. But director Sydney Pollack (Three Days of the Condor, Tootsie) entered the Awards season seeming like he absolutely should鈥檝e won some Academy Awards already. Witness (a thriller starring Harrison Ford) and The Color Purple (Steven Spielberg's adaptation of the Alice Walker novel starring Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey) are much better films, but it was Pollack鈥檚 time to be awarded in the Academy鈥檚 eyes. This is another case of right man, wrong movie, which is a classic Oscars issue.  

 

1987 - A Room with a View

Actual winner: Platoon

Repicked winner: A Room with a View (麻豆原创 Score: 87.00; IMDb rating: 7.4; Tomatometer: 100%)

Other nominees: Hannah and Her Sisters (86.50), Platoon (84.50), Children of a Lesser God (76.50), The Mission (70.00)

This intellectual, witty and funny adaptation of E.M Forster鈥檚 novel could not be less like Oliver Stone鈥檚 Vietnam epic, Platoon, which actually won the 1987 Best Picture award. With A Room with a View, director James Ivory (who wrote this year鈥檚 Call Me By Your Name) offered his take on the British upper class during the early 20th Century. The result was consistently smart, perfectly acted (with an incredible debut by Helena Bonham Carter) and even pleasant to watch, which no one has ever said about an Oliver Stone film. Another point for Ivory: Unlike Stone, he has never made a four-hour love letter to Vladimir Putin.

1988 - The Last Emperor

Actual winner: The Last Emperor

Repicked winner: The Last Emperor (麻豆原创 Score: 85.00; IMDb rating: 7.8; Tomatometer: 92%)

Other nominees: Broadcast News (85.00), Hope and Glory (84.00), Moonstruck (81.50), Fatal Attraction (73.50)

The Last Emperor is an epic through and through鈥攁 sweeping storyline with grand visuals and, of course, an imposing run-time. But Bernardo Bertolucci鈥檚 film, which follows the life of Pu-Yi, from his lavish childhood through the rise of the Red Army in China, is breathtaking enough to look and holds the viewer鈥檚 interest throughout. While the case can certainly be made for Albert Brooks鈥 classic Broadcast News鈥攚hich actually tied The Last Emperor in its 麻豆原创 Score鈥攖his is assuredly not one of the great Oscar heists.

1989 - Rain Man

Actual winner: Rain Man

Repicked winner: Rain Man (麻豆原创 Score: 84.50; IMDb rating: 8.0; Tomatometer: 89%)

Other nominees: Dangerous Liaisons (84.50), Mississippi Burning (83.50), Working Girl (76.00), The Accidental Tourist (74.00)

While all the Dangerous Liaisons-hive may argue (I see you out there, still shipping Malkovich/Pfeiffer), Rain Man rightfully won Best Picture in 1989. Director Barry Levinson's film tells the story of a handsome jerk (Tom Cruise) who takes his estranged autistic brother (who also happens to be a savant) on a cross-country road-trip to try to get a piece of their father's fortune. It is fast-paced, fun and heartbreaking at times. Tom Cruise is at absolute peak Cruise, and manages to make you hate, root against, root for, and then love him as the movie's protagonist.    

1990 - My Left Foot

Actual winner: Driving Miss Daisy

Repicked winner: My Left Foot (麻豆原创 Score: 88.00; IMDb rating: 7.9; Tomatometer: 97%)

Other nominees: Dead Poets Society (83.50), Born on the Fourth of July (81.00), Field of Dreams (80.50), Driving Miss Daisy (78.00)

Driving Miss Daisy is perfect Academy catnip. Two great actors鈥擬organ Freeman and Jessica Tandy鈥攊nvestigating a relationship over many, many years. But, then again, My Left Foot, the story of a difficult man with cerebral palsy who becomes an accomplished writer/painter using only his left foot, also checks a lot of Oscar voter boxes. The absolutely astounding performance by Daniel Day-Lewis turns a biopic we鈥檝e seen before into something else entirely. Though Kevin Costner playing catch with his dad in Field of Dreams is a scene for the ages, My Left Foot deserved the Oscar this year.

