Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Film#2020s

{{Short description|Award for documentary films}}

{{Infobox award

| name = Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Film

| presenter = Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS)

| country = United States

| year = {{start date and age|1943|3|4}} (for films released in 1942)

| holder_label = Most recent winner

| holder = Basel Adra, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal, and Yuval Abraham
No Other Land (2024)

| website = {{URL|oscars.org}}

}}

The Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Film is an award for documentary films. In 1941, the first awards for feature-length documentaries were bestowed as Special Awards to Kukan and Target for Tonight.{{cite web |url=https://www.documentary.org/magazine/drive-archive-academy-pushes-preserve-docs |title=The Drive to Archive: Academy Pushes to Preserve Docs |last=Fisher |first=Bob |date=2012 |publisher=International Documentary Association |access-date=January 4, 2018 }} They have since been bestowed competitively each year, with the exception of 1946.[http://www.cinemasight.com/awards-history/19th-academy-awards-1946/19th-academy-awards-1946-nominees-and-winners/ 19th Academy Awards (1946): Nominees and Winners-Cinema Sight by Wesley Lovell] Copies of every winning film (along with copies of most nominees) are held by the Academy Film Archive.{{cite web|title=Academy Award-Winning Documentaries|url=https://www.oscars.org/film-archive/collections/academy-award-winning-documentaries|website=Academy Film Archive|date=4 September 2014}}

Winners and nominees

Following the Academy's practice, films are listed below by the award year (that is, the year they were released under the Academy's rules for eligibility). In practice, due to the limited nature of documentary distribution, a film may be released in different years in different venues, sometimes years after production is complete.

{{Interlanguage link info|section=true|small=left}}

= 1940s =

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! rowspan="25" |1942
{{small|(15th)}}
In 1942, documentary features and short subjects competed together for Best Documentary. Four special awards were bestowed among the 25 nominees.

| The Battle of Midway

| John Ford (United States Navy)

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| Kokoda Front Line!

| Ken G. Hall{{cite web |url=https://aso.gov.au/titles/newsreels/kokoda-front-line/notes/ |title=Kokoda Front Line! (1942)|author=De Souza, P.|publisher=australianscreen (National Film and Sound Archive Australia)|access-date=11 June 2017}}{{cite web |url=https://www.nfsa.gov.au/latest/australias-first-oscar|title=Australias First Oscar|author=Taylor, B.|publisher=National Film and Sound Archive Australia|access-date=11 June 2017}} (Australian News & Information Bureau)

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| Moscow Strikes Back

| Artkino

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| Prelude to War

| Frank Capra (Office of War Information)

Africa, Prelude to Victory

| The March of Time

Combat Report

| United States Army Signal Corps

Conquer by the Clock

| {{ill|Frederic Ullman Jr.|de|Frederic Ullman junior|fr}} Slavko Vorkapich

The Grain That Built a Hemisphere

| Walt Disney

Henry Browne, Farmer

| United States Department of Agriculture

High Over the Borders

| National Film Board of Canada

High Stakes in the East

| The Netherlands Information Bureau

Inside Fighting China

| National Film Board of Canada

It's Everybody's War

| United States Office of War Information

Listen to Britain

| British Ministry of Information

Little Belgium

| Belgian Ministry of Information

Little Isles of Freedom

|Victor Stoloff and Edgar Loew

Mr. Blabbermouth

| United States Office of War Information

Mr. Gardenia Jones

| United States Office of War Information

The New Spirit

| Walt Disney

The Price of Victory

| William H. Pine

A Ship Is Born

| United States Merchant Marine

Twenty-One Miles

| British Ministry of Information

We Refuse to Die

| William C. Thomas

The White Eagle

| {{ill|Concanen Films|de|Concanen Films Ltd.}}

Winning Your Wings

| United States Army Air Force

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1943
{{small|(16th)}}
A preliminary list of eight films were announced as nominees, but the Documentary Award Committee subsequently narrowed the field to five titles included on the final ballot. The films that did not advance were: For God and Country (United States Army Pictorial Service), Silent Village (British Ministry of Information), and We've Come a Long, Long Way (Negro Marches On, Inc.).
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| Desert Victory

| British Ministry of Information

Baptism of Fire

| United States Army

The Battle of Russia

| United States Department of War Special Service Division

Report from the Aleutians

| United States Army Pictorial Service

War Department Report

| United States Office of Strategic Services Field Photographic Bureau

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center" | 1944
{{small|(17th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| The Fighting Lady

| Edward Steichen (United States Navy)

Resisting Enemy Interrogation

| United States Army Air Force

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center" | 1945
{{small|(18th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| The True Glory

| The Governments of Great Britain and the United States of America

The Last Bomb

| United States Army Air Force

rowspan="4" style="text-align:center" | 1947
{{small|(20th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| Design for Death

| Sid Rogell, Theron Warth and Richard Fleischer

Journey into Medicine

| United States Department of State Office of Information and Educational Exchange

The World Is Rich

| Paul Rotha

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center" | 1948
{{small|(21st)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| The Secret Land

| Orville O. Dull

The Quiet One

| Janice Loeb

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center" | 1949
{{small|(22nd)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| Daybreak in Udi

| Crown Film Unit

Kenji Comes Home

| Paul F. Heard

= 1950s =

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! width="5%" | Year

! width="45%" | Film

! width="50%" | Nominees

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! rowspan="2" |1950
{{small|(23rd)}}

| The Titan: Story of Michelangelo

| Robert Snyder

With These Hands

| Jack Arnold and {{ill|Lee Goodman (filmmaker)|lt=Lee Goodman|de|Lee Goodman}}

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center" | 1951
{{small|(24th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| Kon-Tiki

| Olle Nordemar

I Was a Communist for the F.B.I.

