Welcome to the first Oscar Film Journal entry of 2026! I did forty of these things in 2025 and hope to beat that record this year. Let's get started....
Today's subject is one of the earliest Best Picture nominees, from the third annual Oscars (1929/1930). Premiering in November 1929 and directed by Ernst Lubitsch in his first attempt at a talkie, the film is The Love Parade, a pre-Code musical starring Maurice Chevalier and a debuting Jeanette McDonald.
The Love Parade is about a military attaché to a foreign embassy stationed in Paris, who gets sent back to his own country of Sylvania (Wait, you mean the same fictional country later featured in Duck Soup??) as punishment for a slew of scandalous affairs, ordered to report to Queen Louise, herself a confirmed bachelorette. The pair of course hit it off right away; she is intrigued by his serial philandering and he in turn is fascinated by her disinterest in marriage. They have a torrid affair and agree to wed, with the understanding that he will become a Prince Consort, a figurehead with no real power or responsibilities. But almost immediately he's unable to come to grips with his newfound lack of purpose, and the relationship quickly falls apart.

