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Oscar-nominated movies based on comics

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Joshua Kreitzer

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Mar 23, 2003, 2:04:33 AM3/23/03
to
In case anyone is interested, the following is a list of movies based
on comics which have been nominated for Academy Awards, and the
categories they were nominated in. (I have also included the ADDAMS
FAMILY movies, which were ultimately based on single-panel cartoons.)

There may be additional movies which qualify for this list; if you
know of any, please let me know.

POPEYE THE SAILOR MEETS SINDBAD THE SAILOR (1936)
cartoon short

SUPERMAN (1941)
cartoon short

LI'L ABNER (1959)
scoring of a musical picture

A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN (1970)
original song score

THE DOONESBURY SPECIAL (1977)
animated short

SUPERMAN (1978)
special achievement award for visual effects ** Winner **
sound
original score
film editing

ANNIE (1982)
art direction
original song score and its adaptation or adaptation score

BATMAN (1989)
art direction ** Winner **

DICK TRACY (1990)
art direction ** Winner **
song ** Winner **
makeup ** Winner **
supporting actor
cinematography
sound
costume design

THE ADDAMS FAMILY (1991)
costume design

BATMAN RETURNS (1992)
makeup
visual effects

ADDAMS FAMILY VALUES (1993)
art direction

BATMAN FOREVER (1995)
cinematography
sound
sound effects editing

MEN IN BLACK (1997)
makeup ** Winner **
art direction
musical or comedy score

GHOST WORLD (2001)
adapted screenplay

ROAD TO PERDITION (2002)
supporting actor
art direction
cinematography
score
sound
sound editing

SPIDER-MAN (2002)
sound
visual effects

Apparently this is the first year in which two different comics-based
films have been nominated for Oscars.

Joshua Kreitzer
grom...@hotmail.com

Mark Steese

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Mar 23, 2003, 2:48:51 AM3/23/03
to
Es war einmal ein Mensch, genannt grom...@hotmail.com (Joshua Kreitzer),
der news:196aebc5.0303...@posting.google.com schrieb:

> In case anyone is interested, the following is a list of movies based
> on comics which have been nominated for Academy Awards, and the
> categories they were nominated in. (I have also included the ADDAMS
> FAMILY movies, which were ultimately based on single-panel cartoons.)

[snippage]

> A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN (1970)
> original song score

That was nominated for an Oscar??? Good grief! If anybody ever wrote
songs that caught less of the spirit of 'Peanuts', I hope I never hear
them. Although I concede that I might have liked them better if someone
other than Rod McKuen had sung them. Whatever his merits as a poet, his
musical career peaked when he and Bob McFadden released "The Mummy" in
1959 ("Like, help").

-Mark Steese
--
there's a ribbon in the willow and a tire swing rope
and a briar patch of berries takin over the slope
the cat'll sleep in the mailbox and we'll never go to town
till we bury every dream in the cold cold ground
cold cold ground -Tom Waits

DD DEGG CO

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Mar 23, 2003, 8:45:30 AM3/23/03
to
The NCS now has all the divisional nominess
posted at their site.

Categories include newspaper panel; tv animation,
editorial cartoon, feature animation, comic books,
newspaper illustration, gag cartoons, and more.

http://reuben.org/reuben.asp


D.D.Degg
"It's clever, but is it art?" - Kipling

Chris Lee

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Mar 23, 2003, 11:27:54 AM3/23/03
to
>In case anyone is interested, the following is a list of movies based
>on comics which have been nominated for Academy Awards, and the
>categories they were nominated in. (I have also included the ADDAMS
>FAMILY movies, which were ultimately based on single-panel cartoons.)
>
>There may be additional movies which qualify for this list; if you
>know of any, please let me know.
>

>Joshua Kreitzer

Don't forget Skippy (1931), based on Percy Crosby's strip, for which Norman
Taurog won Best Director, and it also had nominations for Best Picture, Best
Actor (Jackie Cooper), and Best Adapted Screenplay (one of the writers was
Joseph L. Mankiewicz).

>> A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN (1970)
>> original song score
>

>That was nominated for an Oscar??? Good grief! If anybody ever wrote
>songs that caught less of the spirit of 'Peanuts', I hope I never hear
>them. Although I concede that I might have liked them better if someone
>other than Rod McKuen had sung them. Whatever his merits as a poet, his
>musical career peaked when he and Bob McFadden released "The Mummy" in
>1959 ("Like, help").
>
>-Mark Steese

Well, the fact that Vince Guaraldi was included in the nomination should leaven
things a little bit. It probably never had a chance anyway, since it lost to
Let It Be.


Christopher L.
http://ezclee4050.tripod.com

(insert Simpsons quote here)

Paul L. Madarasz

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Mar 24, 2003, 3:12:53 PM3/24/03
to
On 23 Mar 2003 07:48:51 GMT, mst...@charter.net (Mark Steese) wrote,
perhaps among other things:

>Es war einmal ein Mensch, genannt grom...@hotmail.com (Joshua Kreitzer),
>der news:196aebc5.0303...@posting.google.com schrieb:
>
>> In case anyone is interested, the following is a list of movies based
>> on comics which have been nominated for Academy Awards, and the
>> categories they were nominated in. (I have also included the ADDAMS
>> FAMILY movies, which were ultimately based on single-panel cartoons.)
>
>[snippage]
>
>> A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN (1970)
>> original song score
>
>That was nominated for an Oscar??? Good grief! If anybody ever wrote
>songs that caught less of the spirit of 'Peanuts', I hope I never hear
>them. Although I concede that I might have liked them better if someone
>other than Rod McKuen had sung them. Whatever his merits as a poet, his
>musical career peaked when he and Bob McFadden released "The Mummy" in
>1959 ("Like, help").
>
>-Mark Steese

Gee, my favorite Rod McKuen song has always been "Oliver Twist" ("He
raises Dickens/with the chickens/ You oughta see Oliver Twist").