| Bryan Foy

rowspan="4" style="text-align:center" | 1952
{{small|(25th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| The Sea Around Us

| Irwin Allen

The Hoaxters

| Dore Schary

Navajo

| Hall Bartlett

rowspan="4" style="text-align:center" | 1953
{{small|(26th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| The Living Desert

| Walt Disney

The Conquest of Everest

| John Taylor, Leon Clore and {{ill|Grahame Tharp|de}}

A Queen Is Crowned

| Castleton Knight

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center" | 1954
{{small|(27th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| The Vanishing Prairie

| Walt Disney

The Stratford Adventure

| Guy Glover

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center" | 1955
{{small|(28th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| Helen Keller in Her Story

| Nancy Hamilton

Heartbreak Ridge

| {{ill|René Risacher|de}}

rowspan="4" style="text-align:center" | 1956
{{small|(29th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| The Silent World

| Jacques-Yves Cousteau

The Naked Eye

| Louis Clyde Stoumen

Where Mountains Float

| The Government Film Committee of Denmark

rowspan="4" style="text-align:center" | 1957
{{small|(30th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| Albert Schweitzer

| Jerome Hill

On the Bowery

| Lionel Rogosin

Torero!

| Manuel Barbachano Ponce

rowspan="5" style="text-align:center" | 1958
{{small|(31st)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| White Wilderness

| Ben Sharpsteen

Antarctic Crossing

| {{ill|James Carr (filmmaker)|lt=James Carr|de|James Carr (Filmproduzent)}}

The Hidden World

| Robert Snyder

Psychiatric Nursing

| {{ill|Nathan Zucker|de}}

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center" | 1959
{{small|(32nd)}}
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| Serengeti Shall Not Die

| Bernhard Grzimek

The Race for Space

| David L. Wolper

= 1960s =

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! width="5%" | Year

! width="45%" | Film

! width="50%" | Nominees

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! rowspan="2" |1960
{{small|(33rd)}}

| The Horse with the Flying Tail

| Larry Lansburgh

Rebel in Paradise

| Robert D. Fraser

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center" | 1961
{{small|(34th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Le Ciel et la Boue (Sky Above and Mud Beneath)

|Arthur Cohn and {{ill|René Lafuite|de}}

La Grande Olimpiade (Olympic Games 1960)

| dell Istituto Nazionale Luce, Comitato Organizzatore Del Giochi Della XVII Olimpiade

rowspan="3" style="text-align:center" | 1962
{{small|(35th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Black Fox

|Louis Clyde Stoumen

Alvorada (Brazil's Changing Face)

| Hugo Niebeling

rowspan="4" style="text-align:center" | 1963
{{small|(36th)}}
Terminus was originally announced as a nominee, but the nomination was rescinded after it was discovered the film had been released prior to the eligibility period.{{cite web |url=http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ |title=The Official Academy Awards Database |author= |publisher=Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences |access-date=January 4, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090227145302/http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ |archive-date=February 27, 2009 |url-status=dead }}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Robert Frost: A Lover's Quarrel with the World

|Robert Hughes

Le Maillon et la Chaine (The Link and the Chain)

|{{ill|Paul de Roubaix|de

fr}}
The Yanks Are Coming

|Marshall Flaum

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1964
{{small|(37th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Jacques-Yves Cousteau's World without Sun

|Jacques-Yves Cousteau

The Finest Hours

| Jack Le Vien

Four Days in November

|Mel Stuart

The Human Dutch

|Bert Haanstra

Over There, 1914–18

|Jean Aurel

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1965
{{small|(38th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Eleanor Roosevelt Story

| Sidney Glazier

The Battle of the Bulge... The Brave Rifles

| {{ill|Laurence E. Mascott|de

fr}}
The Forth Road Bridge

| Peter Mills

Let My People Go

| Marshall Flaum

To Die in Madrid

| Frédéric Rossif

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1966
{{small|(39th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The War Game

| Peter Watkins

The Face of a Genius

| Alfred R. Kelman

Helicopter Canada

| Peter Jones and Tom Daly

The Really Big Family

| Alex Grasshoff

Le Volcan Interdit (The Forbidden Volcano)

| Haroun Tazieff

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1967
{{small|(40th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Anderson Platoon

| Pierre Schoendoerffer

Festival

| Murray Lerner

Harvest

| Carroll Ballard

A King's Story

| Jack Le Vien

A Time for Burning

| {{ill|Bill Jersey|lt=William C. Jersey|de}}

rowspan="5" style="text-align:center" | 1968
{{small|(41st)}}
Young Americans, produced by Robert Cohn and Alex Grasshoff, won this award on April 14, 1969.

On May 7, 1969, the win and nomination were rescinded after it was discovered the film had been released prior to the eligibility period. First runner-up Journey into Self was named the winner the following day.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ti6C0lFsfk Documentary Winners: 1969 Oscars]

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|Journey into Self

| Bill McGaw

A Few Notes on Our Food Problem

| James Blue

The Legendary Champions

| William Cayton

Other Voices

| {{ill|David H. Sawyer|de}}

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1969
{{small|(42nd)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Arthur Rubinstein – The Love of Life

| {{ill|Bernard Chevry|de}}

Before the Mountain Was Moved

| Robert K. Sharpe

In the Year of the Pig

| Emile de Antonio

The Olympics in Mexico

| Comite Organizador de los Juegos de la XIX Olimpiada

The Wolf Men

| Irwin Rosten

= 1970s =

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! width="5%" | Year

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! width="50%" | Nominees

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! rowspan="5" |1970
{{small|(43rd)}}

|Woodstock

| Bob Maurice

Chariots of the Gods

|Dr. Harald Reinl

Jack Johnson

|Jim Jacobs

King: A Filmed Record... Montgomery to Memphis

|Ely Landau

Say Goodbye

| David H. Vowell

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1971
{{small|(44th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Hellstrom Chronicle

|Walon Green

Alaska Wilderness Lake

|Alan Landsburg

On Any Sunday

|Bruce Brown

The RA Expeditions

|{{ill|Lennart Ehrenborg|de

sv}} and Thor Heyerdahl
The Sorrow and the Pity

|Marcel Ophüls

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1972
{{small|(45th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Marjoe

|Howard Smith and Sarah Kernochan

Ape and Super-Ape

|Bert Haanstra

Malcolm X

|Marvin Worth and Arnold Perl

Manson

|Robert Hendrickson and Laurence Merrick

The Silent Revolution

|{{ill|Eckehard Munck|de}}

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1973
{{small|(46th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Great American Cowboy

|Kieth Merrill

Always a New Beginning

|{{ill|John D. Goodell|pl|John Goodell (reżyser)}}

Battle of Berlin

|Bengt von zur Muehlen

Journey to the Outer Limits

|Alexander Grasshoff

Walls of Fire

|{{ill|Gertrude Ross Marks|de}} and Edmund F. Penney

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1974
{{small|(47th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Hearts and Minds

|Peter Davis and Bert Schneider

Antonia: A Portrait of the Woman

|Judy Collins and Jill Godmilow

The Challenge... A Tribute to Modern Art

|Herbert Kline

The 81st Blow

|Jacquot Ehrlich, David Bergman and Haim Gouri

The Wild and the Brave

|Natalie R. Jones and Eugene S. Jones

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1975
{{small|(48th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Man Who Skied Down Everest

|F. R. Crawley, James Hager and Dale Hartlebe{{cite web | url=http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1976 | title=The 48th Academy Awards | date=4 October 2014 | access-date=September 29, 2015}}

