#Harvest Talk 1953
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cosmicanger · 2 years ago
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Charles White, “Harvest Talk,” 1953/The Art Institute of Chicago, The Charles White Archives Inc.
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brookston · 9 months ago
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Holidays 2.21
Holidays
Alka Seltzer Day
Armed Forces Day (South Africa)
Ben Appreciation Day
Break Up Day (India)
Card Reading Day
Communist Manifesto Day
Father W.H. Lini Day (Vanuatu)
Find Out My Breast Density Day
Freedom of Worship Day (France)
International Mother Language Day (UN)
International Tourist Guide Day
Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day
John Lewis Day
King Harald V Day (Norway)
Kurt Cobain Day (Aberdeen, Washington)
Labor Day (Oregon; Original Date, 1st State Observance)
Language Movement Day (a.k.a. Shahid Dibosh; Bangladesh)
Locomotive Day
Matthiola Day (French Republic)
Mental Health Nurses Day (UK)
Musikahan Festival begins (Philippines) [thru 2.27]
Nascar Day
National Pillow on Head Day
National Waste Awareness Day (Indonesia)
New Yorker Magazine Day
Nina Simone Day (Tyron, North Carolina)
Red Books Day
Remember the Funniest Thing Your Child Ever Did Day
Robert Gabriel Mugabe National Youth Day (Zimbabwe)
Sandino Day (Nicaragua)
Sewing Machine Day
Single-Tasking Day
Telephone Book Day
Washington Monument Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Drink It Now Day
National Biscuits & Gravy Day
National Grain-Free Day
National Malört Day
National Sticky Bun Day
World Kombucha Day
3rd Wednesday in February
National RA Appreciation Day [3rd Wednesday]
Weekly Holidays beginning February 21
Potahto Week (Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada) [thru 3.1]
Independence & Related Days
Aulpannian Shatidom (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
British Protectorate in Egypt ended (1922)
South Formosa (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
Festivals Beginning February 21, 2024
National Watermelon Association Convention (Scottsdale, Arizona) [thru 2.25]
Noise Pop Festival (San Francisco, California) [thru 2.27]
NordicFuzzCon (Malmö, Sweden) [thru 2.25]
30A Wine Festival (Ales Beach, Florida) [thru 2.25]
Feast Days
Anais Nin (Writerism)
Blue Dragon Festival (China) [2nd Day of 2nd Lunar Month]
Boris Karloff Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Daniel, priest, and Verde, virgin (Christian; Martyrs)
David Foster Wallace (Writerism)
Day Sacred to the Goddess Muta (a.k.a. Laranda; Ancient Rome)
Double Second Day (China) [2nd Day of 2nd Lunar Month]
Feast of Peace and Love (Ancient Rome)
Felix of Hadrumetum (Christian; Saint)
Feralia (Old Roman Spirits Festival)
Feralia — Day of Purification (Pagan)
George of Amastris (Christian; Saint)
German and Randaut (Christian; Martyrs)
Germanus of Granfel (Christian; Martyr)
Horace (Positivist; Saint)
Jean Louis Ernest Meissonier (Artology)
Mathilda (Muppetism)
Pepin of Landen (Christian; Saint)
Peter Damian (Christian; Saint)
Pyotr Konchalovsky (Artology)
Randoald of Grandval (Christian; Saint)
Seize a Sausage Day (Pastafarian)
Severianus, Bishop of Scythopolis (Christian; Saint)
Talk to a Goldfish Day (Pastafarian)
W.H. Auden (Writerism)
Yakuyoke Festival (a.k.a. Toshi-no-Matsuri; honoring Kami for bountiful rice harvest; Shinto)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Fortunate Day (Pagan) [8 of 53]
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 9 of 60)
Premieres
Alice at the Rodeo (Disney Cartoon; 1927)
The Alpine Yodeler, featuring Farmer Al Falfa (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1936)
Anna Christie (Film; 1930
Avatar: The Last Airbender (Anime TV Series; 2005)
Babylon Revisited, by F. Scott Fitzgerald (Short Story; 1931)
Bottle Rocket (Film; 1996)
Bullwinkle Makes a Hit or I Get a Bang Out of You (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S1, Ep. 25; 1960)
The Call of the Wild (Film; 2020)
Captains of the Clouds (Film; 1942)
The Conqueror (Film; 1956)
Emma (Film; 2020)
Fishing Made Easy (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1941)
The Gorilla Hunt (Color Rhapsody Cartoon; 1939)
The Hungry Wolf (MGM Cartoon; 1942)
Jerry and Jumbo (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1953)
King of America, by Elvis Costello (Album; 1986)
Kiss Me Car (WB LT Cartoon; 1953)
Le Bœuf sur le Toit (The Bull on the Roof), by Darius Milhaud & Jean Cocteau (Ballet; 1920)
Lipstick on Your Collar (Film; 1993)
The Night Clerk (Film; 2020)
The Night Manager (TV Mini-Series; 2016)
9-1/2 Weeks (Film; 1986)
Old School (Film; 2003)
Peg Leg Pete (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1932)
Pinkadilly Circus (Pink Panther Cartoon; 1968)
Pink Punch (Pink Panther Cartoon; 1966)
Real Time with Bill Maher (TV Series; 2003)
Rock and Roll, by Led Zeppelin (Song; 1972)
Suffering’ ’til Suffrage (America Rock Cartoon; Schoolhouse Rock; 1976)
Three on an Island or Tell It to the Maroons (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S1, Ep. 26; 1960)
The Wind Rises (Animated Studio Ghibli Film; 2014)
Yokel Boy Makes Good (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1938)
Today’s Name Days
Enrica, Gunthild, Petrus (Austria)
Damir, Natalija, Petar (Croatia)
Lenka (Czech Republic)
Samuel (Denmark)
Aavo, Auvo, Avo (Estonia)
Keijo (Finland)
Damien (France)
Enrica, Gunhild, Peter, Petrus (Germany)
Efstathios, Evstathios, Stathis (Greece)
Eleonóra (Hungary)
Eleonora, Leopoldo, Nora, Pier Damiani (Italy)
Eleonora (Latvia)
Eleonora, Feliksas, Kęstutis, Žemyna (Lithuania)
Celine, Samuel, Selma (Norway)
Eleonora, Feliks, Fortunat, Kiejstut, Teodor, Wyszeniega (Poland)
Eustatie, Timotei (Romania)
Eleonóra (Slovakia)
Pedro (Spain)
Hilding (Sweden)
Dallin, Doug, Douglas, Duff (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 52 of 2024; 314 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 3 of week 8 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Nuin (Ash) [Day 4 of 28]
Chinese: Month 1 (Bing-Yin), Day 12 (Yi-Mao)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025)
Hebrew: 12 Adair I 5784
Islamic: 11 Sha’ban 1445
J Cal: 22 Grey; Oneday [22 of 30]
Julian: 8 February 2024
Moon: 93%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 24 Homer (2nd Month) [Horace]
Runic Half Month: Sigel (Sun) [Day 13 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 63 of 89)
Week: 3rd Week of February
Zodiac: Pisces (Day 3 of 30)
0 notes
brookstonalmanac · 9 months ago
Text
Holidays 2.21
Holidays
Alka Seltzer Day
Armed Forces Day (South Africa)
Ben Appreciation Day
Break Up Day (India)
Card Reading Day
Communist Manifesto Day
Father W.H. Lini Day (Vanuatu)
Find Out My Breast Density Day
Freedom of Worship Day (France)
International Mother Language Day (UN)
International Tourist Guide Day
Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day
John Lewis Day
King Harald V Day (Norway)
Kurt Cobain Day (Aberdeen, Washington)
Labor Day (Oregon; Original Date, 1st State Observance)
Language Movement Day (a.k.a. Shahid Dibosh; Bangladesh)
Locomotive Day
Matthiola Day (French Republic)
Mental Health Nurses Day (UK)
Musikahan Festival begins (Philippines) [thru 2.27]
Nascar Day
National Pillow on Head Day
National Waste Awareness Day (Indonesia)
New Yorker Magazine Day
Nina Simone Day (Tyron, North Carolina)
Red Books Day
Remember the Funniest Thing Your Child Ever Did Day
Robert Gabriel Mugabe National Youth Day (Zimbabwe)
Sandino Day (Nicaragua)
Sewing Machine Day
Single-Tasking Day
Telephone Book Day
Washington Monument Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Drink It Now Day
National Biscuits & Gravy Day
National Grain-Free Day
National Malört Day
National Sticky Bun Day
World Kombucha Day
3rd Wednesday in February
National RA Appreciation Day [3rd Wednesday]
Weekly Holidays beginning February 21
Potahto Week (Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada) [thru 3.1]
Independence & Related Days
Aulpannian Shatidom (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
British Protectorate in Egypt ended (1922)
South Formosa (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
Festivals Beginning February 21, 2024
National Watermelon Association Convention (Scottsdale, Arizona) [thru 2.25]
Noise Pop Festival (San Francisco, California) [thru 2.27]
NordicFuzzCon (Malmö, Sweden) [thru 2.25]
30A Wine Festival (Ales Beach, Florida) [thru 2.25]
Feast Days
Anais Nin (Writerism)
Blue Dragon Festival (China) [2nd Day of 2nd Lunar Month]
Boris Karloff Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Daniel, priest, and Verde, virgin (Christian; Martyrs)
David Foster Wallace (Writerism)
Day Sacred to the Goddess Muta (a.k.a. Laranda; Ancient Rome)
Double Second Day (China) [2nd Day of 2nd Lunar Month]
Feast of Peace and Love (Ancient Rome)
Felix of Hadrumetum (Christian; Saint)
Feralia (Old Roman Spirits Festival)
Feralia — Day of Purification (Pagan)
George of Amastris (Christian; Saint)
German and Randaut (Christian; Martyrs)
Germanus of Granfel (Christian; Martyr)
Horace (Positivist; Saint)
Jean Louis Ernest Meissonier (Artology)
Mathilda (Muppetism)
Pepin of Landen (Christian; Saint)
Peter Damian (Christian; Saint)
Pyotr Konchalovsky (Artology)
Randoald of Grandval (Christian; Saint)
Seize a Sausage Day (Pastafarian)
Severianus, Bishop of Scythopolis (Christian; Saint)
Talk to a Goldfish Day (Pastafarian)
W.H. Auden (Writerism)
Yakuyoke Festival (a.k.a. Toshi-no-Matsuri; honoring Kami for bountiful rice harvest; Shinto)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Fortunate Day (Pagan) [8 of 53]
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 9 of 60)
Premieres
Alice at the Rodeo (Disney Cartoon; 1927)
The Alpine Yodeler, featuring Farmer Al Falfa (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1936)
Anna Christie (Film; 1930
Avatar: The Last Airbender (Anime TV Series; 2005)
Babylon Revisited, by F. Scott Fitzgerald (Short Story; 1931)
Bottle Rocket (Film; 1996)
Bullwinkle Makes a Hit or I Get a Bang Out of You (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S1, Ep. 25; 1960)
The Call of the Wild (Film; 2020)
Captains of the Clouds (Film; 1942)
The Conqueror (Film; 1956)
Emma (Film; 2020)
Fishing Made Easy (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1941)
The Gorilla Hunt (Color Rhapsody Cartoon; 1939)
The Hungry Wolf (MGM Cartoon; 1942)
Jerry and Jumbo (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1953)
King of America, by Elvis Costello (Album; 1986)
Kiss Me Car (WB LT Cartoon; 1953)
Le Bœuf sur le Toit (The Bull on the Roof), by Darius Milhaud & Jean Cocteau (Ballet; 1920)
Lipstick on Your Collar (Film; 1993)
The Night Clerk (Film; 2020)
The Night Manager (TV Mini-Series; 2016)
9-1/2 Weeks (Film; 1986)
Old School (Film; 2003)
Peg Leg Pete (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1932)
Pinkadilly Circus (Pink Panther Cartoon; 1968)
Pink Punch (Pink Panther Cartoon; 1966)
Real Time with Bill Maher (TV Series; 2003)
Rock and Roll, by Led Zeppelin (Song; 1972)
Suffering’ ’til Suffrage (America Rock Cartoon; Schoolhouse Rock; 1976)
Three on an Island or Tell It to the Maroons (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S1, Ep. 26; 1960)
The Wind Rises (Animated Studio Ghibli Film; 2014)
Yokel Boy Makes Good (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1938)
Today’s Name Days
Enrica, Gunthild, Petrus (Austria)
Damir, Natalija, Petar (Croatia)
Lenka (Czech Republic)
Samuel (Denmark)
Aavo, Auvo, Avo (Estonia)
Keijo (Finland)
Damien (France)
Enrica, Gunhild, Peter, Petrus (Germany)
Efstathios, Evstathios, Stathis (Greece)
Eleonóra (Hungary)
Eleonora, Leopoldo, Nora, Pier Damiani (Italy)
Eleonora (Latvia)
Eleonora, Feliksas, Kęstutis, Žemyna (Lithuania)
Celine, Samuel, Selma (Norway)
Eleonora, Feliks, Fortunat, Kiejstut, Teodor, Wyszeniega (Poland)
Eustatie, Timotei (Romania)
Eleonóra (Slovakia)
Pedro (Spain)
Hilding (Sweden)
Dallin, Doug, Douglas, Duff (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 52 of 2024; 314 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 3 of week 8 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Nuin (Ash) [Day 4 of 28]
Chinese: Month 1 (Bing-Yin), Day 12 (Yi-Mao)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025)
Hebrew: 12 Adair I 5784
Islamic: 11 Sha’ban 1445
J Cal: 22 Grey; Oneday [22 of 30]
Julian: 8 February 2024
Moon: 93%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 24 Homer (2nd Month) [Horace]
Runic Half Month: Sigel (Sun) [Day 13 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 63 of 89)
Week: 3rd Week of February
Zodiac: Pisces (Day 3 of 30)
0 notes
lecho · 7 years ago
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CHARLES WILBERT WHITE – African American Artist (1918 –  1979)
Charles White was born in Chicago in 1918. The son of an African-American domestic worker and a railroad dining car waiter of Native American ancestry, White grew up in extreme poverty. He showed an early interest in art, using found materials and an oil paint set that his mother bought him for his seventh birthday. Art became a refuge from the poverty and violence in his neighborhood and from the unhappiness in his home after his father died and then when his mother married a belligerent and often drunk steel mill worker. White would often spend hours alone at the public library or the Art Institute of Chicago, while his mother was working, fueling his imagination and expanding his public school education.
