Originally posted by Robert
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I would say the Cavalcade "Titanic" scene was a bit overdone, but there would have been no other way to end the scene. Somehow the payoff has to be that we know that this sad, happily newlywed couple is doomed due to forces they can't foresee. If you start the scene with them saying how wonderful the "Titanic" is, the scene will wilt away.
I like both "Stalag 17" for the performances of William Holden and Robert Strauss (as "Animal"), and "Shane" which contains one of Alan Ladd's sturdiest performances, as well as having that scene where Jack Palance goads Elisha Cook Jr. into drawing so he can kill him "in self defense" before witnesses. I cannot choose between them as to which is better. The problem is "Stalag" is a great war film, and "Shane" a great western. There is really no fair way of comparing them.
The Academy ought to return to a differentiation in awards they dropped far to early. In 1928 they had a special category, "Best comedy direction", as opposed to "Best direction". I believe Lewis Milestone won the award for one of those "Quirk and Flagg" follow-up films ("Women of all Nations" may have been the title - not, I believe, either Chaplin's "The Circus" or Keaton's
"The Cameraman", or LLoyd's "The Kid Brother". What the Academy could have done would have been to make "Best Western Award", "Best Musical Award", "Best Historical Drama", "Best Mystery" - well you can see it would have made more sense. However, the rivalry of the major studios, and the tremendous clout of MGM in voting, reduced the chances of this (it would look more tremendous if MGM's "Grand Hotel" won the 1932-33 Best Picture Oscar than if it was compartmentalized into a genre of some type. It surprises me that in the early years Oscars went to a Western ("Cimerron" with Irene Dunne and Richard Dix") and a Musical ("Broadway Melody"), and that Frederic March got the 1932-33 best actor Oscar for a horror role ("Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde") though MGM forced additional late votes to be counted to give a tie award that year to Wallace Beery for "The Champ". March was the last performer to win for a horror or science fiction part until Anthony Hopkins did as "Hannibal Lector" in "Silence of the Lambs" six decades later.
Jeff
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