
Directed by Woody Allen
Starring Woody Allen, Diane Keaton, Tony Roberts, Carol Kane, Paul Simon, Shelley Duvall, Janet Margolin, Colleen Dewhurst, Christopher Walken, Donald Symington, Helen Ludlum, Mordecai Lawner, Joan Neuman, Jonathan Munk, Hy Anzell, Russell Horton, Jeff Goldblum, John Glover, Truman Capote, Sigourney Weaver, and Marshall McLuhan
I will start by saying that this is probably my favorite movie, and Woody Allen is probably my favorite filmmaker. That being said, I know many people think
Star Wars to be the best picture of 1977. Let me take a moment to explain why this is wrong. Many, many movies have been made about a relationship between a man and a woman. Most of the time, when the movie is told from the perspective of the man in the relationship, as this one is, the woman is presented as some sort of goddess that would never concievably give the time of day to a schlub like the protagonist. The woman in these movies is not a real person, she's some sort of ideal that doesn't really exist. This isn't the case in
Annie Hall. Annie is just as flawed as Woody Allen's Alvy. When they first meet, she is the one who approaches him awkwardly and can't find the right words to say. If you watched all other love stories, you would think that this is impossible, as how could the perfect woman ever be awkward? Annie makes as many mistakes in the relationship as Alvy does, and the viewer can sympathize with him wanting to end the relationship. This makes
Annie Hall the most realistic romantic comedy to ever come out of Hollywood, or in this case, New York.
Another thing that makes
Annie Hall so great is the perfect uses of jokes at the beginning and end of the film. I won't repeat them hear, as they are quite lengthy, but Allen, as a comedian, realizes how good comedy reflects what is important in life, and these two jokes perfectly sum up why he thinks we persue these relationships even though they often lead to nothing but pain. So, even though Alvy and Annie don't end up together, we believe that their relationship was something good while it lasted, and that both would be fools not to pursue others in the future. Woody Allen, in 1977, came as close as anyone ever had to making the perfect movie.
Other nominees:
The Goodbye Girl (Herbert Ross),
Julia (Fred Zinnemann),
Star Wars (George Lucas), and
The Turning Point (Herbert Ross)