This year’s race has kind of been all over the place. The big movies that came in the fall haven’t yet turned into the massive hits people were expecting them to be. Interstellar, despite it having a complicated plot and three hours, has finally surged barely ahead of Gone Girl. It’s still hovering at the top of the box office, however, as people are slowly making their way to see it. Into the Woods will likely do some banging business for the holidays but who would have ever thought that by year’s end the Oscar race would maybe possibly include a single $100 million earner, Gone Girl. And even that film’s fate is held in the balance, knocked way down to #13 by Scott Feinberg, not even predicted at all by Dave Karger at Movie City News. So what are we looking at here? It’s a confused jumble with some known titles clustered in the middle.
The Critics Choice awards are handed out by the Broadcast Film Critics. They used to be a lot more discerning in whom they allowed to be members — then it turned into a free-for-all where literally guys who used to be forum members at my site are now full fledged members of that association. Almost every Oscar blogger I know is a voting member — save David Poland, who opted out of voting at some point. Every other one though? Jeff Wells, Steve Pond, Anne Thompson, Nathaniel Rogers — you name it, they’re members of the BFCA. This is the one area where I exercise the only integrity I have because I’ve never joined this group and, in fact, do not vote on any awards leading up to the Oscars. The reason I do this is because I am paid in advertising dollars by studios directly. Most of my pundit friends have editorial overseers — I do not. I started my own business and run my own business. So it’s a sticky area, I think. Some think so, others don’t – either way, however we got here, here we are.
The BFCA values their record of matching up with Oscar more than any other group. The film critics mostly pretend like they’re at the same party with Oscar voters but are embarrassed to be there. The BFCA embrace this — they even expanded their categories to allow for more celebrities to attend their telecast. I’m really glad they no longer take the stage for a round of applause. That’s progress.
They have virtually zero impact on the Oscars except in the form of publicity. Ben Affleck got off his best joke at the BFCAs when he was “snubbed” for Best Director, saying, “I’d like to think the Academy…” It caught on like wildfire. A speech in front of a camera and an audience is always good publicity and most of the time no one considers anything else. They aren’t quite on the level of the Golden Globes yet, in terms of eyeballs, but they’re still a televised awards show and thus, that matters. Still, it cracks me up when the muggle press covers them like they’re real critics. They ain’t. Their like the Oscar-flavored version of the People’s Choice awards — somewhere between mainstream and snooty, not unlike industry voters.
I have to admit I’ve always wondered whether they try to vote to match what they think the Academy might do, thus following the lead of prominent Oscar bloggers, or whether they vote for what they actually think is good. Could that many of them really like Nine that much? Their score would indicate no. Same goes for Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close. I find this contradiction to be strange. Shouldn’t their nominees match, at the very least, their highest scores? That leads me to believe that they probably do pick films they think the Academy will pick to maintain their record of matching up. But maybe many voting bodies do the same thing — maybe this is how the consensus is formed in the end: bloggers predict what movies get in, people voting pick those same movies, those movies get picked by the Academy. The classic self-fulfilling prophecy. It messes with your head, doesn’t it?
The BFCA will announce on Monday — you can take a look at their scores below, to see how they have leaned 2014 and in previous years. Somewhere as we speak several bloggers and BFCA members have the embargoed list. They already know what’s going to get nominated. I used to be one who got the list but — since I bitch about them too much I’ve been removed, I think, from that privilege.
The Critics Choice Best Picture nominees are in red. An asterisk* means the Academy also chose the movie as a Best Picture nominee.