1991 - Goodfellas

Actual winner: Dances with Wolves

Repicked winner: Goodfellas (麻豆原创 Score: 91.00; IMDb rating: 8.7; Tomatometer: 95%)

Other nominees: Awakenings (83.00), Dances with Wolves (81.00), Ghost (72.00), The Godfather: Part III (71.50)

Decisions like the one the Academy made in 1991 are why lists like this exist. At no point during Dances with Wolves鈥擪evin Costner鈥檚 bloated epic about a Union soldier assigned to Sioux land in South Dakota who falls for the Native American culture鈥攄oes a character explain the optimal way to slice garlic. The film never gets close to the propulsive fun that runs through the entirety (at least until the helicopters show up) of Martin Scorsese's gangster masterpiece. Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci, Ray Liotta, Lorraine Bracco and every other gangster movie bitplayer are perfect in this film. No one has ever said, 鈥淎s far back as I can remember, I always wanted to be Kevin Costner with a bad mustache鈥.鈥  

1992 - The Silence of the Lambs

Actual winner: The Silence of the Lambs

Repicked winner: The Silence of the Lambs (麻豆原创 Score: 90.50; IMDb rating: 8.6; Tomatometer: 95%)

Other nominees: JFK (82.00), Bugsy (76.50), Beauty and the Beast (75.50), The Prince of Tides (70.00)

In many ways, Jonathan Demme鈥檚 The Silence of the Lambs never should have won an Oscar鈥攈orror movies don鈥檛 win Oscars, and February releases rarely receive awards. And yet, buoyed by legendary performances by Sir Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster, and up against a truly terrible slate of films, the murderous classic swept the Big 4 (Picture, Actor, Actress, Director). The only real controversy of the 1992 Awards is if Hopkins really deserved Best Actor when he was only seen on screen for 16 minutes. Winning a Little Golden Man for under 20 minutes of work? The knighted thespian is nothing if not efficient.

1993 - Unforgiven

Actual winner: Unforgiven

Repicked winner: Unforgiven (麻豆原创 Score: 89.00; IMDb rating: 8.2; Tomatometer: 96%)

Other nominees: Howards End (86.00), The Crying Game (85.00), Scent of a Woman (84.00), A Few Good Men (79.00)

Clint Eastwood鈥檚 magnificent Western manages to strip the genre of its varnish to create a brutal and beautiful film about the rough reality of the Wild West. Eastwood, Gene Hackman, and Morgan Freeman are all fantastic (Hackman won Best Supporting Actor and Eastwood Best Director). In the worst case of right man, wrong movie, Al Pacino won Best Actor over Eastwood, Denzel Washington, and Robert Downey Jr. The only downside of this masterpiece is that it means Eastwood can keep directing films forever鈥攊t鈥檚 frightening to imagine what comes next after The 15:17 to Paris. 

1994 - Schindler's List

Actual winner: Schindler's List

Repicked winner: Schindler's List (麻豆原创 Score: 93.00; IMDb rating: 8.9; Tomatometer: 97%)

Other nominees: The Remains of the Day (88.00), In the Name of the Father (87.50), The Fugitive (87.00), The Piano (83.00)

There was no question that Schindler's List would win the Oscar this year. The heartbreaking yet humanity-affirming tale of Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson), a greedy German businessman who eventually risks his life to save his Jewish workers from the Nazis was expertly directed by Steven Spielberg and populated with fantastic performances from Ralph Fiennes, Ben Kingsley and, of course, Neeson. And looking back, it's clear that the story remains important today. Neeson has become everybody's favorite Vengeful Action Dad, but hopefully, he has the opportunity to give another performance like this one.

1995 - The Shawshank Redemption

Actual winner: Forrest Gump

Repicked winner: The Shawshank Redemption (麻豆原创 Score: 92.00; IMDb rating: 9.3; Tomatometer: 91%)

Other nominees: Pulp Fiction (91.50), Quiz Show (85.50), Four Weddings and a Funeral (83.00), Forrest Gump (79.50)

The 1995 Academy Awards was an unfortunate perfect storm of Industry Favorites (Tom Hanks, Robert Zemeckis) mixed with Nostalgia Porn that almost guaranteed Forrest Gump this award. In retrospect, it鈥檚 amazing that the film that launched a thousand locations of Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. beat out Shawshank Redemption, Frank Darabont鈥檚 endlessly rewatchable adaption of the Stephen King short story, or Pulp Fiction, Quentin Tarantino鈥檚 electrifying, hilarious, inventive classic. Darabont gave us Morgan Freeman, and Tarantino brought John Travolta back from the dead鈥攃learly one of them deserved this award.    

