Which film won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature 2013?
Frozen
Chris Buck won in 2013 for Frozen. Jonas Rivera won in 2015 for Inside Out and again in 2019 for Toy Story 4. Byron Howard won in 2016 for Zootopia.
Which Indian film won maximum awards at Oscars in 2013?
Competitive awards
Year | Nominee(s)/recipient(s) | Film |
---|---|---|
2009 (81st) | A. R. Rahman (music) Gulzar(lyrics) | Slumdog Millionaire |
A. R. Rahman(music) | ||
2011 (83rd) | A. R. Rahman(music) | 127 Hours |
2013 (85th) | Bombay Jayashri(music) | Life of Pi |
Did Joy Story win an Oscar?
This movie ” Piper ” has won the Oscar for the best animated movie. It’s duration is only 3 min but director took 3 years to develop. See how life can change…
Who won movie of the Year 2013?
Ben Affleck’s film “Argo” took the best picture Oscar at the 85th Academy Awards. Other marquee winners were Daniel Day-Lewis for lead actor for “Lincoln,” Jennifer Lawrence for lead actress for “Silver Linings Playbook,” and Ang Lee for director for “Life of Pi,” which won four Oscars, the most for any film.
Has Pixar ever not won an Oscar?
No Pixar film released in 2005, either — and incidentally, 2002 and 2005 were the only two years in the award’s entire history that non-American films won.
How many times has Tom and Jerry won an Oscar?
MGM’s Tom and Jerry (1940–67) is the category’s most lauded animated series over all, being nominated for a total of 13 Oscars and winning 7.
Which Indian film got first Oscar award?
Gandhi
Bhanu Athaiya became the first Indian to win an Academy Award in 1983, for designing the costumes for Richard Attenborough’s Gandhi. She jointly won the Academy Award for Best Costume Design with John Mollo, for Richard Attenborough’s “Gandhi”.
How many Oscars did Looney Tunes win?
Rabbit, Duck!), Duck Amuck, One Froggy Evening, and What’s Opera, Doc?), and five (Tweetie Pie, Speedy Gonzales, Birds Anonymous, Knighty Knight Bugs, and For Scent-imental Reasons) have won Academy Awards….
Looney Tunes | |
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Color process | B&W (1930–1943) Technicolor (1942–1969) Cinecolor (selected late 1940s shorts) |