Annal:1984 Hugo Award for Dramatic Presentation, Long Form

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Results of the Hugo Award in the year 1984. For a ranked list of films, try an honor roll:

The Right Stuff

Philip Kaufman

Philip Kaufman’s intimate epic about the Mercury astronauts (based on Tom Wolfe’s book) was one of the most ambitious and spectacularly exciting movies of the 1980s. It surprised almost everybody by not becoming a smash hit. By all rights, the film should have been every bit the success that Apollo 13 would later become; The Right Stuff is not only just as thrilling, but it is also a bigger and better movie. Combining history (both established and revisionist), grand mythmaking (and myth puncturing), adventure, melodrama, behind-the-scenes…

 

Brainstorm

Douglas Trumbull

Brainstorm is a fascinating but frustrating film, simply because it dabbles in greatness but fails to develop the fullest implications of its provocative ideas. It’s a visually dazzling film with outstanding special effects; directed by veteran effects creator Douglas Trumbull, of 2001 fame; but too caught up in marvels of hardware and software at the expense of its characters, who remain interesting but dramatically two-dimensional. The story involves the development of a headset recorder that can replay one person’s experiences—even their…

 

Something Wicked This Way Comes

Jack Clayton

One of Ray Bradbury’s most popular and intriguing novels of good and evil comes to life in this spine-tingling motion picture. On a grim and gusty October day, two young boys encounter a distressed man who foretells of danger blowing their way. Soon after, the town is visited by a seductive stanger named Mr. Dark and his Pandemonium Carnival. Terrifying things begin to happen when the adventurous boys stumble onto the carnival’s deadly and destructive secret! Beware: Something Wicked This Way Comes…and frightening surprises follow!

 

War Games

John Badham

Cute but silly, this 1983 cautionary fantasy stars Matthew Broderick as a teenage computer genius who hacks into the Pentagon’s defense system and sets World War III into motion. All the fun is in the film’s set-up, as Broderick befriends Ally Sheedy and starts the international crisis by pretending while online to be the Soviet Union. After that, it’s not hard to predict what’s going to happen: government agents swoop in, but the story ends up in the “hands” of machines talking to one another. Thus we’re stuck with flashing lights, etc. John Badham…

 
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