When he was in the seventh grade, White won a scholarship to attend Saturday classes at the Art Institute, providing his first formal lessons in art. At age fourteen, he worked as a sign painter, creating signs for theaters and local shops. He also joined the Arts and Crafts Guild of black artists, receiving further instruction in art and providing an opportunity for him to exhibit his work. Through the Guild, he began to meet other black artists and intellectuals, including Katherine Dunham, Richard Wright, and Gwendolyn Brooks. These meetings, his frequent trips to see family in Mississippi, and his continued visits to the public library, where he discovered the works of black writers, laid a foundation for his commitment to African-American social causes.
In 1936, while in high school, White won a scholarship to attend the Art Institute of Chicago. He began to address themes of the social injustices facing blacks and, in 1938, he began working on projects through the Works Progress Administration, including murals for auditoriums and exhibition halls. This led to the commission of his first mural: Five Great American Negroes.
White moved to New York in 1942, studying for a short period of time at the Art Students League, and forging numerous relationships with social activists, writers, musicians, and intellectuals. He continued to execute murals, studying and working for a time with David Alfaro Siqueiros and other Mexican muralists in Mexico City. He also continued his immersion in social causes, providing illustrations for several leftist publications. His travels through the south, where he personally experienced violence and racism, strengthened his resolve to battle social injustice through his art.
White contracted tuberculosis while serving in the Army in 1944, requiring extensive recuperation. Forced to limit his exposure to oil paints, he began to focus more on drawing, continuing to address universal subjects of social injustice, as well as depictions of specific incidents of African American history, such as The Trenton Six, a drawing based on the false arrest and imprisonment of six African American men. By the late 1940s, White had his first solo exhibition in New York, and soon was receiving substantial critical attention. In 1950, he married Frances Barrett, a social worker, and, to aid in his continued battle with tuberculosis, they moved to Los Angeles in 1956.
During the 1960s, White executed a series of massive drawings and continued to receive numerous solo exhibitions and honors, including an honorary doctor of arts degree from Columbia College in Chicago. From the late 1960s through the early 1970s, he created a series of "wanted" posters based on Civil War posters advertising runaway slaves and slave auctions. In the 1970s, he resumed painting, and continued to receive numerous honors, including his inclusion in the first all-black exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, solo exhibitions at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta and the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, and his appointment as Chair of the Drawing Department at Otis College of Art and Design. Continuing to suffer from the illness that he contracted while in the military, White died of congestive heart failure on October 3, 1979. His wife, Frances, died in 2000.
Besides being an artist of extraordinary ability, White was also a man of great integrity, honesty, and compassion. White's work and life were recently celebrated in a monograph written by Andrea Barnwell, Director of the Spelman College Museum of Fine Art. Writes Barnwell, "Charles White's art, easily identifiable by its bold figures, left an indelible imprint. This romantic revolutionary believed wholeheartedly in the art, mission, compassion, and dreams of all black people. Encapsulating the hopes and joys of humanity, his life and work encircle the globe."
http://www.cejjesinstitute.org/cwpp/biography.php
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arinewman7 · 3 years ago
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Harvest Talk
Charles White
1953
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Harvest Talk. 1953. - drawing by Charles White (African-American, 1918-1979), charcoal on paper
(***Click image or title link to view in high resolution***)
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dweemeister · 4 years ago
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The complete list of films featured in 2021′s “31 Days of Oscar” marathon
What follows is the exhaustive list of all 403 short- and feature-length films featured on this blog over the last thirty-one days for the 31 Days of Oscar marathon. This number is up from last year’s count of 327 and is the second-highest number of films I have ever featured in this marathon (behind the 410 films from 2016). Despite the number, this remains only a fraction of the nearly 5,000 films that have been nominated for Academy Awards. This year’s marathon was harder to plan than usual due to the fact it was presented in alphabetical order - with the exception of any write-ups I did.
BREAKDOWN BY DECADE 1927-1929: 7 1930s: 44 1940s: 63 1950s: 63 1960s: 46 1970s: 25 1980s: 29 1990s: 28 2000s: 25 2010s: 43 2020s: 30
Year with most representation (2020 excluded): 1940 (ten films) Median year: 1964
And now, the list. Best Picture winners and the one (and only) winner for Unique and Artistic Production are in bold. Asterisked (*) films are films I haven’t seen in their entirety as of the publishing of this post.
A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001)
Ace in the Hole (1951)
Adam’s Rib (1949)*
The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)
After the Thin Man (1936)*
Airport (1970)*
Aladdin (1992)
Albert Nobbs (2011)
Alexander’s Ragtime Band (1938)
All Quiet on the Western Front (1930)
Almost Famous (2000)
An American in Paris (1951)
Anastasia (1956)
Anatomy of a Murder (1959)
Annie (1982)
Around the World in Eighty Days (1956)
Arrival (2016)
Au Revoir Les Enfants (1987, France)
The Awful Truth (1937)
Babe (1995)
Baby Doll (1956)*
Ballad of a Soldier (1959, Soviet Union)*
The Band Wagon (1953)
Bao (2018 short)
Ben-Hur (1959)
Berkeley Square (1933)
The Best Man (1964)
Better Days (2019, Hong Kong)*
The Big Chill (1983)*
The Birds (1963)
Birds Anonymous (1957 short)
Black Orpheus (1959, Brazil)
BlacKkKlansman (2018)
Blue Velvet (1986)
Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (2006)*
Borat Subsequent Moviefilm: Delivery of Prodigious Bribe to American Regime for Make Benefit Once Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (2020)*
The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
Brief Encounter (1945)
Brotherhood (2018 short, Tunisia/Canada/Qatar/Sweden)
Cabin in the Sky (1943)
Calamity Jane (1953)
Carol (2015)*
Casablanca (1942)
Casino (1995)*
Charade (1963)
The Circus (1928)
Citizen Kane (1941)
City of God (2002, Brazil)*
Claudine (1974)*
Closely Watched Trains (1966, Czechoslovakia)
Coraline (2009)*
Da 5 Bloods (2020)*
Dances with Wolves (1990)
Death in Venice (1971)*
Destination Moon (1950)*
The Devil and Daniel Webster (1941)
Down Argentine Way (1940)
Dunkirk (2017)
Easter Parade (1948)
The Edge of Democracy (2019, Brazil)*
Educated Fish (1937 short)*
El Cid (1961)*
Elmer Gantry (1960)
The End of the Affair (1999)*
Ernest & Celestine (2012, France/Belgium)
Face to Face (1976, Sweden)*
The Fallen Idol (1948)
Fantasia (1940)
A Fantastic Woman (2017, Chile)*
Far from the Madding Crowd (1967)*
A Farewell to Arms (1932)*
A Few Good Men (1992)*
Five Easy Pieces (1970)*
The Five Pennies (1959)
The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T. (1953)
Flower Drum Song (1961)
Flowers and Trees (1932 short)
Flying Down to Rio (1933)*
For All Mankind (1989)
For Sama (2019)*
Forbidden Planet (1956)
Forrest Gump (1994)
42nd Street (1933)
Four Days in November (1964)*
The Four Feathers (1939)
The 400 Blows (1959, France)
Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994)*
From Here to Eternity (1953)
Funny Face (1957)
Funny Girl (1968)
Fury (1936)*
Gandhi (1982)
The Garden of Allah (1936)
Garden Party (2017 short, France)
Gaslight (1944)
Giant (1956)
Gigi (1958)
Gladiator (2000)
The Godfather (1972)
The Godfather, Part II (1974)
Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939)
Gorillas in the Mist (1988)*
Gosford Park (2001)
Grand Hotel (1932)
Grand Prix (1966)*
The Great Beauty (2013, Italy)
The Great Race (1965)
The Great Ziegfeld (1936)
Green Book (2018)
Green Dolphin Street (1947)*
The Green Mile (1999)*
Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner (1967)
Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957)
Gunga Din (1939)
Hair Love (2019 short)
Hallelujah (1929)*
Hamlet (1948)
Hamlet (1990)
Hamlet (1996)
Hangmen Also Die! (1943)*
The Happiest Millionaire (1967)
A Hard Day’s Night (1964)
Harlan County U.S.A. (1976)
The Harvey Girls (1946)
Heartbreak Ridge (1986)*
The Heiress (1949)
Hell’s Angels (1930)*
Henry V (1989)
Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941)
Hero (2002, China)*
Hidden Figures (2016)
The High and the Mighty (1954)*
High Noon (1952)
High Society (1956)
Himalaya (1999, France/Switzerland/United Kingdom/Nepal)*
Home Alone (1990)
Honeysuckle Rose (1980)*
Hoosiers (1986)
The House on 92nd Street (1945)*
How the West Was Won (1962)
How to Survive a Plague (2012)*
I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932)
I Married a Witch (1942)*
I Never Sang for My Father (1970)
I Vitelloni (1953, Italy)*
I Wanted Wings (1941)*
I, Tonya (2017)*
Ida (2013, Poland)
Imitation of Life (1959)
In Cold Blood (1967)
In the Absence (2018 short, South Korea)
In the Heat of the Night (1967)
Inherit the Wind (1960)
Inside Daisy Clover (1965)*
Inside Moves (1980)*
It Happened One Night (1934)
It Happened Tomorrow (1944)*
It Should Happen to You (1954)*
It’s Always Fair Weather (1955)
Jackie Brown (1997)*
Jammin’ the Blues (1944 short)*
Jaws (1975)
The Jazz Singer (1927)
Jerry’s Cousin (1951 short)
Jesus Camp (2006)*
Jezebel (1938)
Jim: The James Foley Story (2016)*
Joe’s Violin (2016 short)
The Journey of Natty Gann (1985)
Joyeux Noel (2005, France)
Judgment at Nuremberg (1961)
Julia (1977)*
Juliet of the Spirits (1965, Italy)
Kagemusha (1980, Japan)
The Karate Kid (1984)
The Killers (1946)*
The King and I (1956)
The King’s Speech (2010)
The Kite Runner (2007)
Knights of the Round Table (1953)*
Knives Out (2019)
Kundun (1997)*
La Ronde (1950, France)*
La Strada (1954, Italy)
La Traviata (1982, Italy)*
Lady Be Good (1941)*
The Lady Eve (1941)
The Ladykillers (1955)*
The Last Emperor (1987)
A Letter to Three Wives (1949)
The Life Ahead (2020, Italy)*
Life is Beautiful (1997, Italy)
Life with Feathers (1945 short)
Lili (1953)
Lilies of the Field (1963)
The Lion in Winter (1968)*
Little Caesar (1931)
A Little Romance (1979)
Little Women (2019)
Logan (2017)
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)
Lost Horizon (1937)
Love Affair (1939)*
Love Story (1970)*
Loving Vincent (2017)
The Magic Flute (1975, Sweden)
The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)
Malcolm X (1992)
The Maltese Falcon (1941)
A Man for All Seasons (1966)
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956)
The Manchurian Candidate (1962)
Maria Full of Grace (2004, Colombia)*
Meet Me in Las Vegas (1956)*
Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)
Mighty Joe Young (1949)*
Milk (2008)
Million Dollar Mermaid (1952)*
The Miracle Worker (1962)*
Mon Oncle (1958, France)
Monsieur Hulot’s Holiday (1953, France)*
Mutiny on the Bounty (1935)
My Fair Lady (1964)
My Favorite Wife (1940)
My Favorite Year (1982)
My Night at Maud’s (1969)*
The Narrow Margin (1952)
The Natural (1984)
Nebraska (2013)
Network (1976)
Night Must Fall (1937)*
Nightcrawler (2014)*
The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)
Ninotchka (1939)
Nowhere in Africa (2001, Germany)*
Odd Man Out (1947)*
The Official Story (1985, Argentina)*
Oklahoma! (1955)*
Oliver! (1968)
On Golden Pond (1981)*
On the Riviera (1951)*
On the Waterfront (1954)
One Day in September (1999)*
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)
One Foot in Heaven (1941)
One Hour with You (1932)
One Potato, Two Potato (1964)*
Only Angels Have Wings (1939)*
Our Town (1940)
Paisan (1946, Italy)
Pal Joey (1957)*
Pan’s Labyrinth (2006, Mexico)
Paper Moon (1973)*
Parasite (2019, South Korea)
The Parent Trap (1961)
A Passage to India (1984)*
Patton (1970)
Pelle the Conqueror (1987, Denmark)*
Period. End of Sentence. (2018 short)
Persepolis (2007, France)
The Philadelphia Story (1940)
The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945)
Pigs in a Polka (1943 short)*
Pillow Talk (1959)*
Pinocchio (1940)
Places in the Heart (1984)*
Poltergeist (1982)
Portrait of Jennie (1948)
Precious (2009)*
The Prisoner of Zenda (1937)
The Private Life of Helen of Troy (1927)*
The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939)*
The Producers (1967)
Psycho (1960)
Pulp Fiction (1994)
Purple Rain (1984)
Puss Gets the Boot (1940 short)
Pygmalion (1938)
Quiet Please! (1945 short)
Quo Vadis, Aida? (2020, Bosnia-Herzegovina)*
Rachel, Rachel (1968)*
Ran (1985, Japan)
Random Harvest (1942)
Rashômon (1950, Japan)
Rasputin and the Empress (1932)*
Rear Window (1954)
Rebecca (1940)
Red River (1948)
The Red Shoes (1948)
A River Runs Through It (1992)
Road to Perdition (2002)
Roma (2018, Mexico)
Saludos Amigos (1942)
Same Time, Next Year (1978)*
The Secret of Kells (2009)
Sense and Sensibility (1995)*
Sergeant York (1941)
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954)
Seven Samurai (1954, Japan)
Shadow of a Doubt (1943)
The Shape of Water (2017)
Shaun the Sheep Movie (2015)*
She Done Him Wrong (1933)*
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949)
The Shootist (1976)
The Shop on Main Street (1965, Czechoslovakia)
The Silence of the Lambs (1991)
Silverado (1985)
Singin’ in the Rain (1952)
Sleeping Beauty (1959)
The Smiling Lieutenant (1931)
The Snake Pit (1948)*
Song of the Sea (2014)
Sounder (1972)
The Sound of Music (1965)
The Spanish Main (1945)*
Speedy (1928)
Speedy Gonzales (1955 short)
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018)
Spirited Away (2001, Japan)
Stagecoach (1939)
A Star is Born (1937)
A Star is Born (1954)
A Star is Born (1976)*
A Star is Born (2018)
Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
Star Wars (1977)
Starship Troopers (1997)
The Sting (1973)
A Stolen Life (1946)*
The Story of Three Loves (1953)*
The Story of the Weeping Camel (2003, Mongolia)*
The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946)*
The Stranger (1946)*
A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)
Strike Up the Band (1940)
Strings (1991 short)*
The Sundowners (1960)*
Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans (1927)
Superman (1978)
Sweet Bird of Youth (1962)
Swing Time (1936)
T-Men (1947)*
The Tale of the Princess Kaguya (2013, Japan)
Tangerines (2013, Estonia)*
Tenet (2020)
Them! (1954)
Theodora Goes Wild (1936)*
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944)*
This is Cinerama (1952)*
The Three Musketeers (1948)
Three Orphan Kittens (1935 short)
Time (2020)*
Timecode (2016 short, Spain)
Tom Jones (1963)
Toni Erdmann (2016, Germany)*
Top Hat (1935)
The Triplets of Belleville (2003, France)*
The Truman Show (1998)*
12 Angry Men (1957)
Twilight of Honor (1963)*
Two Girls and a Sailor (1944)*
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
Umberto D. (1952, Italy)
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964, France)
Unforgiven (1992)
Up (2009)
Vertigo (1958)
Victor/Victoria (1982)
WALL-E (2008)
Watch on the Rhine (1943)*
Waterloo Bridge (1940)
Weary River (1929)*
West Side Story (1961)
Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day (1968 short)
The Wizard of Oz (1939)
Wolfwalkers (2020)
X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014)
You Can’t Take It with You (1938)
Zorba the Greek (1964)*
The 15 nominated short films for the 93rd Academy Awards
The 8 nominees for Best Picture at the 93rd Academy Awards, including the winner, Nomadland
Until next year’s ceremony, folks - February will be here before we know it!