2014
Boyhood – 96
Whiplash – 93
Birdman – 91
Guardians of the Galaxy – 91
The Imitation Game – 91
The LEGO Movie – 91
Selma – 90
Gone Girl – 90
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes – 89
Captain America: The Winter Soldier – 88
Nightcrawler – 88
The Grand Budapest Hotel – 87
How to Train Your Dragon 2 – 87
Snowpiercer – 87
The Theory of Everything – 87
Wild – 87
American Sniper – 85
Foxcatcher – 85
Still Alice – 85
The Babadook – 84
Locke – 84
A Most Violent Year – 84
Only Lovers Left Alive – 84
Unbroken – 84
2013
12 Years a Slave – 94*
Short Term 12 – 94
Gravity – 93*
American Hustle – 91*
Captain Phillips – 90*
Blue Jasmine – 89
Philomena – 89*
Dallas Buyers Club – 88*
Fruitvale Station – 88
All Is Lost – 87
Her – 87*
Nebraska – 87*
Stories We Tell – 87
Before Midnight – 86
Mud – 86
Enough Said – 85
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire – 85
Prisoners – 85
Rush – 85
Saving Mr. Banks – 85
Side Effects – 85
The Spectacular Now – 85
The Wolf of Wall Street – 84*
Lone Survivor – 83
Inside Llewyn Davis – 82
Upstream Color – 82
Lee Daniels’ The Butler – 81
August: Osage County – 80
2012
Argo – 94*
Zero Dark Thirty – 92*
Skyfall – 92
The Avengers – 90
Silver Linings Playbook* – 90
Lincoln – 88*
Django Unchained – 88*
Amour – 87*
Les Misérables – 87*
Life of Pi – 86*
Looper – 86
Beasts of the Southern Wild – 85*
End of Watch – 85
Arbitrage – 84
Moonrise Kingdom – 83
The Impossible – 82
Prometheus – 82
The Master – 81
Flight – 81
Hunger Games – 81
The Road – 79
2011
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2 – 93
The Descendants – 92*
Martha Marcy May Marlene – 92
The Artist – 91*
Drive – 91
The Ides of March – 91
Moneyball – 91*
The Help – 89*
Hugo – 87*
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy – 87
Beginners – 85
Midnight in Paris – 85*
My Week with Marilyn – 85
Bridesmaids – 82
War Horse – 80*
Warrior – 80
Contagion – 79
Melancholia – 78
Rampart – 78
Shame – 78
Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close – 78*
The Tree of Life – 78*
We Need to Talk About Kevin – 78
The Iron Lady – 77
Cloud Atlas – 74
2010
The King’s Speech – 97*
Toy Story 3 – 97*
The Social Network – 95*
True Grit – 95*
Inception – 94*
127 Hours – 90*
The Fighter – 90*
Black Swan – 89*
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – 87
The Town – 87
The Kids Are All Right – 85*
Winter’s Bone – 85*
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo – 84
Secretariat – 83
Another Year – 82
The Ghost Writer – 81
Shutter Island – 81
2009
100 – Me and Orson Welles
100 – Up*
97 – Up in the Air*
95 – An Education*
93 – The Hurt Locker*
93 – Star Trek
92 – (500) Days of Summer
91 – Inglourious Basterds*
91 – Fantastic Mr Fox
89 – Avatar*
89 – Precious*
88 – Julie & Julia
87 – District 9*
86 – A Serious Man*
85 – Sherlock Holmes
85 – The Blind Side*
85 – The Messenger
85 – The Princess and the Frog
83 — Invictus
79 — Nine
I guess I will predict the BFCA Best Picture nominees this way:
Boyhood – 96
Whiplash – 93
Birdman – 91
The Imitation Game – 91
Gone Girl – 90
Selma – 90
Nightcrawler – 88
The Grand Budapest Hotel – 87
The Theory of Everything – 87
Foxcatcher – 85
Interstellar – 80
Also possible:
Wild – 87
American Sniper – 85
Unbroken – 84
Into the Woods – 79
I won’t even guess at the rest of the categories, though I’ll be interested to see how it goes. How about you?