The California Reich

|Walter F. Parkes and Keith F. Critchlow

Fighting for Our Lives

|Glen Pearcy

The Incredible Machine

|Irwin Rosten

The Other Half of the Sky: A China Memoir

|Shirley MacLaine

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1976
{{small|(49th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Harlan County, U.S.A.

|Barbara Kopple

Hollywood on Trial

|James Gutman and David Helpern Jr.

Off the Edge

|Michael Firth

People of the Wind

|Anthony Howarth and David Koff

Volcano: An Inquiry into the Life and Death of Malcolm Lowry

|Donald Brittain and Robert Duncan

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1977
{{small|(50th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Who Are the DeBolts? And Where Did They Get Nineteen Kids?

|John Korty, Dan McCann and Warren L. Lockhart

The Children of Theatre Street

|Robert Dornhelm and Earle Mack

High Grass Circus

| Bill Brind, Torben Schioler and Tony Ianzelo

Homage to Chagall: The Colours of Love

|Harry Rasky

Union Maids

|{{ill|Jim Klein (filmmaker)|lt=Jim Klein|de|Jim Klein}}, Julia Reichert and Miles Mogulescu

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1978
{{small|(51st)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Scared Straight!

|Arnold Shapiro

The Lovers' Wind

|Albert Lamorisse

Mysterious Castles of Clay

|Alan Root

Raoni

|Jean-Pierre Dutilleux, Barry Williams and Michel Gast

With Babies and Banners: Story of the Women's Emergency Brigade

|Anne Bohlen, Lyn Goldfarb and Lorraine Gray

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1979
{{small|(52nd)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Best Boy

|Ira Wohl

Generation on the Wind

|David A. Vassar

Going the Distance

|Paul Cowan and Jacques Bobet

The Killing Ground

|Steve Singer and Tom Priestley

The War at Home

|Glenn Silber and Barry Alexander Brown

= 1980s =

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! width="5%" | Year

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style="background:#FAEB86"

! rowspan="5" |1980
{{small|(53rd)}}

|From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China

|Murray Lerner

Agee

|Ross Spears

The Day After Trinity

|Jon H. Else

Front Line

| David Bradbury

The Yellow Star: The Persecution of the Jews in Europe 1933-45

| Bengt von zur Mühlen and Arthur Cohn

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1981
{{small|(54th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Genocide

|Arnold Schwartzman and Rabbi Marvin Hier

Against Wind and Tide: A Cuban Odyssey

|Suzanne Bauman, Paul Neshamkin and Jim Burroughs

Brooklyn Bridge

|Ken Burns

Eight Minutes to Midnight: A Portrait of Dr. Helen Caldicott

|Mary Benjamin, Susanne Simpson and Boyd Estus

El Salvador: Another Vietnam

|Glenn Silber and Tete Vasconcellos

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1982
{{small|(55th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Just Another Missing Kid

|John Zaritsky

After the Axe

|Sturla Gunnarsson and Steve Lucas

Ben's Mill

|John Karol and Michel Chalufour

In Our Water

|Meg Switzgable

A Portrait of Giselle

|Joseph Wishy

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1983
{{small|(56th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|He Makes Me Feel Like Dancin'

|Emile Ardolino

Children of Darkness

|Richard Kotuk and Ara Chekmayan

First Contact

|Bob Connolly and Robin Anderson

The Profession of Arms

|Michael Bryans and Tina Viljoen

Seeing Red

|James Klein and Julia Reichert

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1984
{{small|(57th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Times of Harvey Milk

|Rob Epstein and Richard Schmiechen

High Schools

|Charles Guggenheim and Nancy Sloss

In the Name of the People

|Alex W. Drehsler and Frank Christopher

Marlene

| Karel Dirka and Zev Braun

Streetwise

| Cheryl McCall

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1985
{{small|(58th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Broken Rainbow

|Maria Florio and Victoria Mudd

Las Madres: The Mothers of Plaza de Mayo

|Susana Blaustein Muñoz and Lourdes Portillo

Soldiers in Hiding

|Japhet Asher

The Statue of Liberty

|Ken Burns and Buddy Squires

Unfinished Business

|Steven Okazaki

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1986
{{small|(59th)}}
A tie in voting resulted in two winners.
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Artie Shaw: Time Is All You've Got (TIE)

|Brigitte Berman

style="background:#FAEB86"

|Down and Out in America (TIE)

|Joseph Feury and Milton Justice

Chile: Hasta Cuando?

|David Bradbury

Isaac in America: A Journey with Isaac Bashevis Singer

|Kirk Simon and Amram Nowak

Witness to Apartheid

|{{ill|Sharon I. Sopher|de}}

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1987
{{small|(60th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Ten-Year Lunch: The Wit and Legend of the Algonquin Round Table

|Aviva Slesin

Eyes on the Prize: America's Civil Rights Years/Bridge to Freedom 1965

|Callie Crossley and James A. DeVinney

Hellfire: A Journey from Hiroshima

|John Junkerman and John W. Dower

Radio Bikini

|Robert Stone

A Stitch for Time

|Barbara Herbich and Cyril Christo

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1988
{{small|(61st)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Hôtel Terminus: The Life and Times of Klaus Barbie

|Marcel Ophüls

The Cry of Reason – Beyers Naudé: An Afrikaner Speaks Out

|Robert Bilheimer and Ronald Mix

Let's Get Lost

|Bruce Weber and Nan Bush

Promises to Keep

|{{ill|Ginny Durrin|de}}

Who Killed Vincent Chin?