"Listen to the Smarm..."
--
Paul L. Madarasz
Tucson, Baja Arizona
"How 'bout cuttin' that rebop?"
-- S. Kowalski

Mark Steese

unread,
Mar 24, 2003, 5:40:42 PM3/24/03
to
Es war einmal ein Mensch, genannt Paul L. Madarasz <pl...@dakotacom.net>,
der news:gipu7vkg4v1vtn8sb...@4ax.com schrieb:

>>That was nominated for an Oscar??? Good grief! If anybody ever wrote
>>songs that caught less of the spirit of 'Peanuts', I hope I never hear
>>them. Although I concede that I might have liked them better if
>>someone other than Rod McKuen had sung them. Whatever his merits as a
>>poet, his musical career peaked when he and Bob McFadden released "The
>>Mummy" in 1959 ("Like, help").
>>

> Gee, my favorite Rod McKuen song has always been "Oliver Twist" ("He
> raises Dickens/with the chickens/ You oughta see Oliver Twist").
>
> "Listen to the Smarm..."

I stand corrected! In penance for my oversight, I shall now go and
listen to Rod's cover of "Mule Train" (clippety-cloppin', clippety-
cloppin')...

Paul L. Madarasz

unread,
Mar 24, 2003, 5:46:43 PM3/24/03
to
On 24 Mar 2003 22:40:42 GMT, mst...@charter.net (Mark Steese) wrote,
perhaps among other things:

>>> Whatever his merits as a


>>>poet, his musical career peaked when he and Bob McFadden released "The
>>>Mummy" in 1959 ("Like, help").
>>>
>> Gee, my favorite Rod McKuen song has always been "Oliver Twist" ("He
>> raises Dickens/with the chickens/ You oughta see Oliver Twist").
>>
>> "Listen to the Smarm..."
>
>I stand corrected! In penance for my oversight, I shall now go and
>listen to Rod's cover of "Mule Train" (clippety-cloppin', clippety-
>cloppin')...
>
>-Mark Steese

Oh, hey, they're *all* gems.

Joshua Kreitzer

unread,
Mar 25, 2003, 1:11:46 AM3/25/03
to
The following is a list of movies based on comics which have been
nominated for Academy Awards, and the categories they were nominated
in. (I have also included the ADDAMS FAMILY movies, which were
ultimately based on single-panel cartoons.) Thanks to Chris Lee for
mentioning SKIPPY (which was nominated in three prestigious categories
that no other comic-based film has been nominated in, and won one of
them). Here's an updated version that also takes into account ROAD TO
PERDITION's single win.


There may be additional movies which qualify for this list; if you
know of any, please let me know.

SKIPPY (1931)
director ** Winner **
picture
actor
adapted screenplay

cinematography ** Winner **
supporting actor
art direction


score
sound
sound editing

SPIDER-MAN (2002)
sound
visual effects

Joshua Kreitzer
grom...@hotmail.com

Joshua Kreitzer

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Apr 4, 2003, 9:17:58 PM4/4/03
to
domd...@aol.com (DomDawes) wrote in message news:<20030404142527...@mb-fy.aol.com>...

> << In case anyone is interested, the following is a list of movies based
> on comics which have been nominated for Academy Awards, and the
> categories they were nominated in.
> (snip)

> << THE DOONESBURY SPECIAL (1977)
> animated short >>
>
> Wasn't this a tv special?
> Wouldn't that qualify it for an Emmy (which I think it won), not an Oscar?

Yes, it was a tv special, but it didn't win an Emmy, and it was
nominated for an Oscar. (Occasionally in the past, it was possible
for the same film/television program to be eligible for both awards;
for example, WACO: THE RULES OF ENGAGEMENT was nominated for an Oscar
for Best Documentary Feature and later won an Emmy for Outstanding
Investigative Journalism. In recent years, the Oscars have been
trying to close the loopholes to keep television shows out of their
awards.)

http://www.doonesbury.com/strip/retro/timeline/index.htm states:
11-27-77
A Doonesbury Special, an animated film directed by
John and Faith Hubley, debuts on NBC. It is later
nominated for an Academy Award and wins the Special
Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.

The Internet Movie Database, and all other sources I have checked
which discuss this sort of thing, agree that A DOONESBURY SPECIAL
received an Oscar nomination. (What they don't agree on is whether
the title is "A" or "THE" DOONESBURY SPECIAL.)

As far as I can tell, there was no Emmy category specifically for
primetime animated programs the year DOONESBURY was broadcast,
although one was created the following season. Before then,
children-oriented animated shows could compete for Outstanding
Children's Special, although that category wouldn't have been
appropriate for DOONESBURY.

Joshua Kreitzer
grom...@hotmail.com

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