Awards
season for 2014 has kicked off early this year, with today’s announcement of
the Gotham Film Award nominations.
It
was a very good morning for Boyhood,
the only film to earn the trifecta of major nominations – Best Picture, Actor
(Ethan Hawke) and Actress (Patricia Arquette) – as well as a Breakthrough Actor
nod for star Ellar Coltrane. Birdman
and Under the Skin were both cited
for Best Feature and earned additional nominations for their leading performers
– Michael Keaton for Birdman and
Scarlett Johansson for Under the Skin
– while the final two nominees, Love Is
Strange and The Grand Budapest Hotel,
failed to make a dent in any other category.
Of
what’s been released this year, Love Is
Strange, The Grand Budapest Hotel
and Boyhood are the three
best
films
I’ve seen, and it’s hard to argue with Birdman – which
I liked, but had some minor quibbles with – nabbing enough votes to compete
here. It’s especially gratifying to see the very under-the-radar Love and the February release Grand Budapest get in here, as more
anticipated releases like Foxcatcher,
A Most Violent Year, Whiplash and Top Five have certainly stolen a lot of their awards thunder (yet
none cracked Best Picture). Neither I nor Andrew have screened Under the Skin yet, but word is very positive on
it; even so, this was a small art-house hit that met its fair share of
detractors, so its leap over stronger Oscar contenders – and better-reviewed
indies – is somewhat surprising.
Miles Teller, a longshot for an Oscar nod, gets deserved recognition from Gotham for "Whiplash" (Sony Pictures Classics) |
For
Best Actor, Keaton and Hawke were joined by Oscar Isaac for A Most Violent Year, whose co-star
Jessica Chastain was snubbed in
Best Actress (though Isaac is supposedly the star of the show); Miles Teller
for Whiplash, in a performance we really
liked; and Bill Hader for The
Skeleton Twins, a lovely little bit of recognition for the comedy star’s
breakout dramatic turn. Likely due to some combination of vote-splitting and
the fact that it’s not represented anywhere else despite superb early reviews, Foxcatcher has received a Special Jury
Prize for its three lead actors (Steve Carell, Channing Tatum and Mark
Ruffalo). This is a very strong category – curiously, the only notable omissions
come from leads of Best Feature contenders, including The Grand Budapest Hotel (Ralph Fiennes) and Love Is Strange (Alfred Molina and John Lithgow).
Arquette
and Johansson headline a more eclectic category. Gugu Mbatha-Raw, who turned
heads earlier this year for Belle
(ineligible at Gotham, as it is not American-made), contends instead for Beyond the Lights, which doesn’t have
much word on it even if her performance has already
been praised. Julianne Moore, Oscar frontrunner for Still Alice, unsurprisingly fit into the final five. Much less expected (but very welcome) is the inclusion of Mia Wasikowska, so
deserving for Tracks but overtaking Reese Witherspoon, whose Wild has
a similar story to Tracks but also a
lot more profile and awards buzz on it. Witherspoon’s omission here shouldn’t
be taken too seriously – though the only lead acting Oscar nominee Gotham
declined to acknowledge last year was Bruce Dern, as others like Meryl Streep
and Judi Dench were ineligible. Regardless, her absence is quite surprising, as
is Chastain’s.
Julianne Moore, Gotham nominee for Best Actress and Oscar frontrunner, stars in "Still Alice" (Sony Pictures Classics) |
Gotham
is most certainly not an Oscar bellwether, but operates on its own and provides
indication as to how critics and industry insiders are thinking. In other
words, expect Boyhood to fare just as
well with critics’ groups through the rest of the season, but when big-budget
giants like Unbroken and Interstellar are mixed in, others like Love Is Strange and Under the Skin probably won’t proceed any further. This is a chance
for lower-profile actors and films to really shine – last year, Inside Llewyn Davis beat 12 Years a Slave for Best Picture, and
Brie Larson beat Cate Blanchett in Actress – and it’s relieving to know that
Wasikowska, Mbatha-Raw, Teller, Hader and others will have received at least
some recognition for an awards season they will very likely be squeezed out of
in a month’s time.
On
the other foot, this is the first mention of many for Oscar frontrunners like
Moore, Carell, Arquette and Keaton. And for those on the fence – Hawke,
Ruffalo, Isaac, The Grand Budapest Hotel
– this is a good, necessary start (for supporting players Hawke, Arquette and
Ruffalo, them making it into lead – because Gotham does not give supporting
trophies – is a very good sign for their chances going forward).
Above
all, it’s just great to see most of the year’s best work (to date, anyway) get recognized.
A full list of nominees, including Breakthrough Actor and Director, and Documentary, can be found here.
A full list of nominees, including Breakthrough Actor and Director, and Documentary, can be found here.