Casino 1995 Oscars
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- De niro spoke of his long history in front of the camera, which has won him two academy awards, as well as his growing and impressive business. This video shows the last scene of robert de niro in casino. Although the name of robert de niro's character in the film is louis cyphre.
1995
The winner is listed first, in CAPITAL letters.
Actor:
NICOLAS CAGE in 'Leaving Las Vegas', Richard Dreyfuss in 'Mr. Holland's Opus', Anthony Hopkins in 'Nixon', Sean Penn in 'Dead Man Walking', Massimo Troisi in 'Il Postino'
Actress:
SUSAN SARANDON in 'Dead Man Walking', Elisabeth Shue in 'Leaving Las Vegas', Sharon Stone in 'Casino', Meryl Streep in 'The Bridges of Madison County', Emma Thompson in 'Sense and Sensibility'
Supporting Actor:
KEVIN SPACEY in 'The Usual Suspects', James Cromwell in 'Babe', Ed Harris in 'Apollo 13', Brad Pitt in 'Twelve Monkeys', Tim Roth in 'Rob Roy'
Supporting Actress:
MIRA SORVINO in 'Mighty Aphrodite', Joan Allen in 'Nixon', Kathleen Quinlan in 'Apollo 13', Mare Winningham in 'Georgia', Kate Winslet in 'Sense and Sensibility'
Director:
MEL GIBSON for 'Braveheart', Mike Figgis for 'Leaving Las Vegas', Chris Noonan for 'Babe', Michael Radford for 'Il Postino', Tim Robbins for 'Dead Man Walking'
Based on Nicholas Pileggi ’s non-fiction account of the fall of the old-school mob control of Las Vegas casinos in the 1970s and the takeover by faceless corporations, Martin Scorsese’s epic suffered a little by coming hard on the heels of the peerless Goodfellas with a similar style and some of the same cast members. The centre of the real story was the Stardust Hotel & Casino (which was. The nominees for the 67th Academy Awards were announced on February 14, 1995, at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills, California, by Arthur Hiller, the president of the Academy, and actress Angela Bassett. Forrest Gump earned the most nominations with thirteen.
The major Oscar winner of the year was the Best Picture award winner, producer / star / director Mel Gibson's and Paramount's stirring and violent historical action-epic tale Braveheart, about 13th century Scottish folk rebel hero and warrior Sir William Wallace, who led a vengeful, bloody revolt composed of guerrilla strikes against the treachery of villainous King Edward I. Its tagline was: 'Every man dies, not every man really lives.'
The three-hour, rousing action tale (Australian Gibson's second feature as director after his work in The Man Without a Face (1993)), with unforgettable battle scenes, romance, and sacrifice, was nominated for ten awards (including Best Costume Design, Best Film Editing, Best Original Dramatic Score, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Sound). It triumphantly won five Oscars - Best Picture, Best Director, Best Cinematography, Best Makeup, and Best Sound Effects. Braveheart was the only Best Picture nominee that didn't have an acting nomination (Gibson was denied a nomination in the performing category).
The only Best Picture nominee that could be considered a traditional Hollywood offering was director Ron Howard's blockbuster hit Apollo 13 (with nine nominations and two wins - Best Sound and Best Editing) - a chronicle of the real-life adventures of the ill-fated, heroic astronauts (Jim Lovell and his crew) of the 1970s Apollo-13 mission to the moon, who averted tragedy with the persistent help of the Houston NASA team.
