Once Upon a Time ... in more critics prizes!
by Nathaniel R
In the latest round up of critics prizes we have critics from the SouthEastern US, Las Vegas, Boston (online) and one of the two (or is it three now?) female critics organizations called "Women's Film Critic's Circle". Once Upon a Time in Hollywood and Parasite pick up several more prizes as do Portrait of a Lady on Fire and... Harriet?
Tomorrow one of the historically coolest and most discerning critics groups is naming their winners (Boston Society of Film Critics -- don't fail us!) but until that potentially exciting announcement here are the latest four associations to announce. The winners and a few comments are after the jump...
SEFCA
(SouthEastern Film Critics Association)
Picture Parasite
Director Martin Scorsese, The Irishman (runner up: Bong Joon-ho, Parasite)
Actress Renée Zellweger, Judy (runner up: Lupita Nyong'o, Us)
Actor Adam Driver, Marriage Story (runner up: Joaquin Phoenix, Joker)
Supporting Actor Brad Pit, Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood (runner up: Joe Pesci, The Irishman)
Supporting Actress Laura Dern, Marriage Story (runner up: Florence Pugh, Little Women)
Screenplay Parasite (runner up: Marriage Story)
Adapted Screenplay The Irishman (runner up: Little Women)
Ensemble Knives Out (runner up: The Irishman)
Cinematography 1917 (runner up: Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood)
Documentary Apollo 11 (runner up: American Factory)
Foreign Film Parasite (runner up: Pain & Glory)
Animated Film Toy Story 4 (runner up: I Lost My Body)
Gene Wyatt Award (for film that best evokes the spirit of the south): Peanut Butter Falcon (runner up: Just Mercy)
TOP TEN FILMS OF 2019
1. “Parasite”
2. “The Irishman”
3. “Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood”
4. “Marriage Story"
5. “1917”
6. “Jojo Rabbit”
7. “Little Women”
8. “The Farewell"
9. “Uncut Gems”
10. “Ford V Ferrari”
We aren't exactly fans of Peanut Butter Falcon (apart from Shia Labeouf's dependable strength as leading man) but we do cherish critics prizes that focus on their own region. It's good to have a regional identity as otherwise it feels a bit "why do we need another group?" ish. In fact the 30-40 plus regional critics groups would all do well to establish some sort of prize like SEFCA's Gene Wyatt Award or the WAFCA's "best portrayal of DC" prize, don't you think? Those prizes would be so cool to track each year to give various groups more of their own identity.
LVFCS
(Las Vegas Film Critics Society)
Picture Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Director Quentin Tarantino, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Actor Adam Sandler Uncut Gems
Actress Renée Zellweger Judy
Supporting Actor Willem Dafoe, The Lighthouse
Supporting Actress Margot Robbie, Bombshell
Ensemble Knives Out
Screenplay Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood
Adapted Screenplay The Two Popes
Score Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Song "Stand Up" Harriet
Costume Design Dolemite Is My Name
Art Direction Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Cinematography 1917
Editing Ford V Ferrari
Visual Effects Avengers: Endgame
Documentary Apollo 11
Foreign Film Parasite
Animated Film Missing Link
Action Film Ford V Ferrari
Comedy: Dolemite Is My Name
Horror/Sci-Fi: MidSommar
Family Film: Fighting With My Family
Breakout Filmmaker Olivia Wilde, Booksmart
Youth Performance (Male) Noah Jupe, Honeyboy
Youth Performance (Female) Julia Butters, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Another ensemble prize for Knives Out. It's a bit weird that it missed with SAG since SAG used to love those super large star-driven casts.
Las Vegas is one of the few organization that gives us nearly all of the Oscar-correlative prizes rather than just say, cinematography, so it's always a bit fun to watch. They do also tend to be less late-year- release focused than other critics groups from our casual observation over the years and we appreciate that, since movies are a year round passion for us. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood was the lucky beneficiary of this full year approach this time around with SIX prizes.
WFCC
(Women's Film Critics Circle)
Movie About Women Portrait of a Lady on Fire (runner up: Little Women)
Best Movie By A Woman (Director) Kasi Lemmons, Harriet (runner up: Celine Sciamma, Portrait of a Lady on Fire)
Woman Storyteller (Screenwriter) Greta Gerwig, Little Women (runner up: Celine Sciamma, Portrait of a lady on Fire)
Actress TIE Lupita Nyong’o Us and Cynthia Erivo, Harriet (runner up: Renée Zellweger, Judy)
Actor Adam Driver, Marriage Story (runner up: Joaquin Phoenix, Joker)
Animated Female: Elsa, Frozen 2 (runner up: Bo Peep, Toy Story 4)
Equality of the Sexes Marriage Story (runner up: Aeronauts)
Screen Couple TIE Noemi Merlant & Adele Haenel in Portrait of a Lady on Fire and Scarlett Johansson & Adam Driver in Marriage Story (runner up: Jennifer Lopez & Constance Wu in Hustlers)
Foreign Film by or About Women Portrait of a Lady on Fire (runner up: Atlantics)
Documentary by or About Women Varda by Agnes (runner up: TIE Maiden and Honeyland)
Adrienne Shelley Award (for a film that passionately opposes violence against women): TIE Bombshell and The Nightingale (runner up: Hustlers)
Josephine Baker Award (for film that expresses the woman of color experience in America): Harriet (runner up: Queen & Slim)
Karen Morley Award (for film about a woman's place in history and search for identity): Harriet (runner up: Little Women)
Acting and Activism Award: Jane Fonda
Lifetime Achievement Award: Alfre Woodard
Alfre Woodard gets a lifetime achievement but she wasn't even nominated for Best Actress and they had (WAIT, IT GETS MUCH MORE UPSETTING) 14 nominees in that category! One really gets more and more of the sense that people just didn't see Clemency this year before voting. We suppose that's partially on Neon but it's also on film critics who didn't make time for it. Many of the other late year releases that are just now opening or have yet to open have been more widely screened and showered with more awards despite worse reviews *cough* Bombshell).
