Best Screenplay

Robert Benton Films | Robert Benton Filmography | Robert Benton Biography | Robert Benton Career | Robert Benton Awards

There were many ways to make it as a bigtime Hollywood director in the 1970s. Robert Benton's experience provides a common mode: a successful screenwriter turned director. Benton teamed with another aspiring author, David Newman, to pen the script of Arthur Penn's wildly successful, highly influential Bonnie and Clyde (1967), a film that showed Hollywood how to meld comedy, melodrama, and social commentary. The story of how Benton and Newman came to write Bonnie and Clyde is the stuff of Hollywood legend.

Bernardo Bertolucci Films | Bernardo Bertolucci Filmography | Bernardo Bertolucci Biography | Bernardo Bertolucci Career | Bernardo Bertolucci Awards

At the age of twenty-one, Bernardo Bertolucci established himself as a major artist in two distinct art forms, winning a prestigious award in poetry and receiving high critical acclaim for his initial film, La commare secca. This combination of talents is evident in all of his films, which have a lyric but exceptionally concrete style. His father, Attilio Bertolucci, was famous in his own right as a critic, professor, and poet, and in 1961 introduced Bernardo to Pier Paolo Pasolini, an esteemed literary figure.

Peter Bogdanovich Films | Peter Bogdanovich Filmography | Peter Bogdanovich Biography | Peter Bogdanovich Career | Peter Bogdanovich Awards

Of all trades ancillary to the cinema, few offer worse preparation for a directing career than criticism. Bogdanovich's background as Hollywood historian and profiler of its legendary figures inevitably invited comparisons between his movies and those of directors like Ford, Hawks, and Dwan, whom he had deified. That he should have occasionally created films that deserve such comparison argues for his skill and resilience.

John Boorman Films | John Boorman Filmography | John Boorman Biography | John Boorman Career | John Boorman Awards

"Film making is the process of turning money into light and then back into money again." John Boorman's neat epigram will probably haunt him for the rest of his filmmaking days, not simply because it is so tidy a formulation, but because the tensions it articulates have played such a prominent part in his own career.

Charles Burnett Films | Charles Burnett Filmography | Charles Burnett Biography | Charles Burnett Career | Charles Burnett Awards

Prior to the release of To Sleep with Anger in 1990, Charles Burnett had for two decades been writing and directing low-budget, little-known, but critically praised films that examined life and relationships among contemporary African Americans.

Joel Coen Films | Joel Coen Filmography | Joel Coen Biography | Joel Coen Career | Joel Coen Awards

Although Joel Coen had worked as an assistant film editor on commercial projects and had made valuable contacts within the industry (particularly director Sam Raimi), he and brother Ethan decided to produce their first feature film independently, raising $750,000 to shoot their jointly written script for Blood Simple, a neo-noir thriller with a Dashiell Hammett title and a script full of homages to Jim Thompson. Though Joel received screen credit for direction and Ethan for the script, this distinction is somewhat artificial both here and in their subsequent productions.

Francis Ford Coppola Films | Francis Ford Coppola Filmography | Francis Ford Coppola Biography | Francis Ford Coppola Career | Francis Ford Coppola Awards

Francis Ford Coppola became the first major American film director to emerge from a university degree program in filmmaking. He received his Master of Cinema degree from UCLA in 1968, after submitting his first film of consequence, You're a Big Boy Now (1967), a freewheeling comedy about a young man on the brink of manhood, to the university as his master's thesis.

Constantin Costa-Gavras Films | Constantin Costa-Gavras Filmography | Constantin Costa-Gavras Biography | Constantin Costa-Gavras Career | Constantin Costa-Gavras Awards

The films of Constantin Costa-Gavras are exciting, enthralling, superior examples of dramatic moviemaking, but the filmmaker is far from being solely concerned with keeping the viewer in suspense. A Greek exile when he made Z, set in the country of his birth, Costa-Gavras is most interested in the motivations and misuses of power: politically, he may be best described as an anti-fascist, a humanist. As such, his films are as overtly political as any above-ground, internationally popular and respected filmmaker in history.

Bill Forsyth Films | Bill Forsyth Filmography | Bill Forsyth Biography | Bill Forsyth Career | Bill Forsyth Awards

For a while during the early 1980s Scottish cinema was virtually synonymous with Bill Forsyth. Today his work remains among the most original and distinctive to have emerged not only from Scotland but from Britain as a whole.

Joseph L. Mankiewicz Films | Joseph L. Mankiewicz Filmography | Joseph L. Mankiewicz Biography | Joseph L. Mankiewicz Career | Joseph L. Mankiewicz Awards

Few of Mankiewicz's contemporaries experimented so radically with narrative form. In The Barefoot Contessa, Mankiewicz (who wrote most of the films he directed) let a half-dozen voice-over narrators tell the Contessa's story, included flashbacks within flashbacks, and even showed one event twice (the slapping scene in the restaurant) from two different points of view.

Alain Tanner Films | Alain Tanner Filmography | Alain Tanner Biography | Alain Tanner Career | Alain Tanner Awards

Alain Tanner's involvement with film began during his college years. While attending Geneva's Calvin College, he and Claude Goretta formed Geneva's first film society. It was during this time that Tanner developed an admiration for the ethnographic documentaries of Jean Rouch and fellow Swiss Henry Brandt, an influence that continued throughout his career.

Billy Wilder Films | Billy Wilder Filmography | Billy Wilder Biography | Billy Wilder Career | Billy Wilder Awards

During the course of his directorial career, Billy Wilder succeeded in offending just about everybody. He offended the public, who shunned several of his movies as decisively as they flocked to others; he offended the press with Ace in the Hole, the U.S. Congress with A Foreign Affair, the Hollywood establishment with Sunset Boulevard ("This Wilder should be horsewhipped!" fumed Louis B. Mayer), and religious leaders with Kiss Me, Stupid; he offended the critics, both those who found him too cynical and those who found him not cynical enough.

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