The other three Best Picture nominees included:
- the Australian fantasy film by director Chris Noonan, Babe (with seven nominations and one win - Best Visual Effects) about a live-action barnyard and its 'sheepherding' star - an intelligent piglet named Babe
- Taiwanese director Ang Lee's costume drama and British comedy of manners Sense and Sensibility (with seven nominations and one win - Best Adapted Screenplay for first-time screenwriter and star actress Emma Thompson), a witty adaptation of Jane Austen's 19th century novel
- director Michael Radford's and Miramax Studio's Italian tragi-comedy based on Antonio Skarmeta's novel Burning Patience, Il Postino (The Postman) (with five nominations and only one win - Best Dramatic Score by Luis Enriquez Bacalov) about a sweet, tongue-tied Mediterranean mailman (Massimo Troisi) whose friendship with exiled, legendary Chilean poet Pablo Neruda yields unexpected results with the town's beautiful barmaid. [Il Postino was only the fifth non-English language film in the history of the Awards that received a Best Picture nomination.]
With his Best Director win, actor/director/producer Mel Gibson became the sixth actor-turned director to win a Best Director Oscar. He joined five other actors-turned-filmmakers with Best Director Oscars:
- Woody Allen for Annie Hall (1977)
- Robert Redford for Ordinary People (1980)
- Warren Beatty for Reds (1981)
- Kevin Costner for Dances With Wolves (1990)
- Clint Eastwood for Unforgiven (1992)
Two of the five directors of Best Picture nominees were not nominated as Best Director:
- Ron Howard
- Ang Lee
In their places, writer/director Mike Figgis was nominated for his adaptation of John O'Brien's semi-autobiographical novel - the low-budget indie Leaving Las Vegas (with four nominations and one win - Best Actor), a depressing, film-noirish acting tour de force about two down-and-outers in flashy Las Vegas. And producer/writer/director Tim Robbins was nominated for Dead Man Walking (with four nominations and one win - Best Actress), an adaptation of Sister Helen Prejean's best-selling account of her work among condemned-to-die prisoners on death row at New Orleans' Angola Prison. Both films - Leaving Las Vegas and Dead Man Walking were nominated in the Best Director, Best Actor and Best Actress categories, but were snubbed in the Best Picture category!
All four of the year's acting winners were first-time Academy Award winners.
The Best Actor Oscar went to Nicolas Cage (with his first nomination and first Oscar) for his performance as failed, Hollywood scriptwriter and fatally-destructive, genial, but suicidal alcoholic Ben Sanderson in Leaving Las Vegas.
The other four Best Actor nominees in the category were:
- Richard Dreyfuss (with his second nomination) as mid-1960s high school, mentoring music teacher Glenn Holland (in a career spanning three decades) in director Stephen Herek's tear-jerker Mr. Holland's Opus (the film's sole nomination)
- Anthony Hopkins (with his third nomination) as tragically-lonely, scandal-ridden President Richard M. Nixon ('Tricky Dick') in producer/director/writer Oliver Stone's three hour-long, melodramatic, historically-interpretative film Nixon (with four nominations and no wins)
- Sean Penn (with his first nomination) as Sister Helen's client - accused, remorseless death row rapist/murderer Matthew Poncelet in Dead Man Walking
- Massimo Troisi as shy, romantically-inclined, village postman Mario Ruoppolo in the bittersweet film Il Postino
[Troisi was the first post-humous Best Actor nominee since Peter Finch was nominated (and won the Oscar) for Network (1976). He died of a heart attack very shortly after filming his final scene.]
Two of the nominees for Best Actress and the winner of the Best Supporting Actress Oscar, played the role of prostitutes. Ironically, the role of a nun was the winner in the Best Actress category - this was the first time a person won for being a nun in Oscar history.