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ritahayworrth · 4 years ago
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Helloooo just curious if you were to give a list on your favorite romantic movies what would be on it? :)
love this question! i’m pretty sure i’m gonna forget a bunch but off the top of my head, in no particular order (see under the cut):
the more lighthearted romance movies:
the philadelphia story (1940)
bringing up baby (1938)
you were never lovelier (1942)
ball of fire (1941)
ninotchka (1939)
barefoot in the park (1967)
sunday in new york (1963)
the more the merrier (1943)
vivacious lady (1938)
practically all the fred and ginger movies (except the story of vernon and irene caste (1939) because the ending is sad so it’s not lighthearted), but especially top hat (1935), swing time (1936), carefree (1938), and the gay divorcee (1934)
roman holiday (1953)
my man godfrey (1936)
for me and my gal (1942)
the voice of the turtle (1947) (we do not talk about the leading man in this, but this movie and eleanor parker are so cute)
cover girl (1944)
you can't take it with you (1938)
bells are ringing (1960)
what's up, doc? (1973) (if you like bringing up baby please watch this!!)
amelie (2001)
pride and prejudice (2005)
emma. (2020)
saving face (2004)
pillow talk (1959)
desk set (1957)
indiscreet (1958)
the princess bride (1987)
his girl friday (1940)
but i'm a cheerleader (1999)
northanger abbey (2007)
sabrina (1954)
born to dance (1936)
the more ~dramatic~ romance movies:
random harvest (1942)
i'll be seeing you (1944)
hiroshima mon amour (1959)
brief encounter (1945)
the umbrellas of cherbourg (1964)
notorious (1946)
a place in the sun (1951)
romeo and juliet (1968)
waterloo bridge (1940)
now, voyager (1942)
all that heaven allows (1955)
the handmaiden (2016)
in the mood for love (2000)
portrait of a lady on fire (2019)
goodbye again (1961)
charade (1963)
the before trilogy (1995-2013)
the way we were (1973)
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thebrewstorian · 4 years ago
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Collection Report: McMenamins Brewery Collection, 1983-2015
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Oh my gosh, this collection has been in my backlog for YEARS! It has been so long that when my daughter helped with the inventory on the brew sheets she was 11 years-old and couldn't check herself out of summer camp [now she can drive and has taken the SAT], but she could talk with John Richen (brewing manager at the time) about her favorite beer names and things she'd noticed about ingredients.
Go straight to the guide: http://bit.ly/mss_mcmenamins
Learn more about the Oregon brewing industry in my Oregon Encyclopedia article
The McMenamins Brewery Collection is, truly, a gem. We scanned thousands of brew sheets, which is a part of the magic, but I'm also delighted by all the fun ephemera, including a full run of their coasters. I'll also add that the company biography included in this guide is really a love letter to the company, and I thank Fred Eckhardt, John Foyston, and all the other journalists over the past 30 years for recording all the fun quirks about this company.
SUMMARY McMenamins is a family-owned chain of brewpubs, breweries, historic hotels, and theater pubs in the Pacific Northwest.
The McMenamins Brewery Collection includes digitized brew sheets, digital images, brochures, coasters, decals, event programs, flyers, newspaper clippings, tap handles, posters, labels, a wooden cask, and a six-pack of Hammerhead beer.
COMPANY BIO
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McMenamins is a family-owned chain of brewpubs, breweries, historic hotels, and theater pubs in the Pacific Northwest. It was founded by brothers Mike and Brian McMenamin, who grew up in Northeast Portland. In 2021, they operated 56 properties, with twelve hotels; dozens of breweries, pubs, and restaurants; movie theaters; spas; music venues; and a coffee roaster, winery, cidery and distillery. Many locations are rehabilitated historical buildings and at least nine are on the National Register of Historic Places. McMenamins only sells its beer in its own pubs, restaurants, hotels, and movie theaters.
Early businesses
Mike and Brian McMenamin both graduated from Oregon State University, Mike with a Political Science degree (1974) and Brian with a Business degree (1980). Mike and two college friends purchased the Produce Row Café, a bar known for all-night, high-stakes poker games, in Portland's warehouse district in 1974 and sold more than 100 types of beer. The building was built in 1951 and opened as a breakfast café for produce dockworkers in 1953; in later years, it was a barbershop. Mike and Brian bought Bogart's Joint, another Portland-area pub on 14th and Flanders. At various points in history, many beer-related activities occurred in this building: Kurt and Rob Widmer brewed in this location, and it was later space occupied by Portland Brewing and Rogue Ales Public House. By 1980, they'd sold Produce Row, Bogart's Joint, and a third tavern, the Stockyard Café.
Mike opened a wine distributorship and Brian opened the McMenamins Pub in Hillsboro. By 1983, Mike’s distributorship had failed, and the brothers decided to try the bar business again. Rather than the smoky, male-dominated taverns common in Portland, they were inspired by the community hubs they��d seen in Europe. They bought the Fat Little Rooster tavern on Southeast Hawthorne and renamed it the Barley Mill Pub; in addition to a varied beer selection, the pub was known for Grateful Dead memorabilia and anniversary parties. The namesake “barley mill,” which can still be found onsite, was used by Chuck Coury at Cartwright Brewing Co., Portland’s first post-Prohibition brewery. It was originally a kitty litter grinder but is now used annually to grind the grain for anniversary ales.
One major event that impacted the trajectory of the beer industry in Oregon in the 1980s was legislation that married production and sales. Fred Bowman and Art Larrance (Portland Brewing), Dick and Nancy Ponzis (BridgePort Brewing) and their brewer Karl Ockert, Kurt and Rob Widmer (Widmer Brothers Brewing), and the McMenamins lobbied to legalize on-site sales. On July 13, 1985, Governor Vic Atiyeh signed Senate Bill 813, the “Brewpub Bill,” into law. It allowed brewers to make and sell beer on the same premises, key for increasing revenue and gaining new customers.
First brewpubs
The McMenamins took advantage of the new law, and by the early 1990s had opened several brewpubs, each with its own small brewing system attached. They opened the Hillsdale Brewery and Public House October 31, 1985 in the Southwest Portland neighborhood of Hillsdale. Not only was it their first brewery, it was also the first brewpub in Oregon since Prohibition. Known as “Captain Neon's Fermentation Chamber,” a nod to Mike McMenamin’s nickname, the first several batches of beer were brewed with old Tillamook dairy equipment. On October 25, 1985, Hillsdale's first brewer Ron Wolf, who had previously worked at Anchor Steam, brewed the first beer in a small copper kettle and called it "Hillsdale Ale.” It fell loosely into the “Special Bitter” classification of beer styles and was a malt extract brew. Hillsdale Ale was brewed 29 times at the Hillsdale location and 14 times at Cornelius Pass Roadhouse between 10/25/1985 and 11/28/1986. In the first year, several brewers moved through the facility and made Hillsdale Ale, including Ron Wolf (who only brewed 13 batches before leaving), Conrad Santos (who replaced Wolf as brew master), Mike McMenamin, Brian McMenamin, John Harris, Scott Barrow, and Alex Farnham (the company’s first female brewer).
In 1986, they purchased a 125-year-old farmhouse in Hillsboro, Oregon, and turned it into the Cornelius Pass Roadhouse. Later that same year, they opened the Lighthouse Brewpub in Lincoln City. The Fulton Pub and Brewery opened in Portland in June 1988 and the Highland Pub and Brewery opened in Gresham in July 1988.
Eventually, 27 breweries would operate under the McMenamins umbrella and they became a training ground for new brewers, many of whom have gone on to found breweries of their own. Alumni include John Harris (Hillsdale, Cornelius Pass Roadhouse), Jack Harris (Cornelius Pass Roadhouse, Lighthouse Brewery), Jason McAdam (Edgefield, Hillsdale, Crystal Ballroom), Alex McGaw (Fulton, Crystal Ballroom), Ben Nehrling and Kevin Lee (Edgefield, Highland, Kennedy School), and Mark Goodwin (Old Church, Crystal Ballroom).
In addition to serving beer at their brewpubs, the company also hosted festivals, concerts, and other public programming events at their properties, including Dad Watson’s Brew Fest, Edgefield Brew Fest, Highland Pub and Brewery Eurofest, Hillsdale Brew Fest, Lighthouse Brew Fest, Mid-Valley Brew Fest, and the Thompson Barley Cup.
Beer and Other Beverages
The McMenamins’ beers could be unsettling to brewing traditionalists; they used ingredients like apples, spices, and candy bars, as well as lesser used malts like Chocolate and Crystal. They introduced fruit beers to Oregon and early batches featured blackberries from the Hillsdale brewpub parking lot. Hand in hand with their experimentation, McMenamins developed three core beers that are brewed at all their breweries. Terminator Stout (1985) is a dark, English-style brew; Ruby (1986) is a light, raspberry-flavored beer; and Hammer Head (1986) is a classic Northwest Pale Ale. Ruby and Hammerhead are iconic company characters as well; artist Lyle Hehn created Ruby Witch and Hammerhead, and both are staples of murals, posters, and coasters.
Terminator Stout made its debut in 1985 at the Hillsdale Brewery & Public House as the 12th beer brewed. Old Hammerhead, as the strong ale was first called, was brewed January 25, 1986 and was the 37th brew and made with malt extract. John Harris, who later created Mirror Pond for Deschutes Brewery, was the first to make Hammerhead an “all-grain” beer. Harris was hired in 1987, and when they transitioned away from extract brewing, he decided to rewrite the Hammerhead recipe; besides changed the grain, he also added more hops. Ruby, originally called “Ruby Tuesday” before the food chain objected, was first brewed in 1986 and used 42 pounds of pureed Oregon raspberries.
