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Oscars Rewind: How ‘American Beauty' Lost Its Luster

Oscars Rewind: How ‘American Beauty' Lost Its Luster

New York Times16-02-2025

It was March 2000, and everything was coming up roses for 'American Beauty.'
There were the box office receipts (more than $350 million worldwide, not adjusted for inflation, against a budget of roughly $15 million, according to the data site Box Office Mojo). The rave reviews ('a hell of a picture,' Kenneth Turan wrote in The Los Angeles Times). The three Golden Globes.
'It was bizarre, because I expected it to be a little art house movie,' Alan Ball, who won an Academy Award for writing the screenplay, said in a recent phone conversation from his home in Los Angeles. 'I think that's all that any of us expected it to be.'
'I had no idea it was going to become what it became,' said Annette Bening, who played a materialistic wife in Ball's satire about a suburban family whose father, Lester Burnham (Kevin Spacey), quits his office job and becomes obsessed with his teenage daughter's best friend.
Then, even more laurels: Five Oscars, including best picture, director (Sam Mendes), original screenplay (Ball), cinematography (Conrad L. Hall) and actor (Spacey).
'I'm a little bit overwhelmed,' a wide-eyed Mendes said in his acceptance speech, as he joined the ranks of Delbert Mann, Jerome Robbins, Robert Redford, James L. Brooks and Kevin Costner as the only filmmakers to win the academy's top directing honor for their feature directorial debut.
'I had a flask in my pocket,' Ball said, recalling the moment. 'That was the only way I could kind of deal with it.'
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Arthur Hamilton, Who Wrote the Enduring ‘Cry Me a River,' Dies at 98

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A new look at ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' plus the week's best movies in L.A.
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