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Oscar Loves... Taking The Bait

Oscar Loves Film Club

Release Date: 01/16/2021

Oscar Loves... Sequels show art Oscar Loves... Sequels

Oscar Loves Film Club

Sometimes the Academy just can't get enough. This month, your friendly Oscarologists look at those Best Pictures whose successors also picked up the grand prize. The films we explore in this episode are: The Godfather (1972) and The Godfather Part II (1974).  This episode was recorded remotely. Thank you to Rachel Valentine Smith for our artwork and Thomas Whitelaw for our intro music.

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Oscar Loves... American Gothic show art Oscar Loves... American Gothic

Oscar Loves Film Club

For our first deep dive of 2023, Mark and Izzy delve into what exactly defines American Gothic and how this relates to our two Best Pictures. The films we explore in this episode are: Rebecca (1940) and Million Dollar Baby (2004).  This episode was recorded remotely. Thank you to Rachel Valentine Smith for our artwork and Thomas Whitelaw for our intro music.

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Oscar Loves... The Theatre show art Oscar Loves... The Theatre

Oscar Loves Film Club

This month, your friendly Oscarologists delve into the films that connect the magic of the theatre to the joy of film, winning Best Picture in the process. The films we explore in this episode are: All About Eve (1950) and Birdman (2014).  Thank you to Rachel Valentine Smith for our artwork and Thomas Whitelaw for our intro music.

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Oscar Loves... The 'Luck' of the Irish show art Oscar Loves... The 'Luck' of the Irish

Oscar Loves Film Club

This month, Mark and Izzy look into the films that walked away with Best Picture, which highlight their connection to Ireland. The films we explore in this episode are: Going My Way (1945) and Titanic (1998).  Thank you to Rachel Valentine Smith for our artwork and Thomas Whitelaw for our intro music.

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Oscar Loves... Hyperlink Cinema show art Oscar Loves... Hyperlink Cinema

Oscar Loves Film Club

This month, your friendly Oscarologists dive into those rare films with multiple perspectives and narrative tributaries which have walked away with the Best Picture award. The films we explore in this episode are: Cavalcade (1933) and The Best Years of Our Lives (1946).  Thank you to Rachel Valentine Smith for our artwork and Thomas Whitelaw for our intro music.

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Oscar Loves... Biographical Fiction show art Oscar Loves... Biographical Fiction

Oscar Loves Film Club

This month, Mark and Izzy discuss the Best Picture winners that seem like biopics and yet their protagonists are completely fictional. The films we dive into in this edition are: Tom Jones (1963) and Forrest Gump (1994).  Thank you to Rachel Valentine Smith for our artwork and Thomas Whitelaw for our intro music.

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Oscar Loves... Noir show art Oscar Loves... Noir

Oscar Loves Film Club

In this edition, Mark and Izzy discuss the Academy's continued interest in film noir and neo noir. And just what is noir anyway? To answer that, we discuss best picture winners All The Kings Men (1950) and No Country For Old Men (2008).  Thank you to Rachel Valentine Smith for our artwork and Thomas Whitelaw for our intro music.

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Oscar Loves... Making History show art Oscar Loves... Making History

Oscar Loves Film Club

This month, Mark and Izzy divert from their planned double feature to discuss this year's Best Picture winner CODA and the ceremony itself.  In a year that will no doubt go down in history for one specific moment, there were many others that were also groundbreaking.  DIrected and adapted by Sian Heder, CODA tells the story of Ruby (Emilia Jones) - the only hearing child of deaf adults, Jackie (Oscar winner Marlee Matlin), and Frank (Oscar winner Troy Kotsur) - who must balance the needs of her family's fishing business against the opportunity to audition for music college.

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Oscar Loves... Sports show art Oscar Loves... Sports

Oscar Loves Film Club

This month, your friendly Oscarologists rally to discuss the most athletic of Best Picture winners. Written by and starring Sylvester Stallone, Rocky (1976) charts the sudden rise to fame of Rocky Balboa, a down on his luck southpaw boxer from Philadelphia. The film also began one of the most successful film franchises in cinema history, with eight sequels. In Chariots of Fire (1982), we follow the competition and shared experiences between fellow 1924 Olympic athletes Harold Abrahams and Eric Liddell, portrayed by Ben Cross and Ian Charleson, featuring one of the most famous opencing...

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Oscar Loves... Adaptations show art Oscar Loves... Adaptations

Oscar Loves Film Club

This month, we delve into the archives for a previously recorded but unreleased episode where the original OLFC gang discuss those Best Picture winners that also have an adapted screenplay.

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More Episodes

Love 'em or hate 'em, a good marketing strategy can make all the difference when it comes to success at the Academy Awards. This month our Oscarologists gather to chat about two films whose publicity campaigns changed the game.

Michael Cimino's The Deer Hunter stars Robert De Niro, Christopher Walken, Meryl Streep and John Cazale as the soldiers and civilians from a small town in Pennsylvania affected by the Vietnam War.

Judi Dench and Gwyneth Paltrow both won Oscars for their performances in Shakespeare In Love. Directed by John Madden, the film is a funny, romantic play on Shakespeare's life and works that celebrates all things theatre.

Thank you to Thomas Whitelaw for our intro music and Rachel Valentine Smith for our artwork.