The company made more than beer. They planted 3 acres of Pinot Gris fruit in 1990 and looked to regional vineyards for additional grapes; McMenamins Edgefield Winery was established in 1992 and began by making Rhone-style wines, including grenache and viognier. The Edgefield Winery produces 20 different white, rosé, dessert, and sparkling wines and supplies 350 tons of wine to McMenamins pubs. Also in 1992, and predating the boom by more than 20 years, McMenamins started making cider at the winery and in 2018 sold as much cider by volume as wine.
In 1995, they began experiments with distillation and made brandy under contract by Carneros Alembic, a California distillery owned by Remy-Martin. In 1997, they built their first distillery in an old root vegetable storage barn on the Edgefield property. Their most popular whiskey is Hogshead, but they make several others, including Money Puzzle, which is dry hopped with Teamaker hops (which has 0 IBUs) and is sweetened with blackberry honey harvest from hives on their property.
Historic preservation
The brothers’ love of historic structures directed business growth and community involvement, and preserving important historical buildings is integral to their business. When the McMenamins started, they couldn’t afford new construction, so they purchased old buildings, which came with stories. They employ a small staff of historians to research and document the history, and those are in turn incorporated into each property’s art, murals, menus, place names, and architectural details.
In 1987, the company opened its first theater, the Mission Theater Pub, in downtown Portland. The converted 1890s Swedish Tabernacle, a church-turned-union hall, was also the state's first theater pub. In 1991, McMenamins turned a 1927 art deco theater that was slated for demolition into a second pub and movie house. These businesses were significant and ushered in a new way to watch movies with beer and food.
In 1987, the brothers purchased Edgefield, which was built in 1911 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places. They paid $560,000 and invested another $2.5 million to transform the farm's 80-year-old buildings into a multi-utility complex. Edgefield was once the Multnomah County Poor Farm, a self-sufficient facility with a meatpacking plant, power station, large rooming house, and infirmary. When the remodeled Edgefield Manor opened in 1991, the meatpacking plant was a brewery, power station a pub with a movie theater, infirmary a winery, and rooming house a 100-room hotel. There was also a meeting space, catering operation, restaurant called the Black Rabbit, herb and flower gardens, four liquor and cigar bars, distillery, golf course, and amphitheater. One of the more outstanding features of Edgefield, and something that would become the McMenamins' signature, was the extensive art installations created by local artists. Art popped up in surprising places throughout the complex (on ceilings, exposed heating pipes, eaves, fuse boxes) and showed local subjects (former residents, Northwest Indians, 19th-century brewers, the Columbia River Gorge). Within a few years, the company had a set of 12 freelance artists ready to work on new property acquisitions. Edgefield brewery is still the company's largest property.
In 1997, they purchased the Crystal Ballroom in Portland, which had been vacant for 30 years, and filled it with murals depicting the building's history, a brewpub, and a bar. The building was famous for its swaying dance floor, which sat on ball bearings. The Crystal Hotel was built in 1911 and became a dance hall and concert facility that hosted national music acts. Around the same time, they partnered with the Portland Development Commission and invested $4.5 million to remodel the Kennedy Elementary School. What was once a boarded-up building was transformed into a 35-room multi-use hotel with an onsite brewery, restaurant and four bars, a movie theater, a jazz hall, cigar bar, and soaking pool.
In 1999, the McMenamins opened McMenamins Hotel Oregon in downtown McMinnville, Oregon. The building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places and had been a hotel since its first two stories were erected in 1905; five years later, two more floors were added. In 1932, the hotel was renamed Hotel Oregon. In addition to renovating guest rooms, the McMenamins renovation added two bars and an art gallery with old photographs and new paintings that showed the history of the hotel and McMinnville.
Many property renovations followed. In 2000, they opened the Grand Lodge in Forest Grove, Oregon, which was formerly a Masonic home built in 1922. In 2001, they opened the 27 room Olympic Club Hotel and Theater, which was an expansion of the McMenamins Olympic Club Pub in downtown Centralia, Washington. The original Oxford Hotel was built in 1908 and Olympic Club was built in 1913. In 2003, they reopened the Rock Creek Tavern in Hillsboro, Oregon, which they had purchased in 1995 when the original tavern burned down. In 2016, the Anderson School in Bothell, Washington opened. The original Anderson School was built in 1931 and opened in 1936. In April of 2018, McMenamins opened their latest project, the Kalama Harbor Lodge in Kalama, Washington. Other properties include the White Eagle Saloon & Hotel in Portland, which was built in 1905; Boon’s Treasury in Salem, built in the 1860s; and Old St. Francis School in Bend, which opened in 1936.
ARCHIVAL COLLECTION INFORMATION The brew sheets and some event materials were provided to the Special Collections & Archives Research Center in 2015 and 2016 for digitization. The original items have been retained by McMenamins.
In addition to the brewery activity and the various beers released by McMenamins, this collection also contains information on events organized by the company, such as homebrew competitions and festivals. The cask held in the collection was used at the Oak Hills Pub and is decorated with a pen drawing created by brewer Chris Haslett. The photographs show art installation, artists, and property renovation.
The brew sheets and some event materials were provided to the Special Collections & Archives Research Center in 2015 and 2016 for digitization. The original items were retained by McMenamins.
Physical and electronic records are available for use in the Special Collections and Archives Research Center reading room.
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caterinabennet · 5 years ago
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100 Greatest Love Stories
1. Casablanca (1942) 2. Gone With the Wind (1939) 3. West Side Story (1961) 4. Roman Holiday (1953) 5. An Affair to Remember (1957) 6. The Way We Were (1973) 7. Doctor Zhivago (1965) 8. It's a Wonderful Life (1946) 9. Love Story (1970) 10. City Lights (1931) 11. Annie Hall (1977) 12. My Fair Lady (1964) 13. Out of Africa (1985) 14. The African Queen (1951) 15. Wuthering Heights (1939) 16. Singin' in the Rain (1952) 17. Moonstruck (1987) 18. Vertigo (1958) 19. Ghost (1990) 20. From Here to Eternity (1953) 21. Pretty Woman (1990) 22. On Golden Pond (1981) 23. Now, Voyager (1942) 24. King Kong (1933) 25. When Harry Met Sally… (1989) 26. The Lady Eve (1941) 27. The Sound of Music (1965) 28. The Shop Around the Corner (1940) 29. An Officer and a Gentleman (1982) 30. Swing Time (1936) 31. The King and I (1956) 32. Dark Victory (1939) 33. Camille (1937) 34. Beauty and the Beast (1991) 35. Gigi (1958) 36. Random Harvest (1942) 37. Titanic (1997) 38. It Happened One Night (1934) 39. An American in Paris (1951) 40. Ninotchka (1939) 41. Funny Girl (1968) 42. Anna Karenina (1935) 43. A Star is Born (1954) 44. The Philadelphia Story (1940) 45. Sleepless in Seattle (1993) 46. To Catch a Thief (1955) 47. Splendor in the Grass (1961) 48. Last Tango in Paris (1972) 49. The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) 50. Shakespeare in Love (1998) 51. Bringing Up Baby (1938) 52. The Graduate (1967) 53. A Place in the Sun (1951) 54. Sabrina (1954) 55. Reds (1981) 56. The English Patient (1996) 57. Two for the Road (1967) 58. Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967) 59. Picnic (1955) 60. To Have and Have Not (1944) 61. Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961) 62. The Apartment (1960) 63. Sunrise (1927) 64. Marty (1955) 65. Bonnie and Clyde (1967) 66. Manhattan (1979) 67. A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) 68. What's Up, Doc? (1972) 69. Harold and Maude (1971) 70. Sense and Sensibility (1995) 71. Way Down East (1920) 72. Roxanne (1987) 73. The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947) 74. Woman of the Year (1942) 75. The American President (1995) 76. The Quiet Man (1952) 77. The Awful Truth (1937) 78. Coming Home (1978) 79. Jezebel (1939) 80. The Sheik (1921) 81. The Goodbye Girl (1977) 82. Witness (1985) 83. Morocco (1930) 84. Double Indemnity (1944) 85. Love Is a Many Splendored Thing (1955) 86. Notorious (1946) 87. The Unbearable Lightness of Being (1988) 88. The Princess Bride (1987) 89. Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) 90. The Bridges of Madison County (1995) 91. Working Girl (1988) 92. Porgy and Bess (1959) 93. Dirty Dancing (1987) 94. Body Heat (1981) 95. Lady and the Tramp (1955) 96. Barefoot in the Park (1967) 97. Grease (1978) 98. The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939) 99. Pillow Talk (1959) 100. Jerry Maguire (1996)
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nanshe-of-nina · 5 years ago
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Wizarding Russian Empire and USSR || Nestor Feodorovich Voinov
Voinov was born in what is now the Krasnodar Krai region of Russia, as the fourth of the five children of Feodor Ivanovich Voinov, an ethnic Russian zemylanin farmer, and Melanippe Vardoulakis, a witch of Pontic Greek origins. Feodor, a habitual alcoholic, died in 1881 of drowning in during a storm and afterwords, the household was run by Melanippe and her eldest daughter, Penthesilea, who had become a journeyman healer. Melanippe was determined that her children get the best education possible, as she herself never had. Voinov excelled in his studies at Koldovstortez, much to his mother’s pleasure, though she was less happy that he renounced religion at 16.
In 1892, he and his sister, Antiopa, joined the newly formed Obshchina Ved’m i Volshebnikov and sided with the Bratstvo Koldunov faction in 1897. In 1898, his youngest sister, Mirina, also joined. Afterwards, he worked in both Lysaya Gora and Ledenets. In 1904, he married the Ukrainian and Bashkir halfblood, Sofiya Antonovna Yevtushenko, but they both fled to France in 1908, while she was pregnant with their first child, a daughter that they named Melanippa after his mother. In 1910, they returned to Russia but were promptly arrested and exiled to Siberia. There, they had a second child, Gektor, in 1911.
Revolution
Voinov and his family returned from Siberia to Ledenets in 1917. Like Yefrem Iosifovich Levandovsky and Zaria Kresnikovna Krasavkina, he was of the opinion that the BK should cooperate with the members of the Shabash Volshebnikov and Krug druzey materi Mokosh, though they were overruled by Babushkin and Oksana Iosifovna Lutsenko. 
During the Civil War, he proved himself to be a talented administrator, overseeing the basic running of operations and communications. In 1921, he and Lavrentiy Radigostovich Zemlianitsyn shared the title Commissar for Magic, though it was recognized from the beginning that Zemlianitsyn was essentially a figurehead.
In 1922, he became a member of the Sovet Koldunov. He, Anfisa Zoranovna Krupina, and Ustinya Feodorovna Orlova were recognized as the leaders of the moderates, who supported Afanasiy Anastasovich Kostov, Levandovsky, and Krasavkina against the Lutsenkos and their supporters. After the falling out between Kostov with the “twins”, Krasavkina and Levandovsky, Voinov, Krupina, and Orlova backed the former.
After the death of his youngest sister, Mirina, from Black Cat Flu in 1926, he and Sofiya took in her two half-Circassian sons, Dizchin and Discheshu Dzharimov, aged 19 and 16. 
Fall From Power
After the collapse of the alliance between Krasavkina, the Lutsenkos, and Levandovsky, Kostov abruptly turned on Krupina, Orlova, and Voinov in favor of pursuing more radical policies. Things came to a head in 1928 when Krupina was caught complaining to Levandovsky and Svarog Svetovidovich Zolotarev about Kostov and his then-most prominent sidekick, Svarog Volosevich Zhelezov. 
Though Voinov held onto his position for slightly longer than Krupina and Orlova, he too was ejected from the SK in 1930 in favor of Agrafena Yuliyevna Lebesheva and appointed as the Commissar of Communications. 
Meanwhile, Kostov found a brand new reason to hate Krupina and Voinov in 1932, he discovered that his second daughter, Yuliya, had been pursuing a romantic relationship with Voinov’s only son, Gektor, with the connivance of Krupina’s youngest daughter, Aglaya. Though Krupina and Voinov had not known what their children were up to, Kostov firmly believed otherwise.
Great Harvest
As 1934 dawned, things seemed to be improving, but this was shattered in the spring when M.V. Kulchytskaya was assassinated in Ledenets and the Vedmak of the area, D.K. Mironov, committed suicide shortly after.
At the end of September 1936, Zaria Krasavkina and Yefrem Levandovsky were put on trial with nine of their former supporters and three agent provocateurs where they implicated Voinov, among other things, in terrorism, espionage, and treason.
The day after the end of the trial, when it came out that Krasavkina and Levandovsky had both been executed, Orlova hung herself in her home. Voinov attempted to do the same, but was discovered by his daughter, Melanippa, while writing a suicide note and she talked him out of it.
For unclear reasons, Kostov dithered for months about whether to order the arrests of Krupina and Orlova, even though his new protege, Valery Vsevolodovich Medvednikov both wanted them arrested right away. They were both finally on 4 March 1937 and kept in prison for over a year before being tried between 6 – 21 March 1938 alongside the former diplomats, Vlasiy Dariyevich Kravtsovich and Zdravko Vlajković; the former Zhnetsy, Lyudmila Vyacheslavovna Vishnevskaya and Alena Torkanovna Cheremisina; Krupina’s son-in-law, Kiril Spiridonovich Vorobyov; the Uzbek leaders who had formerly been a married couple, Narimon Isfandiyorovich Niyazov and Tomiris Safarovna Karimova; and Lavrentiy Zemlianitsyn’s eldest daughter, Kseniya Lavrentiyevna Zemlianitsyna. Besides the standard charges of treason, espionage, and terrorism, he was also forced to confess to having helped Vishnevskaya poison his sister, Mirina.
