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25 Best Picture winners you may not have seen
Fox Searchlight Pictures

25 Best Picture winners you may not have seen

Everyone has their idea of what should win Best Picture. While some go for Oscar bait, others go for indies, blockbusters, or movies that have fanny packs. There are a thousand options each year, and only a few get a chance to be in the running — even fewer get to be in the zeitgeist later on. The award doesn't always go to the most popular movie, which means many of these titles get left by the wayside. Our list is here to highlight those forgotten titles and remind you why these movies are still great today. 

 
1 of 25

'Wings' (1927)

'Wings' (1927)
Paramount Pictutes

The first Best Picture winner holds up like a piece of memorabilia. It's still shiny, tacky, and filled with history. Its story of two pilots in the Air Force is like Top Gun without the banter. 

 
2 of 25

'All The King's Men' (1949)

'All The King's Men' (1949)
Columbia Pictures

All The King's Men tells the story of a corrupt politician who climbs the ladder, then falls to his death. It's one of the more stagey Best Picture winners to date, but the idea of making an anti-American movie in 1949 is quite ambitious. 

 
3 of 25

'The Artist' (2011)

'The Artist' (2011)
Warner Bros.

The Artist is a look at Hollywood's early years, seen through the eyes of a fading star and a budding ingenue. The movie has a playful tone, a black-and-white image, and a silent dance that recalls the ones in Fred Astaire's musicals. It's got a lot going for it, even though most people didn't watch it when it came out. 

 
4 of 25

'The Shape Of Water' (2017)

'The Shape Of Water' (2017)
Fox Searchlight Pictures

Guillermo del Toro has been a well of creativity for over two decades now. Dating back to the '90s, he's been churning out fairytales that sweep the viewer up in a magical spell. In The Shape Of Water, he casts a spell that isn't broken until the credits role, and you realize just how powerful that spell really is.  

 
5 of 25

'Around The World In 80 Days' (1956)

'Around The World In 80 Days' (1956)
United Artists

This movie is so massive it makes the Great Wall look like a lego set. Compared to this world-spanning adventure, almost everything looks quaint. There's a bullfight with stunts, a montage with countries, and nearly 100 stars. It's a bit of a mess, but what a mess it is! 

 
6 of 25

'Gigi' (1958)

'Gigi' (1958)
Warner Bros.

Paris has never looked better than in Vincente Minnelli's Gigi, a colorful musical that takes the plot of My Fair Lady and transports it to another time. It's one of those musicals you can watch on repeat, thanks to its good vibes, catchy songs, and bright colors. Leslie Caron's courtesan is one of the most lovable characters in all of cinema, and everyone around her is just so...nice. Only at the movies can Parisians be this kind. 

 
7 of 25

'Ordinary People' (1980)

'Ordinary People' (1980)
Paramount Pictures

Robert Redford showed his chops as a director in this 1980 classic about a troubled teenager and the parents who try to help him. While many see this as a drag, there are some great performances from a cast that includes Donald Sutherland and Mary Tyler Moore. 

 
8 of 25

'Oliver!' (1968)

'Oliver!' (1968)
Columbia Pictures

Please, sir, can I have some more...of this movie! Charles Dickens got the Oscar treatment in this 1968 classic, which sees a young Oliver Twist beg his way from an orphan to a saint. There are all the twists along the way. Plus, some really fun songs.

 
9 of 25

'The Sting' (1973)

'The Sting' (1973)
Universal Studios

One of my favorite movies on this list. The Sting is why people say, "They don't make 'em like they used to." Hollywood used to put two stars in a room (Robert Redford, Paul Newman) and let them do their thing. Set to a rollicking soundtrack, this story of two con artists hitting the jackpot is really just a chance to see two actors show off. 

 
10 of 25

'In The Heat Of The Night' (1967)

'In The Heat Of The Night' (1967)
United Artists

Two words: Sidney Poitier. That's the real reason to watch In The Heat Of The Night, a '60s drama about a Black cop in Mississippi. This movie aims to be a vicious take on racism and doubles as a chance to see one of the greatest actors do his thing.  

 
11 of 25

'How Green Was My Valley' (1941)

'How Green Was My Valley' (1941)
20th Century Fox

Better than Citizen Kane? Hardly. But the movie that beat out Citizen Kane does have some things going for it, mainly the style that John Ford brings to the table. 

 
12 of 25

'Kramer vs. Kramer' (1979)

'Kramer vs. Kramer' (1979)
Columbia Pictures

One of the smartest looks at divorce in film, Kramer vs. Kramer does for children what Marriage Story  does for parents. It places you in the shoes of a boy as he tries to navigate his parents' divorce. His outlook on the whole thing allows Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep to play complicated characters who love their child but make mistakes. 

