If you’ve ever googled “every Oscar-winning movie ever” and immediately felt your soul leave your body… same vibe.
The Academy Awards have been handing out gold statues since the late 1920s, and over the decades they’ve honored
thousands of films across dozens of categories. That’s a lot of cinema. That’s also a lot of runtime.
That’s also a lot of “wait, this won an Oscar?”
So let’s make this sane, useful, and still totally nerdy: when most people say “Oscar-winning movies,” what they
really mean is the headline champBest Picture. This article gives you a complete, year-by-year list of
every Best Picture winner, from the silent-era beginnings to the modern “whoa, that just won?” era. Then we’ll
zoom out with patterns, fun facts, and some real-world watching experiencesbecause trying to watch them all is a
hobby, a flex, and occasionally a cry for help.
Quick reality check: “all Oscar-winning movies” is a LOT
Technically, “Oscar-winning movies” includes any film that won any Academy AwardBest Visual Effects,
Best Sound, Best Documentary, Best Short Film, and so on. That’s a gigantic list that keeps growing every year.
If you truly want the whole universe, the best approach is to use the Academy’s official awards database and filter
by year, category, and winner status.
But if you want the cultural “canon list” people argue about at parties (and in group chats, and on film Twitter, and
during commercials), it’s the Best Picture winners. So that’s what you’ll find below: the complete Best Picture
winner listevery year, every title.
The complete Best Picture winners list (1927/28–2024)
Note on labeling: early Academy Awards used “award years” like 1927/28. Modern entries are shown by the
award year tied to the ceremony’s eligibility window. In other words: it’s chronological and complete, even if the
first few years look like a pair of dates doing a buddy-cop routine.
| Award Year (Ceremony) | Best Picture Winner |
|---|---|
| 1927/28 (1st) | Wings |
| 1928/29 (2nd) | The Broadway Melody |
| 1929/30 (3rd) | All Quiet on the Western Front |
| 1930/31 (4th) | Cimarron |
| 1931/32 (5th) | Grand Hotel |
| 1932/33 (6th) | Cavalcade |
| 1934 (7th) | It Happened One Night |
| 1935 (8th) | Mutiny on the Bounty |
| 1936 (9th) | The Great Ziegfeld |
| 1937 (10th) | The Life of Emile Zola |
| 1938 (11th) | You Can’t Take It with You |
| 1939 (12th) | Gone with the Wind |
| 1940 (13th) | Rebecca |
| 1941 (14th) | How Green Was My Valley |
| 1942 (15th) | Mrs. Miniver |
| 1943 (16th) | Casablanca |
| 1944 (17th) | Going My Way |
| 1945 (18th) | The Lost Weekend |
| 1946 (19th) | The Best Years of Our Lives |
| 1947 (20th) | Gentleman’s Agreement |
| 1948 (21st) | Hamlet |
| 1949 (22nd) | All the King’s Men |
| 1950 (23rd) | All About Eve |
| 1951 (24th) | An American in Paris |
| 1952 (25th) | The Greatest Show on Earth |
| 1953 (26th) | From Here to Eternity |
| 1954 (27th) | On the Waterfront |
| 1955 (28th) | Marty |
| 1956 (29th) | Around the World in 80 Days |
| 1957 (30th) | The Bridge on the River Kwai |
| 1958 (31st) | Gigi |
| 1959 (32nd) | Ben-Hur |
| 1960 (33rd) | The Apartment |
| 1961 (34th) | West Side Story |
| 1962 (35th) | Lawrence of Arabia |
| 1963 (36th) | Tom Jones |
| 1964 (37th) | My Fair Lady |
| 1965 (38th) | The Sound of Music |
| 1966 (39th) | A Man for All Seasons |
| 1967 (40th) | In the Heat of the Night |
| 1968 (41st) | Oliver! |
| 1969 (42nd) | Midnight Cowboy |
| 1970 (43rd) | Patton |
| 1971 (44th) | The French Connection |
| 1972 (45th) | The Godfather |
| 1973 (46th) | The Sting |
| 1974 (47th) | The Godfather Part II |
| 1975 (48th) | One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest |
| 1976 (49th) | Rocky |
| 1977 (50th) | Annie Hall |
| 1978 (51st) | The Deer Hunter |
| 1979 (52nd) | Kramer vs. Kramer |
| 1980 (53rd) | Ordinary People |
| 1981 (54th) | Chariots of Fire |
| 1982 (55th) | Gandhi |
| 1983 (56th) | Terms of Endearment |
| 1984 (57th) | Amadeus |
| 1985 (58th) | Out of Africa |
| 1986 (59th) | Platoon |
| 1987 (60th) | The Last Emperor |
| 1988 (61st) | Rain Man |
| 1989 (62nd) | Driving Miss Daisy |
| 1990 (63rd) | Dances with Wolves |
