Movie/TV awards 2019-2020 thread

Cachoo

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I am all about the women this year, particularly those involved in Unbelievable, Fleabag, Russian Doll and Killing Eve.
 

Cachoo

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10,751
For some time now I've seen "Parasite" win awards and earn raves but it has not played here and I suspect it won't as a foreign language film. Has anyone in our community here viewed it?
 

Vash01

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For some time now I've seen "Parasite" win awards and earn raves but it has not played here and I suspect it won't as a foreign language film. Has anyone in our community here viewed it?

It was running here for a week but I missed it. May have to check out other theatres.

ETA- Looks like I can see it tomorrow evening at the theatre near me.
 
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Vash01

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It was running here for a week but I missed it. May have to check out other theatres.

ETA- Looks like I can see it tomorrow evening at the theatre near me.

As I mentioned in the movies thread, I don’t understand the hoopla about this movie. Usually I love watching top foreign language movies but not this one.
 

Vash01

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The Critics' Choice Awards nominees came out yesterday:

http://www.criticschoice.com/critics-choice-awards/

Interestingly the headline for the Critics' Choice TV awards was When They See Us leads with the most nominations with This Is Us and Schitt's Creek next most. And all three of those shows were not nominated for Golden Globes.

I like it that they have awards for young actors and for action films.
 

Vash01

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Calendar for 2019-2020 Awards season


Oscars 2020 Short lists (many categories):

 
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Vash01

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Third post in a row, but I had to announce the SAG awards nominations. Those are key to the acting awards.


I am so happy to see Scarlett Johansson get double nominations this year! I have always liked her acting but she was not getting award worthy roles. I really liked her in The Horse Whisperer, and she was just 14 (approx.) then.
 

Vash01

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Golden Globes are on January 5th. I am likely to miss them because I will be out of town, with family members who are not likely to be interested in watching.

Here are the predictions by ET. They sound quite reasonable but there are always some surprises during the actual ceremony.

 
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Vash01

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I went to see it this week. Thought it was really good and well acted. Other than Cynthia Erivo playing Harriet, Joe Alwyn playing Gideon Brodess stood out in that respect.

Thanks for the review. I will go see it if it is still running.
 

VGThuy

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I'm going to add a list of these awards because I do so every year. They aren't the best indicator of Oscar, but I find them useful to see what the critics are champion (even though the National Board of Review aren't critics) and I find myself agreeing more with them that the Oscars even if I don't always.

---------
National Board of Review

Est. 1909

"To determine the NBR's annual awards, ballots are sent in by over 100 members – a select group of knowledgeable film enthusiasts, academics, and filmmakers in the New York metropolitan area – and subsequently tabulated by a certified public accountancy firm in order to decide the winners."


Best Film: THE IRISHMAN
Best Director: Quentin Tarantino, ONCE UPON A TIME…IN HOLLYWOOD
Best Actor: Adam Sandler, UNCUT GEMS
Best Actress: Renée Zellweger, JUDY
Best Supporting Actor: Brad Pitt, ONCE UPON A TIME…IN HOLLYWOOD
Best Supporting Actress: Kathy Bates, RICHARD JEWELL
Best Original Screenplay: Josh Safdie, Benny Safdie, Ronald Bronstein, UNCUT GEMS
Best Adapted Screenplay: Steven Zaillian, THE IRISHMAN
Breakthrough Performance: Paul Walter Hauser, RICHARD JEWELL
Best Directorial Debut: Melina Matsoukas, QUEEN & SLIM
Best Animated Feature: HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORLD
Best Foreign Language Film: PARASITE
Best Documentary: MAIDEN
Best Ensemble: KNIVES OUT
Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography: Roger Deakins, 1917
NBR Icon Award: Martin Scorsese, Robert De Niro, Al Pacino
NBR Freedom of Expression Award: FOR SAMA
NBR Freedom of Expression Award: JUST MERCY

Top Films (in alphabetical order)
1917
Dolemite is My Name
Ford v Ferrari
Jojo Rabbit
Knives Out
Marriage Story
Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood
Richard Jewell
Uncut Gems
Waves


Top 5 Foreign Language Films (in alphabetical order)
Atlantics
Invisible Life
Pain and Glory
Portrait of a Lady on Fire
Transit


Top 5 Documentaries (in alphabetical order)
American Factory
Apollo 11
The Black Godfather
Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese
Wrestle


Top 10 Independent Films (in alphabetical order)
The Farewell
Give Me Liberty
A Hidden Life
Judy
The Last Black Man in San Francisco
Midsommar
The Nightingale”
The Peanut Butter Falcon
The Souvenir
Wild Rose


----------------

The New York Film Critics Circle

Est. 1935

"an American film critic organization founded in 1935 by Wanda Hale from the New York Daily News. Its membership includes over 30 film critics from New York-based daily and weekly newspapers, magazines, online publications."


