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  1. Tom Hanks. Best Actor winner for Philadelphia. Holly Hunter, Anna Paquin and Jane Campion. The Piano winners for Best Actress, Best Supporting Actress and Original Screenplay. Bruce Springsteen. Original Song winner for "The Streets of Philadelphia" from Philadelphia, with presenter Whitney Houston. View More Memorable Moments.

  2. March 18, 1994: Naked Gun 33 + 1 ⁄ 3: The Final Insult: March 30, 1994: Jimmy Hollywood: May 25, 1994: Beverly Hills Cop III: co-production with Mace Neufeld Productions and Robert Rehme Productions July 6, 1994: Forrest Gump: Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture: July 22, 1994: Lassie: co-production with Broadway Pictures: August 3 ...

    Release Date
    Title
    January 12, 1990
    February 2, 1990
    March 2, 1990
    April 13, 1990
    • Best Picture
    • Directing
    • Actor in A Leading Role
    • Actress in A Leading Role
    • Actor in A Supporting Role
    • Actress in A Supporting Role
    • Writing
    • Music
    • Film Editing
    • Cinematography

    Forrest Gump – Wendy Finerman, Steve Tisch, Steve Starkey Four Weddings and a Funeral – Duncan Kenworthy Pulp Fiction – Lawrence Bender Quiz Show – Robert Redford, Michael Jacobs, Julian Krainin, Michael Nozik The Shawshank Redemption– Niki Marvin

    Bullets over Broadway – Woody Allen Forrest Gump – Robert Zemeckis Pulp Fiction – Quentin Tarantino Quiz Show – Robert Redford Red– Krzysztof Kieslowski

    Morgan Freeman – The Shawshank Redemption Tom Hanks – Forrest Gump Nigel Hawthorne – The Madness of King George Paul Newman – Nobody’s Fool John Travolta – Pulp Fiction

    Jodie Foster – Nell Jessica Lange – Blue Sky Miranda Richardson – Tom & Viv Winona Ryder – Little Women Susan Sarandon – The Client

    Samuel L. Jackson – Pulp Fiction Martin Landau – Ed Wood Chazz Palminteri – Bullets over Broadway Paul Scofield – Quiz Show Gary Sinise – Forrest Gump

    Rosemary Harris – Tom & Viv Helen Mirren – The Madness of King George Uma Thurman – Pulp Fiction Jennifer Tilly – Bullets over Broadway Dianne Wiest – Bullets over Broadway

    Forrest Gump – Eric Roth The Madness of King George – Alan Bennett Nobody’s Fool – Robert Benton Quiz Show – Paul Attanasio The Shawshank Redemption– Frank Darabont

    “Can You Feel The Love Tonight” – The Lion King – Music by Elton John; Lyric by Tim Rice “Circle Of Life” – The Lion King – Music by Elton John; Lyric by Tim Rice “Hakuna Matata” – The Lion King – Music by Elton John; Lyric by Tim Rice “Look What Love Has Done” – Junior – Music, Lyric by Carole Bayer Sager, James Newton Howard, James Ingram, Patty ...

    Forrest Gump – Arthur Schmidt Hoop Dreams – Frederick Marx, Steve James, Bill Haugse Pulp Fiction – Sally Menke The Shawshank Redemption – Richard Francis-Bruce Speed– John Wright

    Forrest Gump – Don Burgess Legends of the Fall – John Toll Red – Piotr Sobocinski The Shawshank Redemption – Roger Deakins Wyatt Earp– Owen Roizman

    • Jeremy Urquhart
    • 'Pulp Fiction' The notoriously bloodthirsty Quentin Tarantino arguably peaked as a filmmaker in 1994 with his second feature, Pulp Fiction. It's a movie that's come to define the 1990s and proved influential to many, even if it's proven difficult for other filmmakers to match the energy, blend of crime, drama, and comedy, and overall style that the movie possesses.
    • 'The Shawshank Redemption' Even though The Shawshank Redemption now stands as one of the most popular and beloved movies of all time, it's notable for being a movie that wasn't a hit upon release.
    • 'The Lion King' Few animated movies are as celebrated and emotional as The Lion King is. It's an iconic family film that isn't just for kids, taking a story that's a little like Hamlet (an evil uncle betrays his brother, leading to a son trying to make things right again), but making it about lions, adding music numbers, and ensuring it's family-friendly.
    • 'Hoop Dreams' Hoop Dreams is a fantastic documentary that stands as one of the best of not just 1994, but the decade as a whole. It follows two teenagers over several years, with both being skilled basketball players who dream of one day being sports stars who play in the NBA.
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    • Evergreen Writer
    • Schindler’s List (1993) – 98% Finally, the highest-rated Best Picture winner from the ‘90s on RT is none other than Steven Spielberg’s Schindler’s List.
    • Unforgiven (1992) – 96% The year following The Silence of the Lambs was another major win for genre filmmaking, as the Western Unforgiven took the top prize.
    • The Silence of the Lambs (1991) – 95% The second film to win Best Picture in the ‘90s was the horror classic The Silence of the Lambs, which was the first film of its genre to win the top award.
    • Shakespeare in Love (1998) – 92% The next year, 1998, was a much more balanced year at the Oscars. The Best Picture winner was the film Shakespeare in Love, from director John Madden and starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Joseph Fiennes and Geoffrey Rush.
  4. This is the best sounding VHS of CCBB that was ever put out on the format. In 1989 the film saw its third VHS release through MGM/UA Home Video. It went back to being printed on Dolby linear tracks. A lot of VCR's only play linear tracks back in mono so this should also be avoided. It took another decade until Chitty Chitty Bang Bang would be ...

  5. Jul 29, 2020 · Silence of the Lambs (Won — 1992) One of the only horror films to win Best Picture, let alone the coveted "full sweet," Silence of the Lambs just might be the most suspenseful film of all time. One could go on and on about Jodie Foster's performance, the claustrophobic camera work, the crackling and pulpy screenplay, and all other facets of ...

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