Michael Madsen remembered: All his Oscar-nominated films, from ‘WarGames' to ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood'
Madsen had a robust career with nearly 350 acting credits listed on IMDb, ranging from modern classics to straight-to-video potboilers. And he played key roles in the tapestry of several Academy Award-nominated and -winning films.
More from Gold Derby
The 'Jurassic' rebirth that never happened: How an Oscar-nominated screenwriter almost took the franchise in a wild new direction
'Back to the Future' at 40: All the ways the Robert Zemeckis classic was snubbed by the Oscars
As we remember the work of Michael Madsen, here's a rundown of the Oscar nominated films in which he appeared.
As a missile control specialist unwilling to compromise during a surprise drill, Madsen found himself at the center of one of the '80s most iconic suspense sequences. WarGames earned three Oscar nominations — for Best Original Screenplay, Cinematography, and Sound.
Madsen embodied the dirtier side of baseball as the doomed Bump Bailey opposite Robert Redford as Roy Hobbs. The Natural snagged four nominations: Best Supporting Actress (Glenn Close), Cinematography, Art Direction-Set Design, and Score
In a softer turn that audiences would usually get from Madsen, Jimmy represented an alluring alternative for Louise (Susan Sarandon). The film was one of the year's bigger Oscars players, nominated for Actress twice (Geena Davis and Sarandon), Director (Ridley Scott), Cinematography, Editing, and winning Original Screenplay for Callie Khouri's script.
Madsen wore a marshal's badge as Virgil Earp, the older brother of Wyatt (Kevin Costner) and participant in the blood Gunfight at the OK Corral. Somewhat overshadowed by the release of Tombstone the year before, Lawrence Kasdan's western still earned an Oscar nomination for Best Cinematography.
Real-life Miami-based mafioso Sonny Black was brought to life by Madsen in the undercover cop thriller, which earned writer Paul Attanasio a nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay.
Madsen's signature gravel lent itself well to voice-over work as evidenced by his role as the wolf Maugrim in the adaptation of C.S. Lewis' fantasy classic. The film itself got three technical nominations: Best Makeup, Sound Mixing, and Visual Effects.
Tarantino recruited Madsen to be one of his numbered gunslingers for the locked-room western, in which he played Joe Gage, a cowboy with a secret or two or eight. The Hateful Eight earned three nominations — for Best Supporting Actress (Jennifer Jason Leigh), Cinematography, and the long-overdue win for Ennio Morricone's score.
For their final collaboration, Tarantino cast Madsen as the kind of old-school working actor that he was one of modern film and TV's closest approximations. The film earned 10 Oscar nominations including Best Picture, winning two.
Best of Gold Derby
Everything to know about 'The Batman 2': Returning cast, script finalized
Tom Cruise movies: 17 greatest films ranked worst to best
'It was wonderful to be on that ride': Christian Slater talks his beloved roles, from cult classics ('Heathers,' 'True Romance') to TV hits ('Mr. Robot,' 'Dexter: Original Sin')
Click here to read the full article.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Apple races to box office glory with Brad Pitt's F1 blockbuster
More than three years since Apple's film CODA won the best picture Oscar, the tech company has hit another Hollywood milestone: its first Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Elle
33 minutes ago
- Elle
All About Natasha Lyonne's Boyfriend, Bryn Mooser
Actress Natasha Lyonne famously dated comedian Fred Armisen for a number of years, but fewer people know about her current relationship with media executive Bryn Mooser. The Russian Doll actress has been romantically linked to Mooser since 2023, soon after she admitted she and Armisen had split. While speaking with The Hollywood Reporter in October of that year, Lyonne confirmed the break up when she was asked about whether she still lived in Los Angeles. 'I'm not. I had been there living with Fred and during COVID,' she replied, before joking, 'I honestly think we broke up because I wanted a swimming pool.' More seriously, she added, 'We love each other just about as much as two people can love each other and we're still talking all the time. But Freddy doesn't like a swimming pool. It might seem like a mundane reason for a breakup, but during that pandemic, you've got to get your laps—I'm like Burt Lancaster in The that's the real scandal. I guess I finally am an actual bicoastal.' Here's everything we know about Bryn Mooser and his relationship with Lyonne so far. Bryn Mooser is known as a director and producer, but also a business mogul, especially in regards to media companies. The 45-year-old co-founded Ryot, which focuses on documentaries with virtual and augmented reality, according to his IMDb page. He sold the company to Verizon in 2016, then launched another film and TV studio in 2019, XTR, which also focuses on non-fiction content. He became the CEO of Documentary+ in 2020, per SCMP. Mooser's documentary Body Team 12 won him an Emmy in 2015 and an Oscar nomination for producing. In 2019, he was nominated at the Oscars again for the documentary Lifeboat. Mooser also launched A.I. animation company Asteria Film with Lyonne in 2022, which they both claim is ethically sourced A.I. The pair knew of one another at least as early as 2022, in order to found their company. But rumors that Lyonne and Mooser were dating popped up in 2023, according to the Daily Mail. That was the year they started making appearances at red carpet events, including Macaulay Culkin's Walk of Fame ceremony, followed by the 2024 Golden Globes, the 2025 Independent Spirit Awards, the SNL 50th Anniversary Special, the Chanel Pre-Oscar Awards Dinner, and Vanity Fair's Golden Globe party. At the ISAs, Lyonne told photographers, 'I think I will take a boyfriend picture, thank you so much,' inviting Moser to pose with her.