Best Film
The Irishman

Best Director
Josh and Benny Safdie, Uncut Gems

Best First Film
Atlantics

Best Actor
Antonio Banderas, Pain And Glory

Best Actress
Lupita Nyong’o, Us

Best Supporting Actor
Joe Pesci, The Irishman

Best Supporting Actress
Laura Dern, Marriage Story and Little Women

Best Screenplay
Quentin Tarantino, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

Best Cinematography
Portrait of a Lady on Fire

Best Foreign Language Film
Parasite

Best Non-Fiction Film
Honeyland

Best Animated Film
I Lost My Body

----------


Los Angeles Film Critics Association

Est. 1975

"Its membership comprises film critics from Los Angeles-based print and electronic media."


Best Picture

Winner: Parasite

Runner-up: The Irishman

Best Director

Winner: Bong Joon Ho, Parasite

Runner-up: Martin Scorsese, The Irishman

Best Actor

Winner: Antonio Banderas, Pain and Glory
Runner-up: Adam Driver, Marriage Story

Best Documentary

Best Documentary/Nonfiction Film, Winner: American Factory
Best Documentary/Nonfiction Film, Runner-up: Apollo 11

Best Screenplay

Winner: Noah Baumbach, Marriage Story

The Douglas Edwards Experimental Film Award

Winner: Ja’Tovia Gary’s The Giverny Document

Best Animation

Winner: I Lost My Body
Runner-up: Toy Story 4

Best Actress

Winner: Mary Kay Place, Diane

Best Supporting Actress

Winner: Jennifer Lopez, Hustlers
Runner-up: Zhao Shuzhen, The Farewell

Editing

Winner: Todd Douglas Miller, Apollo 11
Runner-up: Ronald Bronstein & Benny Safdie, Uncut Gems

Best Production Design

Winner: Barbara Ling, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Runner-up: Ha Jun Lee, Parasite

Supporting Actor

Winner: Song Kang Ho, Parasite
Runner-up: Joe Pesci, The Irishman

Best Music/Score

Winner: Dan Levy, I Lost My Body
Runner-up: Thomas Newman, 1917

Best Cinematography

Winner: Claire Mathon, Portrait of a Lady on Fire and Atlantics
Runner-up: Roger Deakins, 1917

Career Achievement Award
Elaine May

Best Foreign-Language Film
Winner: Pain and Glory
Runner-up: Portrait of a Lady On Fire

New Generation

Winners: Joe Talbot, Jimmie Falls, Jonathan Majors, The Last Black Man In San Francisco

---------------

I'm looking forward to seeing what The National Society of Film Critics (approximately 60 members who write for a variety of weekly and daily newspapers along with major publications and media outlets) choose even they do not parallel with Oscar often. They usually announce in the first week of January and they've consistently chosen some of my favorite movies of the year. Not to be confused with The Critics' Choice Awards which are conducted by The Broadcast Film Critics Association aka 250 television, radio and online critics.

Also, here is Sight & Sound's year-end list chosen by a poll of 100 contributors of the magazine (there's some of last year's titles in there because it's a British publication with international contributors where some 2018 films were not released until 2019):


1. The Souvenir — Joanna Hogg
2. Parasite — Bong Joon-ho
3. The Irishman — Martin Scorsese
4. Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood — Quentin Tarantino
5. Portrait of a Lady on Fire — Céline Sciamma
6. Pain and Glory — Pedro Almodóvar
7. Atlantics — Mati Diop
8. Bait — Mark Jenkin
9. Us — Jordan Peele
10. Vitalina Varela — Pedro Costa
11. High Life — Claire Denis
12. Uncut Gems — Ben Safdie and Joshua Safdie
13. Monos — Alejandro Landes
14. Marriage Story — Noah Baumbach
15. For Sama — Waad Al-Khateab and Edward Watts
16. Midsommar — Ari Aster
17. The Lighthouse — Robert Eggers
18. Happy as Lazzaro — Alice Rohrwacher
19. Hustlers — Lorene Scafaria
20. Martin Eden — Pietro Marcello
21. Beanpole — Kantemir Balagov
22. Border — Ali Abbasi
23. Transit — Christian Petzold
24. A Hidden Life — Terrence Malick
25. The Farewell — Lulu Wang
26. The Hottest August — Brett Story
27. Ad Astra — James Gray
28. Varda by Agnès — Agnès Varda
29. I Was at Home, But — Angela Schanelec
30. In Fabric — Peter Strickland
31. Knives Out — Rian Johnson
32. Booksmart — Olivia Wilde
33. Ash is Purest White — Jia Zhang-ke
34. Synonyms — Nadav Lapid
35. Zombi Child — Bertrand Bonello
36. America — Garrett Bradley
37. No Data Plan — Miko Revereza
38. Eighth Grade — Bo Burnham
39. Joker — Todd Phillips
40. Ray & Liz — Richard Billingham
41. Hale County This Morning, This Evening — RaMell Ross
42. I Lost My Body — Jérémy Clapin
43. Holiday — Isabella Eklöf
44. Honeyland — Tamara Kotevska and Ljubomir Stefanov
45. Rocks — Sarah Gavron
46. Rose Plays Julie — Christine Molloy and Joe Lawlor
47. If Beale Street Could Talk — Barry Jenkins
48. Just Don't Think I'll Scream — Frank Beauvais
49. The Favourite — Yorgos Lanthimos
50. The Mule — Clint Eastwood

----------------

The New York based Independent Filmmaker Project announced the Gotham Award winners on December 2 celebrating independent film:


The Gotham winners are usually chosen via a jury of like 5 or more chosen film people who watch every nominee in a category and then decide on a winner. Each category has its own jury.

