The Year: 1979
What the Nominees Were: All That Jazz, Apocalypse Now, Breaking Away, Kramer Vs. Kramer, Norma Rae Other Movies That Should Have Been Considered: Those are five great movies! This was one of the best years for American film. Amazingly, there were more great films, including Being There, The China Syndrome and, of course, Alien.
What Did Win: Kramer Vs. Kramer
How It’s Aged: It’s deeply moving, the all-time great movie about divorce, and the performances from Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep both richly deserved their Oscars. But…
How It’s Aged: It’s deeply moving, the all-time great movie about divorce, and the performances from Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep both richly deserved their Oscars. But…
What Should’ve Won: Breaking Away
How Hard Was the Decision: I truly love Kramer vs. Kramer, but it’s a very strong year. I was going to give it to Apocalypse Now, which is an amazing film, but I was sort of dreading rewatching it, and so I eventually decided to go with my heart and award it to one of my all-time favorites instead.
How Hard Was the Decision: I truly love Kramer vs. Kramer, but it’s a very strong year. I was going to give it to Apocalypse Now, which is an amazing film, but I was sort of dreading rewatching it, and so I eventually decided to go with my heart and award it to one of my all-time favorites instead.
Director: Peter Yates
Writer: Steve Tesich
Stars: Dennis Christopher, Dennis Quaid, Daniel Stern, Jackie Earle Haley, Barbara Barrie, and Paul Dooley
Writer: Steve Tesich
Stars: Dennis Christopher, Dennis Quaid, Daniel Stern, Jackie Earle Haley, Barbara Barrie, and Paul Dooley
The Story: After the quarries close, the sons of stonecutters have no idea what they’re going to do with their lives. Dave decides to be a star bicycle racer and imitates his Italian idols. Only when he meets them and finds out they are cheats does he admit his own problems, especially with his father. He eventually realizes that he should go to college.
Any Nominations or Wins: It won Original Screenplay. It lost Picture, Director, Supporting Actress for Barrie and Score.
Why It Didn’t Win: I can’t blame the Academy for giving it to Kramer vs. Kramer, which was more “of the moment,” addressing one of the most painful issues facing America at the time. Breaking Away, on the other hand, is more gentle and timeless, and giving it an Oscar (other than original screenplay) must have felt less urgent.
Why It Should Have Won:
- Yates didn’t make any other films this good, nor did Tesich, nor did Christopher, making this one of those great one-offs where the right elements all came together in some bizarre alchemical concoction that could never be repeated.
- But Christopher has one of my favorite line readings. Dave’s father runs a used car lot and rips off the local college kids. Dave rejects his family and chooses to idolize Italian bike racers instead. His dad tries to break him of this mania and forces him to take a job on the lot. One day, some kids his dad ripped off try to return their car and Dave naively gives them their money back. His father tries to physically block them from pushing the dead car back onto the lot, almost killing himself with a heart attack. Dave runs off to join a race with his Italian idols, but they betray him too, cheating and running him off the road. Dave returns home tearfully to his dad and bitterly laments, “Everybody cheats. I just didn’t know.” He can no longer hide behind the imaginary heroism of the Italians, which means he must accept his father’s wickedness. It’s just about one of the most devastating moments in any movie I’ve seen.
- The movie has an seemingly-cuttable silent scene that manages (as I’ve pointed out before) to be a perfect one-scene encapsulation of the plot and everything the movie has to say. Practicing his racing along the side of the highway, Dave ends up racing against a truck advertising Italian Vermouth, while an Italian opera plays on the soundtrack. The trucker ends up getting pulled over by a cop, so Dave wins, racing by a sign that says “Now entering Bloomington, Home of Indiana University.” Dave doesn’t realize that his Italian fantasy is harming others, and he doesn’t realize that he’s been heading towards his real goal this whole time: the university.
- I’ve said before that in the best sports movies the hero either wins by losing (Rocky) or loses by winning (Downhill Racer). This movie is a great sports movie, but it’s an exception because the hero wins by winning, and that’s fine. Dave resolves all of his issues with his dad, his girlfriend, and his friends, and then begins the triumphant final bicycle race, which is a bit of an afterthought. The result is an exhilarating stand-up-and-cheer triumph, but it’s still packed with irony: Dave gets to defeat the university kids one last time, but only after admitting that he needs to join the enemy and enroll at the university himself.
- Steve (ne Stoyan) Tesich was a Yugoslavian immigrant who came to Indiana University on a wrestling scholarship, where he decided to switch to screenwriting and wrote two unrelated scripts, one about a bike race and another about ex-stonecutters, but Yates had the great idea to combine them. Sometimes writers don’t know what they have until a clever director leads them there.
























