BOYHOOD Takes Top Prize As New York Film Critics Circle Announce 2014 Winners

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The New York Film Critics Circle voted today for their picks for the 2014 awards at the Film Society at Lincoln Center.

Boyhood was awarded Best Picture and Richard Linklater was named Best Director. Marion Cotillard was selected as Best Actress for her roles in both The Immigrant and Two Days, One Night and Timothy Spall was chosen as Best Actor for Mr. Turner. A Special Award was given to Adrienne Mancia, who, as a curator at MoMA for more than 30 years, helped shape the moviegoing tastes of New Yorkers by bringing the work of filmmakers like Bernardo Bertolucci, Manoel De Oliveira, and Marco Bellocchio to the United States.

In celebration of the Critics 80th year, the awards will be handed out during their annual ceremony on Monday, January 5th at Tao Downtown.

Full list of winners below

Best Picture: BOYHOOD

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Best Director: Richard Linklater (Boyhood)

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Best Actress: Marion Cotillard (for The Immigrant and Two Days, One Night)

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THE IMMIGRANT

Best Actor: Timothy Spall (Mr. Turner)

Spall won Best Actor in May at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival.

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Best Supporting Actress: Patricia Arquette (Boyhood)

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Best Supporting Actor: J.K. Simmons (Whiplash)

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Best Screenplay: The Grand Budapest Hotel

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Best Cinematography: Darius Khondji (The Immigrant)

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Best First Film: Jennifer Kent (The Babadook)

Review HERE.

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Best Foreign Language Film:
Ida

Best Nonfiction Film:           
Citizenfour

Best Animated Film:
The Lego Movie

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Says 2014 NYFCC Chairman, The Star-Ledger’s Stephen Whitty, “This was perhaps the most eclectic, least predictable movie year in recent memory, and I think the Circle’s final choices clearly show that diversity, drama and style – which makes Tao Downtown a particularly fitting choice for this year’s gala.”

A full list of voting members is below:

Melissa Anderson
ARTFORUM

John Anderson
VARIETY/NEWSDAY

Michael Atkinson
VILLAGE VOICE

Dwight Brown
NNPA SYNDICATION

Richard Corliss
TIME

David Denby
THE NEW YORKER

Karen Durbin
ELLE

Bilge Ebiri
NEW YORK MAGAZINE

David Edelstein
NEW YORK MAGAZINE

Marshall Fine
THE STAR

Scott Foundas
VARIETY

Graham Fuller
ARTINFO.COM

Owen Gleiberman
BBC.COM

Rafer Guzman
NEWSDAY

Stuart Klawans
THE NATION

Eric Kohn
INDIEWIRE

Joe Morgenstern
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Wesley Morris
GRANTLAND

Farran Smith Nehme
NEW YORK POST

Joe Neumaier
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Andrew O’Hehir
SALON.COM

Nick Pinkerton
FREELANCE

Peter Rainer
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR

Rex Reed
NEW YORK OBSERVER

Joshua Rothkopf
TIME OUT NEW YORK

Richard Schickel
TRUTHDIG.COM

Kyle Smith
NEW YORK POST

Dana Stevens
SLATE.COM

Amy Taubin
ARTFORUM

Peter Travers
ROLLING STONE

Keith Uhlich
FREELANCE

Elizabeth Weitzman
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Stephen Whitty
THE STAR LEDGER/NJ.COM

Stephanie Zacharek
THE VILLAGE VOICE

THE IMMIGRANT – The Review

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Writer/director James Gray’s outstanding new drama THE IMMIGRANT takes audiences back to a time when America encouraged other countries to send us their tired, poor, and huddled masses. Gray’s fifth film once again takes place in the New York of his previous work (LITTLE ODESSA, THE YARDS, WE OWN THE NIGHT, and TWO LOVERS) but this time he’s presented a period piece that is one of the best movies of 2014 so far.