 
13 of 25

'The Best Years Of Our Lives' (1946)

'The Best Years Of Our Lives' (1946)
RKO Pictures

The Best Years Of Our Lives is one of the finest war movies ever made, and there isn't a single combat scene. Like the neo-realist films of its era (Rome, Open City), it's a movie about the aftermath of war and how the soldiers adjust to everyday life. It's about an entire nation dealing with shellshock. And it lands with the force of an atom bomb. 

 
14 of 25

'The Last Emperor' (1987)

'The Last Emperor' (1987)
Columbia Pictures

Bernardo Bertolucci was the first Italian director to win Best Picture, as well as the first director who was allowed to film in Beijing's Forbidden City. He makes the most of it with a grand, opulent retelling of Pu Yi's life as an Emporer in Japan. The movie feels closer to Bertolucci's previous work than it does to other Best Picture winners, making it one of the outliers in Oscar history. 

 
15 of 25

'Patton' (1970)

'Patton' (1970)
20th Century Fox

One of the only pro-war movies out there, Patton is a shrine to a man who took thousands of lives. Thousands of Nazi lives, but thousands of lives nonetheless. It's one of those movies that feels like an ad for the military but is carried out with such bravado you can't help but watch in awe. As George C. Scott delivers speeches against an American flag, your entire body will be flanked by goosebumps. 

 
16 of 25

'Marty' (1955)

'Marty' (1955)
United Artists

Marty is like a glass of warm tea on a stormy day. It warms your entire body to watch these lovers make it work when the rest of the world says it can't. 

 
17 of 25

'Mrs. Miniver' (1942)

'Mrs. Miniver' (1942)
MGM

This movie was rewritten as the United States entered World War II, making the story of a family in wartime even more relevant. There's a tinge of propaganda in the way that Mrs. Miniver supports the war, which actually works to the film's benefit. Sometimes it's nice to get a pat on the back and a reminder that everything will be alright. 

 
18 of 25

'An American In Paris' (1951)

'An American In Paris' (1951)
MGM

Gene Kelly plays an American GI who stays in Paris to be a painter and falls in love with Lise Bouvier. Tap dancing and musical numbers ensue. 

 
19 of 25

'All Quiet On The Western Front' (1929)

'All Quiet On The Western Front' (1929)
Universal Pictures

The remake just took home a number of Oscars, but the original is the one you should watch first. The movie still packs a punch today, as do the performances that give each soldier a human face. A final shot reminds you that these men have names, and there's a world out there that they are missing out on. 

 
20 of 25

'On The Waterfront' (1945)

'On The Waterfront' (1945)
Columbia Pictures

Marlon Brando is a contender for the best actor ever, and this movie shows you why. Elia Kazan's story of a boxer who "coulda been somebody" is a gritty drama with knockout performances. Brando, in particular, makes you root for his character, even though he has more problems than most people have clothes. 

 
21 of 25

'The Broadway Melody' (1928)

'The Broadway Melody' (1928)
MGM

The first movie with sound. The first movie with songs. The first movie with more problems than Birth Of A Nation. The Broadway Melody is a movie of firsts that should be seen for its history if not much else. 

 
22 of 25

'Going My Way' (1944)

'Going My Way' (1944)
Paramount Pictures

Going My Way is best known for the way it changed the Oscars when Barry Fitzgerald won Best Supporting Actor and then lost Best Actor to his screen partner Bing Crosby.  But there's much to enjoy in this musical, which sees a priest on the verge of retirement when his parish loses faith. 

 
23 of 25

'Terms Of Endearment' (1983)

'Terms Of Endearment' (1983)
Paramount Pictures

Terms Of Endearment is a checklist of Oscar cliches. Someone falls in love? Check. Someone cries on the floor? Check. Someone gets in a shouting match with their spouse? Check. It's all here in James L.  Brook's first movie, which he made after directing The Mary Tyler Moore Show and Taxi. The result is a mother-daughter movie that works despite all the cliches. 

 
24 of 25

'Cimarron' (1931)

'Cimarron' (1931)
RKO

A pre-code Western about a newspaper editor who moves to Oklahoma, Cimarron has some pretty offensive stereotypes, which might be why most people haven't seen it. Still, there's enough here to justify its win at the Oscars back then. What's not justifiable? That the Academy didn't give another Western Best Picture until 1990. 

 
25 of 25

'Coda' (2021)

'Coda' (2021)
Apple TV+

The coda to our list. Coda is a crowd-pleaser about a deaf family and the only speaking girl in that family. It's about how she navigates those issues while trying to become a musician and a woman, all of which builds to a symphony of emotions that made me burst into tears. 

Asher Luberto is a film critic for L.A. Weekly, The Playlist, The Progressive and The Village Voice.

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