In the past 10 decades, 24 motion pictures have won exactly five Academy Awards (Best Picture winners are in bold):
21.
In 2011 two movies won 5 Oscars: The Artist and Hugo. In 2010 two movies won 4 Oscars: The Kings Speech and The Social Network.In 2005 four movies won 3 Oscars: Crash, Brokeback Mountain, Memoirs of a Geisha and King Kong.In 2001 two movies won 4 Oscars: A Beautiful Mind and The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring.In 1976 two movies won 4 Oscars: Network and All the President's Men. (Best Picture winner Rocky won 3 that night.)In 1965 two movies won 5 Oscars: The Sound of Music and Doctor Zhivago.In 1963 two movies won 4 Oscars: Tom Jones and Cleopatra.In 1956 two movies won 4 Oscars: Around the World in 80 Days and The King and I.In 1951 two movies won 6 Oscars: An American in Paris and A Place in the Sun. (Until 1966 there were separate categories for color and black-and-white in cinematography, art direction and costume design.)In 1947 two movies won 3 Oscars: A Gentlemen's Agreementand Miracle on 34th Street.In 1933 two movies won 2 Oscars: Bad Girl and Champ. (Grant Hotel won only for Best Picture.)In 1930 two movies won 2 Oscars: All Quiet on the Western Front and The Big House.In 1928 (1st Academy Awards) two movies won 3 Oscars: Sunrise and 7th Heaven. (Best Picture Wings won 2 awards.)
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Titanic
Edith Head
John Williams.
"Ordinary People" (1980). Won 4 OSCARS.
To name all the movies that have won Oscars would take forever.
None. The first two movies were nominated for an Oscar but neither won.
Three movies have won 11 Oscars: Ben-Hur (1959), Titanic (1997) and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003). Only one movie won 10 Oscars: West Side Story (1961). It won 10 Oscars out of 11 nominations (it didn't win for Screenplay), and was the first Best Director winner to have two directors.
John Williams has won five Oscars, 21 Grammys and three Emmys during his brilliant career as a musician.
The three movies that won 11 Academy Awards each were "Ben-Hur" (1959), "Titanic" (1997) and "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" (2003).