Change Your Image
AlexHartsell
Ratings
Most Recently Rated
Lists
An error has ocurred. Please try again
Academy Award film makers' Golden Globe nominated feature films
Yes this another Oscar Legends spin-off list but this time it is mostly focusing on people who were in my Oscar Legends list (or had films nominated for Oscars that were not in my Oscar legends list cause they did not catch me) that had films nominated for Golden Globe Awards. I will be excluding their TV shows and movies to be focusing on their films released in theaters only for I will need to take somewhat breaks from my Oscar Legends lists and focus on Golden Globes.
Newest updated: I have now added the production companies and their Golden Globe nominated films on this list that are: * Shaw Brothers (Blade Runner and Kill Bill: Vol. 1) * Huayi Brothers (Kung Fu Hustle, The Edge of Seventeen and Molly's Game) * Amblin Entertainment (Continental Divide, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, Back to the Future, The Color Purple, An American Tail, Empire of the Sun, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Dad, Cape Fear, An American Tail: Fievel Goes West, Hook, Schindler's List, The Bridges of Madison County, To Wong Foo! Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar, Men in Black, The Mask of Zorro, Saving Private Ryan, A.I. Artificial Intelligence, Catch Me If You Can, In America, Memoirs of a Geisha, Munich, Monster House, Flags of Our Fathers, Letters from Iwo Jima, The Adventures of Tintin, War Horse, Lincoln, The Hundred-Foot Journey, Bridge of Spies, The Post, First Man, Green Book, Cats and 1917) * Marvel Entertainment (Labor Day, Big Hero 6, Deadpool, Black Panther, Vice and Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse) * DC Comics Entertainment (Superman, Batman, Batman Forever, Catch Me If You Can, The Dark Knight, Labor Day and Joker) * Imagine Entertainment (Parenthood, Apollo 13, The Nutty Professor, Ransom, Liar Liar, Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, A Beautiful Mind, 8 Mile, Cinderella Man, The Da Vinci Code, American Gangster, Changeling, Frost/Nixon, J. Edgar and Rush) * Playtone (That Thing You Do!, Cast Away, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, The Polar Express, The Manchurian Candidate, Charlie Wilson's War, Mamma Mia! and Where the Wild Things Are) * Netflix (Beasts of No Nation, First They Killed My Father, Roma, Dumplin', The Irishman, Marriage Story, The Two Popes and Dolemite Is My Name) * Amazon Studios (Manchester by the Sea, The Salesman, Beautiful Boy, Late Night, The Report and Les Misérables) * Caravan Pictures/Spyglass Entertainment (While You Were Sleeping, The Sixth Sense, The Insider, Seabiscuit, Memoirs of a Geisha, Invictus and The Tourist) * Scholastic (The Mighty and Boyhood) * Mandalay Pictures (Seven Years in Tibet, The Kids Are All Right and Bernie) * Village Roadshow Pictures (Analyze This, Miss Congeniality, Training Day, Mystic River, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Happy Feet, The Brave One, Gran Torino, Where the Wild Things Are, The Lego Movie, The Judge, Annie, Mad Max: Fury Road, Concussion and Joker) * Castle Rock Entertainment (When Harry Met Sally..., Misery, City Slickers, Honeymoon in Vegas, Mr. Saturday Night, A Few Good Men, In the Line of Fire, The Shawshank Redemption, The American President, Lone Star, Ghosts of Mississippi, Hamlet, Jackie Brown, The Green Mile, Miss Congeniality, The Polar Express, Michael Clayton and Before Midnight) * Legendary Entertainment (The Dark Knight, The Hangover, Where the Wild Things Are, Inception, The Town, Steve Jobs and BlacKkKlansman) * Regency Enterprises (Once Upon a Time in America, The War of the Roses, Pretty Woman, Q&A, Switch, JFK, The Mambo Kings, Heaven & Earth, Six Degrees of Separation, Natural Born Killers, A Time to Kill, L.A. Confidential, City of Angels, Bridget Jones's Diary, Unfaithful, The Fountain, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Love & Other Drugs, 12 Years a Slave, Philomena, Noah, Gone Girl, Birdman, The Big Short, The Revenant, Rules Don't Apply, Bohemian Rhapsody, Marriage Story and Little Women) * Broadway Video (Poetic Justice, Lost in Translation, Julie & Julia, Eighth Grade and A Star is Born) * Comedy Central (50/50 and The Big Short)
Notable Famous Filmmakers and their Oscar and Razzie films.
Universal Studios's The Ugly but Charming Movies Collection
Notable filmmakers from my Oscar Legends lists and their BAFTA Film Award nominated films.