| Renee Tajima-Peña and Christine Choy

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1989
{{small|(62nd)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt

|Rob Epstein and Bill Couturié

Adam Clayton Powell

|Richard Kilberg and Yvonne Smith

Crack USA: County Under Siege

|Vince DiPersio and William Guttentag

For All Mankind

|Al Reinert and Betsy Broyles Breier

Super Chief: The Life and Legacy of Earl Warren

|Judith Leonard and {{ill|Bill Jersey|lt=William C. Jersey|de}}

= 1990s =

class="wikitable" style="width:100%"
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! width="5%" | Year

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! width="50%" | Nominees

style="background:#FAEB86"

! rowspan="5" |1990
{{small|(63rd)}}

|American Dream

|Barbara Kopple and Arthur Cohn

Berkeley in the Sixties

|Mark Kitchell

Building Bombs

|Mark Mori and Susan Robinson

Forever Activists: Stories from the Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade

|Judith Montell

Waldo Salt: A Screenwriter's Journey

|Robert Hillmann and Eugene Corr

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1991
{{small|(64th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|In the Shadow of the Stars

|Allie Light and Irving Saraf

Death on the Job

|Vince DiPersio and William Guttentag

Doing Time: Life Inside the Big House

|Alan Raymond and Susan Raymond

The Restless Conscience: Resistance to Hitler Within Germany 1933-1945

|Hava Kohav Beller

Wild by Law

|Lawrence Hott and Diane Garey

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1992
{{small|(65th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Panama Deception

|Barbara Trent and David Kasper

Changing Our Minds: The Story of Dr. Evelyn Hooker

|David Haugland

Fires of Kuwait

|Sally Dundas

Liberators: Fighting on Two Fronts in World War II

|Bill Miles and Nina Rosenblum

Music for the Movies: Bernard Herrmann

|{{ill|Margaret Smilow|de|Margaret_Smilov}} and Roma Baran

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1993
{{small|(66th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|I Am a Promise: The Children of Stanton Elementary School

|Susan Raymond and Alan Raymond

The Broadcast Tapes of Dr. Peter

|David Paperny and Arthur Ginsberg

Children of Fate

|Susan Todd and Andrew Young

For Better or For Worse

|David Collier and Betsy Thompson

The War Room

|D. A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1994
{{small|(67th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision

|Freida Lee Mock and Terry Sanders

Complaints of a Dutiful Daughter

|Deborah Hoffmann

D-Day Remembered

|Charles Guggenheim

Freedom on My Mind

|Connie Field and Marilyn Mulford

A Great Day in Harlem

|Jean Bach

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1995
{{small|(68th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Anne Frank Remembered

|Jon Blair

The Battle Over Citizen Kane

|Thomas Lennon and Michael Epstein

Small Wonders

|Allan Miller and Walter Scheuer

Hank Aaron: Chasing the Dream

|Michael Tollin and Fredric Golding

Troublesome Creek: A Midwestern

|Jeanne Jordan and Steven Ascher

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1996
{{small|(69th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|When We Were Kings

|Leon Gast and David Sonenberg

The Line King: The Al Hirschfeld Story

|Susan W. Dryfoos

Mandela

|{{ill|Jo Menell|cs

sk}} and Angus Gibson
Suzanne Farrell: Elusive Muse

|Anne Belle and {{ill|Deborah Dickson|de

fr}}
Tell the Truth and Run: George Seldes and the American Press

|{{ill|Rick Goldsmith|de

pt}}
rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1997
{{small|(70th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Long Way Home

|Marvin Hier and Richard Trank

4 Little Girls

|Spike Lee and Sam Pollard

Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life

|Michael Paxton

Colors Straight Up

|Michèle Ohayon and Julia Schachter

Waco: The Rules of Engagement

|Dan Gifford and William Gazecki

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1998
{{small|(71st)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Last Days

|James Moll and Kenneth Lipper

Dancemaker

|Matthew Diamond and Jerry Kupfer

The Farm: Angola, USA

|Jonathan Stack and Liz Garbus

Lenny Bruce: Swear to Tell the Truth

|Robert B. Weide

Regret to Inform

|Barbara Sonneborn and {{ill|Janet Cole (filmmaker)|lt=Janet Cole|de|Janet Cole (Filmproduzentin)}}

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 1999
{{small|(72nd)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|One Day in September

|Arthur Cohn and Kevin Macdonald

Buena Vista Social Club

|Wim Wenders and {{ill|Ulrich Felsberg|de

pl}}
Genghis Blues

|Roko Belic and Adrian Belic

On the Ropes

|Nanette Burstein and Brett Morgen

Speaking in Strings

|Paola di Florio and Lilibet Foster

===2000s===

class="wikitable" style="width:100%"
bgcolor="#bebebe"

! width="5%" | Year

! width="45%" | Film

! width="50%" | Nominees

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2000
{{small|(73rd)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport

|Mark Jonathan Harris and Deborah Oppenheimer

Legacy

|Tod Lending

Long Night's Journey into Day

|Deborah Hoffmann and Frances Reid

Scottsboro: An American Tragedy

|Daniel Anker and Barak Goodman

Sound and Fury

|Josh Aronson and {{ill|Roger Weisberg|de}}

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2001
{{small|(74th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Murder on a Sunday Morning

|Jean-Xavier de Lestrade and Denis Poncet

Children Underground

|Edet Belzberg

LaLee's Kin: The Legacy of Cotton

|{{ill|Deborah Dickson|de

fr}} and Susan Froemke
Promises

|B.Z. Goldberg and Justine Shapiro

War Photographer

|Christian Frei

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2002
{{small|(75th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Bowling for Columbine

|Michael Moore and Michael Donovan

Daughter from Danang

|Gail Dolgin and Vicente Franco

Prisoner of Paradise

|Malcolm Clarke and Stuart Sender

Spellbound

|Jeffrey Blitz and Sean Welch

Winged Migration

|Jacques Perrin

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2003
{{small|(76th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Fog of War

|Errol Morris and Michael Williams

Balseros

|{{ill|Carles Bosch|es|Carles Bosch|ca|Carles Bosch i Arisó}} and Josep Maria Domenech