Oh excuse me, it was 1090, even worse…
http://www.criticschoice.com/members/bchurchill/
Fun fact, I believe the 100 score for Me and Orson Welles was due to a type in their score entering as I’ve previously noticed that one critic had their score for that film listed as 1001. An outlier like that would certainly skew the average, lol
HitFix already posted the nominees. And they’re boringly in line with what the pundits have been predicting all year.
http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/birdman-boyhood-and-grand-budapest-hotel-lead-critics-choice-nominations/2
^”since noms used to be announced by their morning newscasters”
phew
Paddy,
I checked the KTLA website since it used to by their morning newscasters, but apparently the CCA moved from the CW to A&E and the latter shows no sign of streaming or announcement of any kind so I’m guessing it’ll be the usual press release.
Thanks Steven. 🙂
Antoinette, don’t let the haters get to you about Interstellar. I found some big flaws with the script, and it’s mostly that to be honest. Otherwise I think it’s amazing. It had the potential to be a full blown masterpiece but it still got some good/great reviews. It just wasn’t the ZOMG 2nd coming of Christ reviews everybody expected, thus it was bad, right? Nope. Same thing happened with Dark Knight Rises. It’s a great film but it had impossible expectations to live up to. It got a 78 on MC overall yet it got a lot of hate.
I can’t speak to the other films…but I usually hope for the best if we’re getting a different spin on something. I adored Wallis in BotSW and hope for the best for her. So stay out of the ditch! There be movies to see!
Thinking:
Birdman
Boyhood
Foxcatcher
Gone Girl
Grand Budapest Hotel
Imitation Game
Selma
Theory of Everything
Unbroken
Whiplash
Thinking that Interstellar is relegated to the Action Category, action acting, plus a ton of tech noms.
Into the Woods may show up a lot, but doubting top 10 for now.
Vague on where Nightcrawler will register (how many categories, hopefully quite a few).
Spall could show up. Laura Dern could show up. Gyllenhall will show up in one category or another. Perhaps OConnell, as well.
@BOB BURNS
I think the fact that they left out Happy-Go-Lucky and Another Year has me worried that Mr. Turner will miss the cut. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, it seems that Leigh’s women usually break through to the awards race (critically or industry-wise, or both). But his men rarely get noticed in the American awards circuit. I’m afraid that Mr. Turner may have the same fate as Topsy-Turvy (where Jim Broadbent was completely snubbed).
Yeh, anybody know when they’ll announce their nominations? And if they’ll do it on a live stream? Or will it just be via press release?
The BFCA fucked it up for me when they tweeted me a couple of years back bragging about how closely their winners matched the Academy’s. I made sure they were aware that I recognised that their choices weren’t aligned with the Academy’s out of any kind of similarity of taste, but out of their sad and silly desperation to match up with the Oscars lest anybody question their credibility. Needless to say, they didn’t drop the act.
goes to show…. one never leaves high school. all the people you wanted so bad to get away from are still around wherever you go. kris and nate rogers were old forum people and they’re pretty good so it’s a mixed record on forum alums. But year after year their selections for their year end awards were very good. That being the case I’d look for Marion Cottilard and Jake Gyllenhaal (currently riding high).
If the Critics Choice voters want to be very cool, it will pick Mr. Turner and Spall out of the overlooked pile.
@Steven I haven’t seen ANNIE. But reading that review, nothing can be that bad. These people don’t like something and they tear it completely to shreds. I think I’m having an emotional episode over the Exodus reaction. lol I haven’t even recovered from the Interstellar haters. I think instead of seeing The Hobbit, I’ll just dig a hole in the ground and jump in. Nobody seems to know how to like anything anymore.
When do they announce tomorrow?
Into the Woods should be listed too, unless I missed it.
I too hope Marion Cotillard makes it, but she is much like Tilda Swinton; both have single wins but dozens of performances that were critically acclaimed. Both seem to choose small films and/or controversial women to portray, thus sparking divides when Oscar ballots are sent out. Ironically Swinton is also competing this year, and sadly will miss out too possibly.
Having said that, Jennifer Aniston is still a fine actress. Anyone who thinks not must have missed The Good Girl (2002), which was one of my favorite performances that year. She has been in the game long enough to warrant some attention, and since I have not seen Cake (2014) I can’t judge whether she would be worthy.