1996 - Sense and Sensibility

Actual winner: Braveheart

Repicked winner: Sense and Sensibility (麻豆原创 Score: 87.50; IMDb rating: 7.7; Tomatometer: 98%)

Other nominees: Apollo 13 (85.50), Il Postino (85.00), Babe (82.50), Braveheart (80.50)

Sense and Sensibility is the best Jane Austen adaptation to date, with a wonderful performance by Emma Thompson (who also wrote the film). The film manages to tell the story grandly, with elegant costumes, while keeping Austen鈥檚 wit throughout. But it was up against two truly gigantic films鈥攖he story of NASA鈥檚 fight to save a spaceship and the story of William Wallace鈥檚 Scottish rebellion. Braveheart won the award, and it seems likely Apollo 13 came in second鈥攖he Academy loves war and is entranced by space.

 

1997 - Secrets & Lies

Actual winner: The English Patient

Repicked winner: Secrets & Lies (麻豆原创 Score: 87.50; IMDb rating: 8.0; Tomatometer: 95%)

Other nominees: Fargo (87.00), Shine (84.00), The English Patient (79.00), Jerry Maguire (78.00)

There鈥檚 not a lot to remember about The English Patient鈥攖he World War II epic about an English burn victim with an oh-so-long story to tell. The film鈥檚 best moment came soon after the awards, when it appeared in a Seinfeld episode as the bane of Elaine鈥檚 existence. The English Patient winning this award was extra painful because Mike Leigh鈥檚 Secrets & Lies, which won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival, was a beautiful look at a complicated family, and Fargo, the Coen Brothers鈥 finest film, is a hilarious, engrossing, incredibly inventive story. This was an example of the Academy picking the film that felt like a Best Picture winner, rather than awarding the best film of the year.

1998 - L.A. Confidential

Actual winner: Titanic

Repicked winner: L.A. Confidential (麻豆原创 Score: 91.00; IMDb rating: 8.3; Tomatometer: 99%)

Other nominees: Good Will Hunting (90.00), The Full Monty (83.50), Titanic (83.00), As Good as It Gets (80.50)

It seems our revisionist understanding of James Cameron鈥檚 (spoiler-alert) sunken boat epic has finally jumped the shark. Sure, Titanic is long. Certainly, the Celine Dion soundtrack is a bit over the top. Without a doubt, Rose could鈥檝e moved over and saved Jack. But for the Academy to award L.A. Confidential鈥攖he Kevin Spacey and Russell Crowe 1950s LA noir film鈥攐ver the film that broke every box office record and a million teenagers鈥 hearts would have been out of touch, even by the Oscar鈥檚 standards. To have it ranked under The Full Monty feels like Leonardo DiCaprio haters fudging the numbers.

1999 - Saving Private Ryan

Actual winner: Shakespeare in Love

Repicked winner: Saving Private Ryan (麻豆原创 Score: 89.00; IMDb rating: 8.6; Tomatometer: 92%)

Other nominees: Life Is Beautiful (83.00), Shakespeare in Love (82.00), Elizabeth (78.50), The Thin Red Line (77.50)

Directed by John Madden (not the Master of the Telestrator), Shakespeare in Love is a perfectly fine romantic comedy (starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Joseph Fiennes) that got elevated to award-winning status because of its period setting. While Saving Private Ryan is a bit overrated, it's probably because it so clearly should've won the Oscar in this underwhelming class of nominees. The gigantic Steven Spielberg-directed war epic鈥攕tarring almost every approachable handsome white male in Hollywood (Tom Hanks, Matt Damon, Ed Burns, etc.)鈥攊s beautifully shot and exciting, even if the igniting plot point is a bit flimsy. But putting the reality of saving a single private to relieve the suffering of a mother aside, this movie absolutely should have beaten out Shakespeare in Love for the 1999 award.