Capturing the Friedmans

|Andrew Jarecki and Marc Smerling

My Architect

|Nathaniel Kahn and Susan R. Behr

The Weather Underground

|Sam Green and Bill Siegel

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2004
{{small|(77th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Born into Brothels

|Ross Kauffman and Zana Briski

The Story of the Weeping Camel

|Byambasuren Davaa and {{ill|Luigi Falorni|de}}

Super Size Me

|Morgan Spurlock

Tupac: Resurrection

|Karolyn Ali and Lauren Lazin

Twist of Faith

|Kirby Dick and Eddie Schmidt

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2005
{{small|(78th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|March of the Penguins

|Luc Jacquet and Yves Darondeau

Darwin's Nightmare

|Hubert Sauper

Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room

|Alex Gibney and Jason Kliot

Murderball

|Henry Alex Rubin and Dana Adam Shapiro

Street Fight

|Marshall Curry

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2006
{{small|(79th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|An Inconvenient Truth

|Davis Guggenheim

Deliver Us from Evil

|Amy Berg and Frank Donner

Iraq in Fragments

|James Longley and John Sinno

Jesus Camp

|Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady

My Country, My Country

|{{ill|Jocelyn Glatzer|de}} and Laura Poitras

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2007
{{small|(80th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Taxi to the Dark Side

|Alex Gibney and Eva Orner

No End in Sight

|Charles Ferguson and Audrey Marrs

Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience

|Richard Robbins

Sicko

|Michael Moore and Meghan O'Hara

War/Dance

|Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2008
{{small|(81st)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Man on Wire

|Simon Chinn and James Marsh

The Betrayal (Nerakhoon)

|Ellen Kuras and Thavisouk Phrasavath

Encounters at the End of the World

|Werner Herzog and Henry Kaiser

The Garden

|Scott Hamilton Kennedy

Trouble the Water

|Carl Deal and Tia Lessin

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2009
{{small|(82nd)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|The Cove

|Louie Psihoyos and Fisher Stevens

Burma VJ

|{{ill|Anders Østergaard|da|Anders Østergaard (filminstruktør)|de|Anders Østergaard}} and {{ill|Lise Lense-Møller|de}}

Food, Inc.

|Robert Kenner and {{ill|Elise Pearlstein|de}}

The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers

|Judith Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith

Which Way Home

|Rebecca Cammisa

= 2010s =

class="wikitable" style="width:100%"
bgcolor="#bebebe"

! width="5%" | Year

! width="45%" | Film

! width="50%" | Nominees

style="background:#FAEB86"

! rowspan="5" |2010
{{small|(83rd)}}

|Inside Job

|Charles Ferguson and Audrey Marrs

Exit Through the Gift Shop

|Banksy and Jaimie D'Cruz

Gasland

|Josh Fox and Trish Adlesic

Restrepo

|Tim Hetherington and Sebastian Junger

Waste Land

|Lucy Walker and {{ill|Angus Aynsley|no

pt}}
rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2011
{{small|(84th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Undefeated

|T. J. Martin, Daniel Lindsay and Rich Middlemas

Hell and Back Again

|Danfung Dennis and Mike Lerner

If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front

|Marshall Curry and Sam Cullman

Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory

|Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky

Pina

|Wim Wenders and Gian-Piero Ringel

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2012
{{small|(85th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Searching for Sugar Man

|Malik Bendjelloul and Simon Chinn

5 Broken Cameras

|Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi

The Gatekeepers

|Dror Moreh, {{ill|Philippa Kowarsky|de

pt}}, and {{ill|Estelle Fialon|de}}
How to Survive a Plague

|David France and Howard Gertler

The Invisible War

|Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2013
{{small|(86th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|20 Feet from Stardom

|Morgan Neville, Gil Friesen and Caitrin Rogers

The Act of Killing

|Joshua Oppenheimer and Signe Byrge Sørensen

Cutie and the Boxer

|Zachary Heinzerling and Lydia Dean Pilcher

Dirty Wars

|Richard Rowley and Jeremy Scahill

The Square

|Jehane Noujaim and Karim Amer

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2014
{{small|(87th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Citizenfour

|Laura Poitras, Mathilde Bonnefoy and Dirk Wilutzky

Finding Vivian Maier

|John Maloof and {{ill|Charlie Siskel|de

pt}}
Last Days in Vietnam

|Rory Kennedy and Kevin McAlester

The Salt of the Earth

|Wim Wenders, Juliano Ribeiro Salgado and David Rosier

Virunga

|Orlando von Einsiedel and Joanna Natasegara

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2015
{{small|(88th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Amy

|Asif Kapadia and James Gay-Rees

Cartel Land

| Matthew Heineman and Tom Yellin

The Look of Silence

| Joshua Oppenheimer and Signe Byrge Sørensen

What Happened, Miss Simone?

| Liz Garbus, Amy Hobby and Justin Wilkes

Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Freedom

| Evgeny Afineevsky and Den Tolmor

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2016
{{small|(89th)}}
{{cite web |url=https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/la-et-mn-oscars-2017-nominees-winners-list-20170123-story.html |title=Academy Awards 2017: Complete list of Oscar winners and nominees |author= |date=February 26, 2017 |newspaper=Los Angeles Times |access-date=January 8, 2018 }}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| O.J.: Made in America

| Ezra Edelman and Caroline Waterlow

Fire at Sea

| Gianfranco Rosi and Donatella Palermo

I Am Not Your Negro

| Raoul Peck, {{ill|Rémi Grellety|de

pt}} and Hébert Peck
Life, Animated

| Roger Ross Williams and Julie Goldman

13th

| Ava DuVernay, Spencer Averick and Howard Barish

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2017
(90th)
{{cite web |url=https://deadline.com/2018/01/oscar-nominations-2018-academy-award-nominees-1202266874/ |title= Oscar Nominations: 'The Shape Of Water' Leads Way With 13 |last=Hipes |first=Patrick |date=January 23, 2018 |website=Deadline Hollywood |access-date=January 23, 2018 }}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| Icarus

| Bryan Fogel and Dan Cogan

Abacus: Small Enough to Jail

| Steve James, Mark Mitten and Julie Goldman

Faces Places

| Agnès Varda, JR and Rosalie Varda

Last Men in Aleppo

| Feras Fayyad, Kareem Abeed and Søren Steen Jespersen

Strong Island

| Yance Ford and Joslyn Barnes

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2018
(91st)
style="background:#FAEB86"

| Free Solo

| Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, Jimmy Chin, Evan Hayes, and Shannon Dill

