Orson Welles’ 1941 masterpiece Citizen Kane, frequently crowned as the greatest film in cinema history, suffered the most notorious Oscar snub when it lost Best Picture in 1942 to How Green Was My Valley. This injustice, confirmed by multiple authorities, tops every list of Academy Awards failings and reshaped Oscar history.
As the 98th Academy Awards prepare to honor this year’s finest films, the conversation inevitably turns to the moments when the Academy got it spectacularly wrong. No example is more infamous than the 1942 Best Picture race, where Orson Welles‘s Citizen Kane was defeated by John Ford‘s sentimental drama How Green Was My Valley. This decision has echoed through decades, cementing itself as the ultimate Oscar scandal.
Citizen Kane revolutionized cinema with its deep-focus cinematography, non-linear storytelling, and sound design. It’s consistently ranked at the top of critics’ lists, often trading the number one spot with films like Alfred Hitchcock‘s Vertigo and Francis Ford Coppola‘s The Godfather. Yet, in 1942, it walked away empty-handed, losing to a film that, while respected, hasn’t endured with the same reverence.
The snub is so profound that TV Insider recently published a ranking of the “15 Worst Best Picture Snubs“, placing Citizen Kane at the pinnacle. The outlet states: “Probably the most-cited example of the Oscars failing to give the award to the most deserving movie, Citizen Kane being beaten out by How Green Was My Valley, a drama helmed by John Ford (an iconic director in his own right, but for Westerns, not dramas), is a reality that becomes more and more unbelievable with each passing year.” They add that the film “endures due to its technical wizardry, stellar performances, and profound influence on moviemaking as a whole. It’s considered the best of all time for a reason.”
This consensus isn’t isolated. Major outlets across the media landscape echo this sentiment, agreeing that Citizen Kane was robbed in 1942. The film’s loss has become a cultural touchstone, symbolizing the Academy’s occasional disconnect from cinematic history.
TV Insider’s top five worst snubs are:
- Citizen Kane (1942)
- Goodfellas (1990)
- Brokeback Mountain (2005)
- BlacKkKlansman (2018)
- Raging Bull (1980)
Another pivotal snub occurred in 2009, when Christopher Nolan‘s The Dark Knight failed to secure a Best Picture nomination entirely. This omission sparked such outrage that the Academy expanded the category from five to ten nominees starting in 2010—a direct response to fan and critic fury.
The 98th Academy Awards air on Sunday, March 14, at 7 p.m. ET on ABC and stream on Hulu. While this year’s contenders like One Battle After Another and Sinners vie for top honors, the shadow of past snubs looms large, reminding us that even the most celebrated films can be overlooked by the Academy.
For fans and cinephiles, the story of Citizen Kane is more than historical trivia—it’s a cautionary tale about the subjectivity of awards and the enduring power of art that transcends its era. The film’s legacy is secure, but the “what if” of that 1942 night remains a haunting “what could have been” for film history.
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