The Calvins: A Ten Year Retrospective
By Reagen Sulewski
February 19, 2011
BoxOfficeProphets.com
Looking back over the history of the Calvins, one thing seems pretty clear – George Clooney should get a restraining order against us.
Over the course of out ten years of voting, Clooney sticks out as a clear and consistent favorite of our voting process, named as a top ten finisher ten different times, across acting, directing and screenwriting categories. He's also won three times, tied for the most wins by a person in our history with Peter Jackson, but he's unique in being the only person to win across multiple categories, let alone to claim wins in directing, writing and acting categories. There could be a couple reasons for this – perhaps it's his incredible talent across all aspects of the movie industry, or maybe it's just those dreamy eyes, and it's our way of getting him to notice us. Either way, call us, George!
It's not even really a close contest, either. Going over the all-time lists, his next closest competitors sit all the way back at seven nominations each. Christopher Nolan and Peter Jackson also accomplish these numbers by going across categories, but should probably learn to act if they want to have a hope of catching Clooney.
The all-time, All-Calvins list of top 10 finishes, where individuals are named, save Worst and Breakthrough (number of wins in parentheses):
Ten Nominations George Clooney (3)
Notes: As mentioned above, Clooney has wins in Best Actor, Best Director and Best Screenplay. If he learns to write music, we're in trouble.
Seven Nominations: Peter Jackson (3) Christopher Nolan (2)
Notes: Jackson's wins were back-to-back-to-back, for the Lord of the Rings trilogy, with six of them coming for directing and writing those films. With the arrival of the Hobbit films next year, Jackson has a shot at topping this; then he has to start “finding” lost manuscripts of Tolkien. Nolan holds the current record among the Calvins for longest time between wins, taking a screenplay prize back in the first year of the awards for Memento, then winning again for director two years ago for The Dark Knight. That project of his in 2016 is going to be special.
Five Nominations Amy Adams (1) Meryl Streep (1) Kate Winslet (1) Matt Damon Wes Anderson Joel and Ethan Coen Quentin Tarantino
Notes: As a group, we tend to cluster our actress votes more than actor votes, which is in large part symptomatic of the dearth of quality roles for women in film relative to men. Amy Adams is quickly emerging as Kate Winslet 2.0, with mentions in 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011. Writer/directors loom large here, with three of the more highly acclaimed double-threats appearing.
Four Nominations Natalie Portman (1) Jason Reitman (1) Robert Downey Jr. Cate Blanchett Nicole Kidman Tilda Swinton Paul Thomas Anderson Alexander Payne Brad Bird
Notes: Reitman is another stealthy rising favorite, with his four mentions coming from three films since 2007. Another cluster of actresses here reflects similar things to the five nomination crowd. As well, we have four more writer-directors, with Brad Bird playing the role of hard-luck loser – collecting two second places for The Incredibles and two third places for Ratatouille.
Three Nominations Paul Giamatti (2) Leonardo DiCaprio (1) Anne Hathaway (1) Naomi Watts (1) Renee Zellweger (1) Andrew Stanton (1) Charlie Kaufman (1) Ben Affleck Clive Owen Don Cheadle Mark Ruffalo Phillip Seymour Hoffman Russell Crowe Sam Rockwell Sean Penn Stanley Tucci Keira Knightley Patricia Clarkson Samantha Morton Taraji P. Henson Fran Walsh & Phillipa Boynes Edgar Wright Judd Apatow Alfonso Cuaron
Notes: Giamatti has the highest batting percentage of anyone with more than one nomination, winning in back to back years in Supporting Actor for Cinderella Man, then in Actor for Sideways. Since then, while he's done roles theoretically worthy of being noticed by us, they've been in movies obscure enough that we haven't gotten to them in time. Such is the flow of the Calvins. The actor/actress imbalance starts to straighten out here, although one actor/director (Affleck) sneaks in (Penn's mentions are all for acting). Charlie Kaufman, along with Walsh & Boynes, are the most highly decorated pure writers in Calvins history, though Walsh and Boynes get the Jackson asterisk attached to them.
Calvins tendency seems to be to pick a favorite film and run with it, letting it pile up a number of awards. Below are the most lauded films in Calvins history ($ indicates number of awards won in categories no longer awarded by us):
Six Wins Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Five Wins Good Night, and Good Luck $ The Queen The Social Network
Four Wins The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring $$ The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers $ Lost in Translation The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King $$ The Dark Knight
Three Wins The Royal Tenenbaums About a Boy Adaptation Sideways The Departed No Country For Old Men Juno WALL-E $ Up in the Air Inglourious Basterds
Two Wins The Bourne Ultimatum Up The Hurt Locker Exit Through the Gift Shop The Fighter
As much as we enjoy piling on some of our favorite terrible actors, we've in general been decent about spreading out the “wealth." Only a few actors have felt our wrath on multiple occasions. Below are the most frequently mentioned worst performances, with wins in parentheses:
Three Nominations John Travolta Mike Myers Nic Cage
Two Nominations Megan Fox (2) Halle Berry (1) Paul Walker (1) Arnold Schwarzenegger Ben Kingsley Hayden Christensen Jessica Alba Shia LaBeouf Taylor Lautner Will Farrell
Over the years, we've also had a number of close races – so many so, that to get our attention as being particularly tight, we're not even interested in hearing about it if you're as many as four points out from first place. That's right, we're that heartless. The closest photo-finishes in Calvins history are below:
One Point 2002 Screenplay – Memento vs The Royal Tenenbaums 2004 Worst Performance – Paul Walker (2 Fast 2 Furious) vs Ben Affleck (Daredevil) 2005 Supporting Actress – Virginia Madsen (Sideways) vs Cate Blanchett (The Aviator) 2006 Worst Performance – Kristianna Loken (Bloodrayne) vs Nicolas Cage (The Wicker Man) 2008 Scene – Ratatouille vs Once
Two Points 2005 Worst Performance – Halle Berry (Catwoman) vs Sharon Stone (Catwoman) 2005 Special Effects – Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow vs Spider-Man 2 2007 Music – A Prairie Home Companion vs Children of Men 2010 Actor – George Clooney (Up in the Air) vs Jeremy Renner (The Hurt Locker)
Three Points 2002 Actor – Gene Hackman (The Royal Tenenbaums) vs Russell Crowe (A Beautiful Mind) 2005 Supporting Actor – Benicio Del Toro (21 Grams) vs Sean Astin (The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers) 2007 TV Show – Battlestar Galactica vs The Office 2008 Worst Performance – Jim Carrey (The Number 23) vs Nicolas Cage (Ghost Rider) 2008 Overlooked Picture – Hot Fuzz vs Once 2009 Screenplay – WALL-E vs In Bruges
We've also had some runaways in our history, with five Calvins winners more than doubling their runner-up's point totals. The most lopsided victories in the Calvins are as follows:
2010 Scene – Up vs The Hangover – 136.54% 2004 Breathrough Performance – Keisha Castle-Hughes (Whale Rider) vs. Scarlett Johansson (Lost in Translation) - 130.40% 2002 Worst Picture – Planet of the Apes vs Lara Croft: Tomb Raider – 129.00% 2009 Worst Picture – The Happening vs 10,000 B.C. - 113.88% 2007 Supporting Actor – Michael Sheen (The Queen) vs Alan Arkin (Little Miss Sunshine) - 112.50%
Until next year.
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