Ranking the Oscar-Nominated Performances in Steven Spielberg's Films
Monday, February 1, 2016 at 2:20PM
Murtada Elfadl in Catch Me If You Can, List Mania, List-Mania, Mark Rylance, Oprah Winfrey, Oscar Trivia, Ralph Fiennes, Steven Spielberg, Supporting Actor, Tom Hanks

Mark Rylance’s best supporting actor nomination for Bridge of Spies marks the 13th time a performance in a Steven Spielberg movie has been nominated for an Oscar. Which of course calls for a list, so without any further ado here's Murtada's ranking. 

Oscar Nominated Performances in Spielberg Films Ranked

13- Anthony Hopkins - Amistad (1997)
Other Nominees: Robert Forster – Jackie Brown, Greg Kinnear – As Good as It Gets, Burt Reynolds – Boogie Nights, Robin Williams – Good Will Hunting.
Winner: Williams

Did Hopkins have a big righteous courtroom speech? Must be, because why else was this performance nominated. The only thing I remember about it is that Hopkins robbed Rupert Everett of his nomination for My Best Friend’s Wedding.

Twelve more after the jump...

12- Melinda Dillon - Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)

Other Nominees: Leslie Browne – The Turning Point, Quinn Cummings – The Goodbye Girl, Vanessa Redgrave – Julia, Tuesday Weld – Looking for Mr. Goodbar.
Winner: Redgrave.

Elevates the stereotypical “Mom” role but is peripheral to the plot, hence the low ranking.

11- Mark Rylance - Bridge of Spies (2015)
Other Nominees: Christian Bale - The Big Short, Tom Hardy - The Revenant, Mark Ruffalo - Spotlight, Sylvester Stallone - Creed.
Winner: To be determined.

This year's critical favorite but after his SAG loss it seems Rylance is a long shot to win. It's looking like Stallone is a lock for the Oscar but will it be Rylance or SAG winner Idris Elba at BAFTA?

10- Sally Field - Lincoln (2012)
Other Nominees: Amy Adams – The Master, Anne Hathaway – Les Misérables, Helen Hunt – The Sessions, Jacki Weaver – Silver Linings Playbook.

Winner: Hathaway

Her scene with Tommy Lee Jones was the comic highlight of a movie surprisingly full of funny scenes. Matches her leading man when emotions escalate in their scenes together, but maybe could’ve reigned in a bit in other scenes instead of going full blast. Still very moving.

9- Christopher Walken - Catch Me If You Can (2002)
Other Nominees: Chris Cooper – Adaptation, Ed Harris – The Hours, Paul Newman – Road to Perdition, John C. Reilly – Chicago.
Winner: Cooper

Only the third best performance in Catch Me If You Can. Still Leonardo DiCaprio’s best performance.

8- Margaret Avery - The Color Purple (1985)
Other Nominees: Anjelica Huston  - Prizzi’s Honor, Amy Madigan - Twice in a Lifetime, Meg Tilly - Agnes of God, Oprah Winfrey - The Color Purple.
Winner: Huston

Remembered among Oscar nerds for her unorthodox campaign to get votes by invoking God (see letter above), Avery’s performance is fantastic and gives Purple the light it needs. Too bad the film only hints at the sexual relationship between her character, Shug and Celie (Goldberg). And Hollywood is still doing it to this day, Gerda Wegener in The Danish Girl is completely stripped of her bi-sexuality. Not even a hint remains.

7- Tom Hanks - Saving Private Ryan (1999)
Other Nominees: Roberto Benigni – Life Is Beautiful, Ian McKellen – Gods and Monsters, Nick Nolte – Affliction, Edward Norton – American History X.
Winner:  Benigni

Hanks is the perfect Spielberg actor, capably representing his themes of good, decent and commanding American values. It’s surprising he received only this one nomination for their collaborations. Frankly any of the other 4 men nominated would've made a better winner than Benigni.

6- Liam Neeson - Schindler’s List (1993)
Other Nominees: Tom Hanks – Philadelphia, Daniel Day-Lewis – In the Name of the Father, Laurence Fishburne – What's Love Got to Do with It, Anthony Hopkins – The Remains of the Day.
Winner: Hanks

Neeson effectively carries the film and would’ve ranked higher if not for the fact that his co-star totally steals it. And this is a very strong best actor lineup, each of these 5 men would've made a worthy winner.

5- Tommy Lee Jones -  Lincoln (2012)
Other Nominees: Alan Arkin – Argo, Robert De Niro – Silver Linings Playbook, Philip Seymour Hoffman – The Master, Christoph Waltz – Django Unchained.
Winner: Waltz

Jones was funny and his scenes with S Epatha Merkerson were the film’s only personal connection to the political story being told. I remember at the film’s NYFF premiere Jones got the biggest applause and for a while it seemed he might actually win.

4-Daniel Day Lewis -  Lincoln (2012)
Other Nominees: Bradley Cooper – Silver Linings Playbook, Hugh Jackman – Les Misérables, Joaquin Phoenix – The Master, Denzel Washington – Flight.
Winner: Day Lewis

The only performance in a Spielberg movie to win. And likely to stay that way; at least till Spielberg’s next movie.

3- Whoopi Goldberg - The Color Purple (1985)
Other Nominees: Anne Bancroft - Agnes of God, Jessica Lange - Sweet Dreams, Geraldine Page - The Trip to Bountiful, Meryl Streep - Out of Africa.
Winner: Page

Remains one of the best film debuts ever. Goldberg might have won if she wasn’t up against Page’s eighth career nomination.

2- Oprah Winfrey - The Color Purple (1985)
Other Nominees: Margaret Avery - The Color Purple, Anjelica Huston  - Prizzi's Honor, Amy Madigan - Twice in a Lifetime, Meg Tilly - Agnes of God.
Winner: Huston

Just remembering this performance tears me up. Winfrey is devastating and devastatingly good as Sophia, by turns defiant and deafeated.

1- Ralph Fiennes - Schindler’s List (1993)
Other Nominees: Leonardo DiCaprio  - What’s Eating Gilbert Grape, Tommy Lee Jones - The Fugitive, John Malkovich  - In the Line of Fire, Pete Postlethewaite - In the Name of the Father.
Winner: Jones

A perfect performance. The one thing I was sure of when I started this list was that Fiennes will be #1. When he lost to the career honor of Jones, everybody thought he’d get many more opportunities to win. Alas 22 years later Fiennes only has one other nomination; for The English Patient (1996). Where is his “overdue” narrative?

There are many excellent performances that Spielberg directed that didn't garner Oscar's attention. Besides DiCaprio there's Drew Barrymore in E.T., Hanks in Catch Me If You Can and Bridge of Spies, Cate Blanchett in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

OK just kidding on the last one, but what are some of your favorites? And do you agree with our ranking? 

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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