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The Lowest Budget Movies to Win the Best Picture Oscar

The Lowest Budget Movies to Win the Best Picture Oscar

It may seem as though there is a formula that all Best Picture Oscar winners adhere to, and according to some, there actually is. Big budgets, long run time, and Oscar campaigning are just a few reasons thought to increase a film’s chance of winning the coveted award. However, when looking at the winners in certain years, none of these reasons ring true.

All Academy Award winners for Best Picture don’t typically have much in common. Some of them are major crowd-pleasers, bringing in hundreds of millions of dollars at the box office while becoming pop culture phenomena in the process. Others are essentially art-house films that don’t enter the public consciousness until they’re announced as a Best Picture contender. Some have huge budgets, and some have tiny budgets. Many of these lower-budgeted films have gone on to win the Best Picture Oscar..

It may come as no surprise that over the years, film studios have increasingly devoted the bulk of their budget to the films that are expected to give them the highest return. To date, the highest-budgeted film in history was James Cameron’s 2022 “Avatar: The Way of Water,” with a $460,000,000 budget. It was one of just a handful of movies in history to break the 2 billion dollar mark at the international box office, which would make it a pretty good investment.

But those investments don’t always pan out. The biggest box office bombs of all time include 1999’s “The 13th Warrior” (an estimated loss of $227 million), 2012’s “John Carter” ($255 million), and 2013’s “The Lone Ranger” ($239 million).

It may seem rather obvious that big budgets don’t necessarily translate to big returns, either at the box office or during awards season, but when the gamble pays off, it can pay off big. On the other hand, some of the most beloved, well-reviewed, award-winning masterpieces of cinema had relatively small budgets. Many Oscar winners of budgets both big and small are available to stream on Netflix. (These are the best movies you can watch on Netflix right now.)

24/7 Tempo reviewed data on production budgets from the film industry site The Numbers to determine the lowest-budget movies that won the Best Picture Oscar. Films that won the Academy Award for Best Picture were ranked based on production budget, adjusted for inflation. Production budget figures were adjusted for inflation using historical ticket prices from the National Association of Theatre Owners. Data on Oscar wins is from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

25. 12 Years a Slave (2013)

Source: Courtesy of Fox Searchlight Pictures
  • Production budget: $22.5 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $63.9 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Steve McQueen

24. Spotlight (2015)

Source: Courtesy of Open Road Films
  • Production budget: $21.7 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $49.0 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Tom McCarthy

23. Ordinary People (1980)

Source: Courtesy of Paramount Pictures
  • Production budget: $21.1 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $178.1 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Robert Redford

22. Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (2014)

Source: Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures
  • Production budget: $20.2 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $47.5 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Alejandro G. Iñárritu

21. The Shape of Water (2017)

Source: Courtesy of Fox Searchlight Pictures
  • Production budget: $19.9 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $65.2 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Guillermo del Toro

20. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)

Source: Courtesy of United Artists
  • Production budget: $19.9 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $491.8 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Milos Forman

19. The Hurt Locker (2008)

The Hurt Locker (2008) | Jeremy Renner in The Hurt Locker (2008)
Source: Courtesy of Summit Entertainment

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  • Production budget: $19.1 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $21.7 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Kathryn Bigelow

18. The Artist (2011)

Source: Courtesy of The Weinstein Company
  • Production budget: $18.5 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $51.6 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Michel Hazanavicius

17. Chariots of Fire (1981)

Source: Courtesy of The Ladd Company
  • Production budget: $18.1 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $202.8 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Hugh Hudson

16. Slumdog Millionaire (2008)

Source: Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures
  • Production budget: $17.9 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $180.3 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Danny Boyle

15. The King’s Speech (2010)

Source: Courtesy of The Weinstein Company
  • Production budget: $17.4 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $161.1 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Tom Hooper

14. Driving Miss Daisy (1989)

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros.
  • Production budget: $17.2 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $244.7 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Bruce Beresford

13. On the Waterfront (1954)

Source: Courtesy of Columbia Pictures
  • Production budget: $17.0 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $179.5 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Elia Kazan

12. Annie Hall (1977)

Source: Courtesy of United Artists
  • Production budget: $16.4 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $157.1 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Woody Allen

11. In the Heat of the Night (1967)

Source: Courtesy of United Artists
  • Production budget: $15.0 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $183.0 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Norman Jewison

10. It Happened One Night (1934)

Source: Courtesy of Columbia Pictures
  • Production budget: $14.8 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $114.0 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Frank Capra

9. Platoon (1986)

Source: Courtesy of Orion Pictures
  • Production budget: $14.8 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $340.6 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Oliver Stone

8. The French Connection (1971)

Source: Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox
  • Production budget: $12.2 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $228.5 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: William Friedkin

7. Parasite (2019)

Source: Courtesy of Neon
  • Production budget: $11.8 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $53.4 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Bong Joon Ho

6. Crash (2004)

Source: Courtesy of Lions Gate Films
  • Production budget: $10.8 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $81.6 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Paul Haggis

5. Tom Jones (1963)

Source: Courtesy of Lopert Pictures Corporation
  • Production budget: $10.7 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $400.5 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Tony Richardson

4. CODA (2021)

Source: Courtesy of Apple TV+
  • Production budget: $10.0 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $2.2 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Sian Heder

3. Nomadland (2020)

Source: Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures
  • Production budget: $5.0 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $2.2 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Chloé Zhao

2. Rocky (1976)

Source: Courtesy of United Artists
  • Production budget: $4.3 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $504.2 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: John G. Avildsen

1. Moonlight (2016)

Source: Courtesy of A24
  • Production budget: $1.6 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Domestic box office: $29.5 million (inflation-adjusted)
  • Directed by: Barry Jenkins
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