List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Director - List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Director 1944 - Henry King, The Song of Bernadette 1945 - Leo McCarey, Going My Way 1946 - Billy Wilder, The Lost Weekend 1947 - Frank Capra, It's a Wonderful Life 1948 - Elia Kazan, Gentleman's Agreement 1949 - John Huston, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre 1950 - Robert Rossen, All the King's Men 1951 - Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard 1952 - Laslo Benedek, Death of a Salesman 1953 - Cecil B. DeMille, The Greatest Show on Earth 1954 - Fred Zinnemann, From Here to Eternity 1955 - Elia Kazan, On the Waterfront 1956 - Joshua Logan, Picnic 1957 - Elia Kazan, Baby Doll 1958 - David Lean, The Bridge on the River Kwai 1959 - Vincente Minnelli,.
List of prizes, medals, and awards - List of prizes, medals, and awards A list of famous prizes, medals, and awards including cups, trophies, bowls, badges, state decorations etc. Lists of people By name By belief By nationality By occupation By office held By prize won Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Science, Mathematics, Technology 1.1 Mathematics 1.2 Computer Science, Engineering, Technology, and Invention 2 Arts and Letters 2.3 American literature 2.4 British literature 2.5 Canadian literature 2.6 Finnish literature 2.7 French language literature 2.8 Indian literature 2.9 Italian literature 2.10 Spanish literature 2.11 Swedish literature 2.12 Science fiction and Fantasy 2.13 Children's literature 3 Architecture 4 Business and Management 5 Humanitarianism 6 Logic and Philosophy 7 General achievement 8 National honours, military, and patriotic medals 8.14 Australia 8.15 Canada 8.16 France 8.17 Germany.
List of movie awards - List of movie awards This is a list of groups, organizations and festivals that award prizes to motion pictures. Many awards are simply called the best picture (or actor or director) as chosen by the group presenting the wards. Where applicable, however, the name of the award is given -- for example, the Oscar. Awards have been divided into three major categories: critics' awards, voted on (usually annually) by a group of critics; festival awards, awards presented to the best film shown in a particular film festival; and industry awards, which are selected by professionals working in some branch of the movie industry. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Critics' awards 1.1 Australia 1.2 Canada 1.3 France 1.4 Internet 1.5 United Kingdom 1.6 United States 2 Festival.
List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Drama - List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Drama 1944 - The Song of Bernadette 1945 - Going My Way 1946 - The Lost Weekend 1947 - The Best Years of Our Lives 1948 - Gentleman's Agreement 1949 - Johnny Belinda; The Treasure of the Sierra Madre 1950 - All the King's Men 1951 - Sunset Boulevard 1952 - A Place in the Sun 1953 - The Greatest Show on Earth 1954 - The Robe 1955 - On the Waterfront 1956 - East of Eden 1957 - Around the World in Eighty Days 1958 - The Bridge on the River Kwai 1959 - The Defiant Ones 1960 - Ben-Hur 1961 - Spartacus 1962 - The Guns of Navarone 1963 - Lawrence of Arabia 1964 - The Cardinal.
List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Comedy/Musical - List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Comedy/Musical 1952 - An American in Paris 1953 - With a Song in My Heart 1954 - No award 1955 - Carmen Jones 1956 - Guys and Dolls 1957 - The King and I 1958 - Les Girls 1959 - Gigi 1960 - Some Like It Hot; Porgy and Bess 1961 - The Apartment; Song Without End 1962 - A Majority of One; West Side Story 1963 - That Touch of Mink; The Music Man 1964 - Tom Jones 1965 - My Fair Lady 1966 - The Sound of Music 1967 - The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming 1968 - The Graduate 1969 - Oliver 1970 - The Secret Of Santa Vittoria 1971 - M*A*S*H 1972 -.
List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Actress, Comedy/Musical - List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Actress, Comedy/Musical 1951 - Judy Holliday, Born Yesterday 1952 - June Allyson, Too Young to Kiss 1953 - Susan Hayward, With a Song in My Heart 1954 - Ethel Merman, Call Me Madam 1955 - Judy Garland, A Star is Born 1956 - Jean Simmons, Guys and Dolls 1957 - Deborah Kerr, The King and I 1958 - Kay Kendall, Les Girls 1959 - Rosalind Russell, Auntie Mame 1960 - Marilyn Monroe, Some Like It Hot 1961 - Shirley MacLaine, The Apartment 1962 - Rosalind Russell, A Majority of One 1963 - Rosalind Russell, Gypsy 1964 - Shirley MacLaine, Irma la Douce 1965 - Julie Andrews, Mary Poppins 1966 - Julie Andrews, The Sound of Music 1967 - Lynn.