Susan Sarandon (with her fifth Best Actress nomination and first Oscar win) won the Best Actress award for her powerful role as anti-death penalty, real-life Catholic nun - Sister Helen Prejean, who spiritually advised a condemned, death-row murderer (Sean Penn) in Dead Man Walking. She became the first star to win Best Actress in a film directed by her nominated director-husband (unofficial but live-in husband Tim Robbins). [Note: Some argue that Frances McDormand was the first in the following year, winning Best Actress for Fargo (1996), directed by nominated director-husband Joel Coen.] She was only the 2nd nun-playing actress in Academy history to win an Oscar for her performance, following Jennifer Jones who won the Best Actress Oscar for The Song of Bernadette (1943). Others who have been nominated (both lead and supporting) for their nun-characters include Meryl Streep and Amy Adams in Doubt (2008), Anne Bancroft and Meg Tilly in Agnes of God (1985), Peggy Wood in The Sound of Music (1965) (P.S. technically, Julie Andrews hadn't taken her vows yet), Lilia Skalia in Lilies of the Field (1963), Audrey Hepburn in The Nun's Story (1959), Deborah Kerr in Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison (1957), Loretta Young and Celeste Holm in Come to the Stable (1949), Ingrid Bergman in The Bells of St. Mary's (1945), and Gladys Cooper in The Song of Bernadette (1943).
The competing Best Actress nominees included:
- Elisabeth Shue (with her first nomination) as lonely, soft-hearted prostitute Sera in Leaving Las Vegas
- Sharon Stone (with her first nomination) as Las Vegas casino boss Robert DeNiro's ex-hooker wife - the hedonistic and alluring Ginger McKenna in writer/director Martin Scorsese's underworld crime adaptation of Nicholas Pileggi's book Casino (the film's sole nomination) that reunited DeNiro, Scorsese, Pesci and Pileggi
- Meryl Streep (with her tenth nomination, and her 8th Best Actress nomination) as repressed, mid-1960s, Madison County (Iowa) farm-wife Francesca Johnson yearning for romance with a photographer (co-star Clint Eastwood) in star/producer/director Clint Eastwood's adaptation of Robert James Waller's novel The Bridges of Madison County (the film's sole nomination)
- Emma Thompson (with her fourth acting nomination and a recent Oscar win in Howard's End (1992)) as sensible Elinor Dashwood in Sense and Sensibility
[Emma Thompson became the first performer to have dual nominations as screenwriter and actress - for Sense and Sensibility. She won the Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar award, but lost her bid for an acting Oscar this time. With her adapted screenplay statue, she became the only individual, male or female, to have scored competitive Oscars for acting and writing, in 1992 and in this year.]
All ten of the Best Supporting Actor and Actress nominees were first-time contenders.
Kevin Spacey (with his first nomination and Oscar win!) won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his performance as evil, crippled con-man/loser Roger 'Verbal' Kint - who was grilled about a San Pedro tanker explosion and confesses in producer/director Bryan Singer's feature film debut, a delightfully-twisted, brilliant film-noirish The Usual Suspects (with only two nominations and two wins - including Best Original Screenplay for Christopher McQuarrie). This low-budget independent film, made for $6 million, introduced the world to the elusive character of Keyser Soze, known for the saying: 'The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn't exist.'
The other four nominees in the Best Supporting Actor category were:
- James Cromwell (with his first nomination) as Babe's kind-hearted farm owner Arthur Hoggett in Babe
- Ed Harris (with his first nomination) as chain-smoking flight director Gene Kranz in Apollo 13
- Brad Pitt (with his first nomination) as seriously deranged Jeffrey Goines in director Terry Gilliam's complex, off-beat science fiction fantasy 12 Monkeys (with two nominations and no wins)
- Tim Roth (with his first nomination) as Rob Roy's evil, loathsome nemesis Cunningham in director Michael Caton-Jones' tale of the early 18th century legendary Scot - the lusty Robert Roy MacGregor in Rob Roy (the film's sole nomination)
For her lead role as naive prostitute/porno star Linda Ash ('Judy Cum'), the wayward birth mother of divorced sportswriter Woody Allen's adopted son in actor/writer/director Woody Allen's Mighty Aphrodite (with two nominations and one win), Mira Sorvino (with her first nomination and Oscar win) won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar award. She followed in a long-line of other actresses who won Oscars for playing streetwalkers and hookers.
