2014 National Society of Film Critics Awards

49th NSFC Awards

January 3, 2015


Best Film:
Goodbye to Language

The 49th National Society of Film Critics Awards, given on 3 January 2015, honored the best in film for 2014.[1][2][3]

Winners

Winners are listed in boldface along with the runner-up positions and counts from the final round:

Richard Linklater, Best Director winner
Timothy Spall, Best Actor winner
Marion Cotillard, Best Actress winner
J. K. Simmons, Best Supporting Actor winner
Patricia Arquette, Best Supporting Actress winner
Wes Anderson, Best Screenplay winner

Best Picture

  1. Goodbye to Language (25)
  2. Boyhood (24)
  3. Birdman (10)
  4. Mr. Turner (10)

Best Director

  1. Richard Linklater Boyhood (36)
  2. Jean-Luc Godard Goodbye to Language (17)
  3. Mike Leigh Mr. Turner (12)

Best Actor

  1. Timothy Spall Mr. Turner (31)
  2. Tom Hardy Locke (10)
  3. Joaquin Phoenix Inherent Vice (9)
  4. Ralph Fiennes The Grand Budapest Hotel (9)

Best Actress

  1. Marion Cotillard The Immigrant and Two Days, One Night (80)
  2. Julianne Moore Still Alice (35)
  3. Scarlett Johansson Lucy and Under the Skin (21)

Best Supporting Actor

  1. J. K. Simmons Whiplash (24)
  2. Mark Ruffalo Foxcatcher (21)
  3. Edward Norton Birdman (16)

Best Supporting Actress

  1. Patricia Arquette Boyhood (26)
  2. Agata Kulesza Ida (18)
  3. Rene Russo Nightcrawler (9)

Best Screenplay

  1. Wes Anderson The Grand Budapest Hotel (24)
  2. Paul Thomas Anderson Inherent Vice (15)
  3. Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Nicolás Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris Jr., and Armando Bo Birdman (15)

Best Cinematography

  1. Dick Pope Mr. Turner (33)
  2. Darius Khondji The Immigrant (27)
  3. Fabrice Aragno Goodbye to Language (9)

Best Non-Fiction Film

  1. Citizenfour Laura Poitras (56)
  2. National Gallery Frederick Wiseman (19)
  3. The Overnighters Jesse Moss (17)

Film Heritage Awards

The Film Heritage Awards were presented for the restorations of classical work of artists in field of film and music:

  1. To Ron Magliozzi, associate curator, and Peter Williamson, film conservation manager, of the Museum of Modern Art, for identifying and assembling the earliest surviving footage of what would have been the feature film to star a black cast, the 1913 Lime Kiln Field Day starring Bert Williams.
  2. To Ron Hutchison, co-founder and director of The Vitaphone Project, which since 1991 has collected and restored countless original soundtrack discs for early sound short films and features, including the recent Warner Bros. restoration of William A. Seiter's 1929 Why Be Good?

Dedication

As per tradition, ceremony was dedicated to the memory of two distinguished members of the Society who died in the previous year; in 2014 the honorees were Jay Carr and Charles Champlin.

References

  1. "Goodbye to Language wins US critics' best film prize". BBC News. January 3, 2014. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
  2. "Good Bye to Language named Best Picture of year by NSFC". Variety. January 3, 2014. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
  3. "National Society of Film Critics Awards winners and runners-up". Deadline.com. January 3, 2014. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
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