Los Angeles Times

LOOKING BACK FOR CLUES TO FUTURE

All of this season’s best picture nominees resemble past winners. Whether it helps is another story.

- BY LISA ROSEN

We peek at past victors to see how they resemble this year’s best picture nominees.

EVERY

YEAR, The Envelope weighs the odds for each of the best picture nominees to win the gold by comparing them to previous Academy Award winners. (“Parasite” — it’s “The Sting” gone horribly wrong!) To analyze the elements of this season’s eight nominees, we looked at plots, themes, styles — even their comic relief. Are the resemblanc­es we found enough to give the current picture a boost? Yeah, probably not. But we did find that this year’s crop, with its weightier story lines, often had us dipping into past documentar­y winners to find our corollarie­s.

“THE FATHER” & “A BEAUTIFUL MIND”

Dementia wreaks havoc on its victims’ minds. “The Father” wreaks havoc on our concept of it, by turning the illness into a mystery thriller. Can Anthony (Anthony Hopkins) believe what he sees? Can we? For such an inventive look at mental decline, we turn to 2002’s winner, “A Beautiful Mind,” and the tricks our mind can play on us when our cognition is altered. 2012’s foreign-language film “Amour” also shares the particular tragedy of this loss.

“JUDAS AND THE BLACK MESSIAH”

& “THE TIMES OF HARVEY MILK”

The heart-wrenching, infuriatin­g story of Black Panther Fred Hampton’s (Daniel Kaluuya) betrayal by his comrade William O’Neal (LaKeith Stanfield), and his subsequent assassinat­ion by the U.S. government, has a number of filmic forebears. Betrayal has a hand in 1985’s winner, “Amadeus,” 2007’s “The Departed” and both “Godfathers.” But 1985’s winning documentar­y feature brings it home, with its story of another great revolution­ary figure betrayed and murdered by a close colleague.

“THE TRIAL OF THE CHICAGO 7”

& “FOG OF WAR”

If 1957’s nominee “12 Angry Men” had won, it would make this one a lot easier. Eight enraged revolution­aries! But, alas, “The Bridge on the River Kwai” won that year, which does nothing to illuminate this film’s chances. The film looks at the travesty of a trial against the men who staged a Vietnam War protest at the 1968 Democratic Convention, which descended into a riot. It is a biting indictment of a government that will try to crush opposition at all costs, not unlike 2004’s documentar­y winner “Fog of War,” in which former Defense Secretary Robert McNamara dissects his role in the Vietnam War and WWII.

“MANK” & “ON THE WATERFRONT”

1941’s “Citizen Kane” would be a ringer for this behind-thescenes look at that film’s screenwrit­er Herman Mankiewicz (Gary Oldman), but as “Mank” fans know, that film won only for its screenplay. Instead, we turn to 1955’s “On the Waterfront.” The stink of corruption permeating New Jersey’s dockworker­s union in “Waterfront” wafts over California’s politics in “Mank.” Both feature a lovely blond heartbroke­n heartbreak­er. And behind the scenes on “Waterfront,” independen­t producer Sam Spiegel was reported to be as much of a thorn in the side of legendary screenwrit­er Budd Schulberg as Mercury Theatre manager John Houseman apparently was to Mankiewicz. Then let’s throw in a dash of the panache of 1937 winner “The Great Ziegfeld.” Both men lived grand lives, gambled recklessly with hearts and money, and left an indelible impression in their wake.

“MINARI”

& “PARASITE” / “TERMS OF ENDEARMENT”

In this quintessen­tially American tale of the immigrant experience, Jacob (Steven Yeun) struggles to give his family a better life and nearly destroys everything in the process. Last year’s victor, “Parasite,” has only the slimmest thematic similarity — downtrodde­n family hustles to survive against intense economic odds — but it is the only other film with an Asian cast and director to have won the best picture Oscar. Could we throw in “Terms of Endearment” for a couple of precocious kids and a live-wire grandmothe­r? We could try.

“NOMADLAND”

& “DOWN AND OUT IN AMERICA”

Fern (Frances McDormand) is an unhoused wanderer, assessing the challenges and freedom of a nomadic way of life. We are immersed in that world along with her and a largely nonprofess­ional cast of real nomads, in a film that straddles narrative and documentar­y genres. So again we turn to a winning documentar­y for comparison, 1987’s “Down and Out in America,” which takes an unsparing look at the brutal effects of Reaganomic­s on the working poor and homelessne­ss in the U.S.

“PROMISING YOUNG WOMAN”

& “UNFORGIVEN” / “AMERICAN BEAUTY”

Carey Mulligan stars as the prophetic Cassandra in an elaboratel­y constructe­d revenge movie that blends comedy, tragedy, romance and any number of genres in between. Good luck finding a best picture winner starring a female on such a mission. Instead, we offer a mash-up of 1992’s “Unforgiven,” for its story about exacting retributio­n for a terrible injustice against a woman, and 1999’s “American Beauty,” for its stylistic look at the emptiness, violence and unexpected joy we are all capable of feeling.

“SOUND OF METAL” & “THE LOST WEEKEND”

This searing film centers on Ruben (Riz Ahmed), a metal drummer and recovering addict who loses his hearing and seemingly everything that gives his life meaning. He reluctantl­y joins a rural deaf rehab community, and even more reluctantl­y, starts coming to terms with being deaf. His battles, and his denial, call to mind that classic of the ravages of alcoholism, 1945’s “The Lost Weekend.” Although Ruben doesn’t return to substances as Ray Milland’s character does, his addictive nature does come into play as he seeks a fix and gives up (or sells) almost everything in the process. And as with that midcentury melodrama, by the end of the film, he manages to reach the grace of acceptance. That’s when life can begin. 8

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Niko Tavernise Netf lix
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Glen Wilson Sundance Institute
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Janet Fries Getty Images
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Ben Smithard Sony Pictures Classics
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Sony Pictures
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Universal Pictures / DreamWorks Pictures
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Amazon Studios
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Focus Features
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Joshua James Richards
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Josh Ethan Johnson A24
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CJ Entertainm­ent
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Hope Runs High Films
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Warner Bros.
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Columbia Pictures

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