The West Coast based Film Independent will announce the winners of the more famous Independent Spirit Awards on the Saturday before the Oscars as it always does.

Best Feature
“The Farewell”
“Uncut Gems”
“Waves”
“Marriage Story” (WINNER)
“Hustlers”

Best Documentary
“American Factory” (WINNER)

“Apollo 11”
“The Edge of Democracy”
“Midnight Traveler”
“One Child Nation”

Bingham Ray Breakthrough Director Award
Laure De Clermont-Tonnerre, “The Mustang” (WINNER)

Kent Jones, “Diane”
Joe Talbot, “The Last Black Man in San Francisco”
Olivia Wilde, “Booksmart”
Phillip Youmans, “Burning Cane”

Best Screenplay
Lulu Wang, “The Farewell”
Tarell Alvin McCraney, “High Flying Bird”
Jimmie Fails, Joe Talbot, and Rob Richert, “The Last Black Man in San Francisco”
Noah Baumbach, “Marriage Story” (WINNER)
Ari Aster, “Midsommar”

Best Actor
Adam Driver, “Marriage Story” (WINNER)

Aldis Hodge, “Clemency”
Adam Sandler, “Uncut Gems”
Willem Dafoe, “The Lighthouse”
Andre Holland, “High Flying Bird”

Best Actress
Florence Pugh, “Midsommar”
Awkwafina, “The Farewell” (WINNER)
Mary Kay Place, “Diane”
Alfre Woodard, “Clemency”
Elisabeth Moss, “Her Smell”

Breakthrough Actor
Taylor Russell, “Waves” (WINNER)

Julia Fox, “Uncut Gems”
Aisling Franciosi, “The Nightingale”
Jonathan Majors, “The Last Black Man in San Francisco”
Noah Jupe, “Honey Boy”
Chris Galust, “Give Me Liberty”

Breakthrough Series – Long Form
“Chernobyl”
“David Makes Man”
“My Brilliant Friend”
“Unbelievable”
“When They See Us” (WINNER)

Breakthrough Series – Short Form
“Pen15” (WINNER)

“Ramy”
“Russian Doll”
“Tuca & Bertie”
“Undone”

Audience Award: “Marriage Story”
 
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Vash01

Fan of Yuzuru, T&M, P&C
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55,380
'Parasite' is this year's 'Roma'. However, Roma had some positives. 'Parasite' has none. It is one of the worst movies I have ever seen. Sad to see it winning so many awards. I found it utterly disgusting.

I really want to see Pain and Glory but it disappeared from the theatres too quickly. I hope they will bring it back.

I had never heard of the movie 'Diane'. Got to do some research on it.

Last year I saw all the short films and all the short animated films. They were really good. So this year I plan on seeing them all too.
 

VGThuy

Well-Known Member
Messages
41,020
Oscar probably will give it tons of nominations but not give it the big win. The voting academy’s tastes aren’t the same as the critics as evidenced by the big winners last year. They may agree in screenplay or some acting awards but that’s about it.
 

Vash01

Fan of Yuzuru, T&M, P&C
Messages
55,380
I'm going to add a list of these awards because I do so every year. They aren't the best indicator of Oscar, but I find them useful to see what the critics are champion (even though the National Board of Review aren't critics) and I find myself agreeing more with them that the Oscars even if I don't always.

---------
National Board of Review

Est. 1909

"To determine the NBR's annual awards, ballots are sent in by over 100 members – a select group of knowledgeable film enthusiasts, academics, and filmmakers in the New York metropolitan area – and subsequently tabulated by a certified public accountancy firm in order to decide the winners."


Best Film: THE IRISHMAN
Best Director: Quentin Tarantino, ONCE UPON A TIME…IN HOLLYWOOD
Best Actor: Adam Sandler, UNCUT GEMS
Best Actress: Renée Zellweger, JUDY
Best Supporting Actor: Brad Pitt, ONCE UPON A TIME…IN HOLLYWOOD
Best Supporting Actress: Kathy Bates, RICHARD JEWELL
Best Original Screenplay: Josh Safdie, Benny Safdie, Ronald Bronstein, UNCUT GEMS
Best Adapted Screenplay: Steven Zaillian, THE IRISHMAN
Breakthrough Performance: Paul Walter Hauser, RICHARD JEWELL
Best Directorial Debut: Melina Matsoukas, QUEEN & SLIM
Best Animated Feature: HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORLD
Best Foreign Language Film: PARASITE
Best Documentary: MAIDEN
Best Ensemble: KNIVES OUT
Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography: Roger Deakins, 1917
NBR Icon Award: Martin Scorsese, Robert De Niro, Al Pacino
NBR Freedom of Expression Award: FOR SAMA
NBR Freedom of Expression Award: JUST MERCY

