Best Cinematography Oscar Winners- Color
This award is split into B&W and Color lists for the sake of length. From the very first year this was a category and one award was given. In 1939 the Academy began giving out two awards for black-and-white and color. In 1957 they only gave one award, which happened to be for a color picture, then returned to two awards the following year. In 1967 they returned to giving one award in this category for good.
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| hypathio7's Rating | My Rating | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Gone With the Wind (1939, G)
The use of color and the grandness of scale of this movie, particularly in filming the lavish interiors, is still amazing. I can hardly imagine what the original audiences must have thought in '39. I have heard some people say they do not like the main characters, so they cannot enjoy the movie. The main characters are flawed, but I found them intriguing to watch and still very much enjoyed the movie. |
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| 2 |
The Thief of Bagdad (1940, Unrated) |
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| 3 |
Blood and Sand (1941, Unrated) |
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| 4 |
The Black Swan (1942, Unrated) |
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| 5 |
Phantom of the Opera (1943, Unrated) |
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| 6 |
Wilson (1944, Unrated) |
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| 7 |
Leave Her to Heaven (1945, Unrated) |
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| 8 |
The Yearling (1946, G) |
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| 9 |
Black Narcissus (1947, Unrated) |
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| 10 |
Joan of Arc (1948, Unrated) |
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| 11 |
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949, Unrated) |
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| 12 |
King Solomon's Mines (1950, Unrated) |
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| 13 |
An American in Paris (1951, Unrated) |
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| 14 |
The Quiet Man (1952, Unrated) |
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| 15 |
Shane (1953, Unrated) |
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| 16 |
Three Coins in the Fountain (1954, Unrated) |
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| 17 |
To Catch a Thief (1955, Unrated) |
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| 18 |
Around the World in 80 Days (1956, Unrated)
The scenery and effects were probably amazing to the 50s audience who hadn't seen many exotic locals. I've also heard that a main reason for this film's popularity were the massive amounts of cameos by various celebrities. I like to think that through my goal to watch Oscar winning movies that I can recognize quite a few well known stars, but all these cameos are a gimmick and they don't carry the story. Where does that leave the story? It's choppy and barely sustained through the 80 days. |
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| 19 |
The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957, PG)
Sweeping Lean! The acting is awesome. I love the battle of wills between the two top officers. POWs captured by the Japanese somewhere in Asia during WWII are ordered to build a bridge that will help the Japanese war effort. But then Alec Guinness decides to build his men's moral by taking on the building project and plans to leave the bridge as a monument to British resourcefulness and engineering skill. This movie has another charismatic performance from Holden too. After escaping, Holden must journey back toward the POW camp on a mission to destroy the bridge that the Japanese will use to transport supplies. You see two Allie forces working at opposite goals. Meanwhile, Hayakawa plays a Japanese General riddled with shame. And the ending is edge of your seat suspenseful without all the excessive special effects and stunts used in today's action dramas. |
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| 20 |
Gigi (1958, G) |
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| 21 |
Ben-Hur (1959, G) |
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| 22 |
Spartacus (1960, PG-13) |
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| 23 |
West Side Story (1961, Unrated) |
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| 24 |
Lawrence of Arabia (1962, PG) |
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| 25 |
Cleopatra (1963, Unrated) |
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| 26 |
My Fair Lady (1964, G) |
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| 27 |
Doctor Zhivago (1965, PG-13) |
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| 28 |
A Man for All Seasons (1966, G) |
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| 29 |
Bonnie and Clyde (1967, R) |
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| 30 |
Romeo and Juliet (1968, PG) |
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| 31 |
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969, PG) |
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| 32 |
Ryan's Daughter (1970, R) |
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| 33 |
Fiddler on the Roof (1971, G)
TRADITION! Well actually the movie is about changing, bending, breaking traditions. The Fiddler on the roof as described by Tevye in the opening of the movie is symbolic for existentialism. It is a metaphor for the challenge of balancing your life and knowing your place in the world. Traditional religious rituals and customs give the community where Tevye's family lives the supposed comfort to get through the balancing act. However, Tevye's three oldest daughters challenge tradition in their romantic lives and the "outside" world is entering into a time a extreme turmoil. The ways of the older generation clash with those of the younger generation. And through it all Tevye is really pretty progressive for a man in his society. |
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| 34 |
Cabaret (1972, PG) |
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| 35 |
Viskningar och Rop (Cries and Whispers) (1972, R) |
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| 36 |
The Towering Inferno (1974, PG) |
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| 37 |
Barry Lyndon (1975, PG) |
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| 38 |
Bound for Glory (1976, PG) |
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| 39 |
Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977, PG) |
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| 40 |
Days of Heaven (1978, PG) |
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| 41 |
Apocalypse Now (1979, R) |
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| 42 |
Tess (1979, PG) |
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| 43 |
Reds (1981, PG)
I liked some of Warren Beatty's performances when he was younger. In his mind he wanted to be as well respected as Charlie Chaplin and Orson Welles in the way they became actors and writers and producers and directors to bring their visions to the movie audiences. But in my opinion he's just not that good. I usually really get into epic historical pics, but I had a hard time getting through this one and understanding it all. |
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| 44 |
Gandhi (1982, PG) |
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| 45 |
Fanny och Alexander (Fanny and Alexander) (1982, R) |
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| 46 |
The Killing Fields (1984, R) |
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| 47 |
Out of Africa (1985, PG) |
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| 48 |
The Mission (1986, PG) |
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| 49 |
The Last Emperor (1987, PG-13)
First, let me recommend the Director's Cut though it is 3 hours and 20 minutes. There is so much historical and political content that I found a second viewing helpful too. The costumes, sets, cinematography, and music are all sumptuous. |
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| 50 |
Mississippi Burning (1988, R) |
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| 51 |
Glory (1989, R)
I have seen this multiple times. I seriously don't think there is a single thing wrong with this movie. I understand that it may not be 100% accurate with every historical detail (though the filmmakers sure seem to come close). I'm all for making people aware of inaccuracies in historical pictures, because I think unrealistic, unauthentic, romantic portrayals of history can lead to bad movies and damage people's education, but sometimes I also think these criticisms are given too much influence. As a movie, as a work of art, this film is perfect in its message and execution. Powerful! I recently found out that Broderick's character Robert Gould Shaw was a Unitarian, which makes sense and adds even more meaning to the story for me. Emotional! There are several scenes that make me tear up every time. But it also makes me feel like fighting for social justice, like standing up proudly with character and strength of heart to better the world! "We are all MEN, aren't we?!" |
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| 52 |
Dances With Wolves (1990, PG-13)
Costner as John Dunbar, a Union Civil War officer, is suicidal. He'd rather lose his life than lose his foot, but miraculously he survives to be sent to the outermost western post that the army has on the frontier. His sense of purpose in life has been renewed. |
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| 53 |
JFK (1991, R) |
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| 54 |
A River Runs Through It (1992, PG) |
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| 55 |
Schindler's List (1993, R) |
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| 56 |
Legends of the Fall (1994, R) |
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| 57 |
Braveheart (1995, R) |
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| 58 |
The English Patient (1996, R) |
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| 59 |
Titanic (1997, PG-13) |
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| 60 |
Saving Private Ryan (1998, R) |
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| 61 |
American Beauty (1999, R) |
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| 62 |
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (Wo hu cang long) (2000, PG-13) |
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| 63 |
The Lord of the Rings - The Fellowship of the Ring (2001, PG-13) |
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| 64 |
Road to Perdition (2002, R) |
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| 65 |
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003, PG-13) |
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| 66 |
The Aviator (2004, PG-13) |
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| 67 |
Memoirs of a Geisha (2005, PG-13) |
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| 68 |
El Laberinto del Fauno (Pan's Labyrinth) (2006, R) |
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| 69 |
There Will Be Blood (2007, R)
Plainview is a complex character. I think Day-Lewis plays him just a bit hammy especially toward the end. Plainview is anti-social and does some nasty things, but you can't say that he doesn't care for the well-being of his employees and son (and abused children). I didn't like Dano in the preacher role. He was too young (didn't age at all in more than 16 years) and screamed like a girl. Are you supposed to feel sorry for the preacher? Is religion supposed to be the obvious superior to business and western development? No, the preacher is unflattering to the image of a church as a thing that saves everyone's souls. The church and the oil business are more alike than different. I'm not a huge fan of the music either, that's not to say that the composer from a rock background will not become better in the future. |
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| 70 |
Slumdog Millionaire (2008, R)
I also really enjoyed this movie even though you can see a lot of the plot coming. The colors are vibrant and even though much of the movie is set in the dusty corrupt slums, where in American gritty urban pics the images are often extremely dark and without color, this movie is always visually interesting. The action is often so fast that colors appear smeared or streaked across the screen and that's not a bad thing. I thought the editing and camera work was done very well especially with the constant flashbacks to different points in Jamal, Salim and Latika's lives. The few adult characters, in particular the game show host, the police interrogators, the gangsters, and the brothers' mother listed here on Flixster, gave solid supporting performances. Dev, Madhur and Freida as the oldest teenage versions of Jamal, Salim and Latika give good performances, but I actually liked the younger actors who played the three main characters better. |



































