Hale County This Morning, This Evening

| RaMell Ross, Joslyn Barnes, and Su Kim

Minding the Gap

|Bing Liu and Diane Quon

Of Fathers and Sons

| Talal Derki, {{ill|Ansgar Frerich|de}}, {{ill|Eva Kemme|de}}, and {{ill|Tobias N. Siebert|de}}

RBG

| Betsy West and {{ill|Julie Cohen (filmmaker)|lt=Julie Cohen|de|Julie Cohen|fr|Julie Cohen|pt|Julie Cohen}}

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2019
(92nd)
style="background:#FAEB86"

| American Factory

| Steven Bognar, Julia Reichert and Jeff Reichert

The Cave

| Feras Fayyad, {{ill|Kirstine Barfod|de}} and {{ill|Sigrid Dyekjær (producer)|lt=Sigrid Dyekjær|da|Sigrid Dyekjær|de|Sigrid Dyekjær}}

The Edge of Democracy

|Petra Costa, Joanna Natasegara, Shane Boris and {{ill|Tiago Pavan|pt}}

For Sama

| Waad al-Kateab and Edward Watts

Honeyland

| Ljubo Stefanov, Tamara Kotevska and Atanas Georgiev

= 2020s =

class="wikitable" style="width:100%"
bgcolor="#bebebe"

! width="5%" | Year

! width="45%" | Film

! width="50%" | Nominees

style="background:#FAEB86"

! rowspan="5" |2020/21
{{small|(93rd)}}

|My Octopus Teacher

|Pippa Ehrlich, James Reed and Craig Foster

Collective

|Alexander Nanau and {{ill|Bianca Oana|de}}

Crip Camp

|Nicole Newnham, Jim LeBrecht and Sara Bolder

The Mole Agent

|Maite Alberdi and {{ill|Marcela Santibáñez|de}}

Time

|Garrett Bradley, {{ill|Lauren Domino|de}} and Kellen Quinn

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2021
{{small|(94th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Summer of Soul

|Questlove, Joseph Patel, {{ill|Robert Fyvolent|display=1|de}} and {{ill|David Dinerstein|display=1|de}}

Ascension

|Jessica Kingdon, Kira Simon-Kennedy and Nathan Truesdell

Attica

|Stanley Nelson and {{ill|lt=Traci A. Curry|Traci Curry|de}}

Flee

|Jonas Poher Rasmussen, Monica Hellström, Signe Byrge Sørensen and Charlotte De La Gournerie

Writing with Fire

|Rintu Thomas and Sushmit Ghosh

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" | 2022
{{small|(95th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|Navalny

|Daniel Roher, Odessa Rae, Diane Becker, Melanie Miller and Shane Boris

All That Breathes

|Shaunak Sen, Aman Mann and Teddy Leifer

All the Beauty and the Bloodshed

|Laura Poitras, Howard Gertler, John Lyons, Nan Goldin and Yoni Golijov

Fire of Love

|Sara Dosa, Shane Boris and Ina Fichman

A House Made of Splinters

|Simon Lereng Wilmont and Monica Hellström

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |2023
{{small|(96th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

|20 Days in Mariupol

|Mstyslav Chernov, Michelle Mizner and Raney Aronson-Rath

Bobi Wine: The People's President

|Moses Bwayo, Christopher Sharp and John Battsek

The Eternal Memory

|Maite Alberdi

Four Daughters

|Kaouther Ben Hania and Nadim Cheikhrouha

To Kill a Tiger

|Nisha Pahuja, Cornelia Principe and David Oppenheim

rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |2024
{{small|(97th)}}
style="background:#FAEB86"

| No Other Land

Basel Adra, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal, and Yuval Abraham
Black Box DiariesShiori Itō, Eric Nyari, and Hanna Aqvilin
Porcelain WarBrendan Bellomo, Slava Leontyev, Aniela Sidorska, and Paula DuPré Pesmen
Soundtrack to a Coup d'EtatJohan Grimonprez, Daan Milius, and Rémi Grellety
SugarcaneJulian Brave NoiseCat, Emily Kassie, and Kellen Quinn

Shortlisted finalists

{{Main|Submissions for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature}}

Finalists for Best Documentary Feature are selected by the Documentary Branch based on a preliminary ballot. A second preferential ballot determines the five nominees.{{cite web |url=https://www.oscars.org/sites/oscars/files/93aa_rules.pdf |title=93rd Academy Award of Merit Rules |author= |publisher=Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences |access-date=May 3, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200502044737/https://www.oscars.org/sites/oscars/files/93aa_rules.pdf |archive-date=May 2, 2020 |url-status=live }} Prior to the 78th Academy Awards, there were twelve films shortlisted.

Superlatives

For this Academy Award category, the following superlatives emerge:[http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ampas_awards/help/helpMain.jsp?helpContentURL=statistics/indexStats.html Academy Award Statistics] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090301005626/http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ampas_awards/help/helpMain.jsp?helpContentURL=statistics%2FindexStats.html |date=2009-03-01 }}

  • Most awards:

Arthur Cohn {{ndash}} 3 awards (resulting from 4 nominations);

Simon Chinn {{ndash}} 2 awards;

Jacques-Yves Cousteau {{ndash}} 2 awards;

Walt Disney {{ndash}} 2 awards (resulting from 7 nominations; Disney has an additional 2 wins in the Documentary Short Subject category);

Rob Epstein {{ndash}} 2 awards;

Marvin Hier {{ndash}} 2 awards;

Barbara Kopple {{ndash}} 2 awards

Mark Jonathan Harris {{ndash}} 2 awards

Process controversies

Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11, at the time the highest-grossing documentary film in movie history, was ruled ineligible because Moore had opted to have it played on television prior to the 2004 election. Previously, the 1982 winner Just Another Missing Kid had already been broadcast in Canada and won that country's ACTRA award for excellence in television at the time of its nomination.