Top Films (in alphabetical order)
1917
Dolemite is My Name
Ford v Ferrari
Jojo Rabbit
Knives Out
Marriage Story
Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood
Richard Jewell
Uncut Gems
Waves


Top 5 Foreign Language Films (in alphabetical order)
Atlantics
Invisible Life
Pain and Glory
Portrait of a Lady on Fire
Transit


Top 5 Documentaries (in alphabetical order)
American Factory
Apollo 11
The Black Godfather
Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese
Wrestle


Top 10 Independent Films (in alphabetical order)
The Farewell
Give Me Liberty
A Hidden Life
Judy
The Last Black Man in San Francisco
Midsommar
The Nightingale”
The Peanut Butter Falcon
The Souvenir
Wild Rose


----------------

The New York Film Critics Circle

Est. 1935

"an American film critic organization founded in 1935 by Wanda Hale from the New York Daily News. Its membership includes over 30 film critics from New York-based daily and weekly newspapers, magazines, online publications."


Best Film
The Irishman

Best Director
Josh and Benny Safdie, Uncut Gems

Best First Film
Atlantics

Best Actor
Antonio Banderas, Pain And Glory

Best Actress
Lupita Nyong’o, Us

Best Supporting Actor
Joe Pesci, The Irishman

Best Supporting Actress
Laura Dern, Marriage Story and Little Women

Best Screenplay
Quentin Tarantino, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

Best Cinematography
Portrait of a Lady on Fire

Best Foreign Language Film
Parasite

Best Non-Fiction Film
Honeyland

Best Animated Film
I Lost My Body

----------


Los Angeles Film Critics Association

Est. 1975

"Its membership comprises film critics from Los Angeles-based print and electronic media."


Best Picture

Winner: Parasite

Runner-up: The Irishman

Best Director

Winner: Bong Joon Ho, Parasite

Runner-up: Martin Scorsese, The Irishman

Best Actor

Winner: Antonio Banderas, Pain and Glory
Runner-up: Adam Driver, Marriage Story

Best Documentary

Best Documentary/Nonfiction Film, Winner: American Factory
Best Documentary/Nonfiction Film, Runner-up: Apollo 11

Best Screenplay

Winner: Noah Baumbach, Marriage Story

The Douglas Edwards Experimental Film Award

Winner: Ja’Tovia Gary’s The Giverny Document

Best Animation

Winner: I Lost My Body
Runner-up: Toy Story 4

Best Actress

Winner: Mary Kay Place, Diane

Best Supporting Actress

Winner: Jennifer Lopez, Hustlers
Runner-up: Zhao Shuzhen, The Farewell

Editing

Winner: Todd Douglas Miller, Apollo 11
Runner-up: Ronald Bronstein & Benny Safdie, Uncut Gems

Best Production Design

Winner: Barbara Ling, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Runner-up: Ha Jun Lee, Parasite

Supporting Actor

Winner: Song Kang Ho, Parasite
Runner-up: Joe Pesci, The Irishman

Best Music/Score

Winner: Dan Levy, I Lost My Body
Runner-up: Thomas Newman, 1917

Best Cinematography

Winner: Claire Mathon, Portrait of a Lady on Fire and Atlantics
Runner-up: Roger Deakins, 1917

Career Achievement Award
Elaine May

Best Foreign-Language Film
Winner: Pain and Glory
Runner-up: Portrait of a Lady On Fire

New Generation

Winners: Joe Talbot, Jimmie Falls, Jonathan Majors, The Last Black Man In San Francisco

---------------

I'm looking forward to seeing what The National Society of Film Critics (approximately 60 members who write for a variety of weekly and daily newspapers along with major publications and media outlets) choose even they do not parallel with Oscar often. They usually announce in the first week of January and they've consistently chosen some of my favorite movies of the year. Not to be confused with The Critics' Choice Awards which are conducted by The Broadcast Film Critics Association aka 250 television, radio and online critics.

Also, here is Sight & Sound's year-end list chosen by a poll of 100 contributors of the magazine (there's some of last year's titles in there because it's a British publication with international contributors where some 2018 films were not released until 2019):