2000 - The Insider

Actual winner: American Beauty

Repicked winner: The Insider (麻豆原创 Score: 87.50; IMDb rating: 7.9; Tomatometer: 96%)

Other nominees: American Beauty (86.00), The Sixth Sense (83.00), The Green Mile (82.50), The Cider House Rules (72.50)

American Beauty鈥攖he darkly wry look at late-鈥90s suburban dread鈥攚as a mammoth debut by director Sam Mendes. Obviously, the recent revelations about Kevin Spacey鈥檚 misconduct have made the disturbingly funny film (in which Spacey falls for a high schooler) feel like something else. But aside from Spacey (who is fantastic in the role), Annette Bening also gives one of her best performances. By no means was this an outlandish Oscar snub, but The Insider鈥擬ichael Mann鈥檚 thriller that follows a cigarette company researcher (Russell Crowe) who decides to appear in a 鈥60 Minutes鈥 expos茅 (reported by Al Pacino)鈥攁bsolutely would have been deserving of the award. Also, if you鈥檙e keeping score at home, this is the start of one of the greatest three-year runs in Oscar history for Crowe.

2001 - Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

Actual winner: Gladiator

Repicked winner: Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (麻豆原创 Score: 88.00; IMDb rating: 7.9; Tomatometer: 97%)

Other nominees: Traffic (84.00), Gladiator (80.50), Erin Brockovich (78.50), Chocolat (67.50)

It wasn鈥檛 shocking that Gladiator鈥攖he most traditionally Best Picture-y film in this class of nominees鈥攖ook home the 2001 award. The epic story of a Roman general turned slave, turned revolutionary was expertly directed by Ridley Scott and features big-time performances by Russell Crowe and Joaquin Phoenix. But Ang Lee鈥檚 magical film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, which tells of a stolen sword and a warrior鈥檚 love story in 19th-century China, was a much more inventive and difficult story-telling feat. Steven Soderbergh鈥檚 Traffic, which weaved interlocking stories of drugs and the border together (and featured amazing performances from Michael Douglas, Benicio del Toro and Catherine Zeta-Jones), also had a real chance to win the award.

2002 - The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring

Actual winner: A Beautiful Mind

Repicked winner: The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (麻豆原创 Score: 89.50; IMDb rating: 8.8; Tomatometer: 91%)

Other nominees: In the Bedroom (84.00), Gosford Park (79.50), A Beautiful Mind (78.50), Moulin Rouge! (76.00)

While A Beautiful Mind is by no means a perfect film, this is a good reminder of why the Academy exists in the first place. Peter Jackson鈥檚 The Lord of the Rings films are perfectly fun, gigantically epic retellings of J.R.R. Tolkien鈥檚 epic masterpieces. But, no matter how pretty New Zealand looks in Jackson鈥檚 camera, this is not a Best Picture film (Liv Tyler plays an elf, for god鈥檚 sake!). Ron Howard鈥檚 biographical look at the life of mentally ill mathematician John Nash (Russell Crowe) has some issues (missing pieces that complicate Nash鈥檚 history), but is a much weightier film than Jackson鈥檚 first LOTR.  

2003 - The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

Actual winner: Chicago

Repicked winner: The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (麻豆原创 Score: 91.00; IMDb rating: 8.7; Tomatometer: 95%)

Other nominees: The Pianist (90.50), Chicago (79.00), The Hours (78.00), Gangs of New York (75.00)

All of the same points apply for Peter Jackson鈥檚 second Lord of the Rings entry鈥攁 fun, exciting film that is just not Best Picture-worthy. However, that doesn鈥檛 mean the actual winner, Chicago鈥攖he adaptation of the Broadway musical starring Richard Gere, Catherine Zeta-Jones, and Ren茅e Zellweger鈥攚as any more deserving. In reality, the dark, haunting Holocaust film, The Pianist, starring Adrien Brody as Polish composer Wladyslaw Szpilman and directed by Roman Polanski, probably deserved this year鈥檚 award.

2004 - The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

Actual winner: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

Repicked winner: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (麻豆原创 Score: 91.50; IMDb rating: 8.9; Tomatometer: 94%)

Other nominees: Lost in Translation (86.50), Mystic River (84.00), Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (79.00), Seabiscuit (75.00)

Once again, it must be said, you just can't give Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King a Best Picture Oscar. Obviously, this is a bit of a "Wow, you really made these three films in three years" award from the Academy鈥攂ut the multiple endings alone should have disqualified this film. Also, a world where a LOTR film can win Best Picture is a world where a Star Wars or Marvel film can as well. Are you really ready for that reality? Sofia Coppola's wonderfully lovely, morose Lost in Translation (which showcased the genius of Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson (as well as Coppola and Spike Jonze's unparalleled abilities to put characters portraying the other into films) was much more deserving of this award. Also, worth noting, Russell Crowe (Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World) starred in a Best Picture nominee four of the five years to start the 2000s, and five of seven between 1998 and 2004.