In 1990, a group of 45 filmmakers filed a protest to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences over a potential conflict of interest involving Mitchell Block. They noted that Block was a member of the Documentary Steering Committee, which selects films as nominees, but he had a conflict of interest because his company Direct Cinema owned the distribution rights to three of the five films (including eventual winner Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt{{--)}}[https://www.imdb.com/search/title/?companies=co0042450&sort=release_date,asc&start=51&ref_=adv_nxt With Direct Cinema Limited (Sorted by Release Date Ascending) – IMDb] selected that year as nominees for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. They noted that Michael Moore's Roger & Me (distributed by Warner Brothers) was omitted from the nominees, although it had been highly praised by numerous critics and was ranked by many critics as one of the top ten films of the year.Collins, Glenn. [https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F3061EFB3D5A0C778EDDAB0894D8494D81 "Film Makers Protest to Academy"], The New York Times, 24 February 1990. Accessed March 6, 2011.

The controversy over Hoop Dreams{{'}} exclusion was enough to have the Academy Awards begin the process to change its documentary voting system.[http://www.current.org/people/peop423h.html "Steve James, Frederick Marx, and Peter Gilbert: Hoop Dreams: from short subject to major league"; current.org; July 30, 1995.] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070607213731/http://www.current.org/people/peop423h.html |date=June 7, 2007 }} Roger Ebert, who had declared it to be the best 1994 movie of any kind, looked into its failure to receive a nomination: "We learned, through very reliable sources, that the members of the committee had a system. They carried little flashlights. When one gave up on a film, he waved a light on the screen. When a majority of flashlights had voted, the film was switched off. Hoop Dreams was stopped after 15 minutes."{{cite web|url=https://www.rogerebert.com/rogers-journal/the-great-american-documentary|title=The great American documentary – Roger Ebert's Journal – Roger Ebert|first=Roger|last=Ebert|website=www.rogerebert.com|date=14 December 2012 }}

The Academy's executive director, Bruce Davis, took the unprecedented step of asking accounting firm Price Waterhouse to turn over the complete results of that year's voting, in which members of the committee had rated each of the 63 eligible documentaries on a scale of six to ten. "What I found," said Davis, "is that a small group of members gave zeros (actually low scores) to every single film except the five they wanted to see nominated. And they gave tens to those five, which completely skewed the voting. There was one film that received more scores of ten than any other, but it wasn't nominated. It also got zeros (low scores) from those few voters, and that was enough to push it to sixth place."Pond, Steve, The Big Show: High Times and Dirty Dealings Backstage at the Academy Awards, pg. 74, Faber and Faber, 2005

In 2000, Arthur Cohn, the producer of the winning One Day in September boasted "I won this without showing it in a single theater!" Cohn had hit upon the tactic of showing his Oscar entries at invitation-only screenings, and to as few other people as possible. Oscar bylaws at the time required voters to have seen all five nominated documentaries; by limiting his audience, Cohn shrank the voting pool and improved his odds. Following protests by many documentarians, the nominating system was subsequently changed.{{cite web|url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/one-day-in-september-2001|title=One Day In September Movie Review (2001) – Roger Ebert|first=Roger|last=Ebert|website=www.rogerebert.com}}

Hoop Dreams director Steve James said "With so few people looking at any given film, it only takes one to dislike a film, and its chances for making the shortlist are diminished greatly. So they've got to do something, I think, to make the process more sane for deciding the shortlist."{{cite web|url=https://www.indiewire.com/article/michael-moore-best-documentary-oscar-will-be-chosen-by-the-full-academy|title=Michael Moore: Best Documentary Oscar Will Be Chosen By the Full Academy – IndieWire|first=Indiewire|last=Team|website=www.indiewire.com|date=9 January 2012}} Among other rule changes taking effect in 2013,{{cite web|url=http://www.craveonline.com/film/articles/639099-the-other-oscars-best-documentary-feature#/slide/1|title=The OTHER Oscars: Best Documentary Feature – |website=CraveOnline|date=31 January 2014}} the academy began requiring a documentary to have been reviewed by either The New York Times or Los Angeles Times, and be commercially released for at least one week in both of those cities. Advocating the rule change, Michael Moore said "When people get the award for best documentary and they go on stage and thank the Academy, it's not really the Academy, is it? It's 5% of the Academy."

The awards process has also been criticized for emphasizing a documentary's subject matter over its style or quality. In 2009, Entertainment Weekly{{'s}} Owen Gleiberman wrote about the documentary branch members' penchant for choosing "movies that the selection committee deemed good because they're good for you... a kind of self-defeating aesthetic of granola documentary correctness."{{cite web|url=https://ew.com/article/2009/11/20/oscar-documentary-scandal/|title=Oscar documentary scandal: The real reason that too many good movies got left out|date=20 November 2009|website=ew.com}}

In 2014, following the announcement of the shortlist of eligible feature documentary nominees, Sony Pictures Classics co-president Tom Bernard publicly criticized Academy documentary voters after they excluded SPC's Red Army from the shortlist. "It's a sign of some really old people in the documentary area of the Academy. There's a lot of people who are really up in their years. It's shocking to me that that film (Red Army) didn't get in," Bernard said.{{Cite news|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/sony-classics-tom-bernard-slams-754619|title=Sony Classics' Tom Bernard Slams Oscar Voters for Snubbing Russian Hockey Doc 'Red Army'|work=The Hollywood Reporter|access-date=2017-11-27|language=en}} Additionally, in his reporting of the Oscar documentary shortlist exclusions that year, The Hollywood Reporter{{'s}} Scott Feinberg reacted to Red Army{{'s}} omission: "...no matter which 15 titles the doc branch selected, plenty of other great ones would be left on the outside. That is the case, most egregiously, with Gabe Polsky's Red Army (Sony Classics), a masterful look at the role of sports in society and Russian-American relations".{{Cite news|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/race/oscar-doc-shortlist-a-brutal-753358|title=Oscar Doc Shortlist: A Brutal Year to Have to Select Just 15 Finalists|work=The Hollywood Reporter|access-date=2017-11-27|language=en}} (Icarus, another documentary related to sports and Russian-American relations, later won the Oscar.)

