Every cinéaste has a list of films and performers  they wish would have won Academy Awards, or even been nominated. But tastes were  often different during the Golden Age of Hollywood, and what was considered  superb back then might seem dated and creaky these days. Whereas, numerous films  that were overlooked for awards in their day have since been embraced by  critics, historians and film buffs.
 So, on the eve of the 83rd Annual Academy Awards,  Classic Hollywood tries to make up for past mistakes  or at least reward  deserving films  with our own retro film awards. Let's call them the Classics.  Here are our picks for films and performers that should have won.
 The Classics: Best Films
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 "City Lights"
 Charlie Chaplin had been nominated for the first  Academy Awards in the lead acting and comedy direction categories for 1928's  "The Circus." Those nominations were withdrawn, however, when the Board of  Governors gave him a special award for the comedy. But three years later, his  beloved masterpiece, which finds the Little Tramp trying to earn money to help a  blind flower girl, was totally neglected.
 "The Shop Around the Corner"
 The great Ernst Lubitsch directed this delightful  1940 romantic comedy, which was totally ignored by the Oscars. Jimmy Stewart and  Margaret Sullavan play feuding clerks at a gift shop who don't know they are  having a romantic pen-pal relationship. The comedy moves like a dream  the  script is delicate and subtle, and the performances are sublime.
 "Singin' in the Rain"
 Widely considered the best movie musical ever made,  this sophisticated, funny and beautifully performed 1952 spoof of the early  sound era only managed nominations for supporting actress for Jean Hagen and for  scoring of a motion picture. Sit back and enjoy Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen's  innovative direction, Betty Comden and Adolph Green's flawless script and those  musical numbers, including Kelly's dancing in the rain and Donald O' Connor's  astonishing "Make 'Em Laugh."
 The Classics: Lead Actor
 Humphrey Bogart "In a Lonely Place"
 Bogart would finally win his Oscar for 1951's "The  African Queen," but he deserves a Classic for his brave, disturbing turn in this  1950 film noir directed by Nicholas Ray. He plays a screenwriter with a  hair-trigger temper who is accused of murdering a young woman.
 Laurence Olivier "Carrie"
 Olivier, who made 1939's "Wuthering Heights" with  William Wyler, reunited with the director for this dour, little-known 1952 drama  based on Theodore Dreiser's novel "Sister Carrie." Olivier gives a revelatory  performance as a married manager of a Chicago restaurant who loses everything  when he falls in love with a young woman (Jennifer Jones). Olivier, who won his  only lead actor Oscar for 1948's "Hamlet," doesn't need dialogue  his finest  moments are just close-ups of his face.
 Kirk Douglas "Ace in the Hole"
 Nobody could play the callous, ambitious jerk like  Douglas. In Billy Wilder's cynical 1951 drama, Douglas gives his greatest  performance as a disgraced big-city reporter working for a small newspaper in  Albuquerque. Douglas has been nominated for three Academy Awards, but not for  this dark drama.
 The Classics: Lead Actress
 Judy Garland "A Star Is Born"
 In 1955, everyone thought the lead actress Oscar  was Garland's, but the award went to Grace Kelly for "The Country Girl." The  lavish "Star"  produced by Garland's then-husband, Sid Luft, and directed by  George Cukor  was her comeback role. Garland doesn't give a false note in this  Hollywood tale of love and loss.
 Bette Davis "The Letter"
 Davis earned 10 nominations and won two Academy  Awards. But she was never better than in her wickedly delicious Oscar-nominated  turn in William Wyler's 1940 version of the Somerset Maugham melodrama. She  plays the bored, manipulative wife of a milquetoast rubber plantation  administrator (Herbert Marshall).
 Barbara Stanwyck "Double Indemnity"
 Stanwyck earned four Oscar nominations, including  one for Wilder's crackling 1944 adaptation of the James M. Cain novel. Though  the Oscar eluded her, Stanwyck receives the Classic as the ultimate femme fatale  who proves to be the downfall of a weak-willed insurance salesman (Fred  MacMurray, also never better).

 


