2005 - Million Dollar Baby

Actual winner: Million Dollar Baby

Repicked winner: Million Dollar Baby (麻豆原创 Score: 86.00; IMDb rating: 8.1; Tomatometer: 91%)

Other nominees: Sideways (85.50), The Aviator (81.00), Finding Neverland (79.50), Ray (79.00)

Though sometimes overrun with clich茅, as sports film tend to be, Million Dollar Baby reaches Best Picture heights because of incredible performances by Hilary Swank and Morgan Freeman. Clint Eastwood directed the film, and also stars as a gruff boxing trainer (which is not a stretch for the Brando of Gruff). Alexander Payne鈥檚 Sideways was good, but not quite consequential enough to earn the award, and The Aviator was inches away from great (but every inch matters when the room is filled with jars of urine).

2006 - Good Night, and Good Luck.

Actual winner: Crash

Repicked winner: Good Night, and Good Luck (麻豆原创 Score: 84.00; IMDb rating: 7.5; Tomatometer: 93%)

Other nominees: Brokeback Mountain (82.00), Capote (82.00), Crash (76.50), Munich (76.50)

Crash鈥攖he messy, sometimes boring Paul Haggis film鈥攊s regularly brought up as one of the Best Pictures the Academy wants back. The movie bucked a trend where unlike most Best Pictures, the film was not nominated for any Golden Globe best film categories, making it one of only two movies to do so. George Clooney鈥檚 overly on-the-nose look at the heroic stand Edward R. Murrow takes against McCarthyism was nominated in six Oscar categories, but took not a single one.

2007 - The Departed

Actual winner: The Departed

Repicked winner: The Departed (麻豆原创 Score: 88.00; IMDb rating: 8.5; Tomatometer: 91%)

Other nominees: Letters from Iwo Jima (85.00), The Queen (85.00), Little Miss Sunshine (84.50), Babel (72.00)

The Departed is an endlessly watchable cable movie, and probably did deserve the 2007 Academy Award. Martin Scorsese鈥檚 film tells the overlapping stories of a cop (Leonardo DiCaprio) that infiltrates a South Boston Irish mob and a gangster (Matt Damon) that infiltrates Boston鈥檚 police department. Jack Nicholson plays mob boss Frank Costello, who seems more than loosely based on actual crime boss Whitey Bulger. Always entertaining and overflowing with talented actors, this film still feels a bit odd as a Best Picture winner, mainly as it so clearly not even close to Scorsese鈥檚 finest work. It鈥檚 another example of right man, wrong movie, though in this case, none of the other nominees are more deserving.  

2008 - No Country for Old Men

Actual winner: No Country for Old Men

Repicked winner: No Country for Old Men (麻豆原创 Score: 87.00; IMDb rating: 8.1; Tomatometer: 93%)

Other nominees: There Will Be Blood (86.00), Juno (84.50), Michael Clayton (81.50), Atonement (80.50)

2008 was an absolutely loaded Best Picture class. In almost any other year, There Will Be Blood鈥擯aul Thomas Anderson鈥檚 oil baron epic starring the unmatchable Daniel Day-Lewis and a wonderfully creepy Paul Dano鈥攚ould have won Best Picture. There鈥檚 a pretty good argument to be made that it should have won anyway. But the Coen Brothers鈥 adaptation of Cormac McCarthy鈥檚 No Country for Old Men is another absolutely unimpeachable film. Tommy Lee Jones plays an old sheriff confronting an evil he鈥檇 hoped to never see (Javier Bardem), while Josh Brolin tries to run for his life with the suitcase full of money that he鈥檚 found. Incredibly, both films were shot simultaneously in the small West Texas town of Marfa.  