- [Mira Sorvino was the third actress to win an Oscar for a performance in a Woody Allen film - following previous winners Diane Keaton for Annie Hall (1977), and two-time winner Dianne Wiest for Hannah and Her Sisters (1986) and Bullets Over Broadway (1994).]
Her competitors in the Best Supporting Actress category included:
- Joan Allen (with her first nomination) as understanding, soft-spoken wife Pat Nixon in Nixon
- Kathleen Quinlan (with her first nomination) as omen-fearing Marylin Lovell - Jim Lovell's (co-star Tom Hanks) wife in Apollo 13
- Mare Winningham (with her first nomination) as older sister Georgia - a settled, stable, successful folk-singer in director Ulu Grosbard's sibling rivalry character study Georgia (the film's sole nomination)
- Kate Winslet (with her first nomination) as overly romantic Marianne Dashwood in Sense and Sensibility
This year's Honorary Oscar award was presented to Kirk Douglas, with a film career of almost 50 years, 'as a creative and moral force in the motion picture community.' He was nominated three times for Best Actor: for Champion (1949), The Bad and the Beautiful (1952), and Lust For Life (1956) - but never won. He had appeared in many other great films, including The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946), Out of the Past (1947), The Big Carnival (1951), Detective Story (1951), Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), Paths of Glory (1957), Spartacus (1960), Lonely Are the Brave (1962), and Seven Days in May (1964).
Another Honorary Oscar award recipient was famed animator Chuck Jones, often known as 'The Father of Contemporary Animation,' for 'the creation of classic cartoons and cartoon characters whose animated lives have brought joy to our real ones for more than half a century. He directed animation at Warner Bros. (famous for Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, and Daffy Duck), and created such characters as Wile E. Coyote, Henery Hawk, Pepe Le Pew, Marvin Martian, Ralph Wolf, the Road Runner, Sam Sheepdog, and Sniffles.
Oscar Snubs and Omissions:
Leaving Las Vegas and Dead Man Walking were nominated in the Best Director, Best Actor and Best Actress categories, but were snubbed in the Best Picture category. Scorsese's Casino, a tale of greed and glittering Las Vegas decadence in the 1970s, with a sole unsuccessful nomination for Sharon Stone, lacked awards-nominations in a number of other categories (Best Director, Best Picture, Best Cinematography, Best Adapted Screenplay), and Robert DeNiro was un-nominated for his role as ill-fated Jewish bookmaking gangster Sam 'Ace' Rothstein. Director Clint Eastwood's The Bridges of Madison County (with only one unsuccessful nomination for Meryl Streep as Best Actress) lacked a Best Director nomination and a Best Acting nomination for his role as photographer Robert Kincaid.
One of the biggest omissions was Before Sunrise (Best Picture, Best Director (Richard Linklater), Best Actor (Ethan Hawke as Jesse), Best Actress (Julie Delpy as Celine), and Best Original Screenplay) - an all-time great romance film about two strangers spontaneously engaging in an overnight conversation in Vienna that changed their lives.
Director Ang Lee failed to win a Best Director nomination for Sense and Sensibility, and director Ron Howard was denied a similar nomination for Apollo 13. Tom Hanks was unnominated for Apollo 13 as astronaut and mission leader Jim Lovell ('Houston, we have a problem'), denying him a chance at an unprecedented three consecutive Oscar wins for Best Actor.
There were only two (unsuccessful) nominations for Terry Gilliam's sci-fi time-travel film 12 Monkeys - Best Supporting Actor (Brad Pitt) and Best Costume Design. Spike Lee's Clockers, a grim film about crack drug trade, was also denied nominations, as was David Fincher's gruesome crime thriller and box-office hit Se7en (with only one nomination - Best Film Editing). Female director Kathryn Bigelow's futuristic thriller Strange Days received zero recognition -- for acting honors to Juliette Lewis, Angela Bassett, or for Ralph Fiennes, or for producer James Cameron's script. The CGI-enhanced visual-special effects by Stan Parks were unrecognized for Jumanji.