1. The Souvenir — Joanna Hogg
2. Parasite — Bong Joon-ho
3. The Irishman — Martin Scorsese
4. Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood — Quentin Tarantino
5. Portrait of a Lady on Fire — Céline Sciamma
6. Pain and Glory — Pedro Almodóvar
7. Atlantics — Mati Diop
8. Bait — Mark Jenkin
9. Us — Jordan Peele
10. Vitalina Varela — Pedro Costa
11. High Life — Claire Denis
12. Uncut Gems — Ben Safdie and Joshua Safdie
13. Monos — Alejandro Landes
14. Marriage Story — Noah Baumbach
15. For Sama — Waad Al-Khateab and Edward Watts
16. Midsommar — Ari Aster
17. The Lighthouse — Robert Eggers
18. Happy as Lazzaro — Alice Rohrwacher
19. Hustlers — Lorene Scafaria
20. Martin Eden — Pietro Marcello
21. Beanpole — Kantemir Balagov
22. Border — Ali Abbasi
23. Transit — Christian Petzold
24. A Hidden Life — Terrence Malick
25. The Farewell — Lulu Wang
26. The Hottest August — Brett Story
27. Ad Astra — James Gray
28. Varda by Agnès — Agnès Varda
29. I Was at Home, But — Angela Schanelec
30. In Fabric — Peter Strickland
31. Knives Out — Rian Johnson
32. Booksmart — Olivia Wilde
33. Ash is Purest White — Jia Zhang-ke
34. Synonyms — Nadav Lapid
35. Zombi Child — Bertrand Bonello
36. America — Garrett Bradley
37. No Data Plan — Miko Revereza
38. Eighth Grade — Bo Burnham
39. Joker — Todd Phillips
40. Ray & Liz — Richard Billingham
41. Hale County This Morning, This Evening — RaMell Ross
42. I Lost My Body — Jérémy Clapin
43. Holiday — Isabella Eklöf
44. Honeyland — Tamara Kotevska and Ljubomir Stefanov
45. Rocks — Sarah Gavron
46. Rose Plays Julie — Christine Molloy and Joe Lawlor
47. If Beale Street Could Talk — Barry Jenkins
48. Just Don't Think I'll Scream — Frank Beauvais
49. The Favourite — Yorgos Lanthimos
50. The Mule — Clint Eastwood

----------------

The New York based Independent Filmmaker Project announced the Gotham Award winners on December 2 celebrating independent film:


The Gotham winners are usually chosen via a jury of like 5 or more chosen film people who watch every nominee in a category and then decide on a winner. Each category has its own jury.

The West Coast based Film Independent will announce the winners of the more famous Independent Spirit Awards on the Saturday before the Oscars as it always does.

Best Feature
“The Farewell”
“Uncut Gems”
“Waves”
“Marriage Story” (WINNER)
“Hustlers”

Best Documentary
“American Factory” (WINNER)

“Apollo 11”
“The Edge of Democracy”
“Midnight Traveler”
“One Child Nation”

Bingham Ray Breakthrough Director Award
Laure De Clermont-Tonnerre, “The Mustang” (WINNER)

Kent Jones, “Diane”
Joe Talbot, “The Last Black Man in San Francisco”
Olivia Wilde, “Booksmart”
Phillip Youmans, “Burning Cane”

Best Screenplay
Lulu Wang, “The Farewell”
Tarell Alvin McCraney, “High Flying Bird”
Jimmie Fails, Joe Talbot, and Rob Richert, “The Last Black Man in San Francisco”
Noah Baumbach, “Marriage Story” (WINNER)
Ari Aster, “Midsommar”

Best Actor
Adam Driver, “Marriage Story” (WINNER)

Aldis Hodge, “Clemency”
Adam Sandler, “Uncut Gems”
Willem Dafoe, “The Lighthouse”
Andre Holland, “High Flying Bird”

Best Actress
Florence Pugh, “Midsommar”
Awkwafina, “The Farewell” (WINNER)
Mary Kay Place, “Diane”
Alfre Woodard, “Clemency”
Elisabeth Moss, “Her Smell”

Breakthrough Actor
Taylor Russell, “Waves” (WINNER)

Julia Fox, “Uncut Gems”
Aisling Franciosi, “The Nightingale”
Jonathan Majors, “The Last Black Man in San Francisco”
Noah Jupe, “Honey Boy”
Chris Galust, “Give Me Liberty”

Breakthrough Series – Long Form
“Chernobyl”
“David Makes Man”
“My Brilliant Friend”
“Unbelievable”
“When They See Us” (WINNER)

Breakthrough Series – Short Form
“Pen15” (WINNER)

“Ramy”
“Russian Doll”
“Tuca & Bertie”
“Undone”

Audience Award: “Marriage Story”
Why am I seeing some 2018 movies listed under ‘best 50 of 2019’? I noticed ‘The favourite’ and ‘if Beale street could talk’ on the list.
 

VGThuy

Well-Known Member
Messages
41,020
Why am I seeing some 2018 movies listed under ‘best 50 of 2019’? I noticed ‘The favourite’ and ‘if Beale street could talk’ on the list.

Some of last year's titles are in there because Sight & Sound is a British publication with international contributors where some 2018 films were not released in their country until 2019. It's kind of like how some foreign films become eligible for Oscars (outside of the Foreign Language Film category) and American critics' awards a year after they were released in their country because they were not released in the U.S. until that year.

Last year, an American movie, The Rider was actually nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for the 2017 calendar year but was not eligible for other awards until 2018 because for some reason, Film Independent (Spirit) decided to allow it to be eligible in 2017 when it only had festival showings rather than be actually distributed and released in theaters/streaming, which didn't happen until 2018. That's how The Rider won Best Film at Gothams the following year and The National Society of Film Critics gave it Best Film for 2018 (over Roma).
 
