[Answer] Which movie sequel won an Oscar for Best Picture?
Which movie sequel won an Oscar for Best Picture? – In 1975, “The Godfather Part II” became the first sequel in Oscar history to win the Academy Award for Best Picture. It won the coveted award two years after the original film was named Best Picture. The sequel was nominated for a total of 11 Oscars, with three separate nominations in the Best Supporting Actor category alone: one for Michael Vincenzo Gazzo (who played Frankie Pentangeli) and Lee Strasberg (as Hyman Roth), and one for Robert De Niro, who took home the statuette for playing the younger version of Vito Corleone. Nearly 30 years later, “Lord of the Rings: Return of the King” became the second and only other sequel to to win Best Picture.
[Answer] Which movie sequel won an Oscar for Best Picture?
Silence of the Lambs
Godfather Part II
The Bells of St. Mary’s
Rocky II
Godfather Part II sequel won an Oscar for Best Picture. So far two proper sequels have won: The Godfather part 2 which was the first sequel to win. Then in 2004 The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King won a full sweep.
But depending on how you look The Silence of the Lambs can be seen as a sequel. It continues the story from Manhunter. Altough that one was done by a different company and cast.
The correct answer is Godfather Part II.
Answer of Which movie sequel won an Oscar for Best Picture?
I’ll echo the other answers on this thread that cite “The Godfather Part II,” as well as “The Silence of the Lambs,” if that floats your boat. But I’d argue that “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” isn’t really a sequel; rather, it’s the final third of an epic film that runs so long (about 10 hours total) that it was released in three installments (albeit over the course of three years).
Godfather Part II sequel won an Oscar for Best Picture. Peter Jackson shot the entire LOTR trilogy at once, and it’s one big saga; it’s not actually three discrete stories told sequentially and filmed at different times as separate projects. Arguably, the Oscar voters recognized this, which is why the Best Picture award for ROTK was widely perceived at the time as a way of honoring all three installments for the monumental achievement they represented in total.
You could argue that ROTK is no more a sequel than “It: Chapter 2,” which is also merely the concluding part of a very long movie saga based on a very long book. Indeed, J.R.R. Tolkien supposedly wrote LOTR as one long book, only to see it arbitrarily divided into three by his publisher. So had he been alive in 2004, he himself might not have considered ROTK a sequel.
But then again, he wrote all of LOTR as a sequel to “The Hobbit.” So maybe ROTK and the other two LOTR movies all count as sequels, even though it would be another decade before Jackson’s “Hobbit” movies existed. And those were referred to as prequels, even though Tolkien wrote the book they were based on before he wrote LOTR…
Which movie sequel won an Oscar for Best Picture?
In 1975, “The Godfather Part II” became the first sequel in Oscar history to win the Academy Award for Best Picture. It won the coveted award two years after the original film was named Best Picture. The sequel was nominated for a total of 11 Oscars, with three separate nominations in the Best Supporting Actor category alone: one for Michael Vincenzo Gazzo (who played Frankie Pentangeli) and Lee Strasberg (as Hyman Roth), and one for Robert De Niro, who took home the statuette for playing the younger version of Vito Corleone. Nearly 30 years later, “Lord of the Rings: Return of the King” became the second and only other sequel to to win Best Picture.
Only The Godfather, part II and The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King unless you’re prepared to count The Silence of the Lambs the second film featuring the character of Hannibal Lecter following Michael Mann’s Manhunter. But the new film was made by a completely different team with a whole new cast.
Godfather Part II sequel won an Oscar for Best Picture. Other sequels nominated for Best Picture include The Godfather, part III, Toy Story 3, The Bells of St Mary’s and Mad Max Fury Road.
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