| 1991 (64th) | The Silence of the Lambs |
| 1992 (65th) | Unforgiven |
| 1993 (66th) | Schindler’s List |
| 1994 (67th) | Forrest Gump |
| 1995 (68th) | Braveheart |
| 1996 (69th) | The English Patient |
| 1997 (70th) | Titanic |
| 1998 (71st) | Shakespeare in Love |
| 1999 (72nd) | American Beauty |
| 2000 (73rd) | Gladiator |
| 2001 (74th) | A Beautiful Mind |
| 2002 (75th) | Chicago |
| 2003 (76th) | The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King |
| 2004 (77th) | Million Dollar Baby |
| 2005 (78th) | Crash |
| 2006 (79th) | The Departed |
| 2007 (80th) | No Country for Old Men |
| 2008 (81st) | Slumdog Millionaire |
| 2009 (82nd) | The Hurt Locker |
| 2010 (83rd) | The King’s Speech |
| 2011 (84th) | The Artist |
| 2012 (85th) | Argo |
| 2013 (86th) | 12 Years a Slave |
| 2014 (87th) | Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) |
| 2015 (88th) | Spotlight |
| 2016 (89th) | Moonlight |
| 2017 (90th) | The Shape of Water |
| 2018 (91st) | Green Book |
| 2019 (92nd) | Parasite |
| 2020 (93rd) | Nomadland |
| 2021 (94th) | CODA |
| 2022 (95th) | Everything Everywhere All at Once |
| 2023 (96th) | Oppenheimer |
| 2024 (97th) | Anora |
What this list tells us: patterns, eras, and plot twists
1) Best Picture is a time capsule (with better lighting every decade)
Early winners are a crash course in Hollywood history: sweeping studio productions, prestige adaptations, and the kind
of star power that came with a side of cigarette smoke and a dramatic violin sting. By the time you hit the 1970s,
the winners start reflecting a grittier, more character-driven eraThe French Connection, The Godfather,
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Then the 1990s and 2000s mix big epics (Titanic,
The Lord of the Rings) with modern dramas (American Beauty, Million Dollar Baby).
And yesevery era has at least one winner that makes newer viewers go, “This won Best Picture?” That’s not a bug.
It’s the entire point. Best Picture isn’t a “greatest hits” playlist; it’s a snapshot of what the industry admired
that yeartaste, politics, trends, and all.
2) The “11 Oscars” mountaintop is tiny (and very crowded)
Three films share the record for the most Oscar wins by a single movie: Ben-Hur,
Titanic, and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King,
each with 11. That’s not just “had a good night.” That’s “won so much hardware they needed a second
shelf” energy.
And those three are wildly different experiences: a biblical epic chariot-racing its way into history; a romance-disaster
mega-production that became a pop-culture monolith; and the grand finale of a fantasy trilogy that basically said,
“Fine, we’ll just win everything then.” If you want to understand how the Oscars reward scale, craft, and cultural
momentum, that trio is a great start.
3) Best Picture nominations evolved (because five slots couldn’t hold the chaos)
For much of Oscar history, Best Picture had five nominees. Then the Academy expanded the field in the modern era,
meaning the race became less “tiny invitational” and more “high-stakes festival lineup.” The result: more genres,
more international attention, and more room for movies that spark conversationeven if they don’t fit the old
prestige-movie mold.
4) Best Picture eligibility now includes representation standards
In recent years, the Academy introduced representation and inclusion standards tied specifically to Best Picture
eligibility. The idea isn’t to “grade” artistic quality; it’s to set baseline expectations for inclusion in
casting, creative leadership, access, and industry opportunity. In practice, it means studios and producers plan
earlierand the conversation around what gets made (and who gets to make it) is part of the awards ecosystem now.
If you want to go beyond Best Picture (without needing a second lifetime)
Build your own “Oscar-winners watchlist” in 3 easy steps
-
Pick a lane: Do you want “Best Picture winners,” “movies with 3+ Oscars,” “all Acting winners,” or
“everything that ever won a statue”? (Be honest with your free time.) -
Choose a timeframe: A decade marathon is way more realistic than “all time, all categories.”