All but Vlajković and Kiril Feognostovich Igumnov were executed afterwards. Supposedly, while awaiting their execution, Voinov angrily broke up an argument between Cheremisina and Mircha Perunovich Zelenko, telling them to be quiet so they could die in peace.
Aftermath
After his execution, his wife and two surviving sisters were both executed while his children and nieces and nephews were shipped off to Vyraj. At some point in the 1940s, the sons of Mirina, Nyasar and Vakha Varayev, were both executed because of their Chechen father and Gektor died of exhaustion and malnutrition in 1952. Before his death, though, he’d fathered a son in 1942 with Yevfemiya Rafaelovna Yastruba, the eldest daughter of the Auror, Varvara Grigoriyevna Sarychina. Though Yevfemiya died not long after the birth, their son somehow managed to survive.
Melanippa and her husband, the Polish rozhdennyy zemley Yakov Isaakovich Klimovich, were both released in 1953. She reestablished contact with Anfisa Krupina’s three daughters and they advocated strongly for their overturning of the verdicts against their parents.
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brookston · 1 year ago
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Holidays 8.29
Holidays
According To Hoyle Day
Black Book Clubs Day
Clean Your Keyboard Day
Day of Loose Talk
Day of Remembrance of the Defenders of Ukraine (Ukraine)
Fennel Day (French Republic)
Flag Day (Spain)
Happy Housewives Holiday
Head Day (Iceland)
Individual Rights Day
International Day Against Nuclear Tests (UN)
Judgment Day (in the film “The Terminator”)
Michael Jackson
Miners’ Day (Ukraine)
Municipal Police Day (Poland)
National Caretaker Appreciation Day (Canada)
National College Colors Day
National Monterey County Fair Day
National Police’s Day (Poland)
National Sarcoidosis Awareness Day
National Sport Sampling Day
National Sports Day (India)
Nut Spas (Russia)
Potteries Bottle Oven Day (UK)
Slovak National Uprising Anniversary Day (Slovakia)
Targeted Individual Day
Telugu Language Day (India)
Third Onam (Harvest Festival; India)
World Day of Video Games
Zipper Clasp Locker Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Chop Suey Day
Gnocchi Day (Argentina)
International Peppercorn Day
Lemon Juice Day
More Herbs, Less Salt Day
National Swiss Winegrowers Day
5th & Last Tuesday in August
Lammas Fair Day (Ballycastle, Ireland) [Last Tuesday]
Touch-A-Heart Tuesday [Tuesday of Be Kind to Humankind Week]
Independence Days
Hjalvik (Declared; 2020) [unrecognized]
Mivland (Declared; 2018) [unrecognized]
Veyshnoria (Declared; 2017) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Adelphus of Metz (Christian; Saint)
Beheading of St. John the Baptist (Christian)
Blobfish Day (Pastafarian)
Dr. Lily Rosenbloom (Muppetism)
Eadwold of Cerne (Christian; Saint)
Euphrasia Eluvathingal (Syro-Malabar Catholic Church)
Feast of Agios Ioannis (Halki, Hittitie God of Grain)
First Day of Thoth (Egyptian New Year)
Gahan Wilson Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Hathor’s Day (Pagan)
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (Artology)
John Bunyan (Episcopal Church)
Medericus (a.k.a. St. Merry; Christian; Saint)
Nativity of Hathor (Egyptian Goddess of Joy & Drunkenness)
Papin (Positivist; Saint)
Sabina (Christian; Saint)
Sebbi (a.k.a. Sebba), King of Essex (Christian; Saint)
Thiruvonam (Rice Harvest Festival, Day 2; Kerala, India)
Vitalis, Sator and Repositus (Christian; Saints)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Prime Number Day: 241 [53 of 72]
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [38 of 60]
Urda (The Oldest Fate)
Premieres
At Your Service Madame (WB MM Cartoon; 1936)
Balls of Fury (Film; 2007)
Cat-Tails for Two (WB MM Cartoon; 1953)
Definitely Maybe, by Oasis (Album; 1994)
The Fugitive final episode (Most Watched TV Show; 1967)
The Full Monty (Film; 1987)
Here Today, Gone Tamale (WB LT Cartoon; 1959)
Independent Women, by Destiny’s Child (Song; 2000)
It’s A Pity To Say Goodnight, recorded by Ella Fitzgerald (Song; 1946)
Kid Galahad (Elvis Presley Film; 1962)
Mary Poppins (Film; 1964)
Move It, by Cliff Richard and the Drifters (Song; 1958)
Pretty Woman, by Roy Orbison (Song; 1964)
Ridiculousness (TV Series; 2011)
Runaway, by Janet Jackson (Song; 1995)
Saint Errant, by Leslie Charteris (Short Stories 1948) [Saint #29]
Shanghai Surprise (Film; 1986)
Signing Off, by UB40 (Album; 1980)
Today’s Name Days
Beatrix, Johannes, Sabine (Austria)
Anastas, Anastasi, Anastasiya (Bulgaria)
Bazila, Ivan, Sabina, Sebo, Verona (Croatia)
Evelína (Czech Republic)
Johannes (Denmark)
Õnne, Õnnela (Estonia)
Iina, Iines, Inari, Inna (Finland)
Méd��ric, Sabine (France)
Beatrice, Johannes, Sabine (Germany)
Arkadios (Greece)
Beatrix, Erna (Hungary)
Battista, Giovanni, Sabina (Italy)
Aiga, Aigars, Armīns, Vismants (Latvia)
Barvydas, Beatričė, Gaudvydė, Sabina (Lithuania)
Jo, Johan, Jone (Norway)
Flora, Jan, Racibor, Sabina (Poland)
Nikola (Slovakia)
Juan (Spain)
Hampus, Hans (Sweden)
Candace, Candice, Poppy, Sabina, Sabra, Sabrina (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 241 of 2024; 124 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of week 35 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Coll (Hazel) [Day 22 of 28]
Chinese: Month 7 (Geng-Shen), Day 14 (Ji-Wei)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 12 Elul 5783
Islamic: 12 Safar 1445
J Cal: 1 Aki; Oneday [1 of 30]
Julian: 15 August 2023
Moon: 97%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 17 Gutenberg (9th Month) [Papin]
Runic Half Month: Rad (Motion) [Day 2 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 69 of 94)
Zodiac: Virgo (Day 8 of 32)
Calendar Changes
Aki (Month 9 of 12; J Calendar)
0 notes
brookstonalmanac · 1 year ago
Text
Holidays 8.29
Holidays
According To Hoyle Day
Black Book Clubs Day
Clean Your Keyboard Day
Day of Loose Talk
Day of Remembrance of the Defenders of Ukraine (Ukraine)
Fennel Day (French Republic)
Flag Day (Spain)
Happy Housewives Holiday
Head Day (Iceland)
Individual Rights Day
International Day Against Nuclear Tests (UN)
Judgment Day (in the film “The Terminator”)
Michael Jackson
Miners’ Day (Ukraine)
Municipal Police Day (Poland)
National Caretaker Appreciation Day (Canada)
National College Colors Day
National Monterey County Fair Day
National Police’s Day (Poland)
National Sarcoidosis Awareness Day
National Sport Sampling Day
National Sports Day (India)
Nut Spas (Russia)
Potteries Bottle Oven Day (UK)
Slovak National Uprising Anniversary Day (Slovakia)
Targeted Individual Day
Telugu Language Day (India)
Third Onam (Harvest Festival; India)
World Day of Video Games
Zipper Clasp Locker Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Chop Suey Day
Gnocchi Day (Argentina)
International Peppercorn Day
Lemon Juice Day
More Herbs, Less Salt Day
National Swiss Winegrowers Day
5th & Last Tuesday in August
Lammas Fair Day (Ballycastle, Ireland) [Last Tuesday]
Touch-A-Heart Tuesday [Tuesday of Be Kind to Humankind Week]
Independence Days
Hjalvik (Declared; 2020) [unrecognized]
Mivland (Declared; 2018) [unrecognized]
Veyshnoria (Declared; 2017) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Adelphus of Metz (Christian; Saint)
Beheading of St. John the Baptist (Christian)
Blobfish Day (Pastafarian)
Dr. Lily Rosenbloom (Muppetism)
Eadwold of Cerne (Christian; Saint)
Euphrasia Eluvathingal (Syro-Malabar Catholic Church)
Feast of Agios Ioannis (Halki, Hittitie God of Grain)
First Day of Thoth (Egyptian New Year)
Gahan Wilson Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Hathor’s Day (Pagan)
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (Artology)
John Bunyan (Episcopal Church)
Medericus (a.k.a. St. Merry; Christian; Saint)
Nativity of Hathor (Egyptian Goddess of Joy & Drunkenness)
Papin (Positivist; Saint)
Sabina (Christian; Saint)
Sebbi (a.k.a. Sebba), King of Essex (Christian; Saint)
Thiruvonam (Rice Harvest Festival, Day 2; Kerala, India)
Vitalis, Sator and Repositus (Christian; Saints)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Prime Number Day: 241 [53 of 72]
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [38 of 60]
Urda (The Oldest Fate)
Premieres
At Your Service Madame (WB MM Cartoon; 1936)
Balls of Fury (Film; 2007)
Cat-Tails for Two (WB MM Cartoon; 1953)
Definitely Maybe, by Oasis (Album; 1994)
The Fugitive final episode (Most Watched TV Show; 1967)
The Full Monty (Film; 1987)
Here Today, Gone Tamale (WB LT Cartoon; 1959)
Independent Women, by Destiny’s Child (Song; 2000)
It’s A Pity To Say Goodnight, recorded by Ella Fitzgerald (Song; 1946)
Kid Galahad (Elvis Presley Film; 1962)
Mary Poppins (Film; 1964)
Move It, by Cliff Richard and the Drifters (Song; 1958)
Pretty Woman, by Roy Orbison (Song; 1964)
Ridiculousness (TV Series; 2011)
Runaway, by Janet Jackson (Song; 1995)
Saint Errant, by Leslie Charteris (Short Stories 1948) [Saint #29]
Shanghai Surprise (Film; 1986)
Signing Off, by UB40 (Album; 1980)
Today’s Name Days
Beatrix, Johannes, Sabine (Austria)
Anastas, Anastasi, Anastasiya (Bulgaria)
Bazila, Ivan, Sabina, Sebo, Verona (Croatia)
Evelína (Czech Republic)
Johannes (Denmark)
Õnne, Õnnela (Estonia)
Iina, Iines, Inari, Inna (Finland)
Médéric, Sabine (France)
Beatrice, Johannes, Sabine (Germany)
Arkadios (Greece)
Beatrix, Erna (Hungary)
Battista, Giovanni, Sabina (Italy)
Aiga, Aigars, Armīns, Vismants (Latvia)
Barvydas, Beatričė, Gaudvydė, Sabina (Lithuania)
Jo, Johan, Jone (Norway)
Flora, Jan, Racibor, Sabina (Poland)
Nikola (Slovakia)
Juan (Spain)
Hampus, Hans (Sweden)
Candace, Candice, Poppy, Sabina, Sabra, Sabrina (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 241 of 2024; 124 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of week 35 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Coll (Hazel) [Day 22 of 28]
Chinese: Month 7 (Geng-Shen), Day 14 (Ji-Wei)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 12 Elul 5783
Islamic: 12 Safar 1445
J Cal: 1 Aki; Oneday [1 of 30]
Julian: 15 August 2023
Moon: 97%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 17 Gutenberg (9th Month) [Papin]
Runic Half Month: Rad (Motion) [Day 2 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 69 of 94)
Zodiac: Virgo (Day 8 of 32)
Calendar Changes
Aki (Month 9 of 12; J Calendar)
0 notes
themuseumwithoutwalls · 5 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
MWW Artwork of the Day (7/7/19) Charles White (African-American, 1918-1979) Harvest Talk (1953) Charcoal & graphite, w/ stumping and erasing on ivory wood pulp laminate board, 66.1 x 99.2 cm. The Art Institute of Chicago (Gift of Mr. & Mrs. Robert Hartman)
Charles White is recognized for the richness of his graphic work and his paintings, which typically depict aspects of the history, culture, and life of African Americans. A native of Chicago, White attended the School of the Art Institute, the Art Students League of New York, and later the Taller de Gráfica Popular in Mexico. Beginning in 1939, he was employed by the Federal Art Project of the Works Progress Administration.
White’s father was a railroad and steel worker and his mother was a domestic worker; this inspired in White a deep respect for labor. Harvest Talk, one of six charcoal and carbon pencil drawings originally exhibited at ACA Galleries in New York in 1953, exemplifies the artist’s mature drawing style. Here his strong, assured manner, coupled with the heroic proportions of the figures and the emphasis on the large scythe (an emblem often associated with the Soviet Union) —- as well as the social realist sensibilities that prevail throughout his oeuvre, his travels to the Soviet Union, and his writings for and affiliation with left-wing publications such as Masses and Mainstream, Freedomways, and the Daily Worker — suggest that Harvest Talk was inspired by socialist ideals. Like many of White’s works on paper, it conveys the power of a mural despite its relatively small format. (from the AIC catalog)
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stainedglassgardens · 6 years ago
Text
Favourite films watched in 2018
I arranged them into broad categories -- other than that they’re in no particular order.
