Of course Julia Louis-Dreyfus loves The Wizard of Oz
Louis-Dreyfus said she re-watches “The Wizard of Oz” every few years. She cannot remember the first time she watched it, though, explaining that the film is now “part of my brain.” She especially loves Bert Lahr as the Cowardly Lion and the scene where he sets out to rescue Dorothy (Judy Garland) from the Wicked Witch of the West (Margaret Hamilton). The Lion speaks a big game and bravely declares he is not afraid. He then asks the Scarecrow and the Tin Woodman (Ray Bolger and Jack Haley) to talk him out of it. Comedy gold.
“The Wizard of Oz” was nominated for multiple Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
Louis-Dreyfus also loves Roberto Benigni’s 1997 drama “Life is Beautiful.” That film, she said, is “a very dramatic and comedic film all at once. It’s a true mash-up. The drama of it, though, is the driver, and it’s done so skillfully, and it is so heartbreaking.” The film is about a father (Benigni) who is abducted by the Nazis and placed in a concentration camp with his young son. To protect his son’s emotional state, he pretends the horrors of the camp are silly games and assures that they will be rescued any minute. It’s astonishing that such a premise works.
“Life is Beautiful” was nominated for multiple Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
Up next on Louis-Dreyfus’ favorites list: the Merchant-Ivory romance “A Room with a View.” The film follows a young woman (Helena Bonham Carter) in 1907 England as she falls in love with a free-willed young man played by Julian Sands. Maggie Smith, Daniel Day-Lewis, and Judi Dench also appear. Louis-Dreyfus declared the movie “the most romantic film of all time,” adding that it makes her cry “whenever I watch it.” She also noted her Elaine hair on “Seinfeld” was inspired by Carter’s hair in the film.
“A Room with a View” was nominated for multiple Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
Louis-Dreyfus also loves Hoosiers and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
Perhaps unexpectedly, Louis-Dreyfus then selected David Anspaugh’s basketball drama “Hoosiers” as one of her favorites. She explained that “it is a sports story, but it’s so much more. It’s about an underdog team and beating the odds. It’s about teamwork. And I am a basketball fan, but I will tell you that before I was a basketball fan, I was a fan of ‘Hoosiers.’ That’s why I’m saying I think you should watch it, because you’ll really, really enjoy it.”
She also credited stars Gene Hackman and Dennis Hopper for buoying the film with their amazing performances. She was even impressed with the way Hackman drank coffee; there was, it seems, a great deal of authenticity brought to every gesture.
“Hoosiers” was not nominated for any Academy Awards.
Finally, like many, Louis-Dreyfus loves Miloš Foreman’s 1975 drama “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” adapted from the novel of the same name by Ken Kesey. That film is about a criminal layabout named McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) who accepts a sentence in a mental facility rather than going to prison. However, he finds the facility’s mentally ill residents are being poorly managed by the stern Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher), and that fear and oppression rule the land. Everything ends badly. Commenting on the film, Louis-Dreyfus described it as “a movie about social injustice and inequity and the disenfranchised, and it will kill you. It will sway you with its sadness, but in a way that is appropriate, and there is a glimmer of hope at the end, I would say.”
“One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” was nominated for multiple Academy Awards, including Best Picture. This time, however, it won Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress, and Best Screenplay. It’s one of the best films of the 1970s.
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