The following were additional acting nominations - denied or unacknowledged:
- Jennifer Jason Leigh as Mare Winningham's tormented sister Sadie - a wanna-be, drug-addicted rock singer in Georgia
- Gary Sinise as bitter, grounded astronaut Ken Mattingly in Apollo 13
- Julianne Moore as affluent, fragile California housewife Carol White with a unique 20th century affliction called MCS ('multiple chemical sensitivity') and forced to live an isolated existence at a desert retreat called Wrenwood to prevent serious allergic reactions, in Todd Haynes' Safe
- Kathy Bates as the title character Dolores Claiborne, an abused wife in a domestically-troubled family with estranged daughter Selena (Jennifer Jason Leigh) in director Taylor Hackford's adaptation of Stephen King's 1992 novel Dolores Claiborne (with no nominations)
- Julia Ormond as Sabrina Fairchild, and Nancy Marchand as a daffy society matron (and Harrison Ford's mother) in the inferior remake Sabrina (with two unsuccessful nominations - Best Original Musical or Comedy Score, and Best Original Song - 'Moonlight')
- Angela Bassett as raging, wronged wife Bernadine 'Bernie' Harris in Forest Whitaker's Waiting to Exhale (with no nominations), adapted from Terry McMillan's novel of the same name
- Golden Globe winner Nicole Kidman as TV anchorwoman Suzanne Stone Maretto with sociopathic, spouse-murdering intentions, and Joaquin Phoenix as the dumb, working-class teen drawn into her scheme in Gus Van Sant's black dramedy To Die For
- Ian McKellen as the title character in Richard Loncraine's dramatic period film Richard III (with only two unsuccessful nominations - Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design)
- Kevin Kline as French jewel thief Luc Teyssier in Lawrence Kasdan's French Kiss (with no nominations)
- Jim Carrey as Edward Nygma/The Riddler in Batman Forever(with three unsuccessful nominations - Best Cinematography, Best Sound, and Best Sound Effects Editing)
- Albert Finney as Alfie Byrne, an early 1960s Dublin bus driver in A Man of No Importance
- Don Cheadle as a criminal psychopath named Mouse - a sharp counterpoint to Denzel Washington's private eye named Easy in an LA crime case in Devil in a Blue Dress
Casino 1995 Oscars Nominees
Babe (1995, Australia)
Revolutionary computer effects made this family-oriented comedic drama the Oscar winner for Best Achievement in Visual Effects, defeating the other nominee Apollo 13 (1995). During filming, 970 animals were trained by dozens of trainers and assistants, including pigs, dogs, cats, sheep, horses, cows, goats, ducks, mice, and pigeons, of which 500 eventually appeared on screen.
It used a combination of real and animatronic animals: pigs and border collies. Many piglets (Large White Yorkshire purebreds) were required for the production since they grew so fast -- and were the right size for Babe for only a three week stretch. Pigs were filmed when they were between 16 and 18 weeks of age and 18 inches tall. Every three weeks, litters of pigs were bred for filming - and only female pigs were used -- to avoid displaying the prominent genitals of the males.
1995 Oscar Movies
There was one animatronic pig, used for wide-open shots (when there was 15-20 feet of open space in all directions around the pig), when a trainer couldn't be nearby. And the animatronic pig was also used for reverse, over-the shoulder POV shots, when Babe was talking to another animal.
1995 Oscars Best Picture
In post-production, special effects engineers overlaid innovative computer modeling over the live animals' jawlines. The lips of animals moved in sync with speech, digitally-modified in order to create human-like talking 'mouths.' In some cases, the animatronic pig was manipulated to mouth words.
1995 Oscar Best Song
The finale was a sheepherding contest in which Babe successfully and flawlessly corraled a flock of sheep into a pen, and was praised by farmer Arthur Hoggett's (James Cromwell) words: 'That'll do, Pig. That'll do.'