Awards

TITANIC, Leonardo Di Caprio, Kate Winslet, 1997

Titanic Trivia Quiz

Happy anniversary ‘Titanic’? Twenty-five years ago today the James Cameron-directed masterpiece took home 11 Oscar wins. Let’s see how much you remember!

Ke Huy Quan, winner of Best Actor in a Supporting Role award for ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once,’ Michelle Yeoh, winner of the Best Actress in a Leading Role award for ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once,’ Brendan Fraser, winner of the Best Actor in a Leading Role award for ’The Whale,’ and Jamie Lee Curtis, winner of the Best Actress in a Supporting Role award for ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’

’80s & ’90s Stars Cleaned Up at the Oscars

‘Indiana Jones’ and ‘Encino Man’ stars struck major Oscar gold this year as all had a very happy reunion at the 95th Academy Awards.

THE WIZARD OF OZ, Judy Garland, Toto the dog, 1939

That Didn’t Win? Major Movie Blockbuster Oscar Snubs

These have to have won best picture in their day, Right?

Test Your Knowledge of ’80s & ’90s Stars at the 2023 Oscars

With the Oscars coming up, test your knowledge of the ’80s and ’90s stars up for an award this year.

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)

‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ and Other Sci-Fi Films on TCM’s 31 Days of Oscar

The March 10 evening lineup also features Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), The Time Machine (1960), Destination Moon (1950) and Forbidden Planet (1956).

Teresa Wright as Eleanor Gehrig and Gary Cooper as Lou Gehrig in

TCM’s 31 Days of Oscar: ‘The Pride of the Yankees’ & Other Sports Movies

The March 9 evening lineup also features ‘Somebody Up There Likes Me’ (1956), ‘This Sporting Life’ (1963), ‘Hoop Dreams’ (1994), ‘The Stratton Story’ (1949) and ‘Pat and Mike’ (1952).

Daniel Day-Lewis as Bill the Butcher in Martin Scorsese's Gangs of New York

TCM’s 31 Days of Oscar: ‘Gangs of New York’

Martin Scorsese’s multi-Oscar-nominated 2002 historical drama makes its TCM premiere March 8 as the centerpiece of a night of acclaimed crime films that also includes The French Connection, Shaft (1971) and more.

Bob Hope introducing the 25th Academy Awards ceremony, the first to be televised, in 1953

Watch Bob Hope’s Opening at the First Oscars TV Broadcast in 1953

“Television. That’s where movies go when they die,” quips the host, along with other zingers that good-naturedly reflect the tension between the film industry and young upstart television 70 years ago.