Indie
River of Grass, Meek’s Cutoff and Night Moves (Kelly Reichardt, 1994, 2010 and 2013)
Tangerine and The Florida Project (Sean Baker, 2015 and 2017)
We Need to Talk About Kevin (Lynne Ramsay, 2011)
Winter’s Bone (Debra Granik, 2010)
Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter (David Zellner, 2014)
Ginger & Rosa (Sally Potter, 2012)
Cracks (Jordan Scott, 2009)
I Am Not a Witch (Rungano Nyoni, 2017)
Turn the River (Chris Eigeman, 2007)
Hello I Must Be Going (Todd Louiso, 2012)
Shuttle Life (Tan Seng Kiat, 2017)
On Body and Soul (Testről és lélekről, Ildikó Enyedi, 2017)
Vagabond (Sans toit ni loi, Agnès Varda, 1984)
Easy Living (Adam Keleman, 2017)
Mother of George (Andrew Dosunmu, 2013)
Khadak (Peter Brosens and Jessica Hope Woodworth, 2006)
Shirkers (Sandi Tan, 2018)
Comedy
Lipstick Under My Burkha (Alankrita Shrivastava, 2016)
Addicted to Fresno (Jamie Babbit, 2015)
The Spy Who Dumped Me (Susanna Fogel, 2018)
Edge of Seventeen (David Moreton, 1998)
Secretary (Steven Shainberg, 2002)
Experimental
Scorpio Rising (Kenneth Anger, 1963)
Always Shine (Sophia Takal, 2016)
The Midnight Swim (Sarah Adina Smith, 2014)
La Jetée (Chris Marker, 1962)
Daisies (Sedmikrásky, Věra Chytilová, 1966)
Classics
Reflections in a Golden Eye (John Huston, 1967)
Dead Ringer (Paul Henreid, 1964)
Horror
Creep and Creep 2 (Patrick Brice, 2014 and 2017)
The Poughkeepsie Tapes and As Above, So Below (John Erick Dowdle, 2007 and 2014)
Raw (Grave, Julia Ducournau, 2016)
Cargo (Ben Howling and Yolanda Ramke, 2017)
Hard Candy (David Slade, 2005)
Snowtown (Justin Kurzel, 2011)
Banshee Chapter (Blair Erickson, 2013)
Mandy (Panos Cosmatos, 2018)
Science fiction
Primer and  Upstream Color (Shane Carruth, 2004 and 2013)
Resolution and The Endless (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2012 and 2017)
Midnight Special (Jeff Nichols, 2016)
Arrival (Denis Villeneuve, 2016)
Into the Forest (Patricia Rozema, 2015)
Ex Machina (Alex Garland, 2014)
Under the Skin (Jonathan Glazer, 2013)
Liquid Sky (Slava Tsukerman, 1982)
Bird Box (Susanne Bier, 2018)
Action
Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie, 2016)
M.F.A. (Natalia Leite, 2017)
Revenge (Coralie Fargeat, 2017)
Brick (Rian Johnson, 2005)
Full list of 306 films watched in 2018 under the cut!
January
The Devil’s Candy (Sean Byrne, 2015)
A United Kingdom (Amma Asante, 2016)
Creep (Patrick Brice, 2014)
The Witch (Robert Eggers, 2015)
The Blues Brothers (John Landis, 1980)
The Lost Boys (Joel Schumacher, 1987)
Midnight Special (Jeff Nichols, 2016)
Arrival (Denis Villeneuve, 2016)
We Need to Talk About Kevin (Lynne Ramsay, 2011)
Life (Daniel Espinosa, 2017)
Logan (James Mangold, 2017)
Creep 2 (Patrick Brice, 2017)
The Discovery (Charlie McDowell, 2017)
Otherlife (Ben C. Lucas, 2017)
The Dressmaker (Jocelyn Moorhouse, 2015)
Bokeh (Geoffrey Orthwein and Andrew Sullivan , 2017)
February
Get Out (Jordan Peele, 2017)
The Handmaiden (아가씨, Agassi, Park Chan-wook, 2016)
Brick (Rian Johnson, 2005)
Looper (Rian Johnson, 2012)
Winter’s Bone (Debra Granik, 2010)
Thelma (Joachim Trier, 2017)
The Guest (Adam Wingard, 2014)
Beach Rats (Eliza Hittman, 2017)
Let the Right One In (Låt den rätte komma in, Tomas Alfredson, 2008)
Cameraperson (Kirsten Johnson, 2016)
Sweet Bean (あん, An, Naomi Kawase, 2015)
The Hallow (Corin Hardy, 2015)
Cloverfield (Matt Reeves, 2008)
10 Cloverfield Lane (Dan Trachtenberg, 2016)
The Cloverfield Paradox (Julius Onah, 2018)
Moonlight (Barry Jenkins, 2016)
28 Days Later (Danny Boyle, 2002)
Take Shelter (Jeff Nichols, 2011)
Ginger Snaps (John Fawcett, 2000)
River of Grass (Kelly Reichardt, 1994)
Old Joy (Kelly Reichardt, 2006)
Reflections in a Golden Eye (John Huston, 1967)
March
Raw (Grave, Julia Ducournau, 2016)
Palo Alto (Gia Coppola, 2013)
By the Sea (Angelina Jolie, 2015)
Lady Bird (Greta Gerwig, 2017)
Jupiter Ascending (The Wachowskis, 2015)
Irreplaceable You (Stephanie Laing, 2018)
Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter (David Zellner, 2014)
Annihilation (Alex Garland, 2018)
Ravenous (Les Affamés, Robin Aubert, 2017)
The Bad Batch (Ana Lily Amirpour, 2016)
Notes on Blindness (Peter Middleton and James Spinney, 2016)
Breathe (Respire, Mélanie Laurent, 2014)
Night Moves (Kelly Reichardt, 2013)
Carol (Todd Haynes, 2015)
Lovesong (So Yong Kim, 2016)
Upstream Color (Shane Carruth, 2013)
April
ARQ (Tony Elliott, 2016)
Primer (Shane Carruth, 2004)
Meek’s Cutoff (Kelly Reichardt, 2010)
Certain Women (Kelly Reichardt, 2016)
The Lady from Shanghai (Orson Welles, 1947)
Waking Life (Richard Linklater, 2001)
Roman Holiday (William Wyler, 1953)
American Honey (Andrea Arnold, 2016)
Maurice (James Ivory, 1987)
The Silent House (La Casa Muda, Gustavo Hernández, 2010)
Viral (Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost, 2016)
Buster’s Mal Heart (Sarah Adina Smith, 2016)
Waitress (Adrienne Shelly, 2007)
Grey Gardens (Albert and David Maysle, 1975)
Ginger & Rosa (Sally Potter, 2012)
Cracks (Jordan Scott, 2009)
Into the Forest (Patricia Rozema, 2015)
A New Leaf (Elaine May, 1971)
Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958)
The Beguiled (Sofia Coppola, 2017)
Scarface (Brian De Palma, 1983)
The Violent Years (William Morgan, 1956)
The Ritual (David Bruckner, 2017)
Casting JonBenet (Kitty Green, 2017)
Slums of Beverly Hills (Tamara Jenkins, 1998)
We’ve Forgotten More Than We Ever Knew (Thomas Woodrow, 2017)
Love and Other Cults (Kemonomichi, Eiji Uchida, 2017)
You Were Never Really Here (Lynne Ramsay, 2017)
Shirley: Visions of Reality (Gustav Deutsch, 2013)
Catfight (Onur Tuckel, 2017)
Pyewacket (Adam MacDonald, 2017)
May
Lick the Star (Sofia Coppola, 1998)
Scorpio Rising (Kenneth Anger, 1963)
Novitiate (Maggie Betts, 2017)
The Tree of Life (Terrence Malick, 2011)
The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki (Hymyilevä mies, Juho Kuosmanen, 2016)
Dead Reckoning (John Cromwell, 1947)
Human Flow (Ai Weiwei, 2017)
Mystery Train (Jim Jarmusch, 1989)
Dawson City: Frozen Time (Bill Morrison, 2016)
The Killing of a Sacred Deer (Yorgos Lanthimos, 2017)
I Am Not a Witch (Rungano Nyoni, 2017)
Cléo from 5 to 7 (Cléo de 5 à 7, Agnès Varda, 1962)
Orbiter 9 (Órbita 9, Hatem Khraiche, 2017)
M.F.A. (Natalia Leite, 2017)
Lipstick Under My Burkha (Alankrita Shrivastava, 2016)
Kedi (Ceyda Torun, 2016)
Deidra and Laney Rob a Train (Sydney Freeland, 2017)
The Most Dangerous Game (Irving Pichel and Ernest B. Schoedsack, 1932)
Girl Asleep (Rosemary Myers, 2015)
Always Shine (Sophia Takal, 2016)
The Monster (Bryan Bertino, 2016)
Desert Hearts (Donna Deitch, 1985)
Addicted to Fresno (Jamie Babbit, 2015)
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (Fritz Lang, 1956)
The Fits (Anna Rose Holmer, 2015)
Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie, 2016)
The Midnight Swim (Sarah Adina Smith, 2014)
The Quiet Hour (Stéphanie Joalland, 2014)
Synchronicity (Jacob Gentry, 2015)
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Mike Nichols, 1966)
Pod (Mickey Keating, 2015)
Turn the River (Chris Eigeman, 2007)
Tangerine (Sean Baker, 2015)
Frequencies (Darren Paul Fisher, 2013)
Spring (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2014)
Time Lapse (Bradley D. King, 2014)
Meet Me There (Lex Lybrand, 2014)
Ex Machina (Alex Garland, 2014)
The Florida Project (Sean Baker, 2017)
Berberian Sound Studio (Peter Strickland, 2012)
Laggies (Lynn Shelton, 2014)
Starlet (Sean Baker, 2012)
Dead Ringer (Paul Henreid, 1964)
The Doom Generation (Gregg Araki, 1995)
The Riot Club (Lone Scherfig, 2014)
Berlin Syndrome (Cate Shortland, 2017)
Dude (Olivia Milch, 2018)
Nightcrawler (Dan Gilroy, 2014)
June
Hello I Must Be Going (Todd Louiso, 2012)
Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion (David Mirkin, 1997)
Mystery Road (Ivan Sen, 2013)
The Double (Richard Ayoade, 2013)
Dear White People (Justin Simien, 2014)
The Selfish Giant (Clio Barnard, 2013)
Don’t Breathe (Fede Álvarez, 2016)
Marina Abramović: The Artist is Present (Matthew Akers, 2012)
Hot Bot (Michael Polish, 2016)
Beneath the Harvest Sky (Aron Gaudet and Gita Pullapilly, 2013)
Tim’s Vermeer (Teller, 2013)
The Firefly (La Luciérnaga, Ana Maria Hermida, 2015)
Twinsters (Samantha Futerman and Ryan Miyamoto, 2015)
Resolution (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2012)
Enemy (Denis Villeneuve, 2013)
Mother of George (Andrew Dosunmu, 2013)
We Are What We Are (Jim Mickle, 2013)
The Battery (Jeremy Gardner, 2012)
Crystal Fairy & The Magical Cactus (Sebastián Silva , 2013)
Boy (Taika Waititi,2010)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Steven Chbosky, 2012)
White Bird in a Blizzard (Gregg Araki, 2014)
The American (Anton Corbijn, 2010)
Ocean’s Eight (Gary Ross, 2018)
Compliance (Craig Zobel, 2012)
Seeking a Friend for the End of the World (Lorene Scafaria, 2012)
Weekend (Andrew Haigh, 2011)
Under the Skin (Jonathan Glazer, 2013)
July
Martha Marcy May Marlene (Sean Durkin, 2011)
Safety Not Guaranteed (Colin Trevorrow, 2012)
Hard Candy (David Slade, 2005)
Duck Butter (Miguel Arteta, 2018)
The Artist (Michel Hazanavicius, 2011)
Another Earth (Mike Cahill, 2011)
Melancholia (Lars von Trier, 2011)
