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Best Picture
Celebrate this year's nominees in the Best Picture category alongside their producers.

In-Gallery
Gallery Spotlight: Archiving the Academy
Without careful preservation, many precious and enlightening objects from the film industry would be lost to time. Across all 19 of our branches, ranging from acting to writing to artist representation, the Academy strives to preserve and document rare photographs, one-of-a-kind objects, iconic costumes, props and more. Join us as we share the Academy's efforts to preserve and nurture the legacy of film history.
About Gallery Spotlights
Gallery Spotlights feature special guests who bring fresh insights to our exhibitions. Join us for revealing monthly conversations connecting the objects in our galleries to the art and history of moviemaking.
If you have any questions or need assistance planning your visit, please email museumeducation@oscars.org.
Related Content

Screenings
Marty in 35mm
Ernest Borgnine had largely been stereotyped in villainous supporting roles (memorably in From Here to Eternity, 1953) when director Delbert Mann and casting supervisor Betty Pagel chose him to star in the film version of Paddy Chayefsky’s acclaimed TV play—which had starred Rod Steiger and Nancy Marchand/earned him the Best Actor Oscar and helped launch a varied career that lasted into the 21st century.
Winner of Best Picture (Harold Hecht, producer), Directing (Mann), and Screenplay (Chayefsky), the film was also nominated for its black-and-white art direction and black-and-white cinematography, and for the supporting performances of Joe Mantell as Marty’s friend and Betsy Blair as Marty’s love interest.
35mm

Screenings

Screenings
Alfie in 35mm
Michael Caine achieved international stardom and received his first Best Actor nomination for his wry performance as a charismatic lothario in this comedy-drama from producer-director Lewis Gilbert (You Only Live Twice, 1967) that is a lively time capsule of Swinging London. Gilbert and casting supervisor Sally Nicholl supported Caine with an impressive array of actresses, including two-time Oscar winner Shelley Winters, as well as Jane Asher, Shirley Anne Field, and stage actress Vivien Merchant in a touching, nominated performance as one of Alfie’s married conquests.
The film was also nominated for Best Picture (Gilbert), Bill Naughton’s adaptation of his own play, and the classic title song by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, performed for the film’s end credits by Cher.
35mm

Screenings
Ordinary People in 35mm
Robert Redford made his feature directorial debut with this moving adaptation of Judith Guest’s novel about the difficult relationship between an emotionally troubled teenager and his parents after the death of his brother. The cast, selected by Redford and casting director Penny Perry, balanced veteran actors such as Donald Sutherland, Mary Tyler Moore (earning a Best Actress nomination for a rare dramatic role), and Supporting Actor nominee Judd Hirsch with relative newcomers such as Elizabeth McGovern, Dinah Manoff, and Timothy Hutton, who won Best Supporting Actor for his sensitive performance as the guilt-ridden Conrad. The film earned additional Oscars for Best Picture (Ronald L. Schwary, producer), Redford’s direction, and Alvin Sargent’s screenplay.
35mm

Screenings
Tootsie in 35mm
Dustin Hoffman plays a principled but difficult actor who unexpectedly achieves stardom after assuming a female persona to land a role on a soap opera. Director Sydney Pollack and casting director Lynn Stalmaster supported Hoffman with a top-notch cast in this hugely popular farce, including Supporting Actress winner Jessica Lange as a soap actress, Supporting Actress nominee Teri Garr as Hoffman’s perplexed girlfriend, Charles Durning, Dabney Coleman, Geena Davis, and a scene-stealing performance by Pollack himself as Hoffman’s long-suffering agent.
The film was also nominated for Best Picture, Hoffman’s performance, and Pollack’s direction as well as its original screenplay, cinematography, film editing, sound, and the original song “It Might Be You.”
35mm

Screenings
Terms of Endearment in 35mm
Veteran TV writer-producer James L. Brooks made his feature directing debut with this hilarious yet heartbreaking adaptation of the novel by Larry McMurtry (The Last Picture Show, 1971), following the complicated relationship between a strong-willed mother (Shirley MacLaine, winning her only Oscar) and her daughter (fellow Best Actress nominee Debra Winger). Jack Nicholson won his second Oscar for his supporting role as a free-spirited astronaut who romances MacLaine, with John Lithgow also nominated as Winger’s well-meaning suitor. Another member of the top-notch cast, chosen by Brooks and legendary casting directors Ellen Chenoweth and Juliet Taylor, was Jeff Daniels, in his breakout role as Winger’s feckless husband.
The film also earned three Oscars for Brooks himself—for Best Picture, Directing, and his adapted screenplay.
35mm

Screenings
Secrets & Lies
A woman is united with the adult daughter she never knew in this original and authentic comedy-drama from seven-time Oscar nominated writer-director Mike Leigh. Leigh created the script by his usual method, working with his top team of actors (assembled by casting directors Paddy Stern and Susie Parriss) to develop the characters and storyline, and the result earned nominations for stars Brenda Blethyn and Marianne Jean-Baptiste as the unlikely mother-daughter pair.
The cast includes Leigh regulars such as Timothy Spall and Lesley Manville, and the film was also nominated for Best Picture (Simon Channing-Williams, producer), Leigh’s direction, and the film’s original screenplay.
DCP

Screenings
Erin Brockovich in 4K
Julia Roberts won the Best Actress Oscar for her commanding performance as the real-life legal assistant taking on a power company that poisoned a small California town. The film received nominations for Best Picture (Danny DeVito, Michael Shamberg, and Stacey Sher, producers), Steven Soderbergh’s direction (he won that same year for Traffic, in competition with himself), Susannah Grant’s original screenplay, and the supporting performance of Albert Finney as attorney Ed Masry, part of the expert cast chosen by Soderbergh and casting director Margery Simkin. Additional inspired casting decisions came via Marg Helgenberger as an ailing plaintiff and Aaron Eckhart as Roberts’s biker love interest.
4K DCP

Screenings
98th Oscars Casting Winner
A special screening of the Academy's first winner for achievement in casting, to be announced after the 98th Academy Awards on March 15.
