Academy Award for Best Director

category of film award From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Academy Award for Best Director
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The Academy Award for Best Directing (Best Director), usually known as the Best Director Oscar, is one of the Awards of Merit presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS). It is given to directors for a movie.

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Nominations for Best Director are made by members in the academy's Directing branch. The award winners are selected by the academy membership as a whole.

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Winners and nominees

1920s

In the first year only, the award was separated into Dramatic Direction and Comedy Direction.

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1930s

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1940s

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1950s

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1960s

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1970s

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1980s

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1990s

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2000s

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2010s

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International presence

As the Academy Awards are based in the United States and are centered on the Hollywood film industry, the majority of Academy Award winners have been Americans. Nonetheless, there is significant international presence at the awards, as evidenced by the following list of winners of the Academy Award for Best Director.

However, no director has won for a film that is entirely in a foreign language.

There have been 20 directors nominated for films entirely or significantly in a foreign (non-English) language.

  • Federico Fellini (nominated for 4 films, which were all in Italian)
  • Ingmar Bergman (nominated for 3 films, which were all in Swedish)
  • Pietro Germi (Italian)
  • Hiroshi Teshigahara (Japanese)
  • Claude Lelouch (French)
  • Gillo Pontecorvo (Italian-born director nominated for The Battle of Algiers, which was in French and Arabic)
  • Costa Gavras (Greek-born director nominated for French-language film Z.)
  • Jan Troell (Swedish)
  • François Truffaut (French)
  • Lina Wertmuller (Italian)
  • Edouard Molinaro (French)
  • Wolfgang Petersen (German)
  • Akira Kurosawa (Japanese)
  • Lasse Hallström (Swedish. He was also nominated for the English-language film The Cider House Rules.)
  • Krzysztof Kieslowski (Polish-born director nominated for French-language film Three Colours: Red)
  • Michael Radford (an English-born director nominated for the Italian-language film Il Postino.)
  • Roberto Benigni (Italian)
  • Ang Lee (Taiwanese-born director nominated for the Mandarin-language film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. He would later win for the English-language film Brokeback Mountain.)
  • Pedro Almodóvar (Spanish)
  • Fernando Meirelles (Brazilian Portuguese)
  • Clint Eastwood (an American director nominated for the Japanese-language film Letters from Iwo Jima, which has a few brief scenes in English).
  • Julian Schnabel (an American director nominated for the French-language film The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.)

Ironically, internationally known filmmakers Jean Renoir (for The Southerner), Michelangelo Antonioni (for Blowup) and Louis Malle (for Atlantic City) were nominated for films that were in English and not their native language.

Nominations for films primarily in English with some scenes (of a notable length) in a foreign language includes:

Several international nominees (regardless of the language used in their respective films) include:

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References

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