Toronto Star

Classic horror flicks that got passed over

Horror movies usually get the cold shoulder at the Oscars — but that could soon change

- BRUCE FRETTS THE NEW YORK TIMES

When it comes to horror films, the response from the Academy Awards has generally been: Get out!

But there have been rare exceptions. The Silence of the Lambs swept the major categories, winning Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor and Best Actress in 1992. Guillermo del Toro’s 2006 dark fantasy Pan’s Labyrinth emerged triumphant for Best Cinematogr­aphy, Art Direction and Makeup. Otherwise, the Oscars have mostly given chillers the cold shoulder.

That could change this year with Get Out, which is nominated for Best Picture. It also garnered Best Director and Original Screenplay nods for Jordan Peele, and a Best Actor nomination for Daniel Kaluuya. Of course, it’s much more than a horror movie; it’s also a trenchant satire of America’s racial dynamics.

Still, you can’t help but fear that Get Out might end up in “the sunken place” on Oscar night, given the lack of academy appreciati­on for other terrifying classics. Here are some examples. Frankenste­in (1931) Nomination­s: None The odds were stacked against this adaptation of Mary Shelley’s gothic classic in more ways than one. At that time, there were only three nominees in most of the academy’s major categories, except for Best Picture, which had eight contenders. Yet director James Whale’s stark depiction of the diabolical doctor played by Colin Clive and his stitched-together monster, played by Boris Karloff, failed to make the cut. Best Actor went to the lead in another scary movie, Fredric March in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (who tied with Wallace Beery for The Champ), perhaps because he showed greater range in his dual role than Clive did in his single part. Psycho (1960) Nomination­s: 4 Wins: None Shockingly, Alfred Hitchcock never won a Best Director award. Although he was awarded an honorary Oscar in 1968, he was nominated for this mother of a creepfest. He lost to Billy Wilder for The Apartment, which also beat Psycho for Best Black and White Art Direction.

Janet Leigh was in the hunt for Best Supporting Actress, but perhaps because her part was cut so short she was passed over in favour of Shirley Jones in Elmer Gantry. That film’s lead, Burt Lancaster, took home the Best Actor prize for his portrayal of the titular charlatan. Despite his daring, gender-fluid turn as Norman Bates, Anthony Perkins wasn’t among the finalists. Rosemary’s Baby (1968) Nomination­s: 2 Wins: 1 Maybe the devil made them do it? The academy snubbed this satanic satire from Roman Polanski, choosing not to nominate it for Best Picture or Director, both of which were won by Carol Reed’s more upbeat Oliver! Mia Farrow’s affecting, tremulous work as the mother of the devil’s spawn was left out of the Best Actress race, which ended in a tie between Barbra Streisand for Funny Girl and Katharine Hepburn for The Lion in Winter.

Rosemary’s Baby found favour only in the Best Supporting Actress category, where Ruth Gordon snagged the prize for her hysterical portrayal of a buttinsky neighbour who leads a coven of Upper West Side witches. The Exorcist (1973) Nomination­s: 10 Wins: 2 It’s enough to make your head spin. What could have possessed the academy to spurn director William Friedkin’s terrifying tale of a pea soupspewin­g little girl played by Linda Blair in favour of George Roy Hill’s con-men comedy The Sting for Best Picture, Director, Art Direction and Editing?

William Peter Blatty did win for adapting his own novel into a screenplay, but he didn’t have to compete with The Sting, which fell into the original screenplay category. Blair lost Best Supporting Actress to a less demonic youngster, Tatum O’Neal, for Paper Moon, while Ellen Burstyn, who played Blair’s mother, was defeated for Best Actress by Glenda Jackson for A Touch of Class.

The Exorcist did win for Best Sound. The Shining (1980) Nomination­s: None Where was Johnny — er, Jack — on Oscar night when Stanley Kubrick’s loose interpreta­tion of Stephen King’s haunted-hotel novel was eligible? Nowhere to be seen.

The ceremony was dominated by Ordinary People, which won Best Picture, a Best Director award for Robert Redford, Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor for Timothy Hutton.

The Shining did earn the dubious distinctio­n of garnering two Razzie nomination­s: Shelley Duvall for Worst Actress and Kubrick for Worst Director. It’s almost enough to make you want to commit redrum.

 ??  ?? We’re still not sure what possessed Oscar voters to overlook the performanc­es of Linda Blair and Ellen Burstyn in The Exorcist.
We’re still not sure what possessed Oscar voters to overlook the performanc­es of Linda Blair and Ellen Burstyn in The Exorcist.

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