THE IMMIGRANT begins in 1921 on Ellis Island, where Polish sisters Ewa and Magda Cybulski (Marion Cotillard and Angela Sarafyan) wait in line to be processed for entry into the New York port. Magda is quarantined, suspected of having contracted tuberculosis and there is murky reference to some “low moral” behavior on Ewa’s part while aboard the ship, so she is threatened with immediate deportation. Bruno Weiss (Joaquin Phoenix), a nicely-dressed observer in a bowler hat, steps in and makes Ewa an offer she can’t refuse: if she comes and works for him, he’ll put a roof over her head and use his connections at Ellis Island to release Magda from the infirmary there. Ewa accepts his offer and at first dances in his burlesque show dressed ironically as Lady Liberty (some of the performers are topless) but it quickly becomes clear that Bruno’s bread and butter derives from his career as a pimp and she is soon selling her body. Things get complicated when Ewa meets Orlando the Magician (Jeremy Renner), Bruno’s kind cousin and rival, setting up the sort of love triangle that can only lead to tragedy.

One of the great strengths of the THE IMMIGRANT is the way it convincingly captures the period. Its operatic plot and characters (a magician, a pimp, a dance hall girl) are straight out of the silent films and there’s even a cameo by opera singer Enrico Caruso (Joseph Calleja). The film contains an undercurrent of melancholy that is moving but it proceeds at a slow, deliberate pace that gives the audience much to savor and admire, especially the trio of nuanced performances from Marion Cotillard, Joaquim Phoenix, and Jeremy Renner. Some may find Ewa too passive, lacking fire in her belly, but to me Ewa seemed real, doing what she has to do to survive while showing courage, determination and dignity. Cotillard speaks volumes with her expressive eyes and subtle expressions and her work here should generate Oscar buzz. Joaquin Phoenix, who’s worked with Gray three times before, shines in a tricky role, going from savior to predator and back convincingly. Jeremy Renner is also excellent, though his role is smaller and less showy. Gray, working with cinematographer Darius Khondji, presents a dreamy, sepia-tinted vision of Manhattan in the 1920s with murky brown tenements seen through dirty focus and sooty air. THE IMMIGRANT is a restrained, thoughtful drama that satisfies on every level and is highly recommended as a cure for the junky summer blockbuster blues (see my BLENDED review).

4 1/2 of 5 Stars

THE IMMIGRANT opens in St. Louis Friday, May 23rd at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Theater

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THE IMMIGRANT Trailer Stars Marion Cotillard, Joaquin Phoenix & Jeremy Renner

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Watch the beautiful new trailer for THE IMMIGRANT.

In James Gray’s THE IMMIGRANT, Ewa Cybulski (Marion Cotillard) and her sister sail to New York from their native Poland in search of a new start and the American dream. When they reach Ellis Island, doctors discover that Magda (Angela Sarafyan) is ill, and the two women are separated. Ewa is released onto the mean streets of Manhattan while her sister is quarantined.

Alone, with nowhere to turn and desperate to reunite with Magda, Ewa quickly falls prey to Bruno (Joaquin Phoenix), a charming but wicked man who takes her in and forces her into prostitution. The arrival of Orlando (Jeremy Renner) – a dashing stage magician who is also Bruno’s cousin – restores her self-belief and hopes for a brighter future, becoming her only chance to escape the nightmare in which she finds herself.

THE IMMIGRANT

THE IMMIGRANT debuted at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival and also screened at the New York Film Festival in October.

In his review, Jose Solis (stagebuddy.com) wrote, “While everyone in the cast is phenomenal, most attention should be given to its leading lady: a lesser actress would’ve made Ewa seem like a martyr, but the endlessly expressive Cotillard gives her a humanity that becomes beautifully ironic when seen through Darius Khondji’s lens.”

From The Weinstein Company, the movie opens on May 16th.

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(L-R) JOAQUIN PHOENIX and director JAMES GRAY behind the scenes of THE IMMIGRANT.

Photos – Copyright: © 2013 The Weinstein Company. All Rights Reserved.