I have seen Still Alice (2014), and while Julianne Moore delivers a riveting performance- it still seems a bit bland and empty. Perhaps it was the dull story; I was bored ten minutes in, and it took me three viewings to finish the under 2 hour film. Alec Baldwin did nothing to peek my interest, and Kristen Stewart actually was the most interesting thing about the movie based on her character- but the issues are never solved. (SPOILER)- we only see the beginnings of Moore’s disease, and not the whole out come- which would have been far more satisfying. Better movies dealing with Alzheimer’s include Iris (2001) with Judi Dench and Oscar-winning Jim Broadbent, and Away from Her (2007) with Julie Christie and (forgot his name) – but her husband was excellent.
I’m really hoping for Marion Cotillard to get a nomination at least in the Best Actress field here. I’m sorry, but I prefer her over Aniston. Cotillard is such an inspiring actor! Having seen The Imitation Game, I firmly believe it’s one of the movies that should be on the list in all major categories it qualifies for, especially Best Actor and Best Supporting Actress. Benedict Cumberbatch and Keira Knightley were stunning in their roles. I actually thought the acting (by everyone) in the movie was even better than the movie itself, and the movie was pretty good. Birdman, awesome accolades. I’ve always loved Michael Keaton and he was unbelievable as Reagan. A real tour-de-force performance!
Antoinette, when did you see Annie? Honestly based on the trailer I never was interested after that except for Wallis. Another curious thing to me, on paper this should’ve been one of the most talked about movies of the year (African American Annie and Daddy Warbucks, a knockout actress as Ms Hannigan, updated to very modern times, Christmas musical) yet I’ve barely heard nary a peep from the few sites I go to or even some critics. I’m curious to watch but given how many things are opening wide around that time I’ll probably wait for a home release.
After seeing Inherent Vice last night it blows my mind that Phoenix isn’t in the Best Actor discussion. He’s phenomenal and carries that entire film. Brolin is a deserving contender as well and although Waterston has some great scenes I don’t think she stands out enough to deserve Supporting recognition–a field I typically think should be occupied by film-stealers. Brolin is that, Waterston isn’t.
Greenwood has one of the best scores of the year, for sure.
Justin I don’t think the supporting actor field is weak at all.
First I think four of the actors most often mentioned-J.K. Simmons, Edward Norton, Ethan Hawke, and Mark Ruffalo are all strong contenders.
Then there’s
Robert Duvall
Channing Tatum-Foxcatcher
Josh Brolin-Inherent
John Goodman-The Gambler
Riz Ahmed-Nightcrawler
Albert Brooks-A Most Violent Year
Tyler Perry-Gone Girl
Tom Wilkinson-Selma
Tony Revolori-The Grand Budapest Hotel
Kind of weird how weak the Supporting Actor field is this year isn’t it? I would guess the final five will be everyone from the SAG/Globe field except Duvall but I’m not sure who that is. Aside from Brolin, not a lot of solid contenders.
Sasha, I don’t know if you’ve seen this yet, but the Hollywood Reporter directors’ roundtable is up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xkh982zFm8&list=UUZ8Sxmkweh65HetaZfR8YuA
This is a bit off topic, but if Boyhood wins Best Picture at the Oscars this year, which seems pretty likely, the film will be either the cheapest or 2nd cheapest film to win it in the Oscars’ 87 year history (after controlling for inflation). The only one that might be cheaper is Marty (1955), which was made on a 350,000 dollar budget, which translates to about 3 million dollars today. Boyhood’s budget has variously been estimated at 2.4 million to 4 million dollars. Anyway, it’s reassuring that you don’t have to douse a film in money to get it to sparkle.
The BFCA gets some hate but I personally enjoy some of their choices. Their Best Actress nominations for Brie Larson in Short Term 12 and Elizabeth Olsen in Martha Marcy May Marlene were inspired and warranted. They also gave their Best Supporting Actor trophy to Philip Seymour Hoffman in The Master. No complaints about any of these selections.