Woodshock (Kate and Laura Mulleavy, 2017)
Hanna (Joe Wright, 2011)
Snowtown (Justin Kurzel, 2011)
Aloft (Claudia Llosa, 2014)
A Fantastic Woman (Una mujer fantástica, Sebastián Lelio, 2017)
The Feels (Jenée LaMarque, 2017)
The Endless (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2017)
Shuttle Life (Tan Seng Kiat, 2017)
I Origins (Mike Cahill, 2014)
The Taking of Deborah Logan (Adam Robitel, 2014)
Chasing Ice (Jeff Orlowski, 2012)
Manchester By the Sea (Kenneth Lonergan, 2016)
The Bar (El Bar, Álex de la Iglesia, 2017)
Mr. Roosevelt (Noël Wells, 2017)
Woman Walks Ahead (Susanna White, 2017)
The Manual (William Magness, 2017)
The Conjuring (James Wan, 2013)
Oculus (Mike Flanagan, 2013)
The Eye (Pang brothers, 2002)
August
The Overnight (Peter Brice, 2015)
Axolotl Overkill (Helene Hegemann, 2017)
Little Sister (Zach Clark, 2016)
Witchfinder General (Michael Reeves, 1968)
Secretary (Steven Shainberg, 2002)
The Quiet Earth (Geoff Murphy, 1985)
The Hunger (Tony Scott, 1983)
They (Anahita Ghazvinizadeh, 2017)
Revenge (Coralie Fargeat, 2017)
Cargo (Ben Howling and Yolanda Ramke, 2017)
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (Amy Heckerling, 1982)
Radius (Caroline Labrèche and Steeve Léonard, 2017)
17 Girls (17 Filles, Delphine Coulin and Muriel Coulin, 2011)
The Deuce of Spades (Faith Granger, 2011)
The Bank Job (Roger Donaldson, 2008)
La Jetée (Chris Marker, 1962)
Train to Busan  (부산행, Busanhaeng, Yeon Sang-ho, 2016)
As Above, So Below (John Erick Dowdle, 2014)
Liquid Sky (Slava Tsukerman, 1982)
Wild Zero (Tetsuro Takeuchi, 1999)
Multiple Maniacs (John Waters, 1970)
The Lifeguard (Liz W. Garcia, 2013)
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (Les Parapluies de Cherbourg, Jacques Demy, 1964)
The Beales of Grey Gardens (Albert Maysles, David Maysles and Ian Markiewicz, 2006)
The Edge of Seventeen (Kelly Fremon Craig, 2016)
Salesman (Albert Maysles, David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin, 1969)
Easy Living (Adam Keleman, 2017)
Going Back (Adam Keleman, 2010)
A Series of Acts (Adam Keleman, 2006)
Long Days (Adam Keleman, 2012)
Okja (Bong Joon-ho, 2017)
Before I Fall (Ry Russo-Young, 2017)
The Poughkeepsie Tapes (John Erick Dowdle, 2007)
Three Colours: Blue (Krzysztof Kieślowski, 1993)
Three Colours: White (Krzysztof Kieślowski, 1994)
Three Colours: Red (Krzysztof Kieślowski, 1994)
Island of Lost Souls (Erle C. Kenton, 1932)
Khadak (Peter Brosens and Jessica Hope Woodworth, 2006)
The Lure (Córki dancingu, Agnieszka Smoczyńska, 2015)
Vagabond (Sans toit ni loi, Agnès Varda, 1984)
Little Evil (Eli Craig, 2017)
September
The Harder They Come (Perry Henzell, 1972)
Isle of Flowers (Ilha das Flores, Jorge Furtado, 1989)
Beat Girl (Edmond T. Gréville, 1960)
On Body and Soul (Testről és lélekről, Ildikó Enyedi, 2017)
Village of the Damned (Wolf RIlla, 1960)
Tampopo (タンポポ, Tanpopo, Juzo Itami, 1985)
Mustang (Deniz Gamze Ergüven, 2015)
Outside In (Lynn Shelton, 2017)
Voyeur (Myles Kane, 2017)
The Land of Steady Habits (Nicole Holofcener, 2018)
Clouds of Sils Maria (Olivier Assayas, 2014)
Already Tomorrow in Hong Kong (Emily Ting, 2015)
Tig (Kristina Goolsby and Ashley York, 2015)
Shortwave (Ryan Phillips, 2016)
The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond (Jodie Markell, 2008)
Sexy Beast (Jonathan Glazer, 2000)
October
The Most Assassinated Woman in the World (La Femme la plus assassinée du monde, Franck Ribière, 2018)
I Think We’re Alone Now (Reed Morano, 2018)
The Woman Who Left (Ang Babaeng Humayo, Lav Diaz, 2016)
The Babysitter (Brian Duffield, 2017)
The Frighteners (Peter Jackson, 1996)
Emelie (Michael Thelin, 2015)
21 Grams (Alejandro González Iñárritu, 2003)
Apostle (Gareth Evans, 2018)
Phantasm (Don Coscarelli, 1979)
Banshee Chapter (Blair Erickson, 2013)
Joshua (George Ratliff, 2007)
Office (오피스, Hong Won-chan, 2015)
The Nightmare (Rodney Ascher, 2015)
The Spy Who Dumped Me (Susanna Fogel, 2018)
Before I Wake (Mike Flanagan, 2016)
The Most Unknown (Ian Cheney, 2018)
Private Life (Tamara Jenkins, 2018)
Octavio is Dead! (Sook-Yin Lee, 2018)
Leave No Trace (Debra Granik, 2018)
Cube (Vincenzo Natali, 1997)
Galveston (Mélanie Laurent, 2018)
Growing Up Coy (Eric Juhola, 2016)
Texas Chain Saw Massacre (Tobe Hooper, 1974)
November
Murder My Sweet (Edward Dmytryk, 1944)
Madeline’s Madeline (Josephine Decker, 2018)
Out of the Past (Jacques Tourneur, 1947)
Mandy (Panos Cosmatos, 2018)
Crossfire (Edward Dmytryk, 1947)
The Lobster (Yorgos Lanthimos, 2015)
Silent Light (Stellet Licht, Carlos Reygadas, 2007)
Shirkers (Sandi Tan, 2018)
Berlin Express (Jacques Tourneur, 1948)
Red Road (Andrea Arnold, 2006)
Angels Wear White (嘉年华, Vivian Qu, 2017)
Interstellar (Christopher Nolan, 2014)
The Italian Job (F. Gary Gray, 2003)
In the Aisles (In den Gängen, Thomas Stuber, 2018)
Edge of Seventeen (David Moreton, 1998)
Mad Max: Fury Road (George Miller, 2015)
Columbus (Kogonada, 2017)
I Don’t Feel at Home in this World Anymore (Macon Blair, 2017)
The Full Monty (Peter Cattaneo, 1997)
Daisies (Sedmikrásky, Věra Chytilová, 1966)
Blue My Mind (Lisa Brühlmann, 2017)
December
The Tokyo Night Sky is Always the Densest Shade of Blue (夜空はいつでも最高密度の青色だ, Yozora wa itsudemo saiko mitsudo no aoiro da, Yuya Ishii, 2017)
Michael Lost and Found (Daniel Wilner, 2017)
The Trader (Sovdagari, Tamta Gabrichidze, 2018)
Valley Girl (Martha Coolidge, 1983)
The Kindergarten Teacher (Sara Colangelo, 2018)
Everything Beautiful is Far Away (Pete Ohs and Andrea Sisson, 2017)
McQueen (Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui, 2018)
Better Watch Out (Chris Peckover, 2016)
I Feel Pretty (Abby Kohn, 2018)
Eighth Grade (Bo Burnham, 2018)
A Simple Favor (Paul Feig, 2018)
Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story (Alexandra Dean, 2017)
Grandma (Paul Weitz, 2015)
Bird Box (Susanne Bier, 2018)
The Man in the Wall (האיש שבקיר‎, Evgeny Ruman, 2015)
Tout ce qui brille (Géraldine Nakache and Hervé Mimran, 2010)
Gas Food Lodging (Allison Anders, 1992)
Love, Cecil (Lisa Immordino Vreeland, 2018)
21 notes · View notes
amtopmthoughts · 6 years ago
Text
OSCARS
Legenda:
Legenda  -  Winners I have watched
Legenda  -  Winners I don’t know of
Legenda  - Winners I know of
Legenda  -  Nominees I have watched
Legenda  -  Nominees I don’t know of
Legenda  -  Nominees I know of
1927/28
BEST MOVIE
Wings
The Racket
7th Heaven
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Janet Gaynor:
for her role as Diane Angela, The Wife in 7th Heaven and Street Angel Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans
Louise Dresser:
for her role as Mrs. Pleznik in A Ship Comes In
Gloria Swanson:
for her role as Sadie Thompson in Sadie Thompson
1928/29
BEST MOVIE
The Broadway Melody
Alibi
Hollywood Revue
In Old Arizona
The Patriot
= 0
Mary Pickford:
for her role as Norma Besant in Coquette
Ruth Chatterton: 
for her role as Jacqueline Floriot in Madame X
Betty Compson:
for her role as Carrie in The Barker
Jeanne Eagels:
for her role as Leslie Crosbie in The Letter
Corinne Griffith:
for her role as Emma Hamilton in The Divine Lady
Bessie Love:
for her role as Hank Mahoney in The Broadway Melody
1929/30
BEST MOVIE
All Quiet on the Western Front
The Big House
Disraeli
The Divorcee
The Love Parade
= 0
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Jerry Bernard Martin in The Divorcee
Nancy Carroll:
for her role as Hallie Hobart in The Devil’s Holiday
Ruth Chatterton:
for her role as Sarah Storm in Sarah and Son
Greta Garbo:
for her role as Anna Christie/Madame Rita Cavallini in Anna Christie Romance
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Lucia Marlett in Their Own Desire
Gloria Swanson:
for her role as Marion Donnell in The Trespasser
1930/31
BEST MOVIE
Cimarron
East Lynne
The Front Page
Skippy
Trader Horn
= 0
Marie Dressler:
for her role as Min Divot in Min and Bill
Marlene Dietrich:
for her role as Mademoiselle Amy Jolly in Morocco
Irene Dunne:
for her role as Sabra Cravat in Cimarron
Ann Harding:
for her role as Linda Seton in Holiday
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Jan Ashe in A Free Soul
1931/32
BEST MOVIE
Grand Hotel
Arrowsmith
Bad Girl
The Champ
Five Star Final
One Hour with You
Shanghai Express
The Smiling Lieutenant
= 0
Helen Hayes:
for her role as Madelon Claudet in The Sin of Madelon Claudet
Marie Dressler:
for her role as Emma Thatcher Smith in Emma
Lynn Fontanne:
for her role as The Actress in The Guardsman
1932/33
BEST MOVIE
Cavalcade
42nd Street
A Farewell to Arms
I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang
Lady for a Day
Little Women
The Private Life of Henry VIII
She Done Him Wrong
Smilin’ Through
State Fair
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Katharine Hepburn:
for her role as Eva Lovelace in Morning Glory
May Robson:
for her role as Apple Annie in Lady for a Day
Diana Wynyard:
for her role as Jane Marryot in Cavalcade
1934
BEST MOVIE
It Happened One Night
The Barretts of Wimpole Street
Cleopatra
Flirtation Walk
The Gay Divorcee
Here Comes the Navy
The House of Rothschild
Imitation of Life
One Night of Life
The Thin Man
Viva Villa!