List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Actress, Drama - List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Actress, Drama 1944 - Jennifer Jones, The Song of Bernadette 1945 - Ingrid Bergman, Gaslight 1946 - Ingrid Bergman, The Bells of St. Mary's 1947 - Rosalind Russell, Sister Kenny 1948 - Rosalind Russell, Mourning Becomes Electra 1949 - Jane Wyman, Johnny Belinda 1950 - Olivia de Havilland, The Heiress 1951 - Gloria Swanson, Sunset Boulevard 1952 - Jane Wyman, The Blue Veil 1953 - Shirley Booth, Come Back, Little Sheba 1954 - Audrey Hepburn, Roman Holiday 1955 - Grace Kelly, The Country Girl 1956 - Anna Magnani, The Rose Tattoo 1957 - Ingrid Bergman, Anastasia 1958 - Joanne Woodward, The Three Faces of Eve 1959 - Susan Hayward, I Want to Live 1960 - Elizabeth Taylor, Suddenly, Last.
List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Actor, Comedy/Musical - List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Actor, Comedy/Musical 1951 - Fred Astaire, Three Little Words 1952 - Danny Kaye, On the Riviera 1953 - Donald O'Connor, Singin' in the Rain 1954 - David Niven, The Moon is Blue 1955 - James Mason, A Star Is Born 1956 - Tom Ewell, Seven Year Itch 1957 - Cantinflas, Around the World in Eighty Days 1958 - Frank Sinatra, Pal Joey 1959 - Danny Kaye, Me and the Colonel 1960 - Jack Lemmon, Some Like It Hot 1961 - Jack Lemmon, The Apartment 1962 - Glenn Ford, Pocketful of Miracles 1963 - Marcello Mastroianni, Divorce - Italian Style 1964 - Alberto Sordi, To Bed or Not to Bed 1965 - Rex Harrison, My Fair Lady 1966 - Lee.
List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Actor, Drama - List of Golden Globe Awards: Film, Best Actor, Drama 1944 - Paul Lukas, Watch on the Rhine 1945 - Alexander Knox, Wilson 1946 - Ray Milland, The Lost Weekend 1947 - Gregory Peck, The Yearling 1948 - Ronald Colman, A Double Life 1949 - Laurence Olivier, Hamlet 1950 - Broderick Crawford, All the King's Men 1951 - José Ferrer, Cyrano de Bergerac 1952 - Fredric March, Death of a Salesman 1953 - Gary Cooper, High Noon 1954 - Spencer Tracy, The Actress 1955 - Marlon Brando, On the Waterfront 1956 - Ernest Borgnine, Marty 1957 - Kirk Douglas, Lust for Life 1958 - Alec Guinness, The Bridge on the River Kwai 1959 - David Niven, Separate Tables 1960 - Anthony Franciosa, Career 1961 - Burt Lancaster,.
Academy Award for Best Art Direction - Academy Award for Best Art Direction The Academy Awards are the oldest awards ceremony for achievements in motion pictures. The Academy Award for Best Art Direction recognizes achievement in art direction on a film. The films below are listed with their production year, so the Oscar 2000 for best art direction went to a film from 1999. This award was originally for Interior Decoration 1928 William Cameron Menzies - The Dove and Tempest Harry Oliver - Seventh Heaven Rochus Gliese - Sunrise 1929 Cedric Gibbons - The Bridge of San Luis Rey Mitchell Leisen - Dynamite Cedric Gibbons - Hollywood Review William Cameron Menzies - The Iron Mask Hans Dreier - The Patriot Harry Oliver - Sweet Angel 1930 Herman Rosse - King of Jazz William Cameron Menzies.
Cannes Film Festival - Cannes Film Festival The Cannes Film Festival is a prestigious international film festival. It has been held annually in Cannes, in the south of France, since 1946 with a few exceptions. Given massive media exposure, the Festival is attended by many movie stars and is a popular venue for movie producers to launch their new films and attempt to sell their works to the distributors who come from all over the globe. The most prestigious award given out at Cannes is the Palme d'Or (Golden Palm) for the best film; this is sometimes shared by multiple films in one year. Winners: Year Film Director Country 1946 L'Épreuve (Hets) Alf Sjöberg Sweden 1946 The Lost Weekend Billy Wilder United States 1946 La Terre sera rouge Bodil Ipsen &.
List of Canadians - List of Canadians This is a list of well-known Canadians. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Artists 2 Astronauts 3 Authors 4 Business Personalities 5 Cartoonists 6 Criminals 6.1 Alleged criminals 6.2 Wrongfully convicted 7 Educators 8 Explorers 9 Humanitarians 10 Inventors 11 Military Figures 12 Motion Pictures, Radio, & Television 13 Musicians 14 Political Leaders 15 Religious personalities 16 Scholars 17 Scientists 18 Sports Personalities 19 Other Personalities Artists The Group of Seven - male painters The Beaver Hall Group - female painters Robert Bateman (1930-), painter Paul-Émile Borduas, abstract painter Emily Carr (1871-1945), painter Jack Chambers Susan M. Cohen Watercolour artist, Thornhill, Ontario Greg Curnoe (1936-1992) Charles Daudelin (1920-2001), sculptor Marcelle Ferron (1924-2001), glazier Pierre Granche (1948-1997), sculptor Jack Harman, (1927-2001), sculptor Jean-Paul Mousseau, (1927-1991),.
