AwardsBest Screenplay Written Directly For The Screen 1978 - Marshall Brickman, Best Direction 1977 - Woody Allen, Best Actress 1977 - Diane Keaton, Best Director 1978 - Woody Allen, Best Screenplay Written Directly For The Screen 1978 - Woody Allen, Best Picture 1978 -, Best Actress In A Leading Role 1978 - Diane Keaton, Best Film 1977 -
Additional InformationWoody Allen cowrote, directed, and stars in this award-winning film as a kvetchy Brooklyn comedian wistfully recalling his bygone relationship with flighty, adorable, and irrepressibly midwestern (read: not Jewish) Annie Hall. The film marked a transition from Allen's earlier absurdist comedies to a richer vein of thoughtful consideration of relationships. The gentle narrative revolutionized the urban romantic-comedy genre, while Keaton's hip, man-tailored wardrobe set the 1977 fashion standard. The film is filled with memorable scenes and oft-quoted lines and features Allen talking right into the camera, a technique that was not commonplace at the time. Allen, playing comedian Alvy Singer, uses many of his stand-up comedy routines in the film as he woos the wonderful Diane Keaton, playing the title character, Annie Hall. As Alvy helps Annie mature, she grows apart from him, choosing to live in Southern California, which is the antithesis of his deep love for New York. The film features fabulous visual and verbal gags, a propensity for food scenes, and memorable cameos by the likes of Marshall McLuhan, Paul Simon, Christopher Walken, Truman Capote, Shelley Duvall, and others.
ReviewsNew York Times - Included in the New York Times "10 BEST FILMS OF 1977"
Costume DesignerRuth Morley, Nancy McArdle, George Newman, Ralph Lauren, Marilyn Putnam
AuthorWoody Allen, Marshall Brickman
CinematographerGordon Willis