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VGThuy

Well-Known Member
Messages
41,020
Owen Gleiberman and Peter Debruge of Variety published their top ten list of the decade:

 

VGThuy

Well-Known Member
Messages
41,020
The National Society of Film Critics announced their winners today:


Best Picture
Parasite” (44 points)
Runners-up
Little Women” (27 points)
“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” (22 points)

Best Director
Greta Gerwig, “Little Women” (39 points) :eek::cheer:
Runners-up
Bong Joon Ho, “Parasite” (36 points)
Martin Scorsese, “The Irishman” (31 points)

Best Actress
Mary Kay Place, “Diane” (40 points)
Runners-up
Zhao Tao, “Ash is Purest White” (28 points)
Florence Pugh, “Midsommar” (25 points)

Best Actor
Antonio Banderas, “Pain and Glory” (69 points)
Runners-up
Adam Driver, “Marriage Story” (43 points)
Adam Sandler, “Uncut Gems” (41 points)
Best Supporting Actress
Laura Dern, “Marriage Story” and “Little Women” (57 points)
Runners-up
Florence Pugh,”Little Women” (44 points)
Jennifer Lopez, “Hustlers” (26 points)

Best Supporting Actor
Brad Pitt, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” (64 points)
Runners-up
Joe Pesci, “The Irishman” (30 points)
Song Kang Ho, “Parasite” (18 points)
Wesley Snipes, “Dolemite is My Name” (18 points)

Best Screenplay
Bong Joon Ho and Han Jin Won, “Parasite” (37 points)
Runners-up
Quentin Tarantino, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” (34 points)
Greta Gerwig, “Little Women” (33 points)

Best Cinematography
Claire Mathon, “Portrait of a Lady on Fire” and “Atlantics” (41 points)
Runners-up
Robert Richardson,”Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” (29 points)
Yorick Le Saux, “Little Women” (22 points)

Best Non-Fiction Film
“Honeyland” (33 points)
Runners-up
“American Factory” (28 points)
“Apollo 11” (27 points)



I’ve seen most of these movies win other awards but I’m still surprised that Little Women is ranking so high (I mean it placed second for Best Picture here and Gerwig beat the likes of Scorsese and Tarantino and Baumbach!) but I love it. I’m sure some of those who are obsessed with these awards like me are complaining about the “PC” choices especially with Gerwig considering how they reacted to Lady Bird winning so many of these critics awards. :rolleyes:
 
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screech

Well-Known Member
Messages
7,409
I love Quentin Tarantino films, but I feel like I was the only person who didn't love Once Upon A Time, and didn't think Brad Pitt was anything that spectacular in it.

With the Globes tonight, I'm looking forward to seeing how Jennifer Lopez will dress. She's got such interesting style, but will she go for the classic look (like she did just a few days ago when she won an award)?

I haven't seen many of the films up for awards this year, but I will say that I absolutely loved Knives Out, and love that Daniel Craig and Ana de Armas were nominated for Globes for their brilliant performances. (I hate that a random sweater Chris Evans wore for less than half the movie took so much media focus, though)
 

Vash01

Fan of Yuzuru, T&M, P&C
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I love Quentin Tarantino films, but I feel like I was the only person who didn't love Once Upon A Time, and didn't think Brad Pitt was anything that spectacular in it.

With the Globes tonight, I'm looking forward to seeing how Jennifer Lopez will dress. She's got such interesting style, but will she go for the classic look (like she did just a few days ago when she won an award)?

I haven't seen many of the films up for awards this year, but I will say that I absolutely loved Knives Out, and love that Daniel Craig and Ana de Armas were nominated for Globes for their brilliant performances. (I hate that a random sweater Chris Evans wore for less than half the movie took so much media focus, though)


I hated Once upon a time in Hollywood and I never liked Tarantino. I am glad that he didn’t win the Best Director. I hope to see the Sam Mendes movie soon.

The Globes were fairly predictable. The movies that critics loved and I hated, won. (Once upon a time... and Parasite).

Now I really must see Joker.

Glad that Renée Zellweger won in drama,but the musical/comedy category for women was really weak. Nothing against Akwafina but it was a rather weak field. She was ok in Farewell. That movie didn’t live up to my expectations but it was quite good.

I really wanted Jo Jo Rabbit to win something.
 
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Sylvia

TBD
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Golden Globes thread:

BAFTA nominations:

Joker led the pack with 11 nominations, closely followed by The Irishman (Martin Scorsese's 14th BAFTA nomination) and Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood (Quentin Tarantino's 11th BAFTA nom) with 10 each, and Sam Mendes' 1917 just behind with nine.
Elsewhere, BAFTA will likely face a headache after it emerged that this year's main acting categories failed to include a single person of color at the same time as no female filmmakers made it onto the directors' shortlist. ...
In terms of distributors, Netflix led the charge with 23 nominations, including 10 for The Irishman and five each for Marriage Story and The Two Popes, followed by Sony with 16, with Once Upon a Time in Hollywood accounting for 10.
...
The awards ceremony itself will take place at the Royal Albert Hall in London on Feb. 2.
Best Film
1917
The Irishman
Joker
Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood
Parasite

Leading Actress
Jessie Buckley, Wild Rose
Scarlett Johansson, Marriage Story
Saoirse Ronan, Little Women
Charlize Theron, Bombshell
Renée Zellweger, Judy

Leading Actor
Leonardo Dicaprio, Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood
Adam Driver, Marriage Story
Taron Egerton, Rocketman
Joaquin Phoenix, Joker
Jonathan Pryce, The Two Popes