List of movies that have been considered the greatest ever - List of movies that have been considered the greatest ever This is a partial list of films that have been regarded as the greatest ever. There is no uniform opinion as to which film is the greatest ever, but a number of films have been presented as such. Generally speaking, these tend to be films that can be said to have advanced both the art form and the technique of cinema, and are usually agreed upon by a consensus of critics and scholars to have been inordinately successful on both these grounds. Different groups have very different criteria for what is greatness, however. While critics and film aficionados would agree to the above definition, others would argue that popular appeal is a more important measure of.
No Man's Land (movie) - Man's Land (movie) The debut of writer and director Danis Tanovic in 2001 No Man's Land is a war/anti-war movie, a bleakly funny parable packed with irony, settled in the 1993 Bosnian conflict. Plot outline: After various skirmishes, two wounded soldiers, one Bosnian and one Serb, confront each other in a trench in the no man's land between their lines. They wait for dark, trading insults and even finding some common ground; sometimes one has the gun, sometimes the other, sometimes both. Things get complicated when another wounded Bosnian, the UN (whose high command tries not to help), an English reporter, a French sergeant, and a Germanlandmine specialist show up... No Man's Land has been compared to Catch-22, MASH and Waiting for Godot containing equal parts of irony and futility. Awards.
Juliette Binoche - is a French actress, born in Paris. Born to a movie-director father and an actress mother, at age 15 she was sent to Paris to study at a specialized arts high school, after which she attended the National Conservatory of Dramatic Arts. At age 18 she was given a bit part in the small independent film Liberty Belle. While trying to build her career over the next five years, she worked as a clerk at a Paris department store and earned extra cash as a painter's model. She was 24 when she received her first big break with a role in Philip Kaufman's film The Unbearable Lightness of Being. Her performance brought much praise and the offer of leading roles including in Three Colors: Blue, part 1 of Krzysztof Kieslowski's highly.
Hope Lange - on December 19, 2003 at Santa Monica, California, was a stage, film, and television actress. Born into a theatrical family, Hope Lange was only 12 years of age when she first appeared in a Broadway play. Following her father’s passing, a teenage Lange worked as a waitress in her mother’s Greenwich Village restaurant and sometimes walked the dog of former First Lady of the United States, Eleanor Roosevelt who had a nearby apartment. When the photo of the beautiful girl appeared in the newspaper, she received an offer to work as a New York City advertising model that eventually led to a return to acting in the early 1950’s when she began working in television. After being part of a 1953 television series, the demure and sophisticated blonde actress came to.
Dancer in the Dark - Dancer in the Dark Dancer in the Dark is a musical film from the year 2000. It was directed by Lars von Trier and stars Bjork, Catherine Deneuve, David Morse and Peter Stormare. The movie is part three in a trilogy of films by von Trier that included "Breaking the Waves" and "The Idiots (Danish: Idioterne)". Warning: Wikipedia contains spoilers The film, which takes place in America in 1964, focuses around Selma (Bjork), a Czech immigrant who has moved to the States with her teenaged son, Gene. They live a life of poverty as Selma works at a factory with her good friend Cvalda (Deneuve). She rents a trailer home on the property of town policeman Bill (Morse) and his wife Linda. She is also pursued by the amourous Jeff (Stormare).
Actor - In addition to playing dramatic roles, actors may also sing or dance. A female actor is sometimes called an actress. See: List of male movie actors, List of female movie actors, List of male theater actors and List of female theater actors For information on the artistic craft, see acting History The first recorded case of an actor performing took place in 534 B.C (probably on November 23rd, though the changes in calendar over the years make it hard to determine exactly) when the Greek performer Thespus stepped on to the stage at the Theatre Dionysus and became the first person to speak words as a character in a play. Prior to that, stories were told in song and dance and in third person narrative, but no one had assumed the.
Apocalypse Now - Apocalypse Now is a Francis Ford Coppola film, based (loosely) on Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness but set in the Vietnam War, in which a taciturn soldier is sent to terminate an American colonel "with extreme prejudice." The colonel, deep in the Cambodian jungle, has turned to cannibalism and murder and is worshipped by the natives. The film features performances by Martin Sheen as Captain Willard (Marlow, in the novel), Marlon Brando as Col. Kurtz, and Dennis Hopper as the reporter (the harlequin). The film deviates extensively from the book, for example in that Captain Willard is not sent to investigate, but to kill, and that Col. Kurtz does not die a natural though mysterious death; also Marlow is sent here to Cambodia, not the land of the Congo River. Due.
The English Patient (1996 movie) - English Patient (1996 movie) The English Patient is the film version of the novel by Michael Ondaatje. Directed by Anthony Minghella with Ralph Fiennes, Juliette Binoche, Willem Dafoe and Kristin Scott Thomas. It was released in 1996 and won the Golden Globe for Best Picture - Drama and Academy Awards for: Best Picture Art Direction Costume Design Sound Film Editing Cinematography Original Dramatic Score Supporting Actress: Juliette Binoche Director: Anthony Minghella Song of the film: Fred Astaire: Cheek To Cheek Benny Goodman: Wang Wang Blues Muzsikás-Sebestyén Márta: Szerelem szerelem Benny Goodman: One O'Clock Jump Ella Fitzgerald: Cheek To Cheek.