Finally for what is not on the list are the production companies and their BAFTA nominated films: * Regency Enterprises (The King of Comedy, Once Upon a Time in America, Brazil, Legend, The War of the Roses, Pretty Woman, JFK, The Client, L.A. Confidential, Bridget Jones's Diary, Fantastic Mr. Fox, 12 Years a Slave, Philomena, Gone Girl, Birdman, The Big Short, The Revenant, Bohemian Rhapsody and Widows) * Legendary Entertainment (Batman Begins, The Dark Knight, Inception, The Town, The Dark Knight Rises, Pacific Rim, Interstellar, Steve Jobs and BlacKkKlansman) * Lucasfilm (American Graffiti, Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope, Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Labyrinth, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace, The Incredibles, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Iron Man, The Lego Movie, Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last Jedi) * The Jim Henson Company (The Dark Crystal, Labyrinth, The Bear, The Witches, Four Weddings and a Funeral, Babe, The English Patient, 101 Dalmatians (1996), The Talented Mr. Ripley, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, Gosford Park, Batman Begins, The Jungle Book and Ready Player One) * DC Comics Entertainment (Superman, Batman, Batman Returns, The Iron Giant, Catch Me If You Can, Batman Begins, Superman Returns, The Dark Knight and The Dark Knight Rises) * Marvel Entertainment (Spider-Man, Spider-Man 2, Spider-Man 3, Iron Man, The Avengers, Iron Man 3, X-Men: Days of Future Past, Guardians of the Galaxy, Big Hero 6, Ant-Man, Doctor Strange, Black Panther, Avengers: Infinity War, Vice and Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse) * Walt Disney Animation Studios (Lady and the Tramp, 101 Dalmatians (1961), Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, The Lion King, Frozen, Big Hero 6, Zootopia, Moana and Frozen 2) * Warner Bros. Animation (Who Framed Roger Rabbit, The Iron Giant and The Lego Movie)
List of filmmakers that directed music videos of songs for Academy Award nominated movies.
List of films that have (or will get) a cult following according to their audience score on Rotten Tomatoes.
List of animated feature films that I think will make the short list for Best Animated Feature for the 93rd Academy Awards.
Reviews
Django Unchained (2012)
Quentin Tarantino's best next to Pulp Fiction and a good tribute to not only western films, but the directors who mentor Quentin.
This movie to me is one of the best movies of 2012 and Quentin Tarantino's best movie that is great as his other masterpiece Pulp Fiction. The story is about a slave Jango (the "D" is silent) played by Jamie Foxx rescued by a bounty hunter (played by Quentin Tarantino's lucky acting cram Christoph Waltz in another best acting role of his). They soon become partners in the bounty hunting bushiness and plan to rescue Django's wife held as a slave by the villainous Leonardo DiCaprio (in a great role of his career) and the evil and sneaky Samuel L. Jackson (who turns out is the real brains behind this slave ring). The action is great and pretty funny like most Quentin's films and it is not only a great tribute to Spaghetti Westerns by Quentin, but to me a great tribute to the two directors who help Mr. Tarantino make his first movie Tony Scott and Ulu Grosbard who died on the year of this film's release before it came out. I notice the tributes to them in this film more than other people did. For Ulu Grosbard, Quentin pay tributes to his films such as True Confessions (the partnership with Dr. King Schultz and Django), Falling in Love (Django and his wife's romance), The Deep End of the Ocean (Broomhilda surprised to have finally meet Django again) and Who Is Harry Kellerman and Why Is He Saying Those Terrible Things About Me? (in scenes including Jamie Foxx in a snow hill scene in the same way as Dustin Hoffman in the movie). For Tony Scott, it was mostly the action scenes (especially the big battle in Candy Land) are tributes to his films True Romance, Enemy of the State, The Last Boy Scout and Domino. What should of make the film better is that the credits should of have "Dedicated to Ulu and Tony" the same as Clint Eastwood dedicated Unforgiven to Sergio Leone and Don Siegel. But along with "In Memory of Sally Menke and J. Michael Riva". That was the only thing that I criticize the movie about is Quentin should of dedicated his movie to Tony Scott, Ulu Grosbard, Sally Menke and J. Michael Riva who died before the film was release. Over all, this is still a great movie and very good tributes to Western and Tony Scott and Ulu Grosbard. I say its worth checking out, if you love colorful funny bloody action and Quentin films you will love it. Its funny, action packed, original and has good acting and action.
Mousehunt (1997)
What happens when you combined the elements of the Coen Brothers with Laurel-and-Hardy and Home Alone, you get Mousehunt
This is one of my favorite comedies that I love and this is the film that made audiences skip Home Alone 3, to see this. While I love Home Alone and I am a fan of slap stick, this film is much better with the slap stick than Home Alone 3. This film is is the debut of Gore Verbinski (famous for the Pirates of the Caribbean trilogy and Rango) who does a really good job at mixing the elements of the Coen Brothers with Laurel-and-Hardy and John Huges in this funny movie. Although I love John Huges and I am one of his fans, Gore Verbinski had beating him in that year for the funniest slap stick movie. The humor is golden and laugh out loud and it has some wonderful Christopher Walken moments in it. If you are a fan of Home Alone and want something new in the slap stick world besides Home Alone 3. Rent this movie, it is a very funny film you and your kids will enjoy and laugh.
