1. Full awards and nominations of Ship of Fools - Filmaffinity
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USA | UK
2. 1965 – Ship of Fools - Academy Award Best Picture Winners
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3. 1965 Academy Awards® Winners and History - Filmsite.org
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1965 The winner is listed first, in CAPITAL letters.
4. 38th Academy Awards (1966) - Movies from 1965 - Ship of Fools
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5. The Oscar Quest: Best Actress – 1965 - B+ Movie Blog
Jan 11, 2012 · The Sound of Music wins Best Picture, and instinctively we all just understand that. ... Ship of Fools — I don't really like, but, it's big, so ...
Oh, 1965. This year is a rock to me. It’s just — there. You don’t question a rock, it just, is. The Sound of Music wins Best Picture, and instinctively we all just understand that…
6. Oscar Vault Monday – Ship Of Fools, 1965 (dir. Stanley Kramer)
Feb 28, 2011 · Oscar Vault Monday – Ship Of Fools, 1965 (dir. Stanley Kramer) ... This was a film I'd meant to watch for a while because it was Vivien Leigh's ...
This was a film I’d meant to watch for a while because it was Vivien Leigh’s last screen appearance. Then it disappeared off of Instant Netflix and I kind of forgot I wanted to watch it…
7. Ship of Fools (film) | Sony Pictures Entertaiment Wiki - Fandom
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Ship of Fools is a 1965 drama directed by Stanley Kramer, which recounts the stories of several passengers aboard an ocean liner bound to Germany from Mexico in 1933. It stars Vivien Leigh, Simone Signoret, José Ferrer, Lee Marvin, Oskar Werner, Michael Dunn, Elizabeth Ashley, George Segal, José Greco, Charles Korvin, andHeinz Rühmann. It was to be Vivien Leigh's last film and Christiane Schmidtmer's first U.S. production. Ship of Fools was highly regarded, with reviewers praising the cast's per
8. Best Actor 1965: Oskar Werner in Ship of Fools
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Oskar Werner received his only Oscar nomination for portraying Dr. Schumann in Ship of Fools. Ship of Fools is a very flawed ensemble pi...
9. Ship of Fools | film by Kramer [1965] - Britannica
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Other articles where Ship of Fools is discussed: Stanley Kramer: Directing: Kramer returned to drama with Ship of Fools (1965), which was based on the Katherine Anne Porter novel. Though viewed by some as a soap opera, the Oscar-nominated film addressed important issues, notably anti-Semitism and the rise of Nazism, and it boasted a cast that included Vivien Leigh (in her…
10. Ship of Fools (1965) - Turner Classic Movies - TCM
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Passengers on a steam ship in the '30s struggle with their tangled relations and the rise of Nazism.
11. The History of the Academy Awards: Best Picture – 1965
Sep 10, 2010 · The Results: Doctor Zhivago and The Sound of Music lead the nominations with 10 apiece. Ship of Fools was next with 8, but was missing the Best ...
The 38th annual Academy Awards, for the film year 1965. The nominations were announced on February 21, 1966 and the awards were held on April 18, 1966. Best Picture: The Sound of Music Doctor Zhi…
12. Ship of Fools (1965) - Art of the Title
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Director Stanley Kramer’s 1965 film Ship of Fools is a movie lost at sea. Despite being one of Kramer’s most critically acclaimed movies and winning two Academy Awards (Best Cinematography and Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, both in the now defunct Black and White categories), the film has largely faded into obscurity.
Made between It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) and Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner (1967), Kramer’s Ship of Fools has all the hallmarks of a classic mid-60s Hollywood production: prestigious source material in Pulitzer Prize-winner Katherine Anne Porter’s 1962 novel of the same name; a sprawling international cast featuring the likes of Vivien Leigh, Lee Marvin, Simone Signoret, José Ferrer, Oskar Werner, and George Segal to name a few; and a high-gloss opening title sequence typical of the era.
Set in 1933, Ship of Fools follows the voyage of an ocean liner from Mexico to Germany. The title sequence introduces the audience to the vessel’s passengers and crew – the captain, a countess, the ship's doctor, a troubled divorcée, a young couple, a retired athlete – a microcosm of Western society in the lead-up to World War II. One by one their faces fade into view, arranged by class and creed, the portraits slowly forming the outline of the great liner.
Designed by Richard “Dick” Ellescas and produced by studio Pacific Title (credited as simply “Pacific&rdquo...
13. The Blog: Actress Files: Simone Signoret - Nick's Flick Picks
May 17, 2010 · Why I Waited: Has anyone ever hustled to see Ship of Fools? 150 minutes of Stanley Kramer mixing and matching thinly archetypal characters with ...
Simone Signoret, Ship of Fools★ ★ ★ ★ ★(lost the 1965 Best Actress Oscar to Julie Christie for Darling)
14. Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Actor 1965 - 1001plus
Feb 10, 2020 · 4. I should probably watch Ship of Fools again, because I don't have ... This was so clearly his Oscar that, out of shame, he won two ...
The Contenders: Lee Marvin: Cat Ballou (winner) Laurence Olivier: Othello Rod Steiger: The Pawnbroker Oskar Werner: Ship of Fools Ric...
15. Best Supporting Actor 1965 - Unofficial Academy Awards ...
Mar 19, 2012 · By default, this Oscar should go to Michael Dunn. Ship of Fools isn't a masterpiece, but it's generally very well acted, and Dunn is no ...
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16. Best Actress 1965: Simone Signoret in "Ship of Fools" - Fritz and the Oscars
Feb 16, 2010 · Best Actress 1965: Simone Signoret in "Ship of Fools". After having won an Oscar ... all the others on the ship. Simone right from the ...
After having won an Oscar for suffering subtly, Simone Signoret received her second nomination for a role in which she showed again that no ...
17. Ship of Fools | Rotten Tomatoes
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When an eclectic group of passengers boards a cruise ship bound for prewar Germany, they form a microcosm of 1930s society. One passenger, a mysterious countess (Simone Signoret), is headed for a German prison camp. The charming Dr. Schumann (Oskar Werner) harbors a debilitating heart condition. Then there's American divorcée Mary Treadwell (Vivien Leigh), who vainly attempts to outrun time itself. During their weeks at sea, the group forges bonds and rivalries, and unearths secrets.