In between our two complaints (yes there's one more - sorry WFCC) we should note that we love the "Best Animated Female" category. It's fun... even if we wish the blissful reinvention of Bo Peep (Toy Story 4's best reason to exist) would have triumphed over Elsa who was still treading her same character arc in film two.
We can't say that we understand FOUR Harriet prizes (still saddened by that film's mediocrity) when there were so many terrific films by women this year, and starring women of color too (!), but critics organizations are made from compromise so who knows how the voting went amongst their 75 members. But just to give you a taste of how much richness they had to choose from their other self-selected nominees for "Movie By A Woman" represent an incredible array of acclaimed pictures: American Factory, Booksmart , Clemency , The Farewell , Harriet , High Life , Hustlers , Little Women , The Nightingale , Portrait of a Lady on Fire, and The Souvenir. All of those had much stronger rotten tomatoes and metacritic scores than Harriet (73%/66) so it's a bit perplexing (and interesting). Perhaps female critics just liked Harriet a whole lot better than male critics and male critics do dominate metacritic and rotten tomatoes scores.
BOFCA
(Boston Online Film Critics Association)
Picture Parasite
Director Bong Joon-ho, Parasite
Actor Adam Sandler Uncut Gems
Actress Lupita Nyong’o Us
Supporting Actor Brad Pit, Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood
Supporting Actress Florence Pugh, Little Women
Screenplay Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood
Ensemble Little Women
Score Uncut Gems
Cinematography Robert Richardson, Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood
Editing Thelma Schoonmaker The Irishman
Documentary Apollo 11
Foreign Film Parasite
Animated Film Toy Story 4
TOP TEN FILMS OF 2019
1. “Parasite”
2. “Uncut Gems”
3. “The Irishman”
4. “Once UPon A Time… In Hollywood
5. “Marriage Story”
6. “Little Women”
7. “Portrait Of A Lady On Fire”
8. “Ford V Ferrari”
9. “The Farewell”
10. “Us”
Happy to see Lupita Nyong'o doing so well with critics --Us even made their top ten list! -- but we do always wonder (this is not a subtweet of Boston Online but just a thing we've obvserved for many years about all regional critics prizes) in such cases if an early prize from one of the two most prestigious organizations (NYFCC & LAFCA) influences later regional voting and whether or not some of the other smaller critics groups would have voted for something less Oscar atypical if NYFCC or LAFCA didn't go there first. On the other hand LAFCA's prize for Mary Kay Place in Diane hasn't helped her curr any additional critics group favour so maybe the love for Lupita was always going to be there and didn't need the very high profile stampe of approval from NYFCC?
PREVIOUSLY IN CRITICS PRIZES
Reader Comments (23)
I never thought in August the race would be down to Renne vs Lupita for Best Actress,is there any hope a 2nd Black Actress could win.
Willem Dafoe is not a category fraud candidate.
Film is Pattinson's story, and not about their relationship. That there are only two real characters doesn't change that.
Me - agree to disagree. It's a duet. And you can't have a duet without two equal people.
Mark - i think you're putting too much stock in critics prizes. They aren't the same voters as Oscar. I hope Lupita is nominated but I think she's still running 5th or at best 4th. I would love it if she could win but I can't see that she's any threat to Renée... or even Cynthia (Oscar voters respond to roles first, performance second... at least historically they have.) . I dont think there's a single precedent in Oscar history for them to take an inventive genre performance like Lupita's seriously enough for a win without some strange mitigating circumstances. (Ruth Gordon in Rosemary's Baby and Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight are the only winners I can think of atypical enough to qualify from genre films)
Why do you say LIGHTHOUSE is Patterson's story, "Me"? I don't see that. Maybe we identify with him more because he's not old and grizzled and seemingly crazy from the beginning, but that doesn't make it "his story."
Dafoe and Pattinson are both leads.