In 2017, following the win of the eight-hour O.J.: Made in America in this category, the Academy announced that multi-part and limited series would be ineligible for the award in the future, even if they are not broadcast after their Oscar-qualifying release (as was O.J.: Made in America).{{cite news|url=https://variety.com/2017/film/news/oscars-new-rules-documentary-oj-made-in-america-barred-1202026406/ |title=Oscars: New Rules Bar Multi-Part Documentaries Like 'O.J.: Made in America' |first=Dave |last=McNary |work=Variety |date=2017-04-07 |access-date=2017-05-30}}

Various other acclaimed documentaries have not been nominated such as:{{cite web |last=Oliver |first=Lyttelton |date=18 February 2014 |title=Great Documentariees That Weren't Nominated for an Oscar |url=https://www.indiewire.com/2014/02/10-great-documentaries-that-werent-nominated-for-an-oscar-88933/ |website=IndieWire}}[https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1992-03-16-ca-2766-story.html Oscars Have No Hidden 'Agenda' to Thwart Popular Documentaries – Los Angeles Times]

{{div col|colwidth=20em}}

{{div col end}}

Documentaries with wins or nominations in other categories

Though Academy rules do not expressly preclude documentaries from being nominated in other competitive categories,{{Cite web|url=https://www.oscars.org/oscars/rules-eligibility|title=Rules & Eligibility|date=2014-07-28|website=Oscars.org {{!}} Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences|language=en|access-date=2020-01-30}} documentaries are typically considered ineligible for nominations in categories that presume the work is fictitious, including Best Production Design, Best Costume Design, and acting. To date, no documentaries have been nominated for Best Picture,{{Cite web|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/oscars-a-best-picture-nom-a-documentary-why-not-950984|title=Oscars: A Best Picture Nom for a Documentary? Why Not?|website=The Hollywood Reporter|date=2 December 2016|language=en|access-date=2020-02-02}} or Best Director. The Quiet One was nominated for Best Story and Screenplay.

No documentary feature has yet been nominated for Best Picture, although Chang was nominated in the "Unique and Artistic Production" category at the 1927/28 awards.

At the 3rd Academy Awards, prior to the introduction of a documentary category, With Byrd at the South Pole won the award for Best Cinematography, becoming the first documentary both to be nominated for and win an Oscar.{{cite web |title=With Byrd at the South Pole (1930) |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/13385 |website=catalog.afi.com |publisher=American Film Institute |access-date=27 June 2018}}{{cite web|url=http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/54972/With-Byrd-at-the-South-Pole-The-Story-of-Little-America/details|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080616030642/http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/54972/With-Byrd-at-the-South-Pole-The-Story-of-Little-America/details|url-status=dead|archive-date=2008-06-16|department=Movies & TV Dept.|work=The New York Times|date=2008|title=Movie Reviews}} 1952's Navajo would become the first film nominated for both Best Documentary and Best Cinematography.

Woodstock was the first documentary to be nominated for Best Film Editing[https://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1971 1971|Oscars.org] while Hoop Dreams was the second (although it was, controversially, not nominated for Best Documentary Feature).[https://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1995 1995|Oscars.org][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9sfNs2NZSlA Forrest Gump Wins Film Editing: 1995 Oscars] Woodstock is also the only documentary to receive a nomination for Best Sound.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zm4NalNc-vw&t=636s The Opening of the Academy Awards in 1971 – Oscars on YouTube]

Honeyland became the first documentary to be nominated for both Best International Feature Film and Best Documentary Feature.{{Cite web|url=https://slate.com/culture/2020/01/oscars-2020-honeyland-international-documentary-north-macedonia.html|title=A Documentary About Beekeepers Just Made Oscar History|last=Martinelli|first=Marissa|date=2020-01-13|website=Slate Magazine|language=en|access-date=2020-01-30}} The following year, Collective would accomplish the same double nomination.[https://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/2021 2021|Oscars.org][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kptJmLPcKBg "Another Round" Wins Best International Film|93rd Oscars][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2T9f3RKLU5w "My Octopus Teacher" Wins Best Documentary Feature|93rd Oscars] Prior to this, Waltz with Bashir became the first documentary and first animated film nominated for Best International Feature Film, although it was not nominated for Best Documentary Feature.[https://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/2009 2009|Oscars.org][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3pRF9T3D6Bo "Departures" Wins Foreign Language Film: 2009 Oscars] The Danish-language animated documentary Flee was later nominated for Best International Feature, Best Documentary Feature, and Best Animated Feature, the first film to accomplish this feat.

Nine documentaries have received nominations for Best Original Song: Mondo Cane (for Riz Ortolani and Nino Oliviero's "More"),{{Cite web|url=http://old.post-gazette.com/pg/08022/851177-331.stm|title=80th Annual Academy Awards Oscar Quiz|website=old.post-gazette.com|access-date=2020-01-30}} An Inconvenient Truth (for Melissa Etheridge's "I Need to Wake Up", the only nominee from a documentary to win),[https://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/2007 2007|Oscars.org] Chasing Ice (for J. Ralph's "Before My Time"), Racing Extinction (for Ralph and Anhoni's "Manta Ray"), Jim: The James Foley Story (for Ralph and Sting's "The Empty Chair"), Glen Campbell: I'll Be Me (for Glen Campbell and Julian Raymond's "I'm Not Gonna Miss You"), The Hunting Ground (for Lady Gaga and Diane Warren's "Til It Happens To You"), RBG (for Warren's "I'll Fight"){{Cite web|url=https://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/2019|title=The 91st Academy Awards {{!}} 2019|website=Oscars.org {{!}} Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences|date=15 April 2019 |language=en|access-date=2020-01-30}} and American Symphony (for Batiste's "It Never Went Away").

Documentaries nominated for their scores include This is Cinerama, White Wilderness (which also won for Documentary Feature[https://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1959 1959|Oscars.org]), Let It Be, and Birds Do It, Bees Do It.

Five documentary filmmakers have received honorary Oscars: Pete Smith, William L. Hendricks, D. A. Pennebaker, Frederick Wiseman, and Agnès Varda.{{Cite web|url=https://www.goldderby.com/article/2018/honorary-oscar-winners-full-list-academy-award-history/|title=Honorary Oscars: Full list of 132 winners from Charlie Chaplin to Cicely Tyson|last=Sheehan|first=Paul|date=2018-09-06|website=GoldDerby|language=en-US|access-date=2020-02-02}}

See also

Notes

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References

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