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Every 'Jurassic' movie ranked (including 'Jurassic World Rebirth')
Humans may do all the talking in the "Jurassic Park" and "Jurassic World" movies but they know who the main character is: that Tyrannosaurus rex. Ever since John Williams' epic theme hit and extinct creatures walked again on a big screen in Steven Spielberg's original 1993 movie, we've enjoyed several films with dinos wrecking things, eating people and eating things while trying to wreck people. The latest is "Jurassic World Rebirth" (in theaters now), with Scarlett Johansson, Jonathan Bailey and Mahershala Ali joining the franchise. No, it wasn't a great idea to genetically manufacture raptors, pterodactyls and all sorts of monstrous critters for a theme park, but the "Jurassic" flicks have brought in some serious blockbuster dough over the years. And so what if the quality of the movies hasn't exactly been consistently stellar? As long as the dinos are top notch, that's what fills theater seats. Now hold on to your butts: In honor of "Rebirth," we're ranking all the "Jurassic" flicks from worst to best. (And if you need to catch up, the previous six installments are streaming on Peacock.) 7. 'Jurassic Park III' (2001) OG "Jurassic Park" star Sam Neill features in this miss of a threequel, the first franchise outing to not be directed by Spielberg. And it's definitely missing the same magic. Neill's paleontologist Alan Grant, who's trying to drum up cash for his Velociraptor research, is recruited to find a wealthy couple's son who went missing while parasailing over a dino-infested island, and they all run into a pesky Spinosaurus. 6. 'Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom' (2018) A volcano on Isla Nubar is about to erupt and wipe the dinos out again, leading Owen Grady (Chris Pratt) and Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard) to help their relocation. There's a nefarious conspiracy at play, however, and what was a disaster movie turns into a haunted-house flick where our heroes spend much of the back half of the messy narrative trapped in a mansion with a gene-spliced monstrosity called an Indoraptor. 5. 'Jurassic World Rebirth' (2025) When dino DNA is discovered to be crucial in a miracle cure for heart disease, a team led by a cover operative (Scarlett Johansson) and a paleontologist (Jonathan Bailey) is sent to an abandoned island research facility to snag genetic matter from three species. The mission ends up being a load of trouble, with some human drama and betrayal plus a rampaging debut for the mutated and monstrous Distortus rex. 4. 'The Lost World: Jurassic Park' (1997) Even not-so-great Spielberg is better than most everything else. The legendary director's "Park" sequel is a genetic clone of the first movie, with a returning Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum) and his paleontologist girlfriend (Julianne Moore) on board to send a new bunch of dinos to a Jurassic Park in San Diego. A baby T. rex and its parents on the loose, plus some Velociraptors, equals some serious SoCal property damage. 3. 'Jurassic World' (2015) A new trilogy begins with a rebooted Jurassic theme park that's lacking some spark, so they bring in an Indominus rex, a genetically modified hybrid "bigger, better and louder" than the T. rex. Operations manager Claire is in charge of this doomed experiment, behavioral expert Owen (who has an A-team of Velociraptors) knows it's a bad idea, and 20,000 park visitors are put in harm's way courtesy of a sweet multi-species dino battle royale. 2. 'Jurassic World Dominion' (2022) This trilogy closer gets a bad rap, because it's got plenty of nifty dino-filled action sequences and a heaping of nostalgia, teaming the "Park" heroes with the "World" crew. Earth has to face cloned critters living among humans, yet there's plenty of crowd-pleasing familiarity, from another shady tech company and lots of creatures (27 species, guys!) to an epic throwdown between our pal, the T. rex, and the formidable Gigantosaurus. 1. 'Jurassic Park' (1993) The best of them all, and it isn't even particularly close. In Spielberg's capable hands, dinos rule in a grand spectacle ultimately about not messing around with Mother Nature. Based on the Michael Crichton novel, the film that started it all tackles corporate greed and mankind's god complex with these stunning genetically cloned reptiles, and Spielberg takes us on a terrifying, popcorn-chomping journey featuring the kind of breathtaking species that only existed in kids' imaginations.