Showing posts with label NEW YORK FILM CRITICS CIRCLE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NEW YORK FILM CRITICS CIRCLE. Show all posts

Monday, December 1, 2014

New York Film Critics Circle

PICTURE: Boyhood
DIRECTOR: Richard Linklater, Boyhood
ACTOR: Timothy Spall, Mr. Turner
ACTRESS: Marion Cotillard, The Immigrant; Two Days, One Night
SUPPORTING ACTOR: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
SCREENPLAY: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Wes Anderson, Hugo Guinness
ANIMATED FEATURE: The LEGO Movie
FOREIGN FILM: Ida
NON-FICTION FILM: Citizenfour
CINEMATOGRAPHY: The Immigrant- Darius Khondji
FIRST FILM: Jennifer Kent, The Babadook
SPECIAL AWARD: Adrienne Mancia

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

New York Film Critics Circle

And we're off!  The NYFCC starts the exhaustive critics leg of the 2013 awards season with David O. Russell's American Hustle starting off the awards season in a major way with three key wins including Best Picture.  Surprising so far in the least, in so much as evident by the Gotham's going for the Coen Brothers' Inside Llewyn Davis and today's reveal, perhaps this season will not be ruled by 12 Years a Slave, though NY did give it's director, Steve McQueen, the directing prize.  Missing out in NY, which may or may not be apropos of nothing, were films like Gravity, Nebraska, Captain Phillips, Philomena, August: Osage County, Before Midnight, Frances Ha and The Wolf of Wall Street (however with New York's early date, it's possible not everyone caught up with Scorsese's latest, which just started screening this past weekend.)



PICTURE: American Hustle
DIRECTOR: Steve McQueen, 12 Years a Slave
ACTOR: Robert Redford, All is Lost
ACTRESS: Cate Blanchett, Blue Jasmine
SUPPORTING ACTOR:  Jared Leto, Dallas Buyers Club
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Jennifer Lawrence, American Hustle
SCREENPLAY: American Hustle- Eric Singer & David O. Russell
ANIMATED FILM: The Wind Rises
DOCUMENTARY: Stories We Tell
FOREIGN FILM: Blue is the Warmest Color
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Inside Llewyn Davis- Bruno Delbonnel
FIRST FILM: Fruitvale Station- Ryan Coogler 
SPECIAL AWARD: Frederick Wiseman, documentarian 

Monday, December 3, 2012

New York Film Critics Circle

The games officially begin!!!  The oldest (est. 1935) and most venerable of the critical groups opens up the awards season with their official unveiling of the best in the film for 2012.


BEST FILM: Zero Dark Thirty
BEST DIRECTOR: Kathryn Bigelow, Zero Dark Thirty
BEST ACTOR: Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln
BEST ACTRESS: Rachel Weisz, The Deep Blue Sea
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Matthew McConaughey, Magic Mike and Bernie
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Sally Field, Lincoln
BEST SCREENPLAY: Lincoln- Tony Kushner
BEST FOREIGN FILM: Amour
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE: Frankenweenie
BEST NON FICTION FILM: Central Park Five
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY: Zero Dark Thirty- Greg Fraser
BEST FIRST FEATURE: David France, How to Survive a Plague

Zero Dark Thirty, Kathryn Bigelow's follow-up to The Hurt Locker which traces the events leading up to the capture and execution of Osama bin Ladin, made it through the wire with three big wins out of the gates.  The film, which made it screenings debut just last weekend in the Thanksgiving rush, will open in limited engagement in a few weeks before opening wide in January.  Anyway, you look at it, and no matter the eventual Oscar-ness of Zero Dark Thirty, the New York Film Critics win is big.  Big for Lincoln too which won three prizes as well.


The surprises, or really the off the grid victors, as nothing should be seen as too surprising this early, were the some of the other winners.  Mostly, Matthew McConaughey, who has firmly established himself a contender in the past week with Indie Spirit noms and a NYFCC win.  The big on was Rachel Weisz's big win for the little seen period indie The Deep Blue Sea, which premiered through itty-bitty distributor Music Box Films last spring.  Weisz earned rave reviews and small murmurs of awards buzz, but was considered in a film too small for most pundits to predict.  This may mean something or nothing, but the New York seal of approval makes a compelling FYC ad.

Snubbed: The Master, which will need some help to trudge along, Les Miserables, The Sessions and Beasts of the Southern Wild.  Interestingly that acclaimed doc How to Survive a Plague won the First Feature bid-- I suspect because of the great NY nature of the story of that film and it's documentary pic Central Park Five

National Board of Review is next at bat on Wednesday.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

New York Film Critics Circle

BEST PICTURE 
The Social Network

BEST DIRECTOR 
David Fincher, The Social Network

BEST ACTOR 
FINALLY!
Colin Firth, The King's Speech

BEST ACTRESS 
Annette Bening, The Kids Are All Right

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Mark Ruffalo, The Kids Are All Right

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Melissa Leo, The Fighter

BEST SCREENPLAY
The Kids Are All Right- Stuart Blumberg & Lisa Cholodenko

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
The Illusionist

BEST DOCUMENTARY
Inside Job

BEST FOREIGN FILM
Carlos

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Black Swan- Matthew Libatique

BEST FIRST FEATURE
Animal Kingdom- David Michod

A nice, and much needed boost for The Kids Are All Right and Annette Bening.  For those keeping track-- the New York Film Critics Circle are the first awards group not give their screenplay award to The Social Network.
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