12 Years a Slave (2013)
Best movie since Schindler's List and the slave version of it.
Just saw it last week and was really powerful and a masterpiece as Schindler's List. The story is haunting and makes you feel you are in that time period. I really want this win Best Picture for the 86th Academy Awards and also win for Best Director Steve McQueen and have him become the first black director to win Best Director. Why? The acting from the main character is amazing, as well as Michael Fassbender who plays a crazy religious drunk slave owner and is become one of the best actors of the 21st century. The direction by Steve McQueen is gold and the best I have seen since Steven Spilberge for Saving Pravite Ryan and again Schindler's List and Tom Hooper for The King's Speech. The other stuff that I like was the music score by Hans Zimmer while although it feels the same as he did Inception, it is haunting and powerful as his scores to The Thin Red Line and Galdiator. The script by Undercover Brother's John Ridley which is pure gold and some of the art and costumes as well. If you are looking for a good movie that goes with Schindler's List and Grave of the Firefiles. This is a masterpiece to go see and put in that collection.
The Haunting (1999)
Like Comic Book Guy would say, Worst Remake EVER!
After seeing a trailer to the original movie of this. I find this remake is insulting to the original and the great Robert Wise. The story is too Disneyish, that idiot Jan de Bont thinks he can do good but make things crap. The CGI is cartoon, Liam Neleson is really bad in this (and this goes as one of his worst performances next the Clash of the Titans remake), Owen Willson is so annoying that he makes you castrate yourself and this whole power of love thing is getting tired and makes me angry. And to make things bad, the great Steven Spielberg who was influenced by Robert Wise had involvement in it. But lucky after this abomination, he announced that he will never work with Jan de Bont forever and has the same thing as George Lucas has with the Star Wars Holiday Special which is prevented this film to be released on Blu-ray and it's a good thing Spielberg had his named uncredited in this awful movie. Which means that Steven Spielberg is the guy who said that The Lost World and The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull is okay, while this remake is the project is the thing that he is personally ashamed of. Let me repeat that again. The Lost World and The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull: okay. The remake of The Haunting: Personally ashamed of. My advice see the original Haunting it is more better, it has a good ghost story, great Psychology horror, has better character development and has no cartoon CGI, annoying characters, and stupid Disney good vs evil story in which piece of garbage has and should never be on DVD or Blu- ray.
Little Monsters (1989)
A miserable film
I have to agree with The Nostalgia Critic, after seeing Little Monsters. It is not funny and is a miserable and depressing movie. At first when I saw the cover of the movie, I thought this might not be bad. But when I saw boy was I wrong. Here are the problems why this film is miserable and not funny. Fred Savage plays a awful kid who gets his mean-spirited nature from cruel dad played by Daniel Stern (not even this half-ass Wonder Years reunion could save it). The pranks are super awful especially the putting plastic on the toilet which is really cruel to women. Howie Mandel (even though he is trying to be funny and is close) plays the same monster who's weakness is light from Joe Dante's Gremlins but with a style of being the second member to the Supernatural Fast Talking Annoying Dick Club (the first was with Beetlejuice to it's newest member Wilfred the Dog). The script is somehow written by newcomers at that time the writer duo Terry Rossio and Ted Elliott (who would latter write more classical children films like Aladdin (where that film got it's supernatural annoying dick from), the first Shrek movie and Treasure Planet) who wrote this to punish kids or maybe hatted kids at that time. The monster world is too dark and red for a kid's film while going under the bed is interesting. The visuals are too scary to be a PG rating. Also the film need to be a PG-13 rating also to the language and this was back then when the people who rating films were not well and were too lazy. Finally, it has measurable things like kids being blamed and yelled from their at for the pranks Fred Savage and Howie Mandel made (oh my god!) and it's also good not to see some of the parents beat them up. Then to make it more miserable it has separation which kids really don't need to see their film until it has a better idea and is not too measurable. Lastly it is very too mean-spirited for a comedy (sometimes it can work if it has a meaning and this film doesn't) and kid's thing. And is on the the awful mean-spirited media next to Drop Dead Fred, The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy and Wilfred which are things I can't stand. This film is know to start the downfall of Fred Savage's fame and staring in movies (if though The Wizard was bad, this is worst) and Howie Mandel appearing in fewer movies. I have to say this film is the evil big brother to Pixar's Monsters, Inc. and if you want a good family film to watch with kids, watch Monsters, Inc. instead of this depression piece of crap that can scar and frighting your kids to pain.