Given that the association throws in one or two unexpected nominations in there I think Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Timothy Spall, and/or Chadwick Boseman could gain some momentum here.
Damn numerical scores. If they aren’t used to determine the top ten nominees, then what’s the point of a combined score?
“This film got a 92, but fuck it. We’ll dump it and put in the one at 87.” Why? Because it was “better”, of course. Not good enough for a 92, but better none the less.
Numbers, scores, stars are bogus.
My predictions:
Best Picture
01. A Most Violent Year
02. Birdman
03. Boyhood
04. Foxcatcher
05. Gone Girl
06. Selma
07. The Grand Budapest Hotel
08. The Imitation Game
09. The Theory of Everything
10. Whiplash
Best Directing
01. Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Birdman
02. Richard Linklater, Boyhood
03. David Fincher, Gone Girl
04. Ava DuVernay, Selma
05. Wes Anderson, The Grand Budapest Hotel
06. Damien Chazelle, Whiplash
Best Actor
01. Michael Keaton, Birdman
02. Steve Carell, Foxcatcher
03. Jake Gyllenhaal, Nightcrawler
04. David Oyelowo, Selma
05. Benedict Cumberbatch, The Imitation Game
06. Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything
Best Actress
01. Amy Adams, Big Eyes
02. Rosamund Pike, Gone Girl
03. Julianne Moore, Still Alice
04. Felicity Jones, The Theory of Everything
05. Marion Cotillard, Two Days, One Night
06. Reese Witherspoon, Wild
Best Supporting Actor
01. Edward Norton, Birdman
02. Ethan Hawke, Boyhood
03. Mark Ruffalo, Foxcatcher
04. Josh Brolin, Inherent Vice
05. Robert Duvall, The Judge
06. J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
Best Supporting Actress
01. Jessica Chastain, A Most Violent Year
02. Emma Stone, Birdman
03. Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
04. Meryl Streep, Into the Woods
05. Keira Knightley, The Imitation Game
06. Laura Dern, Wild
Best Acting Ensemble
01. Birdman
02. Boyhood
03. Inherent Vice
04. Into the Woods
05. The Grand Budapest Hotel
06. The Imitation Game
Best Adapted Screenplay
01. Gone Girl
02. Inherent Vice
03. Still Alice
04. The Imitation Game
05. The Theory of Everything
06. Wild
Best Original Screenplay
01. Birdman
02. Boyhood
03. Foxcatcher
04. Selma
05. The Grand Budapest Hotel
06. Whiplash
Best Animated Feature
01. Big Hero 6
02. How to Train Your Dragon 2
03. The Boxtrolls
04. The Lego Movie
05. The Tale of the Princess Kaguya
Best Documentary Feature
01. Citizenfour
02. Jodorowsky’s Dune
03. Last Days in Vietnam
04. Life Itself
05. Virunga
Best Foreign Language Film
01. Force Majeure
02. Ida
03. Leviathan
04. Mommy
05. Two Days, One Night
That movie isn’t playing by me but I cried today too. I thought EXODUS was awe-inspiring. 10/10 I know what others are saying. I’m not being contrarian. I really loved it.
I don’t know what to think of the critics choice awards anymore. Were they in a hangar last time? Anyway the show wasn’t fun at all. It didn’t seem like anyone really cared if they won one either.
Mommy brought me to tears as well. Best movie of the year!
It’s amazing, so authentic and “real”. And I’m in awe of Anne Dorval. She’d make such a good Best Actress nominee.
Isn’t it great?
Boyhood
Birdman
The Imitation Game
The Theory of Everything
Into The Woods
The Grand Budapest Hotel
Interstellar
Gone Girl
Nightcrawler
Selma
Off topic: I’m just back from seeing Mommy. I can only say it reduced me to tears…
I probably just add “A Most Violent Year” as a definite Best Picture possibility for the BFCA. The bloggers seem to have loved it more than just Chastain getting in (and getting her new MVP award). Who knows though.