Start with the 1990s or 2010s if you want modern pacing. -
Mix in categories you actually love: Animation, documentary, international feature, or
cinematography winners can be more rewarding than forcing yourself through something you’re “supposed” to respect.
A quick starter pack: 12 Best Picture winners that show the range
- Wings (1927/28) silent-era spectacle and historical curiosity.
- Casablanca (1943) immortal dialogue, classic Hollywood craft.
- Ben-Hur (1959) scale, spectacle, and a record-setting Oscar haul.
- In the Heat of the Night (1967) a landmark drama that still hits hard.
- The Godfather (1972) one of the most influential movies ever made.
- Rocky (1976) underdog storytelling that refuses to age out.
- Schindler’s List (1993) devastating, essential, unforgettable.
- Titanic (1997) pop phenomenon plus serious craft.
- The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) the “won everything” finale.
- Moonlight (2016) intimate, lyrical, and culturally seismic.
- Parasite (2019) genre-bending brilliance with sharp social teeth.
- Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022) wild, emotional, and totally unlike the old template.
Conclusion
A complete list of “Oscar-winning movies” across every category is basically a cinematic universemassive, expanding,
and guaranteed to start debates. But the Best Picture winners? That’s the spine of Oscar history: a nearly 100-year
highlight reel of what the industry crowned as “the big one” each year.
Use this list as a watch roadmap, a trivia weapon, or a way to settle that one argument where someone confidently
says a movie “definitely won Best Picture” (and you get to gently, lovingly, fact-check them into silence).
Whether you’re chasing classics, modern masterpieces, or the weird winners that make you laugh out loud, there’s
something here for every kind of film fan.
Reader Experiences: What It’s Like Trying to Watch Them All
Watching every Best Picture winner sounds glamorouslike you’ll emerge from the marathon wearing a velvet blazer,
speaking only in perfectly timed monologues, and casually dropping phrases like “the Academy’s early sound-era bias.”
The reality is more like: you start strong, you hit a few masterpieces, and then you realize you’ve voluntarily signed
up for a century-long group project with Hollywood.
The first surprise is how quickly your brain starts noticing “Oscar patterns.” You’ll recognize the years that loved
big, sweeping epics, and the years that rewarded smaller, more intimate stories. You’ll also discover that some winners
feel timeless (hello, Casablanca), while others feel like a very specific cultural moment trapped in amber.
That’s not a failure. It’s honestly part of the funlike flipping through a family photo album where everyone dressed
differently every decade and somebody always insisted on a mustache.
Another unexpected experience: your taste evolves mid-marathon. Movies you assumed would be “homework” turn out to be
wildly entertaining. Movies you assumed would be instant favorites might not land. It’s especially noticeable when you
bounce between eras. One night you’re watching a modern winner with fast pacing and sharp editing, and the next night
you’re in a 1940s drama where the tension simmers for twenty minutes before anyone even raises their voice. Both can be
great; they’re just playing different games.
If you do this as a social thingwatch parties, film club, sibling rivalry bracketexpect the debates to get personal.
Someone will defend a controversial winner with a PowerPoint-worthy argument. Someone will declare a classic “overrated”
and immediately regret saying it out loud. Someone will ask, “Wait, that beat that?” at least once per decade.
Snacks help. So does agreeing in advance that it’s okay to love a movie that didn’t win, and it’s also okay to be
unimpressed by something the Academy adored.
The best “experienced watcher” tip is pacing. Don’t try to bulldoze the whole list. Pick a theme: one winner per week,
or one decade per month, or “I’ll watch the winners that keep showing up in conversations.” Mix in something light
after something heavy. Celebrate small victories. And when you hit a movie that feels like a slog, remember: you’re not
failing the Oscars. The Oscars are simply revealing their personality, and sometimes that personality is “long and
extremely serious.”
By the end, you’ll have a weird superpower: you’ll understand film history in a way that’s hard to get from highlights
alone. You’ll see how storytelling styles changed, how acting trends shifted, how technology transformed what directors
could pull off, and how culture and industry priorities shaped “award-worthy” cinema. And you’ll also have the
extremely practical benefit of being the person who can confidently say, “Actually, the Best Picture winner that year
was…”which is either a party trick or a warning sign, depending on how your friends feel about movie trivia.