The White Parade
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Claudette Colbert:
for her role as Ellie Andrews in It Happened One Night
Grace Moore:
for her role as Mary Barrett in One Night of Love
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Elizabeth Barrett in The Barrett of Wimpole Street
Bette Davis:
for her role as Mildred Rogers in Of Human Bondage
1935
BEST MOVIE
Munity on the Bounty
Alice Adams
Broadway Melody of 1936
Captain Blood
David Copperfield
The Informer
The Lives of a Bengal Lancer
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Les Misérables
Naughty Marietta
Rugs of Red Gap
Top Hat
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Bette Davis:
for her role as Joyce Heath in Dangerous
Elisabeth Bergner:
for her role as Gemma Jones in Escape Me Never
Claudette Colbert:
for her role as Jane Everest in Private Words
Katharine Hepburn:
for her role as Alice Adams in Alice Adams
Miriam Hopkins:
for her role as Becky Sharp in Becky Sharp
Merle Oberon:
for her role as Kitty Vane in The Dark Angel
1936
BEST MOVIE
The Great Ziegfeld
Anthony Adverse
Dodsworth
Libeled Lady
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town
Romeo and Juliet
San Francisco
The Story of Louis Pasteur
A Tale of Two Cities
Three Smart Girls
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Luise Rainer:
for her role as Anna Held in The Great Ziegfeld
Irene Dunne:
for her role as Theodora Lynn in Theodora Goes Wild
Gladys George:
for her role as Carrie Snyder in Valiant is the Word for Carrie
Carole Lombard:
for her role as Irene Bullock in My Man Godfey
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Juliet Capulet in Romeo and Juliet
1937
BEST MOVIE
The Life of Emile Zola
The Awful Truth
Captain Courageous
Dead End
The Good Earth
In Old Chicago
Lost Horizon
One Hundred Men and a Girl
Stage Door
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Luise Rainer:
for her role as O-Lan in The Good Earth
Irene Dunne:
for her role as Lucy Warriner in The Awful Truth
Greta Garbo:
for her role as Marguerite Gautier in Camille
Janet Gaynor:
for her role as Esther Victoria Blodgett/Vicki Lester in A Star is Born
Barbara Stanwyck:
for her role as Stella Martin Dallas in Stella Dallas
1938
BEST MOVIE
You Can’t Take It With You
The Adventures of Robin Hood
Alexander’s Ragtime Band
Boys Town
The Citadel
Four Daughters
Grand Illusion
Jezebel
Pygmalion
Test Pilot
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Bette Davis:
for her role as Julie Marsden in Jezebel
Fay Bainter:
for her role as Hannah Parmalee in White Banners
Wendy Hiller:
for her role as Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Marie Antoinette in Marie Antoinette
Margaret Sullavan:
for her role as Patricia “Pat” Hollmann in Three Comrades
1939
BEST MOVIE
Gone With The Wind
Dark Victory
Goodbye, Mr. Chips
Love Affair
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
Ninotchka
Of Mice and Men
Stagecoach
The Wizard of Oz
Wuthering Heights
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Vivien Leigh:
for her role as Scarlett O’Hara in Gone with the Wind
Bette Davis:
for her role as Judith Traherne in Dark Victory
Irene Dunne:
for her role as Terry McKay in Love Affair
Greta Garbo:
for her role as Nina Yakushnova “Ninotchka” Ivanoff” in Ninotchka
Greer Garson:
for her role as Katherine Bridges in Goodbye, Mr. Chips
1940
BEST MOVIE
Rebecca
All This, and Heaven Too
Foreign Correspondent
The Grapes of Wrath
The Great Dictator
Kitty Foyle
The Letter
The Long Voyage Home
Our Town
The Philadelphia Story
= 0
BEST ACTRESS:
Ginger Rogers:
for her role as Kitty Foyle in Kitty Foyle
Bette Davis:
for her role as Leslie Crosbie in The Letter
Joan Fontaine:
for her role as The Second Mrs. de Winter in Rebecca
Katharine Hepburn:
for her role as Tracy Lord in The Philadelphia Story
Martha Scott:
for her role as Emily Webb in Our Town
1941
BEST MOVIE
How Green Was My Valley
Blossoms in the Dust
Citizen Kane
Here Comes Mr. Jordan
Hold Back the Dawn
The Little Foxes
The Maltese Falcon
One Foot in Heaven
Sargeant York
Suspicion
= 0
BEST ACTRESS:
Joan Fontaine:
for her role as Lina McLaidlaw Aysgarth in Suspicion
Bette Davis:
for her role as Regina Giddens, The Little Foxes
Olivia de Havilland:
Emmy Brown, Hold Back the Dawn
Greer Garson, Blossoms in the Dust
Barbara Stanwyck, Ball of Fire
1942
BEST MOVIE
Mrs. Miniver
The Invaders
Kings Row
The Magnificent Ambersons
The Pied Piper
The Pride of the Yankees
Random Harvest
The Talk of the Town
Wake Island
Yankee Doodle Dandy
= 0
BEST ACTRESS:
Greer Garson, Mrs. Miniver
Bette Davis, Now, Voyager
Katharine Hepburn, Woman of the Year
Rosalind Russel, My Sister Eileen
Teresa Wright, The Pride of the Yankees
1943
BEST MOVIE
Casablanca
For Whom the Bell Tolls
Heaven Can Wait
The Human Comedy
In Which We Serve
Madame Curie
The More the Merrier
The Ox-Bow Incident
The Song of Bernadette
Watch on the Rhine
= 0
BEST ACTRESS:
Jennifer Jones, The Song of Bernadette
Jean Arthur, The More the Merrier
Ingrid Bergman, For Whom the Bell Tolls
Joan Fontaine, The Constant Nymph
Greer Garson, Madame Curie
1944
BEST MOVIE
Going My Way
Double Indemnity
Gaslight
Since You Went Away
Wilson
= 0
BEST ACTRESS:
Ingrid Bergman, Gaslight
Claudette Colbert, Since You Went Away
1945
BEST MOVIE
The Lost Weekend
Anchors Aweigh
The Bells of St. Mary’s
Mildred Pierce
Spellbound
= 0
1946
BEST MOVIE
The Best Years of Our Lives
Henry V
= 0
1947
BEST MOVIE
Gentleman’s Agreement
The Bishop’s Wife
Crossfire
Great Expectations
Miracle on 34th Street
= 0
1948
BEST MOVIE
Hamlet
Johnny Belinda
The Red Shoes
The Snake Pit
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
= 0
1949
BEST MOVIE
All the King’s Men
Battleground
The Heiress
A Letter to Three Wives
Twelve O’Clock High
= 0
1950
BEST MOVIE
All About Eve
Born Yesterday
Father of the Bride
King Solomon’s Mines
Sunset Boulevard
= 0
1951
BEST MOVIE
An American In Paris
Decision Before Dawn
A Place in the Sun
Quo Vadis
A Streetcar Named Desire
= 0
1952
BEST MOVIE
The Greatest Show on Earth
High Noon
Ivanhoe
Moulin Rouge
The Quiet Man
= 0
1953
BEST MOVIE
From Here to Eternity
Julius Caesar
The Robe
Roman Holiday
Shane
= 1
1954
BEST MOVIE
On The Waterfront
The Caine Mutiny
The Country Girl
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers
Three Coins in the Fountain
= 0
1955
BEST MOVIE
Marty
Love is a Many-Splendored Thing
Mister Roberts
Picnic
The Rose Tattoo
= 0
1956
BEST MOVIE
Around the World in 80 Days
Friendly Persuasion
Giant
The King and I
The Ten Commandments
= 0
1957
BEST MOVIE
The Bridge On The River Kwai
12 Angry Men
Peyton Place
Sayonara
Witness for the Prosecution
= 0
1958
BEST MOVIE
Gigi
Auntie Mame
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
The Defiant Ones
Separate Tables
= 0
1959
BEST MOVIE
Ben-Hur
Anatomy of a Murder
The Diary of Anne Frank
The Nun’s Story
Room at the Top
= 0
1960
BEST MOVIE
The Apartment
The Alamo
Elmer Gantry
Sons and Lovers
The Sundowners
= 0
1961
BEST MOVIE
West Side Story
Fanny
The Guns of Navarone
The Hustler
Judgment at Nuremberg
= 1
1962
BEST MOVIE
Lawrence of Arabia
The Longest Day
The Music Man
Mutiny on the Bounty
To Kill a Mockingbird
= 0
1963
BEST MOVIE
Tom Jones
America America
Cleopatra
How the West Was Won
Lilies of the Field
= 0
1964
BEST MOVIE
My Fair Lady
Becket
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
Mary Poppins
Zorba the Greek
= 1
1965
BEST MOVIE
The Sound of Music
Darling
Doctor Zhivago
Ship of Fools
A Thousand Clowns
= 1
1966
BEST MOVIE
A Man for All Seasons
Alfie
The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming
The Sand Pebbles
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf
= 0
1967
BEST MOVIE
In the Heat of the Night
Bonnie and Clyde
Doctor Dolittle
The Graduate
Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner
= 0
1968
Oliver!
Funny Girl
The Lion in Winter
Rachel, Rachel
Romeo and Juliet
= 1
1969
BEST MOVIE
Midnight Cowboy
Anne of the Thousand Days
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
Hello, Dolly!
Z
= 0
1970
BEST MOVIE
Patton
Airport
Five Easy Pieces
Love Story
M*A*S*H
= 0
1971
BEST MOVIE
The French Connection
A Clockwork Orange
Fiddler on the Roof
The Last Picture
Nicholas and Alexandra
= 0
1972
BEST MOVIE
The Godfather
Cabaret
Deliverance
The Emigrants
Sounder
= 0
1973
BEST MOVIE
The Sting
American Graffitti
Cries and Whispers
The Exorcist
A Touch of Class
= 0
1974
 BEST MOVIE
The Godfather Part II
Chinatown
The Conversation
Lenny
The Towering Inferno
= 0
1975
BEST MOVIE
One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest
Barry Lyndon
Dog Day Afternoon
Jaws
Nashville
= 0
1976
BEST MOVIE
Rocky
All the President’s Men
Bound for Glory
Network
Taxi Driver
= 0
1977
BEST MOVIE
Annie Hall
The Goodbye Girl
Julia
Star Wars
The Turning Point
= 0
1978
BEST MOVIE
The Deer Hunter
Coming Home
Heaven Can Wait
Midnight Express
An Unmarried Woman
= 0
1979
BEST MOVIE
Kraver vs. Kramer
All That Jazz
Apocalypse Now
Breaking Away
Norma Rae
= 1
1980
BEST MOVIE
Ordinary People
Coal Miner’s Daughter
The Elephant Man
Raging Bull
Tess
= 0
1981
BEST MOVIE
Chariots of Fire
Atlantic City
On Golden Pond
Raiders of the Lost Ark
Reds
= 0
1982
BEST MOVIE
Ghandi
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
Missing
Tootsie
The Verdict
= 1
1983
BEST MOVIE
Terms of Endearment
The Big Chill
The Dresser
The Right Stuff
Tender Mercies
= 0
1984
BEST MOVIE
Amadeus
The Killing Fields
A Passage to India
Places in the Heart
A Soldier’s Story
= 0
1985
BEST MOVIE
Out of Africa
The Color Purple
Kiss of the Spider Woman
Prizzi’s Honor
Witness
= 0
1986
BEST MOVIE
Platoon
Children of a Lesser God
Hannah and Her Sisters
The Mission
A Room with a View
= 0
1987
BEST MOVIE
The Last Emperor
Broadcast News
Fatal Attraction
Hope and Glory
Moonstruck
= 2
1988
BEST MOVIE
Rain Man
The Accidental Tourist
Dangerous Liaisons
Mississipi Burning
Working Girl
= 0
1989
BEST MOVIE
Driving Miss Daisy
Born on the Fourth of July
Dead Poets Society
Field of Dreams
My Left Foot
= 1
1990
BEST MOVIE
Dances with Wolves
Awakenings
Ghost
The Godfather III
Goodfellas
= 1
1991
BEST MOVIE
The Silence of the Lambs
Beauty and the Beast
Bugsy
JFK
The Prince of Tides
= 1
1992
BEST MOVIE
Unforgiven
The Crying Game
A Few Good Men
Howards End
Scent of a Woman
= 0
1993
BEST MOVIE
Schindler’s List
The Fugitive
In the Name of the Father
The Piano
The Remains of the Day
= 1
1994
BEST MOVIE
Forrest Gump
Four Weddings and a Funeral
Pulp Fiction
Quiz Show
The Shawshank Redemption
= 3
1995
BEST MOVIE
Braveheart
Apollo 13
Babe
The Postman (Il Postino)
Sense and Sensibility
= 4
1996
BEST MOVIE
The English Patient
Fargo
Jerry McGuire
Secrets & Lies
Shine
= 0
1997
BEST MOVIE
Titanic
As Good as it Gets
The Full Monty
Good Will Hunting
L.A. Confidential
= 3
1998
BEST MOVIE
Shakespeare in Love
Elizabeth
Life is Beautiful
Saving Private Ryan
The Thin Red Line
= 3
1999
BEST MOVIE
American Beauty
The Cider House Rules
The Green Mile
The Insider
The Sixth Sense
= 1
2000
BEST MOVIE
Gladiator
Chocolat
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Erin Brokovich
Traffic
= 3
2001
BEST MOVIE
A Beautiful Mind
Gosfrod Park
In the Bedroom
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
Moulin Rouge!
= 1
2002
BEST MOVIE
Chicago
Gangs of New York
The Hours
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
The Pianist
= 1
2003
BEST MOVIE
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
Lost in Translation
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
Mystic River
Seabiscuit
= 0
2004
BEST MOVIE
Million Dollar Baby
The Aviator
Finding Neverland
Ray
Sideways
= 1
2005
BEST MOVIE
Crash
Brokeback Mountain
Capote
Good Night, and Good Luck
Munich
= 0
2006
BEST MOVIE
The Departed
Babel
Letters from Iwo Jima
Little Miss Sunshine
The Queen
= 2
2007
BEST MOVIE
No Country for Old Men
Atonement
Juno
Michael Clayton
There Will Be Blood
= 1
2008
BEST MOVIE
Slumdog Millionaire
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Frost/Nixon
Milk
The Reader
= 1
2009
BEST MOVIE
The Hurt Locker
Avatar
The Blind Side
District 9
An Education
Inglorious Basterds
Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Saphire
A Serious Man
Up
Up in the Air
= 4
2010
BEST MOVIE
The King’s Speech
127 Hours
Black Swan
The Fighter
Inception
The Kids Are All Right
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winter’s Bone
= 5
2011
BEST MOVIE
The Artist
The Descendants
Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
The Help
Hugo
Midnight in Paris
Moneyball
The Tree of Life
War Horse
= 3
2012
BEST MOVIE
Argo
Amour
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Django Unchained
Les Miserábles
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Silver Linings Playbook
Zero Dark Thirty
= 4
2013
BEST MOVIE
12 Years a Slave
American Hustle
Captain Philips
Dallas Buyers Club
Gravity
Her
Nebraska
Philomena
The Wolf of Wall Street
= 4
2014
BEST MOVIE
Birdman
American Sniper
Boyhood
The Grand Budapest Hotel
The Imitation Game
Selma
The Theory of Everything
Whiplash
= 2
2015
BEST MOVIE
Spotlight
The Big Short
Bridge of Spies
Brooklyn
Mad Max: Fury Road
The Martian
The Revenant
Room
= 3
BEST ACTRESS:
Brie Larson, Room
Cate Blanchett, Carol
Jennifer Lawrence, Joy
Charlotte Rampling, 45 Years
Saoirse, Brooklyn
2016
BEST MOIVE
Moonlight
La La Land
Arrival
Fences
Hacksaw Ridge
Hell or High Water
Hidden Figures
Lion
Manchester by the Sea
= 5
BEST ACTRESS:
Emma Stone, La La Land
Isabelle Huppert, Elle
Ruth Negga, Loving
Natalie Portman, Jackie
Meryl Streep, Florence Foster Jenkins
2017
BEST MOVIE
The Shape of Water
Lady Bird
Call Me by Your Name
Get Out
Darkest Hour
Dunkirk
Phantom Thread
The Post
Three Billboards Outside Ebbig, Missouri
= 4
BEST ACTRESS:
Frances McDormand, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Sally Hawkins, The Shape of Water
Margot Robbie, I, Tonya
Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird
Meryl Streep, The Post
TOTAL = 71/
7 notes · View notes