2009 - Slumdog Millionaire

Actual winner: Slumdog Millionaire

Repicked winner: Slumdog Millionaire (麻豆原创 Score: 86.00; IMDb rating: 8.0; Tomatometer: 92%)

Other nominees: Milk (85.00), Frost/Nixon (84.50), The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (75.00), The Reader (69.00)

Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire has no business working as well as it does. Framed around the Indian version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire?, the film shows how an orphan from the slums of Mumbai (Dev Patel) could know the answer to every question posed to him. Two important other notes on the 2009 Academy Awards: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is one of the worst movies ever made by extremely capable actors and a great director; if There Will Be Blood had come out a year later, P.T. Anderson's film would have won every single award.

2010 - Up

Actual winner: The Hurt Locker

Repicked winner: Up (麻豆原创 Score: 90.50; IMDb rating: 8.3; Tomatometer: 98%)

Other nominees: The Hurt Locker (86.50), Inglourious Basterds (85.50), District 9 (85.00), An Education (84.00), Up in the Air (82.50), Precious (82.00), Avatar (80.50), A Serious Man (80.00), The Blind Side (72.00)

In this field of nominees, populated with wonderfully entertaining romps (Inglourious Basterds), Pocahontas remakes (Avatar), fun weird sci-fi (District 9), and touching yet controversial sports movies (The Blind Side), it makes sense that Kathryn Bigelow鈥檚 Iraq War epic won Best Picture. The film is incredibly intense, well acted (Jeremy Renner, Anthony Mackie and Guy Pearce are all great), and impressively poignant commenting on an ongoing war. But, in a crowded year without a truly standout masterpiece, it should have been the Pixar animated film. Up is the only film in the field that can make even the Gruffest Brando laugh, smile and cry.    

2011 - Toy Story 3

Actual winner: The King鈥檚 Speech

Repicked winner: Toy Story 3 (麻豆原创 Score: 91.00; IMDb rating: 8.3; Tomatometer: 99%)

Other nominees: The King's Speech (87.50), Inception (87.00), The Social Network (86.50), True Grit (85.50), 127 Hours (84.50), The Fighter (84.00), Black Swan (83.00), Winter's Bone (83.00), The Kids Are All Right (81.50)

While The King鈥檚 Speech鈥攚hich tells the story of Bertie, the unlikely new King of England, working with a speech therapist to overcome a stutter to give a much-needed rousing radio-address鈥攚as a bit of a meh Best Picture winner, it made perfect sense based on the Academy鈥檚 taste. Toy Story's third and final installment was a tear jerker, and could have been a hat tip to one of the most classic trilogies of the 21st century.

2012 - The Artist

Actual winner: The Artist

Repicked winner: The Artist (麻豆原创 Score: 87.50; IMDb rating: 7.9; Tomatometer: 96%)

Other nominees: Midnight in Paris (85.00), Moneyball (85.00), Hugo (84.50), The Descendants (81.00), The Help (78.00), The Tree of Life (76.00), War Horse (74.00), Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (57.50)

The Artist is catnip for the Academy鈥攊t鈥檚 a period piece, overly stylized and reverential to the good ol鈥 days of Hollywood. The silent film is impressively made and does feature a truly great performance by a Jack Russell, but it simply feels too cute by half. In this field, there isn鈥檛 a clear snub (Midnight in Paris is incredibly fun, but also not quite serious enough to deserve the top honor).

2013 - Argo

Actual winner: Argo

Repicked winner: Argo (麻豆原创 Score: 86.50; IMDb rating: 7.7; Tomatometer: 96%)

Other nominees: Amour (86.00), Django Unchained (85.50), Silver Linings Playbook (85.00), Life of Pi (83.00), Zero Dark Thirty (82.50), Lincoln (82.00), Beasts of the Southern Wild (79.50), Les Mis茅rables (72.50)

Based on the fantastic Wired article by Joshuah Bearman, Argo tells the story of the CIA鈥檚 unlikely ploy to rescue six American hostages being held in Tehran. Ben Affleck does an impressive job directing and starring in the film, and Bryan Cranston, Alan Arkin and John Goodman are all wonderful as the supporting cast. Argo is a deserving enough Best Picture winner, but was less affecting than Zero Dark Thirty, and much less inventive than Silver Linings Playbook. It was amazing that the tiny Beasts of the Southern Wild was even nominated, but at the same time, it was the most wonderful film of the year.