I agree with Me. In fact... (SPOILER ALERT) I have my suspicions that Dafoe's character is a figment of Pattinson's fractured psyche. The rule for me is always this... which character do you see alone? If we see both of them alone ar some point in the movie, then it's a duet and they're both lead. If we only ever see one of them without the other, then the point of view is skewed toward one character who is the lead. I don't remember ever seeing Dafoe's character in a scene without Pattinson, but Pattinson spends nearly half the movie in scenes without Dafoe. That's why it's not a duet in my mind and that's why Dafoe in Supporting is not category fraud.
Is the story ever told or seen through Dafoe’s eyes? I don’t see it as a duet at all.
Well it's certainly his story, even if one considers it a duet in that traditional sense.
I don't disagree with the general argument, and I don't have an issue with someone calling him a lead...but not category fraud. Pattinson has all the individual stuff, so they're not absolute equals.
While I’m usually A-OK with calling out category fraud at every chance (it’s a scourge everywhere from TV to film to Broadway), I can’t help but notice it’s trotted out diligently in nearly every article mentioning Pitt and Dafoe and is almost never invoked at all when talking about Jennifer Lopez. If it’s good for the goose...
Gabe -- that's merely because Jennfier seems like a more borderline case to me than either of those two gentlemen. I can't look at THE LIGHTHOUSE and ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD without thinking of them as buddy movies (to use the silly term) like MIDNIGHT COWBOY or BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID (and of course today people would bend themselves into knots trying to say that either Voight or Hoffman or Newman or Redford was supporting in those films) but I see Hustlers as more of Constance Wu's story with a big ensemble of which Jennifer Lopez is a dazzling centerpiece.
I wish i hadn't been backd into such a corner with this though. My status as the warrior against it means i'm much more likely to err on the side of "they're a lead" even when I myself am ambivalent about it (as in the case of Lopez who i keep waffling on) . But there was no choice because things became more and more egregious and now i see there is no such thing as a two lead movie in most people's eyes now (except opposite gender movies in which case people arent so insane)
I have this funny idea to get a digital copy of Once upon a Time in Hollywood and re-edit it myself erasing EVERY SINGLE Sharon Tate reference so it becomes a last minute revelation. Also to erase the long tracking shot of Leo´s character playing his role and just cut to him bitching about him forgetting the lines. Also erase the little Charles Manson cameo that gives also away that the neighbours are the Polanskis. And also that horrible wink to the audience with the "and this is the moment you have all be waiting for" which dragged me completely out of the film. As it is now, I rate it ** out of *****. I think with those edits it would get up to *** 1/2 or ****.
It really amazes me, how everyone is buying QT's biggest ego trip to date, as a "tribute to old school filmmaking"
I know many people don’t think highly of “Harriet”, but I keep thinking about it.
It’s as if there is a subliminal movie and parts of it keep floating up to the surface. It makes me think there is a much higher level of craft than is generally acknowledged.
Funny enough, I think Lopez is more a lead than Dafoe.
Richter Scale; That's well said, tho I think of Collateral, Training Day, and especially I think of Scent of a Woman as examples where second lead is lead enough that he can't be supporting.
I can accept it in The Lighthouse but it's definitely not a buddy movie like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Midnight Cowboy, or Thelma and Louise, so on and so on.
@Jesus, what really amazes me is that you even dared to suggest to re-edit a masterpiece.I'd stick to Quentin Tarantino's version. I'm pretty sure millions would agree with me. Thank you very much.
Jesus: that's funny. I have my own master-edit of Basterds where you take Brad Pitt's scenes out of it entirely (which reduces Waltz, but gives him more impact), and it improves the movie enormously.
Dafoe is 1000% lead in Lighthouse. He's one of two.
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood came out five months ago and you're already treating it like it's a part of some scared canon. Please shut up and get a grip.
What's the point of having a Women's Film Critics Circle if you're not going to nominate Alfre Woodard and Mary Kay Place? Ageism (and laziness) sucks!
Nathaniel,so are you saying Renee is unstoppable then or could we be in for another shocker like last year with a Lupita win,I hear what your saying about genre bias as they didn't nominate THE best performance last year from Toni Collette because of the horror bias.
@Max, I assumed that your reply is meant for me. So sorry for even personally considering OUATIH as a masterpiece. My bad. I humbly apologize. It was an awful, awful movie and other people’s own take on the movie should have been the one made. I’m sure those will win gazillion of awards and millions at the box-office.
Dafoe and Pattinson are both leads- Pattinson has more alone time - like his furious masturbation scene
Anyone else getting the feeling that Song Kang-Ho (Parasite) and Zhao Shuzhen (The Farewell) might be "shock" nominations in supporting? Those two are my Marina de Taviras this year.
@goodbar
I happen to be trained in film making and editing and arts and let me tell you: whoever thinks OUATIH is a masterpiece forgot to put the film in context and does not realize it is not a tribute but an ego trip that is in desperate need of trimming (specially, removing the shadow of Sharon Tate till the last shot, to let the Rick Dalton story BREATHE).
Wtf happened to Queen and Slim?
The WFCC has nominees for Lifetime Achievement! LMAOOOO
No further traction for Little Women’s ensemble is a greater bad sign