Supporting Actress
Laura Dern, Marriage Story
Scarlett Johansson, Jojo Rabbit
Florence Pugh, Little Women
Margot Robbie, Bombshell
Margot Robbie, Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood

Supporting Actor
Tom Hanks, A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
Anthony Hopkins, The Two Popes
Al Pacino, The Irishman
Joe Pesci, The Irishman
Brad Pitt, Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood

Outstanding British Film
1917
Bait
For Sama
Rocketman
Sorry We Missed You
The Two Popes

Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer
Bait, Mark Jenkin (Writer/Director), Kate Byers, Linn Waite (Producers)
For Sama, Waad Al-Kateab (Director/Producer), Edward Watts (Director)
Maiden, Alex Holmes (Director)
Only You, Harry Wootliff (Writer/Director)
Retablo, Álvaro Delgado-Aparicio (Writer/Director)*

Film Not in the English Language
The Farewell
For Sama
Pain and Glory
Parasite
Portrait of a Lady on Fire

Documentary
American Factory
Apollo 11
Diego Maradona
For Sama
The Great Hack

Animated Film
Frozen 2
Klaus
A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon
Toy Story 4

Director
1917, Sam Mendes
The Irishman, Martin Scorsese
Joker, Todd Phillips
Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood, Quentin Tarantino
Parasite, Bong Joon-ho

Original Screenplay
Booksmart, Susanna Fogel, Emily Halpern, Sarah Haskins, Katie Silberman
Knives Out, Rian Johnson
Marriage Story, Noah Baumbach
Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood, Quentin Tarantino
Parasite, Han Jin-won, Bong Joon-ho,

Adapted Screenplay
The Irishman, Steven Zaillian
Jojo Rabbit, Taika Waititi
Joker, Todd Phillips, Scott Silver
Little Women, Greta Gerwig
The Two Popes, Anthony Mccarten

Original Score
1917, Thomas Newman
Jojo Rabbit, Michael Giacchino
Joker, Hildur Gudnadóttir
Little Women, Alexandre Desplat
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, John Williams

Casting
Joker, Shayna Markowitz
Marriage Story, Douglas Aibel, Francine Maisler
Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood, Victoria Thomas
The Personal History of David Copperfield, Sarah Crowe
The Two Popes, Nina Gold

Cinematography
1917, Roger Deakins
The Irishman, Rodrigo Prieto
Joker, Lawrence Sher
Le Mans ’66, Phedon Papamichael
The Lighthouse, Jarin Blaschke

Editing
The Irishman, Thelma Schoonmaker
Jojo Rabbit, Tom Eagles
Joker, Jeff Groth
Le Mans ’66, Andrew Buckland, Michael McCusker
Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood, Fred Raskin

Production Design
1917, Dennis Gassner, Lee Sandales
The Irishman, Bob Shaw, Regina Graves
Jojo Rabbit, Ra Vincent, Nora Sopková
Joker, Mark Friedberg, Kris Moran
Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood, Barbara Ling, Nancy Haigh

Costume Design
The Irishman, Christopher Peterson, Sandy Powell
Jojo Rabbit, Mayes C. Rubeo
Judy, Jany Temime
Little Women, Jacqueline Durran
Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood, Arianne Phillips

Makeup and Hair
1917, Naomi Donne
Bombshell, Vivian Baker, Kazu Hiro, Anne Morgan
Joker, Kay Georgiou, Nicki Ledermann
Judy, Jeremy Woodhead
Rocketman, Lizzie Yianni Georgiou

Sound
1917, Scott Millan, Oliver Tarney, Rachael Tate, Mark Taylor, Stuart Wilson
Joker, Tod Maitland, Alan Robert Murray, Tom Ozanich, Dean Zupancic
Le Mans ’66, David Giammarco, Paul Massey, Steven A. Morrow, Donald Sylvester
Rocketman, Matthew Collinge, John Hayes, Mike Prestwood Smith, Danny Sheehan
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, David Acord, Andy Nelson, Christopher Scarabosio, Stuart Wilson, Matthew Wood

Special Visual Effects
1917, Greg Butler, Guillaume Rocheron, Dominic Tuohy
Avengers: Endgame, Dan Deleeuw, Dan Sudick
The Irishman, Leandro Estebecorena, Stephane Grabli, Pablo Helman
The Lion King, Andrew R. Jones, Robert Legato, Elliot Newman, Adam Valdez
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, Roger Guyett, Paul Kavanagh, Neal Scanlan, Dominic Tuohy

British Short Animation
Grandad Was a Romantic, Maryam Mohajer
In Her Boots, Kathrin Steinbacher
The Magic Boat, Naaman Azhari, Lilia Laurel

British Short Film
Azaar, Myriam Raja, Nathanael Baring
Goldfish, Hector Dockrill, Harri Kamalanathan, Benedict Turnbull, Laura Dockrill
Kamali, Sasha Rainbow, Rosalind Croad
Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone (If You’re a Girl), Carol Dysinger, Elena Andreicheva
The Trap, Lena Headey, Anthony Fitzgerald