2014 - 12 Years a Slave

Actual winner: 12 Years a Slave

Repicked winner: 12 Years a Slave (麻豆原创 Score: 88.50; IMDb rating: 8.1; Tomatometer: 96%)

Other nominees: Gravity (87.00), Her (87.00), Dallas Buyers Club (86.50), Captain Phillips (85.50), Nebraska (84.00), Philomena (84.00), American Hustle (83.00), The Wolf of Wall Street (80.00)

In 2014, there was an incredibly impressive slate of nominees, but Steve McQueen's 12 Years a Slave鈥攚hich tells the true story of a Northern musician kidnapped and sold into slavery on an Antebellum plantation鈥攈it the right balance of powerful storytelling, beautiful direction and affecting performances (Chiwetel Ejiofor, Lupita Nyong'o and Michael Fassbender were all nominated, and Nyong'o won Best Supporting Actress). A handful of other nominees were deserving and could have won in another year: Spike Jonze's Her was gorgeously original (and had a great Sofia Coppola stand-in), Dallas Buyers Club was overflowing with transformative performances, Gravity was a masterclass in filmmaking, and The Wolf of Wall Street was a darn good time. Nebraska and Philomena were both small, intimate, deeply beautiful films.

2015 - Whiplash

Actual winner: Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)

Repicked winner: Whiplash (麻豆原创 Score: 89.50; IMDb rating: 8.5; Tomatometer: 94%)

Other nominees: Boyhood (88.00), Selma (87.00), The Grand Budapest Hotel (86.50), The Imitation Game (85.50), Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (84.50), The Theory of Everything (77.50), American Sniper (72.50)

Damien Chazelle鈥檚 Whiplash was about as meteoric a debut as one can imagine. The young director鈥檚 film tracked a jazz drummer (Miles Teller) and his demanding/sadistic teacher (J.K. Simmons) and muses on what the artist must give up in order to make great art. It went from Sundance darling to legitimate Oscar contender. The stylish, hilarious, bizarre Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) ended up winning the big award, but it seems clear Chazelle will get one sooner than later. His film La La Land literally had the award in its hands before Moonlight was named Best Picture last year鈥攈is next film, which stars Ryan Gosling as Neil Armstrong is already a front-runner.

2016 - Mad Max: Fury Road

Actual winner: Spotlight

Repicked winner: Mad Max: Fury Road (麻豆原创 Score: 89.00; IMDb rating: 8.1; Tomatometer: 97%)

Other nominees: Spotlight (89.00), Room (88.00), Brooklyn (86.00), The Martian (85.50), Bridge of Spies (83.50), The Big Short (83.00), The Revenant (80.00)

In times like these, a film like Tom McCarthy鈥檚 Spotlight鈥攚hich tells the story of The Boston Globe uncovering the massive sex abuse scandal in the Catholic Church鈥攕eems extra important. As the President attacks the free press, it seems important to lionize great journalists doing the hard work of exposing the evils of the powerful. But, if we鈥檙e being honest, the best film of 2016 was another disturbingly relatable movie; this one telling the story of a post-apocalyptic hellscape in which a powerful woman (Charlize Theron) leads a rebellion against a ghoulish tyrant with bad hair and many brides. George Miller鈥檚 film was such an unexpected joy, but was probably a step too far for some Academy voters.

2017 - Manchester by the Sea

Actual winner: Moonlight

Repicked winner: Manchester by the Sea (麻豆原创 Score: 87.00; IMDb rating: 7.9; Tomatometer: 95%)

Other nominees: Arrival (86.50), La La Land (86.50), Moonlight (86.50), Hell or High Water (86.50), Hidden Figures (85.50), Hacksaw Ridge (84.00), Lion (83.50), Fences (83.00)

As discussed earlier, the Academy loves films about art in LA (La La Land), loves films about space (Arrival and Hidden Figures), and loves films about war (Hacksaw Ridge)鈥 though director Barry Jenkins鈥 Moonlight鈥攚hich features jaw-dropping performances from Mahershala Ali and Naomie Harris鈥攆eatured none of the above, it was such an overwhelmingly beautiful, breathtaking film that it was able to take home the award. Still, when looking at the data in retrospect, Manchester by the Sea鈥擪enneth Lonergan鈥檚 absolutely tragic movie about a depressed uncle (Casey Affleck) raising his nephew after his brother (Kyle Chandler) dies鈥攕hould have won.

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