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Awards
Golden Globe Best Performance By an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture 1952 · Winner
Golden Globe Cinematography - Color 1952 · Winner
Academy Award Cinematography (Color) 1952 · Nominated
Academy Award Actor in a Supporting Role 1952 · Nominated
Academy Award Film Editing 1952 · Nominated
Academy Award Best Motion Picture 1952 · Nominated
Academy Award Art Direction (Color) 1952 · Nominated
Golden Globe Best Motion Picture - Drama 1952 · Nominated
Academy Award Music (Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture) 1952 · Nominated
Academy Award Costume Design (Color) 1952 · Nominated
Eight Academy Awards
- The film was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, and it was such a huge box office success that it was credited with single-handedly rescuing MGM from the brink of bankruptcy.
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Quo Vadis Jump to Academy Awards, USA (8) Directors Guild of America, USA (1) Golden Globes, USA (3) National Board of Review, USA (1) International Film Music Critics Award (IFMCA) (1) 4 wins & 10 nominations
Quo Vadis (Latin for "Where are you going?") is a 1951 American religious epic film set in ancient Rome during the final years of Emperor Nero's reign, based on the 1896 novel of the same title by Polish Nobel Laureate author Henryk Sienkiewicz.
- $7.6 million
- Sam Zimbalist
Humphrey Bogart. Best Actor winner for The African Queen, with presenter Claire Trevor. Vivien Leigh. Accepting her Best Actress award for A Streetcar Named Desire from Harry Cohn in London, England. View More Memorable Moments.
Feb 5, 2014 · Decision before Dawn – Anatole Litvak, Frank McCarthy. A Place in the Sun – George Stevens. Quo Vadis – Sam Zimbalist. A Streetcar Named Desire – Charles K. Feldman.
Dec 11, 2021 · The story of a woman’s fight to save her family during the true events of the 1995 Bosnian War genocide in Srebrenica scooped the top European Film prize as well as European Director for Žba...
9th Golden Globes Awards (1952) - Movies from 1951. nom. Best Picture - Drama; winner Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture (Peter Ustinov) winner Best Cinematography - Color (Robert Surtees, William V. Skall) NBR (National Board of Review) - Awards for 1951. nom. Top Films (In alphabetical order) Directors Guild of America (DGA) - 1951 ...
Quo Vadis (with a total of eight nominations and no wins) - director Mervyn LeRoy's and MGM's big budget epic version of Henryk Siekiewicz's classic novel about Nero's Christian persecution, starring Deborah Kerr and Robert Taylor - the most expensive film of its time