Rising Star Award
Awkwafina
Jack Lowden
Kaitlyn Dever
Kelvin Harrison Jr.
Micheal Ward
 

Sylvia

TBD
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79,976
The Producers Guild of America has revealed its nominees in the motion picture and television categories for its 31st Annual Producers Guild Awards; nominees include recent Golden Globe winners “1917,” “Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood,” “Missing Link,” “Succession,” “Fleabag” and “Chernobyl.”
The PGA, which has about 8,200 members, has matched the Oscar for best picture in 21 of its 30 years, including “The Green Book” last year and “The Shape of Water” in 2018.
The PGA uses a preferential balloting system that’s similar to that employed by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. The PGA and AMPAS both expanded their voting for the top film to 10 nominees in 2009. About three-quarters of the PGA’s Zanuck nominees wind up as Oscar best picture nominees.
Movie producer nominations copied out below; TV producer awards are listed in the article.

The Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures
1917
Producers: Sam Mendes, Pippa Harris, Jayne‐Ann Tenggren, Callum McDougall

Ford v Ferrari
Producers: Peter Chernin & Jenno Topping, James Mangold

The Irishman
Producers: Jane Rosenthal & Robert De Niro, Emma Tillinger Koskoff & Martin Scorsese

Jojo Rabbit
Producers: Carthew Neal, Taika Waititi

Joker
Producers: Todd Phillips & Bradley Cooper, Emma Tillinger Koskoff

Knives Out
Producers: Rian Johnson, Ram Bergman

Little Women
Producer: Amy Pascal

Marriage Story
Producers: Noah Baumbach, David Heyman

Once Upon a Time in… Hollywood
Producers: David Heyman, Shannon McIntosh, Quentin Tarantino

Parasite
Producers: Kwak Sin Ae, Bong Joon Ho

The Award for Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures
Abominable
Producer: Suzanne Buirgy

Frozen II
Producer: Peter Del Vecho

How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World
Producers: Bradford Lewis, Bonnie Arnold

Missing Link
Producers: Arianne Sutner, Travis Knight

Toy Story 4
Producers: Mark Nielsen, Jonas Rivera
 
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Seerek

Well-Known Member
Messages
5,780
I don't ever remember the Academy Awards being held that early in the calendar year - is there an official explanation?
 

Sylvia

TBD
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79,976
The nominations for Oscars 2020 will be announced on the morning of Monday, January 13th, 2020.


The 2020 Directors Guild of American winners will be announced Saturday, January 25. Check out the 2020 DGA feature film nominations in the lists below.

Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film for 2019
Bong Joon Ho, “Parasite”
Sam Mendes, “1917”
Martin Scorsese, “The Irishman”
Quentin Tarantino, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”
Taika Waititi, “Jojo Rabbit”

Outstanding Directorial Achievement of a First-Time Feature Film Director for 2019
Mati Diop, “Atlantics”
Alma Har’el, “Honey Boy”
Melina Matsoukas, “Queen & Slim”
Joe Talbot, “The Last Black Man in San Francisco”
Tyler Nilson and Michael Schwartz, “The Peanut Butter Falcon”
 

VGThuy

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Messages
41,020
Outside of some Brit-centric nominations and their anti-Denzel Washington bias, BAFTA has been a pretty good predictor of Oscar (as has the Australian counterpart) because BAFTA has a lot of overlap in membership with the Academy.
 

Japanfan

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Messages
25,532
Opinion piece in The Guardian on how films with women's narratives struggle to get awards love:

Hollywood is still largely an old white boys' club.

I have to wonder why I saw films like 'The Godfather', 'Walking Tall' and gangster films as appealing when I was younger (though IIRC 'Walking Tall' appeal to me because I saw it as a movie about a rebel, and I was a rebel. There were no rebel female models for me at the time :(). Granted, I did see 'The Godfather' as part of a double feature with 'Love Story', an odd choice perhaps but I lived in a very small town and I guess the theater took movies as they came in (usually some time after their initial release).

There are so many films about women that merit recognition the films did not receive. One such is 'North Country' with Charlize Theron (2005). She works in a male-dominated mine, where she is harassed and assaulted. She goes on to lead the charge in putting forth the first class action suit for sexual discrimination (of something similar, I do not recall precisely) in America. This film has all the elements of Hollywood success as the story of an average person who takes on the establishment and wins. The one element missing - a central male character. :(

The film really resonated with me, as I worked in a mine in my home town one summer. It was only the first or second year when were allowed to work in the mine (1975 or so). Girly pictures and calendars were posted all over the place. I had a night shift, and there were two men shift with me. They called me all sort of names and sometimes would urinate right in front of me. I got past that, proud that I endured discrimination and stuck around to collect some very good paychecks.

Another women-centered film that I loved was 'Frozen River' with Melissa Leo. That one did at least receive some recognition.

These days, I prefer not to watch violet films about men with guns and gangsters. I doubt I'll watch a Scorsese film again (granted 'Age of Innocence' was wonderful and had an unusual focus for Scorsese). The last Scorsese I saw was 'Streets of New York' - may have the title wrong, as it was some time ago. It was just way too violent for me.
 
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